2017 IL App (1st) 170406
FOURTH DIVISION
September 28, 2017
No. 1-17-0406
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
In re TYREKE H., a Minor ) Appeal from the
(The People of the State Of Illinois, ) Circuit Court of
) Cook County.
Petitioner-Appellee, )
v. ) No. 16 JD 1793
)
Tyreke H., ) Honorable
) Stuart F. Lubin,
Respondent-Appellant.) ) Judge Presiding.
JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court.
Justice Howse concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Justice McBride specially concurred, with opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Minor respondent Tyreke H. (Respondent) was riding his bicycle on Waveland Avenue
when two police officers, wishing to speak with him not as a suspect but as a potential witness to
a homicide, stopped their squad car in Respondent’s path of travel in the middle of the street.
When stopped, officers spotted a bulge in his pocket that resembled a firearm. Respondent
confirmed his identity to the officers and admitted that he was in possession of a firearm. He was
adjudicated delinquent of two counts of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon and one count of
unlawful possession of firearms.
¶2 Respondent claims he was unreasonably seized and unreasonably searched in violation of
the fourth amendment. The trial court initially agreed and suppressed the evidence of the gun,
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then reconsidered and reversed its ruling, leading to Respondent’s adjudication of delinquency
on the gun charge.
¶3 We affirm. We hold that a seizure did take place, but that the seizure was reasonable
under the circumstances. We further agree with the trial court that the search did not violate the
fourth amendment.
¶4 I.
¶5 On August 11, 2016, the State filed a petition for adjudication of wardship, charging
Respondent with two counts of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon (AUUW) and one count of
unlawful possession of firearms (UPF). The first AUUW count was premised on Respondent’s
possession of a gun while he was not in his home, was under 21 years of age, and was not
engaged in lawful activities under the Wildlife Code. The other AUUW count was based on
Respondent’s possession of a handgun when he had not been issued a currently valid Firearm
Owner’s Identification (FOID) Card. The UPF count was premised on his possession of a
concealed handgun while he was under 18 years of age.
¶6 Respondent filed a motion to quash arrest and suppress evidence. He claimed the stop,
search, and interrogation went beyond the scope of an investigative stop pursuant to Terry v.
Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968). He argued that the officers had no reasonable, articulable belief that he
was armed, nor any reasonable articulable suspicion that he was in the process of committing, or
was about to commit, any crime.
¶7 On September 12, 2016, the trial court held a hearing on Respondent’s motion. Officer
Gerald Ludwich, a Chicago police officer, testified that, on August 10, 2016, at approximately
1:30 p.m., he was on duty in an unmarked car in the area of 5640 West Waveland with his
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partner, Officer John Rottman. Both were in plain clothes with vests that displayed a badge and
name tag. 1
¶8 The officers were assisting Area North detectives in a homicide investigation. The
detectives had asked them to locate Respondent as a possible witness and request that
Respondent accompany them to headquarters for questioning about the homicide. The officers
had been given a photograph of Respondent and information as to his home location.
¶9 While in the area of West Waveland, the officers saw an individual they believed to be
Respondent riding a bicycle. Officer Ludwich testified that when he first saw Respondent, there
was a bulge in Respondent’s right front jeans pocket. He was about 75 feet away at the time.
¶ 10 Both Respondent and the officers were traveling eastbound. The officers drove past
Respondent, visually confirmed his identity, and stopped the car just in front of Respondent, just
east of him, so that he would ride directly to them. At that point, the distance between
Respondent and the officers “was only ten feet possibly,” but the distance was decreasing as
Respondent continued traveling eastbound towards the officers.
¶ 11 The officers got out of their vehicle as Respondent stopped before them. Officer
Rottman, the driver, asked Respondent for his name. Respondent identified himself, cooperated,
and made no furtive movements either before or during the stop. Officer Ludwich testified that,
after they confirmed that Respondent was Tyreke H., it was Officer Ludwich’s intention to ask
Respondent some questions and ask whether he was willing to go down to the station.
¶ 12 Officer Ludwich came around the rear of the car and approached Respondent from
behind. When he was about four feet away, he saw the bulge in Respondent’s pocket. He
testified that this bulge appeared “to be basically a handgun in [Respondent’s] right front pants
1
Both officers’ names were spelled more than one way in the transcript.
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pocket.” Officer Ludwich also stated that “[i]t was a silhouette of a handgun in a front jeans
pocket.” Officer Ludwich had recovered a handgun “hundreds” of times during his 23-year
career with the Chicago police department. And, in his opinion, the bulge in Respondent’s
pocket was “different than what a typical wallet or set of keys would look like.”
¶ 13 Before conducting a protective pat down of Respondent, Officer Ludwich tapped
Respondent’s right pant pocket to confirm, for officer safety, whether it was a firearm. Officer
Ludwich described what he felt as a “hard metallic nonyielding touch.” Based on what he felt
when he tapped Respondent’s right front pants pocket, Officer Ludwich “believed” and “knew”
it was a gun in Respondent’s pocket. He said, “What’s this?” Respondent replied, “It’s a gun. I
need it for protection.”
¶ 14 Officer Ludwich performed a protective pat down and recovered a .22 caliber AMT
semiautomatic handgun with six live rounds, five in the magazine and one in the chamber.
Officer Ludwich testified that the gun was approximately seven inches long. The weapon was
inventoried, and Respondent was arrested.
¶ 15 At the end of the hearing, the trial court granted Respondent’s motion to suppress. The
trial court found that Respondent was “in a different position from the usual defendant because
the police were not suspicious that there was criminal activity as in the case of Terry v. Ohio,
[392 U.S. 1 (1968)].” Instead, as the trial court noted, Respondent was a possible witness. In
granting Respondent’s motion to suppress, the trial court stated, in part, as follows:
“On cross-examination, [Officer Ludwich] said [the bulge in Respondent’s
pocket] appeared to be a handgun. It looked like a handgun. It was the silhouette.
