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14-P-927 Appeals Court
COMMONWEALTH vs. JUAN ELADIO ORTIZ.
No. 14-P-927.
Suffolk. June 1, 2015. - October 26, 2015.
Present: Sullivan, Maldonado, & Massing, JJ.
Controlled Substances. Practice, Criminal, Motion to suppress.
Search and Seizure, Motor vehicle, Inventory, Container.
Constitutional Law, Search and seizure.
Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
Department on March 27, 2013.
A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Kenneth
W. Salinger, J., and a motion for reconsideration was considered
by him.
An application for leave to prosecute an interlocutory
appeal was allowed by Margot Botsford, J., in the Supreme
Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk, and the appeal was
reported by her to the Appeals Court.
David D. McGowan, Assistant District Attorney, for the
Commonwealth.
Eduardo Antonio Masferrer for the defendant.
MALDONADO, J. The Commonwealth brings this interlocutory
appeal challenging the suppression, after an evidentiary
2
hearing, of cocaine and of any postarrest statements. The
Commonwealth contends that because a State trooper lawfully
stopped and arrested the defendant for failing to signal before
switching lanes and for driving with a suspended Massachusetts
license, the trooper's postarrest warrantless inventory search
of the contents of the defendant's vehicle, specifically a
backpack that was in the vehicle, was proper and, therefore, it
was error for the judge to allow the motion to suppress. The
motion judge concluded that the trooper undertook the inventory
search, after stopping and arresting the defendant, as a pretext
to conduct a search for investigative purposes. We affirm the
judge's well-reasoned order of suppression.
Facts. We summarize the judge's findings. See
Commonwealth v. Isaiah I., 448 Mass. 334, 337 (2007);
Commonwealth v. Jones-Pannell, 472 Mass. 429, 431 (2015). The
defendant, Juan Eladio Ortiz, became the subject of surveillance
in a Drug Enforcement Agency task force (DEA) investigation into
cocaine trafficking. In the course of their investigation, the
DEA agents discovered that the defendant's Massachusetts
driver's license and right to operate a motor vehicle in
Massachusetts had been suspended, rendering the defendant
subject to arrest at any point when he drove a motor vehicle in
Massachusetts.
3
The agents waited until the morning of February 28, 2013,
when -- according to an undisclosed source -- the defendant
would be transporting a kilogram of cocaine, to set in motion a
plan for the defendant's arrest. In anticipation of the
defendant driving a motor vehicle through the town of Norwood
and eventually into Boston, they contacted Massachusetts State
police Trooper Dennis Lynch, and with the expectation that
impoundment and an inventory search of the defendant's motor
vehicle would follow, they asked Trooper Lynch to arrange for a
trooper to be positioned between Norwood and Boston to be
available to make a lawful stop of the defendant on any observed
motor vehicle infraction and an arrest for driving in
Massachusetts on a suspended license. Trooper Lynch assigned
the task to Trooper Matthew Hannigan, the handler of a canine-
unit dog trained in the detection of narcotics.
At some later point that day, when the DEA agents observed
the defendant leave a residence in Norwood carrying a black
backpack over his right shoulder and drive off in a minivan,1
they followed the defendant's vehicle and contacted Trooper
Lynch to have the defendant stopped and arrested. Lynch radioed
Trooper Hannigan and instructed him to effectuate the
1
The van had a Florida license plate.
4
defendant's stop and arrest and the inventory search of the
vehicle that would follow.
The DEA task force alerted the State police of the
defendant's whereabouts, and Trooper Hannigan found and followed
the defendant onto the Veteran of Foreign Wars (VFW) Parkway.
The trooper had his narcotics-sniffing dog with him. When the
defendant changed lanes on VFW Parkway without signaling,
Hannigan pulled the defendant over and, after obtaining the
defendant's driving documentation,2 placed the defendant under
arrest. The judge found that but for these explicit
instructions, Hannigan "would not have stopped [the defendant]
for changing lanes . . ." and "that in other circumstances he
would not arrest someone for operating a motor vehicle with a
suspended license."3
Following the stop and arrest, Hannigan radioed for
assistance, and when the second cruiser arrived, Hannigan
impounded the vehicle and conducted a warrantless inventory
2
The defendant had a valid Florida driver's license.
3
The judge's findings were supported by the testimony at
the motion hearing. For example, Hannigan was asked during
cross-examination whether "in the case where you weren't told
that there was a kilo of drugs in the car, could you envision
yourself maybe not arresting somebody who's moved out of state,
has an out-of-state license, has an out-of-state car because
they say they weren't aware that their right to drive had been
suspended in Massachusetts?" He responded, "Yes, I could see
myself summonsing him."
5
search of its contents pursuant to a State police inventory
policy.4
Hannigan located the black backpack on the back seat of the
minivan. He opened it and discovered a package of what he
believed to be cocaine. Hannigan returned the package to the
interior of the minivan and brought the drug-sniffing canine to
it; the dog alerted to the presence of cocaine.
Discussion. "In reviewing a decision on a motion to
suppress, 'we accept the judge's subsidiary findings of fact
absent clear error "but conduct an independent review of [the
judge's] ultimate findings and conclusions of law."'"
Commonwealth v. Jessup, 471 Mass. 121, 129 (2015), quoting from
Commonwealth v. Scott, 440 Mass. 642, 646 (2004). The
Commonwealth contends that because the defendant was lawfully
stopped5 and arrested on motor vehicle infractions, the trooper's
application of an inventory search policy to impound and search
the vehicle was not a pretext and, therefore, his search of the
4
There is no dispute as to the validity of the inventory
policy.
5
See G. L. c. 90, § 14B (failure to signal a change of
lanes a civil infraction); Commonwealth v. Williams, 46 Mass.
App. Ct. 181, 182 (1999). As the motion judge noted, the
constitutional reasonableness of traffic stops "does not depend
on the actual motivations of the individual officer involved."
Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806, 813 (1996). Commonwealth
v. Avellar, 70 Mass. App. Ct. 608, 610 & n.4, 613 (2007).
6
contents of the vehicle did not warrant suppression. We
disagree.
Even if otherwise valid, an inventory search must be
"conducted for some legitimate police purpose other than a
search for evidence." Commonwealth v. Benoit, 382 Mass. 210,
219 (1981). See Commonwealth v. White, 469 Mass. 96, 102 (2014)
("The investigative use of these pills transformed a lawful
inventory seizure of the pills into an unlawful investigatory
search of the pills"); Commonwealth v. Woodman, 11 Mass. App.
Ct. 965, 966 (1981).
"The distinction between an inventory search and an
investigatory search is found in the objective of each. The
objective of an investigatory search is to gather evidence,
whereas an inventory search is conducted for the purposes of
'safeguarding the car or its contents, protecting the police
against unfounded charges of misappropriation, protecting the
public against the possibility that the car might contain
weapons or other dangerous instrumentalities that might fall
into the hands of vandals, or a combination of such reasons.'"
Commonwealth v. Baptiste, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 511, 516 (2006),
quoting from Commonwealth v. Muckle, 61 Mass. App. Ct. 678, 682-
683 (2004). "[T]he fact that the searching officer may have
harbored a suspicion that evidence of criminal activity might be
uncovered as a result of the search should not vitiate his
7
obligation to conduct the inventory." Commonwealth v.
Tisserand, 5 Mass. App. Ct. 383, 386-387 (1977). However, "an
inventory search [will] not be upheld if . . . there [is] a
'suggestion . . . that this standard procedure' [is] a pretext
concealing an investigatory police motive . . . ." Ibid.,
quoting from South Dakota v. Opperman, 428 U.S. 364, 376 (1976).
Here, DEA agents suspected the defendant of transporting
cocaine and prearranged for the defendant's arrest on minor
motor vehicle infractions. Trooper Hannigan was directed to
make a valid motor vehicle stop and then arrest the defendant
for the sole purpose of impounding and searching the defendant's
vehicle and its contents pursuant to State police inventory
policy. The motion judge credited Trooper Hannigan's testimony
that he would not have stopped the defendant simply for failing
to signal, nor would he have exercised his discretion to arrest
the defendant had it not been for the directive that he make an
arrest so as to employ the inventory policy to search the
backpack for drugs.6 See G. L. c. 90, § 21, as appearing in St.