And he tapped his pocket. He patted him down. He never asked him, you know,
You are a witness, would you like to come to the station?
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He never gave him a chance to do that. So this is a pretty close case, but I
think [Respondent] was searched illegally.”
¶ 16 The State moved for reconsideration. The State argued that the court erred in its
application of the law, that a police officer is not required to ask questions before recovering a
weapon. The State contended that, based on Officer Ludwich’s observations of the bulge in
Respondent’s pocket, which he believed to be a handgun, Officer Ludwich was justified in
conducting the pat-down to determine if it was, in fact, a handgun.
¶ 17 On October 14, 2016, the court began hearing the motion to reconsider. The trial court
looked at the gun and stated that the gun was smaller than the court had previously thought. The
court said it “would like to see the gun actually in the pants to decide whether or not—that—that
would be the best test of whether it can be—if it’s immediately apparent to be a gun.” The
State’s motion was entered and continued.
¶ 18 On November 10, 2016, the trial court held a hearing on the State’s motion. Defense
counsel noted that although Respondent had provided his pants, the police officers could not
determine which pants Respondent was wearing on the date of his arrest. After hearing argument
from both sides, the trial court granted the motion to reconsider and reversed its previous
suppression order.
¶ 19 At trial, the State presented Officer Ludwich as its only witness. He testified consistently
with his prior testimony at the hearing on Respondent’s motion to suppress.
¶ 20 Officer Ludwich also testified that, when he recovered the firearm from Respondent, he
did not present a valid FOID card. When asked whether Respondent told him that he had a valid
FOID card, Officer Ludwich testified: “I believe he said he did not.” On cross-examination,
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Officer Ludwich testified that he did not run Respondent’s name in the computer to see if he had
a FOID card.
¶ 21 The trial court made a finding of delinquency on all three counts. The court later
sentenced Respondent to 18 months’ probation. Respondent filed a timely notice of appeal.
¶ 22 II.
¶ 23 Respondent raises two issues regarding his encounter with the police officers. He says he
was unreasonably seized in violation of the fourth amendment, and that he was unreasonably
searched in violation of the fourth amendment. The seizure and search questions are separate
matters, of course. People v. Sorenson, 196 Ill. 2d 425, 433 (2001) (“The question of whether the
investigatory stop was valid, however, is a separate question from whether the search for
weapons was valid.”). We consider the seizure question first, because if the initial encounter was
an unconstitutional detention, the search incident to that detention was, too. People v. Harris,
2011 IL App (1st) 103382, ¶ 17; see also Adams v. Williams, 407 U.S. 143, 146 (1972).
¶ 24 A.
¶ 25 We apply a two-part standard of review when considering the trial court’s ruling on a
motion to suppress evidence. People v. Almond, 2015 IL 113817, ¶ 55. We afford great
deference to the trial court’s factual findings, reversing them only if they are against the manifest
weight of the evidence. Id. We review de novo the trial court’s ultimate ruling as to whether the
evidence should be suppressed. Id.
¶ 26 But here, as to the question of the initial stop, there are no disputed facts. Officer
Ludwich testified without contradiction as to the circumstances surrounding the stop of
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Respondent. Respondent does not claim that the officer’s testimony was fabricated or
implausible. (The search issue is a different matter, but we are concerned here only with the
seizure.) Because the facts are undisputed, we apply de novo review to this issue. See People v.
Gherna, 203 Ill. 2d 165, 175 (2003); People v. Anthony, 198 Ill. 2d 194, 201(2001); People v.
Sims, 192 Ill. 2d 592, 615 (2000).
¶ 27 Respondent says that the police seized him when they blocked his path, forcing him to
stop his bicycle and answer questions, and that they did so without any reasonable, articulable
suspicion that Respondent had committed a crime. The State does not dispute the second half of
that argument; it agrees that the officers lacked a reasonable, articulable suspicion that
Respondent had committed a crime. But the State argues that the trial court properly denied
Respondent’s motion because he was not seized in the first place; the encounter between the
officers and Respondent, says the State, was consensual.
¶ 28 Both the fourth amendment to the United States Constitution and the Illinois Constitution
of 1970 guarantee the right of individuals to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.
U.S. Const., amend. IV; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 6. Our supreme court has divided police-citizen
encounters involving the investigation of crime into three tiers: (1) arrests, which must be
supported by probable cause; (2) brief investigative detentions, or “Terry stops,” which must be
supported by a reasonable, articulable suspicion that the detainee has committed, is committing,
or is about to commit a crime (see Terry, 392 U.S. 1); and (3) encounters that involve no
coercion or detention, known as consensual encounters. People v. Hopkins, 235 Ill. 2d 453, 471
(2009); People v. Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d 530, 544 (2006). And a “consensual encounter between
a citizen and an officer does not violate the fourth amendment because it does not involve
coercion or a detention.” Almond, 2015 IL 113817, ¶ 56.
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¶ 29 “[A] person has been seized when, considering the totality of the circumstances, a
reasonable person would believe he is not free to leave.” Almond, 2015 IL 113817, ¶ 57.
Recently, in In re Elijah W., 2017 IL App (1st) 162648, ¶¶ 27-32, this court held that, when
determining whether an encounter between a minor and law enforcement was consensual for
fourth amendment purposes, the reasonable person standard is modified to take the minor’s age
and other relevant factors into account. Id. ¶ 27-32. This court reasoned that our supreme court
has adopted the holding of the U.S. Supreme Court that an individual’s age and other
characteristics are relevant in determining whether the individual is in “custody” for purposes of
the fifth amendment. See In re D.L.H., 2015 IL 117341, ¶ 51 (in considering “whether a
reasonable person, innocent of wrongdoing, would have believed he or she was free to terminate
the [police] questioning and leave,” “the reasonable person standard is modified to take [fact that
person is juvenile] into account”); J.D.B. v. North Carolina, 564 U.S. 261, 281 (2011) (juvenile’s
age must be considered in determining whether juvenile was in “custody” under Fifth
Amendment). This court then agreed that the consideration of a juvenile’s age on the fifth
amendment “custody” question “ ‘seems particularly fitting for search-and-seizure analyses since
the tests for custody under the Fifth Amendment and detentions under the Fourth Amendment
both focus on how reasonable persons would perceive their interaction with the police.’ ” Elijah
W., 2017 IL App (1st) 162648, ¶ 28 (quoting In re J.G., 175 Cal. Rptr. 3d 183, 190 (2014)).
¶ 30 We agree with Respondent that the determination of whether he was seized depends on
whether, considering the totality of the circumstances, a reasonable 17-year-old would believe he
was not free to leave. But we emphasize that, whether we considered a reasonable person in the
abstract or a reasonable 17-year-old, our decision would be the same.
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¶ 31 The United States Supreme Court has identified the following four factors that indicate a
seizure: (1) the threatening presence of several officers, (2) the display of a weapon by an officer,
(3) some physical touching of the person, or (4) using language or tone of voice compelling the
individual to comply with the officer’s requests. United States v. Mendenhall, 446 U.S. 544, 554
(1980); see also Almond, 2015 IL 113817, ¶ 57. “In the absence of some such evidence,
otherwise inoffensive contact between a member of the public and the police cannot, as a matter
of law, amount to a seizure of that person.” Mendenhall, 446 U.S. at 555.
¶ 32 The Illinois Supreme Court has stated that “the absence of Mendenhall factors, while not
necessarily conclusive, is highly instructive.” Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d at 554; accord Almond,
2015 IL 113817, ¶ 57. “If those factors are absent, that means that only one or two officers
approached the defendant, they displayed no weapons, they did not touch the defendant, and they
did not use any language or tone of voice indicating that compliance with their requests was
compelled.” Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d at 554. “Obviously, a seizure is much less likely to be found
when officers approach a person in such an inoffensive manner.” Id. But the Mendenhall factors
are not exhaustive, and a seizure may be found on the basis of other coercive police conduct
similar to the Mendenhall factors. People v. Cosby, 231 Ill. 2d 262, 281 (2008).
¶ 33 We find instructive the reasoning of the appellate and supreme courts in People v.
Thomas, 315 Ill. App. 3d 849 (2000), aff’d, 198 Ill. 2d 103 (2001).
¶ 34 In Thomas, 198 Ill. 2d at 106, an Officer Melton had heard from an informant that the
defendant was using his bicycle to deliver illegal drugs. The defendant was riding his bicycle and
holding a police scanner when the officer overtook and passed defendant by car and then
“positioned his squad car across defendant’s path.” Id. At that point, the defendant abruptly
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changed direction on his bicycle, escaping down an alley; he was later caught with drugs in his
possession. Id. at 106-07.
¶ 35 The trial court suppressed the evidence of the drugs, finding that the officer’s stopping of
the car, blocking the defendant’s path, constituted an unreasonable seizure. Thomas, 315 Ill.
App. 3d at 852. The appellate court agreed that the officer’s initial stop of the vehicle constituted
a Terry stop unsupported by the requisite reasonable, articulable suspicion that the defendant was
engaged in criminal activity. The appellate court rejected the State’s claim that the initial
stopping of the vehicle fell under the third category of police-citizen interaction, the “consensual
encounter,” elaborating at length on its reasoning:
“Officer Melton was not trying to engage in the kind of personal intercourse between
police officers and citizens that falls short of a seizure. He was trying to effect a forceful
stop and detention. His use of the phrase “field interview” to describe his intent and
design does not alter what he did in order to effect it. Nor does it change the investigative
nature of that intent and design.
***
The method employed to fulfill this investigative purpose constituted more than a
mere casual approach to engage in conversation. To give effect to his intent, Officer
Melton had to chase after and find the defendant. Then he had to halt the defendant’s
movements. When he caught up to the defendant, he did not honk his horn and wave, or
roll down his window and engage in conversation. *** Officer Melton maneuvered his
squad car to effect an abrupt stop of a moving vehicle by cutting off the path ahead. This
was clearly an effort to effect an investigatory stop and detention.
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Contrary to the State’s contention, Officer Melton’s actions constituted a show of
authority. While it is true that Officer Melton did not display a gun, did not utter a word,
and did not physically touch the defendant, his action was sufficient to produce a feeling
of freedom’s restraint in an objectively reasonable person. Officer Melton sped past the
defendant, made a sudden veer at a right angle to the defendant’s travel route, and
deployed his squad car in a manner designed to cut off the defendant’s roadway. It would
be quite reasonable for a motorist, or, in this case, a bicyclist, confronted with such police
action to conclude that the officer wanted no further movement and expected submission.
When a police officer suddenly obstructs continued movement by placing his squad car
between a traveler and the road ahead, most travelers would feel compelled to stop and
constrained to stay until they engaged further direction from the officer.” (Emphasis
added.) Id. at 853-54.
¶ 36 The appellate court ultimately held, however, that because the defendant did not submit
to the unreasonable seizure—he fled down an alley instead—he could not have been “seized” as
a matter of law, as California v. Hodari D., 499 U.S. 621, 627 (1991), held that when a suspect
flees from an officer’s attempt to detain him, no “seizure” can occur under the fourth
amendment. Thomas, 315 Ill. App. 3d at 857.
¶ 37 Our supreme court “agree[d] with the appellate court that Officer Melton’s initial conduct
constituted an unwarranted investigatory stop and was constitutionally impermissible.” Thomas,
198 Ill. 2d at 110. The supreme court concurred in the following summary from the appellate
court:
“ ‘Had the defendant stopped when his path was obstructed, had he submitted to Officer
Melton’s show of authority, a seizure of the kind offensive to our constitution would have
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occurred. Officer Melton would have effected an investigatory stop absent the requisite
degree of suspicion to support it. The stop would have constituted an unreasonable
seizure of the defendant’s person. However, Officer Melton’s attempt to effect an
unlawful stop did not implicate the fourth amendment because the defendant took flight
and prevented it.’