1985, c. 794, § 1, providing that an officer "may arrest" a
6
The judge found, "Hannigan pulled over Ortiz because he
intended, as directed, to arrest Ortiz for driving without a
license, impound the minivan, and then search the vehicle for
the kilo of cocaine that Hannigan had been told could be found
inside in a black backpack."
8
person who operates a motor vehicle after his license has been
suspended.7
The conduct of the police is assessed by an objective
standard. When viewed objectively, the search here was an
investigative search and not an inventory search. Accordingly,
we see no error in the judge's finding that the inventory search
here was simply a pretext for using the inventory policy to
conduct an investigatory search of the backpack for evidence of
drug activity without a warrant. Viewed in this context the
warrantless search of the backpack was unconstitutional.8
Compare Commonwealth v. Benoit, 382 Mass. at 219 ("The record
clearly reveals that the only purpose for the [search of the
suitcase] . . . was to seize evidence").
7
We need not decide today whether a driver whose
Massachusetts license has been suspended is prohibited from
driving in Massachusetts if validly licensed elsewhere. See
G. L. c. 90, § 10, second par., first sentence, as appearing in
St. 1966, c. 144, § 4 (allowing one with a previously suspended
or revoked license to operate motor vehicles if "a new license
. . . has . . . been issued to him"). Compare Commonwealth v.
Murphy, 68 Mass. App. Ct. 152, 153-154 (2007) (proper to dismiss
an indictment under G. L. c. 90, § 23, when the defendant driver
had been issued a hardship license, which qualified as a new
license under that statute).
8
The exceptions to the requirement for a warrant to search
(such as the automobile exception) are interpreted narrowly, as
they raise the risk of subverting the constitutional requirement
for a warrant and the danger posed by general warrants. See
Commonwealth v. Moynihan, 376 Mass. 468, 472-474 (1978), citing
Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 467 (1971).
9
This finding by the judge is further supported by the fact
that Trooper Lynch specifically assigned the task of stopping
and arresting the defendant to Trooper Hannigan, who stopped the
defendant with his narcotics-sniffing dog in tow. See
Commonwealth v. Alvarado, 420 Mass. 542, 553 (1995) ("The
Commonwealth's contention that the search of the [vehicle] was
an inventory search is also defeated by the fact that the police
enlisted the assistance of a canine in conducting the search.
The canine was trained for, and used in this instance for, the
detection of controlled substances. Thus, it is clear that the
search of the [vehicle] was of an investigatory nature and was
not an inventory search").9
9
The Commonwealth makes two additional arguments, which we
conclude lack merit. First, the Commonwealth assented to the
motion hearing proceeding and, therefore, is foreclosed at this
juncture from raising challenges to the particularity of the
defendant's affidavit under Mass.R.Crim.P. 13, as appearing in
442 Mass. 1516 (2004). See Commonwealth v. Mubdi, 456 Mass.
385, 390-391 & n.6 (2010). We also reject the Commonwealth's
assertion that the defendant lacked a reasonable expectation of
privacy in both the vehicle and the backpack. Relying on police
testimony that the defendant carried the backpack on his
shoulder into the car, we conclude the judge properly found the
defendant possessed a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
backpack. The defendant has not cross-appealed; therefore,
there is no challenge to the portion of the judge's order that
denies the suppression of any items other than those discovered
in the backpack. Accordingly, we need not decide whether the
defendant lacked a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
rental vehicle. See and compare, e.g., United States v.
Buchner, 7 F.3d 1149, 1154 (5th Cir. 1993), cert denied, 510
U.S. 1207 (1994) (reasonable expectation of privacy in bag left
in another person's car); United States v. Edwards, 632 F.3d
633, 641-642 (10th Cir. 2001) (defendant had standing to
10
Accordingly, we conclude that the judge did not err in
ordering suppression under the circumstances presented here.
Order allowing in part
motion to suppress evidence
affirmed.
Order denying motion for
reconsideration
affirmed.
challenge search of closed personal luggage in trunk of car even
though he had no authorization to drive car).