We agree and so hold.” Id. at 112 (quoting Thomas, 315 Ill. App. 3d at 857).
¶ 38 There are some obvious differences between this case and Thomas—Respondent did not
flee from the police but submitted to the show of police authority; Respondent was not suspected
of criminal wrongdoing—but on the question of whether the officers’ actions here constituted a
seizure, Thomas is squarely applicable.
¶ 39 Here, the officers drove past Respondent on his bicycle and then quickly stopped just
short of him, got out of the car, and faced him. Officer Ludwich testified that the vehicle,
travelling eastbound like Respondent on his bike, passed Respondent and then “stopped just in
front of him,” “just east of him.” At that point, the officers left the vehicle so “[Respondent]
would ride directly to us.” When the State, on cross-examination, asked if he or his partner
approached Respondent, Ludwich said, “Actually, [Respondent] continued travelling eastbound
toward us, which was only ten feet possibly.”
¶ 40 A reasonable, innocent person, riding a bike along a public roadway, seeing a vehicle
stop “just in front of him” and positioned in his path of travel such that he “would ride directly
to” that car, and then seeing two officers wearing badges on their vests quickly emerge from the
vehicle and face him, could only come to one conclusion: “that the officer[s] wanted no further
movement and expected submission.” Thomas, 315 Ill. App. 3d at 854. The only conclusion a
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reasonable, innocent person could draw from the officers’ actions was that they were demanding
to speak with him then and there.
¶ 41 As in Thomas, we cannot accept the State’s contention that what occurred here was a
casual, “consensual” encounter not subject to the fourth amendment. This was not a low-key
approach on a sidewalk for a consensual chat; Respondent’s travel by bicycle was halted in the
middle of the road by a vehicle that cut off his path of travel, with two officers immediately
emerging from that car to address him.
¶ 42 We acknowledge the general rule that the police do not seize citizens when they approach
them in public to ask a question. See Florida v. Bostick, 501 U.S. 429, 439 (1991); Luedemann,
222 Ill. 2d at 549. But there is a difference between approaching a pedestrian on the sidewalk
and stopping a bicyclist in mid-travel down the street, by positioning a police vehicle directly in
front of the bike’s forward path and immediately leaving the car to speak with the oncoming
bicyclist. As New York’s highest court put it, “[a]lthough the right to stop a vehicle is generally
analogous to the right to stop a pedestrian, police/motorist encounters must be distinguished from
police/pedestrian encounters,” because “the obvious impact of stopping the progress of an
automobile is more intrusive than the minimal intrusion involved in stopping a pedestrian.”
People v. Spencer, 646 N.E.2d 785 (N.Y. 1995). Here, Respondent’s progress was stopped no
less because he was on a bike, rather than behind the wheel of a car.
¶ 43 “ ‘[T]he critical factor is whether the policeman, even if making inquiries a private
citizen would not, has otherwise conducted himself in a manner which would be perceived as a
nonoffensive contact if it occurred between two ordinary citizens.” People v. Lake, 2015 IL App
(4th) 130072, ¶ 29 (quoting 4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 9.4(a), at 582-83 (5th ed.
2012)). Said differently, “[A]n encounter between a police officer and a civilian ‘is a seizure
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only if the officer adds to those inherent pressures by engaging in conduct significantly beyond
that accepted in social intercourse.’ ” People v. Castigilia, 394 Ill.App.3d 355, 358 (2009)
(quoting 4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 9.4(a), at 425 (4th ed. 2004))). Thus, in Lake,
2015 IL App (4th) 130072, ¶ 32, when an officer approached the defendant and tapped him on
the shoulder, no seizure occurred, as the officer’s touch of the shoulder was “one of many
nonoffensive methods our culture and society accept as a measure of common courtesy to attract
another person's attention” and “was not a demonstration of police authority indicative of a
seizure.”
¶ 44 A lay person might stop a fellow citizen on the street and ask for directions, or ask them
the time, or interact with that citizen for any number of reasons. But a lay person cannot stop a
car in the middle of the road and get out, as if in a parking lot, to ask a question of the motorist or
bicyclist behind them. That action was an unquestionable show of police authority above and
beyond ordinary social intercourse, and it would be perceived as such by any reasonable,
innocent person. We are not suggesting that the officers did anything wrong, or that they abused
their authority, but neither will we pretend that stopping their car in the middle of the road to
speak with an oncoming bicyclist is the same thing as a casual approach of a citizen on the
sidewalk. No reasonable, innocent person would have viewed their actions as anything but a
show of police authority, indicating that the officers wanted to speak with Respondent, and they
wanted to do so right at that moment. We reject the State’s claim that this was a consensual
encounter.
¶ 45 Indeed, we highly question whether Respondent even would have had a chance to
consent, given the officers’ testimony that they stopped the car “just in front of him,” leaving
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him little time to have done anything other than stop the bike right in front of them—which was
exactly how the officers designed the stop, by Ludwich’s own admission.
¶ 46 True, as the State argues, the officers did not draw weapons, tackle him, or threaten
Respondent. That was true in Thomas, too, but our supreme court still found that the officers’
blocking of the defendant’s path of travel by bike constituted a seizure. Thomas, 198 Ill. 2d at
110, 112; see also Thomas, 315 Ill. App. 3d at 854 (“While it is true that Officer Melton did not
display a gun, did not utter a word, and did not physically touch the defendant, his action was
sufficient to produce a feeling of freedom’s restraint in an objectively reasonable person.”). As in
Thomas, the officers’ actions were an unquestionable show of authority, designed to indicate to a
reasonable, innocent person that he was supposed to stop his bike and submit to that authority.
¶ 47 While, as we already said above, our supreme court has noted that the absence of any of
the four traditional Mendenhall factors is “highly instructive” (Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d at 554) on
the seizure question, neither our supreme court nor the United States Supreme Court has ever
instructed us to consider only those factors to the absolute exclusion of any other factual
circumstances that may be present in a given case. Thomas, itself, is just such an example.
¶ 48 Indeed, the U.S. Supreme Court, in determining whether the police seized a fleeing
suspect, considered whether the officers “operated the car in an aggressive manner to block [the
suspect’s] course or otherwise control the direction or speed of his movement.” Michigan v.
Chesternut, 486 U.S. 567, 575 (1988). Though the Court there found no seizure, as the police
made no attempt to stop the man after he fled on foot upon seeing the police cruiser, but rather
merely “drove alongside him for a short distance” before the man discarded contraband (id. at
569), the Court considered the vehicle’s intrusion on the suspect’s movements as a factor in
determining whether a seizure occurred.
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¶ 49 The Maryland Supreme Court made this very point in Jones v. State, 572 A.2d 169, 172
(Md. 1990), in holding that an officer seized a bicyclist when he pulled his police cruiser to the
side of the road, got out, and verbally called out to the passing bicyclist: “Hey, could you come
here” or “Hold on a minute” or “Hey, wait a minute.” The court acknowledged the absence of
the four traditional Mendenhall factors but noted that Chesternut indicated that other factors
could be considered as well, including the officer’s use of his vehicle to obstruct the citizen’s
progress, and the Maryland court found that a reasonable person in defendant’s position would
not have felt free to disregard the officer and pedal away. Id.
¶ 50 We are not suggesting that the facts of this case entirely mirror those in Jones. The
vehicle there did not stop directly in front of the bicyclist’s forward path or impede its movement
at all, but on the other hand, the officer said something to the passing bicyclist that indicated that
the officer wanted his attention. Our point here is simply that the manner in which the officers
used their vehicle in this case is a factor that we are entitled to consider.
¶ 51 The State also argues that the vehicle in Thomas completely blocked the defendant’s
forward path, unlike here. True, the car in this case was not stopped at an angle, but it stopped in
Respondent’s direct path of travel and almost immediately in front of him, whereupon officers
got out of the car to face the rapidly-approaching Respondent. Our analysis need not rise or fall
on whether Respondent’s path was completely, mostly, or partially obstructed. From an objective
standpoint of the reasonable, innocent person, the officers had clearly gone to considerable effort
to stop Respondent on his bike without advance notice—without first calling out to him and
asking him to pull over, or signaling to him in any way before stopping the vehicle right in front
of him and in his direct path, then emerging from the car to face him. Any reasonable person
would have concluded that the officers were demanding his attention at that very moment.
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¶ 52 And we would further note that the vehicle in Thomas did not block the defendant’s
immediate forward path—he had time to steer his bike to avoid the police vehicle, which is
precisely what he did, fleeing down an alley on that bike before reaching the roadblock. See
Thomas, 198 Ill. 2d at 106. Here, in contrast, while the car did not veer to an angle, it stopped
almost immediately in front of Respondent. No two cases ever have precisely the same facts in
this context. But we do not see how this distinction advanced by the State alters the outcome.
¶ 53 The State is also correct that Respondent cooperated once he was detained; he gave them
his name and truthfully admitted he had a gun in his pocket. But the seizure had already occurred
by then. The officers’ actions are viewed at their inception. See id. at 109 (“The conduct
constituting the stop under Terry must have been justified at its inception.”); People v. Colyar,
2013 IL 111835, ¶ 40 (same). The fact that Respondent, once seized by police officers,
cooperated with the officers does not convert a seizure into a “consensual encounter.” We would
have very little left of the fourth amendment if an individual’s submission to authority after
being seized could be viewed as some waiver of a constitutional right.
¶ 54 In addition to some differences between Thomas and this case we have just discussed
above, the special concurrence further distinguishes Thomas, arguing at length that the
motivations of the officers in Thomas were to stop a man they suspected had committed a crime,
whereas here, “the only evidence regarding the officers’ intentions showed that they were
seeking to have a conversation with respondent as a potential witness to an unrelated crime, and
that, if respondent did not consent to that interaction, he would have been free to leave.” But the
officer’s subjective motivation, and his or her reason for stopping a citizen—suspicion of a
crime, to ask a question, perhaps to perform a community caretaking function—are irrelevant to
the question of whether a seizure occurred.
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¶ 55 In determining whether a seizure occurred, we view the actions of the officer and ask
how a reasonable, innocent person would objectively perceive them—whether, “considering the
totality of the circumstances, a reasonable person would believe he was not free to leave.”
People v. Oliver, 236 Ill. 2d 448, 456 (2010). The officer’s subjective intent or reasoning has no
place in the analysis. See Mendenhall, 446 U.S. at 555 n.6 (“the subjective intention of the DEA
agent in this case to detain respondent, had she attempted to leave, is irrelevant” to whether
seizure occurred, “except insofar as that may have been conveyed to the respondent.”). As this
court recently wrote, “ ‘The objective nature of the test also means that whether an encounter has
become a seizure depends on the officer's objective behavior, not any subjective suspicion of
criminal activity.’ ” Lake, 2015 IL App (4th) 130072, ¶ 28 (quoting 4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search
and Seizure § 9.4(a), at 568 (5th ed. 2012)). Thus, in determining whether a seizure occurred,
“we need not concern ourselves with any suspicions [the officer] may have had about defendant
as he approached, intending to engage him in conversation.” Id.
¶ 56 The reason why the officer stopped the citizen is the next question, assuming a seizure is
found to have occurred; we proceed to ask whether the officer had justification to seize the
citizen, to determine whether that seizure was reasonable. People v. Brownlee, 186 Ill. 2d 501,
517–18 (1999) (“As a general rule, all seizures must be reasonable ***.”). See also State v.
Davis, 517 A.2d 859, 863, 869 (N.J. 1986) (finding seizure occurred when officer blocked
bicyclists’ path with squad car, but finding seizure reasonable under circumstances). So the fact
that the officers in Thomas were trying to stop a man they suspected to be involved in criminal
activity, whereas here, the officers had a suspicionless reason for stopping Respondent, has no
bearing on how a reasonable, innocent person would objectively perceive the officers’ actions.
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¶ 57 The special concurrence also suggests that we are taking liberties with the notion that the
police vehicle’s stop in front of Respondent on his bike was a seizure, because Respondent did
not, himself, argue as much at the suppression hearing. The concurrence says that Respondent
only argued that he was seized when the officers placed him on the vehicle after recovering the
weapon. The record shows that Respondent did not so limit his argument; he argued in his
written motion that “[a]t the point that the police stopped [Respondent] he was ‘seized’ for
purposes of Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment analysis.” So we disagree that Respondent never
raised that argument below, and he obviously raises it before us. We find no forfeiture.
¶ 58 We hold that the officers seized Respondent when they stopped his bicycle in the middle
of the street.
¶ 59 B.
¶ 60 The Constitution does not forbid seizures per se, only unreasonable seizures. U.S. Const.,
amend. IV; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 6. In the investigatory context, Terry is a narrow exception
to the general rule that a citizen may not be detained without probable cause. That narrow
exception typically requires a reasonable, articulable suspicion that the person being detained is
involved in criminal activity. See Terry, 392 U.S. at 26-27; United States v. Hensley, 469 U.S.
221, 229 (1985); Michigan v. Summers, 452 U.S. 692, 699 (1981). But the U.S. Supreme Court
has unanimously held that suspicionless detentions of citizens as potential witnesses to a crime,
even if they are seizures, are not per se unconstitutional, but rather are subject to a
reasonableness test. Illinois v. Lidster, 540 U.S. 419, 426 (2004).
¶ 61 Lidster involved a police roadblock in Lombard, Illinois. A vehicle had killed a bicyclist
in a hit-and-run incident. About a week later, with the crime still unsolved, the police set up a
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roadblock in that same area, at roughly the same time of night, as the hit-and-run incident,
hoping to find motorists who might have information about it. Id. at 422. One of the vehicles in
the line of waiting cars, when it was its turn to pull up to the roadblock, swerved and almost
struck an officer, leading officers to inquire further and ultimately leading to a failed sobriety test
and a DUI conviction. Id.
¶ 62 The Supreme Court agreed that a seizure occurred. Id. at 425-26 (“such an involuntary
stop amounts to a ‘seizure’ in Fourth Amendment terms”). And it was undisputed that the
officers lacked an individualized, articulable suspicion that the defendant had engaged in a crime
before stopping him. Id. at 423-24. Indeed, as the Court noted, “the context here (seeking
information from the public) is one in which, by definition, the concept of individualized
suspicion has little role to play.” Id. at 424 (parenthetical in original).
¶ 63 But the Court refused to apply a “rule of automatic unconstitutionality to brief,
information-seeking highways stops” of this nature. “The fact that such stops normally lack
individualized suspicion cannot by itself determine the constitutional outcome.” Id. It might in
other contexts, such as in one’s home, but “[t]he Fourth Amendment does not treat a motorist’s
car as his castle,” and “special law enforcement concerns will sometimes justify highway stops
without individualized suspicion.” Id.
¶ 64 On the other hand, it did not follow that “the stop is automatically, or even
presumptively, constitutional. It simply means that we must judge its reasonableness, hence, its
constitutionality, on the basis of the individual circumstances.” Id. at 426. In determining the
reasonableness of a seizure in this context, it was necessary to consider “ ‘the gravity of the
public concerns served by the seizure, the degree to which the seizure advances the public
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interest, and the severity of the interference with individual liberty.’ ” Id. at 427 (quoting Brown
v. Texas, 443 U.S. 47, 51 (1979)).
¶ 65 Given that the investigation involved a death, the Court found that the “relevant public
concern was grave.” Id. at 427. The stop advanced this concern in that the checkpoints were
uniquely tailored to identify people who might have been on the road the week earlier, by
instituting them in the same area at the same time of night. Id. And “[m]ost importantly,” the
stops were only a minimal intrusion on motorists, as the wait in line was “a very few minutes at
most” and “[c]ontact with the police lasted only a few seconds.” Id. The Court thus upheld the
seizure as reasonable. Id. at 428. 2
¶ 66 While Lidster involved a police roadblock, its holding and test have been applied in other
contexts involving suspicionless detentions of potential witnesses. See, e.g., State v. Woldt, 876
N.W.2d 891, 896 (Neb. 2016) (detaining vehicle on road to question individual about a driver in
nearby vehicle suspected of reckless driving); Maxwell v. County of San Diego, 708 F.3d 1075
(9th Cir. 2013) (separating witness family members in home and refusing to let witness-victim
leave in ambulance); State v. Whitney, 54 A.3d 1284, 1286 (Me. 2012) (detaining vehicle to
determine if driver had information as to whether three men conversing with him outside vehicle
had left scene of car accident earlier that night); State v. LaPlante, 26 A.3d 337 (Me. 2011)
(detaining vehicle to question driver about another driver’s excessive speeding); Gipson v. State,
268 S.W.3d 185 (Tex. App. 2008) (detaining vehicle leaving parking lot of store that was just
2
We have characterized Lidster’s holding as unanimous. The employment of a reasonableness test
for suspicionless detentions of potential witnesses, rather than a per se rule of unconstitutionality, was
indeed joined by all justices. Three justices dissented only from the decision to decide the reasonableness
of the checkpoint, rather than remanding to the Illinois courts to conduct that test. See id. at 428 (Stevens,
J., concurring in part and dissenting in part, joined by Souter and Ginsburg, JJ.).
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burglarized to question occupants as potential witnesses to robbery); State v. Mitchell, 186 P.3d
1071 (Wash. Ct. App. 2008) (detaining purported victim of robbery); State v. Watkins, 88 P.3d
1174, 1176 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2004) (detaining purported witness and victim after she tried to walk
away from officers).
¶ 67 We believe that Lidster applies here as well. The Supreme Court gave several reasons for
applying a reasonableness test to suspicionless police checkpoints, rather than a per se rule of
unconstitutionality, all of which apply here. First, if “[t]he Fourth Amendment does not treat a
motorist’s car as his castle” (Lidster, 540 U.S at 424), it most certainly does not treat a person’s
bicycle as such. Second, the Court’s rationale that “the law ordinarily permits police to seek the
voluntary cooperation of members of the public in the investigation of a crime” (id. at 425) is no
less applicable to bicyclists than it is to motorists. Finally, the Court noted that information-
seeking highway stops are “less likely to provoke anxiety or *** prove intrusive,” “are likely
brief,” and are not likely to elicit self-incriminating information. Id. We acknowledge that being
stopped on a bicycle is more confrontational than being one of many drivers stopped at a
roadside checkpoint. But given that the ultimate goal of the officers is to seek information, not to
investigate the bicyclist for commission of a crime, the likelihood of a self-incriminating
confrontation is just as low as it would be for a driver; we do not see the intrusion or anxiety to
be so great as to justify a different test for bicyclists than for drivers stopped at a checkpoint.
¶ 68 In light of Lidster, it would be inappropriate to impose a per se rule of unconstitutionality
for the suspicionless roadway stop of a bicyclist who is believed to be a witness to a crime
committed by someone else. As the Supreme Court did there, we instead apply a reasonableness
test to the officers’ conduct here.
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¶ 69 Applying the reasonableness test from Lidster, we find the seizure here to have been
reasonable. The investigation underway was a homicide, every bit as grave a concern as the
vehicular death in Lidster, 540 U.S at 427. And the stop in this case was far more tailored to
advance the public’s interest in solving this homicide than the stop in Lidster. There, all drivers
were stopped; their connection to the bicyclist’s death was nothing more than the fact that, one
week after that incident, they were on the same road, at the same time of night, as the bicyclist
when he died. Yet that was sufficient tailoring for the Supreme Court. See id. Here, officers were
targeting a specific person whose assistance was sought, and they believed (correctly) that they
had found that specific person. The stop could not have been more narrowly tailored toward the
public interest in solving this homicide.
¶ 70 The final factor is the severity of the interference with individual liberty. See id. We do
not deny that the officers stopped Respondent in a rather dramatic, abrupt fashion in the middle
of the road. But that plays into whether the stop constituted a seizure, and we have already found
that it did. All seizures, by definition, interfere with one’s liberty. This reasonableness test does
not even come into play unless a court first finds a seizure to have occurred. The supreme court
was referring, in this final factor, not to the fact that an individual is detained in the first instance,
but to the duration and scope of that detention. Id.
¶ 71 And on that question, we would have to give a grade of “incomplete.” The officers’
detention of Respondent for questioning was interrupted after the first question—asking
Respondent his name—at which point Officer Ludwich became suspicious of the possible
firearm in Respondent’s pants pocket. It quickly devolved into a search and arrest. For what it’s
worth, Officer Ludwich testified without contradiction that his intention had been to ask
Respondent if he would be willing to come to the police station for questioning, and that
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Respondent would have been free to decline that request and be on his way. Any way you view
it, we cannot say that Respondent has carried his burden of showing that the initial detention,
prior to the search, constituted a severe interference with his liberty.
¶ 72 Each of the three factors favors a finding of reasonableness. We thus hold that the traffic
stop was a seizure, but a reasonable one.
¶ 73 C.
¶ 74 Because we hold that the officers complied with the fourth amendment in stopping
Respondent, we turn to the question of the frisk that followed the stop.
¶ 75 A frisk for weapons, following a valid stop, must be based on a reasonable suspicion that
the individual is armed and thus dangerous. Terry, 392 U.S. at 10, 27; Colyar, 2013 IL 111835,
¶¶ 34-37. The reasonable suspicion must be more than a mere hunch, but the officer need not be
absolutely certain the individual is armed. Terry, 392 U.S. at 27; Colyar, 2013 IL 111835, ¶¶ 36,
40. The officer must point to “specific and articulable facts” that demonstrate the reasonableness
of the suspicion. Terry, 392 U.S. at 21; Colyar, 2013 IL 111835, ¶ 40.
¶ 76 At the outset, we agree with the State that Respondent’s reliance on our decision in
Harris, 2011 IL App (1st) 103382, is misplaced. In Harris, the initial encounter was an
investigatory stop—i.e., a Terry stop—that we found unreasonable. Id. ¶ 15. So it followed that
the subsequent search was not justified because “[t]he police may only perform a protective
search if they are entitled to stop the person in the first place.” Id. ¶ 17. Having determined that
the stop here complied with the fourth amendment, Harris does not apply.
¶ 77 Besides Harris, Respondent relies on additional cases where this court has stated that a
bulge in the defendant’s clothing, by itself, does not create reasonable suspicion. See, e.g.,
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People v. Surles, 2011 IL App (1st) 100068, ¶ 40; People v. Goodum, 356 Ill. App. 3d 1081,
1085 (2005); People v. Byrd, 47 Ill. App. 3d 804, 808 (1977). We take no issue with that
proposition of law. But the evidence here went beyond testimony of seeing a mere bulge.
¶ 78 The officer testified that, as he approached within about four feet of Respondent, he saw
the silhouette of a handgun in Respondent’s jeans. The trial court, on reconsideration of the
suppression issue, accepted the officer’s testimony. Indeed, the court’s very basis for reversing
its previous decision was that the court had believed that a .22 caliber was small—and thus
unlikely to be observed inside a pants pocket—but after seeing the gun, the court realized it was
bigger than it had thought, and thus it found the officer’s testimony credible.
¶ 79 We review that credibility determination for manifest error. Almond, 2015 IL 113817,
¶ 55. We find no error. We cannot say that the opposite conclusion was clearly evident. Nor has
Respondent supplied any reason for us to do so. The only basis Respondent raises for ignoring
this “silhouette” testimony, and focusing only on the “bulge” testimony, is that the testimony
about the silhouette came on cross-examination by the State at the suppression hearing. We are
aware of no case law suggesting that testimony on cross-examination is less valuable than direct
testimony. And to the extent that Respondent suggests that this makes the testimony less likely—
elicited as it was by the friendly prosecutor, presumably—the trial court disagreed and found it
credible, and we find no reason to disturb that finding.
¶ 80 We agree with the trial court that Officer Ludwich’s observation of not merely a bulge,
but the outline of a weapon, in Respondent’s jeans was a specific and articulable fact that
supported a reasonable suspicion that Respondent was armed.
¶ 81 The complicating factor here is that a Terry frisk usually requires two things: (1) a
reasonable suspicion that the detainee is involved in criminal activity (thus justifying the stop)
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No. 1-17-0406
and (2) a reasonable suspicion that the individual is armed (thus justifying the frisk). Terry, 392
U.S. at 24; People v. Evans, 2017 IL App (4th) 140672, ¶ 34; see also United States v. Robinson,
846 F.3d 694, 698 (4th Cir. 2017) (en banc). We have just held that the second condition was
satisfied. Officer Ludwich had a reasonable suspicion that Respondent was armed. But it is
undisputed that the first condition is not present here. The State concedes that the officers did not
suspect Respondent of criminal wrongdoing when they first stopped him (that is, before Ludwich
got close to Respondent and saw the outline of the gun).
¶ 82 In the previous section of this opinion, we found the stop here constitutionally valid, as it
was a reasonable seizure based on the officer’s need to obtain information from a potential
witness to a homicide. Even absent reasonable suspicion of criminal wrongdoing, the officers
validly stopped Respondent. So the question becomes, during a valid but suspicionless seizure, if
an officer develops a reasonable suspicion that the detainee is armed, can he conduct a protective
search of that individual for weapons?
¶ 83 Initially, we note that the State, and some courts, have pointed to our supreme court’s
decision in Colyar, 2013 IL 111835, for the answer. In that case, officers approached individuals
in a vehicle that was blocking one of the entrances to a motel parking lot. Id. ¶¶ 6-7. Upon
approach and initial questioning, the officers saw a single, large bullet in a plastic bag on the
console of the vehicle. Id. ¶ 8. At that point, the officers ordered the occupants out of the car and
removed the plastic bag, finding additional large-round ammunition inside. Id. ¶ 9. They then
patted down the occupants and found another bullet in one of the detainees’ pockets, at which
point they cuffed the occupants, conducted a full search of the vehicle, and found a revolver. Id.
¶ 10. Our supreme court held that the search was valid, as the sighting of the bullet in plain view
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No. 1-17-0406
inside the automobile provided officers with a reasonable suspicion that one or more of the
vehicle’s occupants were armed. Id. ¶ 52.
¶ 84 The court in Evans, 2017 IL App (4th) 140672, ¶ 37, wrote that “[t]he Colyar decision is
significant because the original encounter between the officers and the citizens began as a
consensual encounter but escalated into a permissible Terry frisk after the police officers, during
the consensual encounter, developed reasonable suspicion the citizens may be armed and
dangerous.” (Emphases added.) The court in Evans thus held that, under Colyar, “police officers
need not have reasonable suspicion of criminal activity to conduct a Terry frisk for weapons
during a consensual encounter but, rather, need only have reasonable suspicion the citizen is
armed and potentially dangerous.” Id.
¶ 85 The court in People v. Slaymaker, 2015 IL App (2d) 130528, ¶ 18, cited Colyar for the
proposition that “an officer initially engaged in community caretaking may develop a reasonable
suspicion that the subject of the inquiry has a weapon” (emphasis added) and thus have sufficient
grounds to search for weapons.
¶ 86 We must respectfully disagree with these interpretations of Colyar, however, for the
initial encounter in Colyar was neither a consensual encounter nor a community-caretaking stop
unrelated to the investigation of crime. The supreme court made it clear, at least three separate
times in the majority opinion, that the initial encounter with the occupants of the vehicle was a
Terry stop. See Colyar, 2013 IL 111835, ¶ 41 (noting that parties conceded that defendant’s
initial encounter with police “was lawful under Terry”); ¶ 52 (“Following the initial lawful Terry
stop and the observation of the bullet in plain view,” officers justifiably developed reasonable
suspicion that gun was present in vehicle); and ¶ 58 (noting again that defendant conceded “that
this incident began as a proper Terry stop”). Justice Thomas, in his concurrence, likewise noted
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No. 1-17-0406
that the defendant had conceded that “this began as a proper Terry stop” and went further to
argue that, even absent that concession, the facts established sufficient indicators of criminal
activity to justify a Terry stop. Id. ¶¶ 68-69 (Thomas, J., concurring).
¶ 87 A consensual encounter does not implicate the fourth amendment because the individual
consents to questioning and is thus not seized. Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d at 544. A seizure under
the “community caretaking” function does not involve the investigation of crime at all. Id. at
548. Neither of those categories applies to Colyar’s facts. Colyar involved a Terry stop—an
investigatory detention based on officers’ reasonable, articulable suspicion that criminal activity
was afoot. See id. at 544. (“brief investigative detentions, or ‘Terry stops,’ *** must be
supported by a reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity”).
¶ 88 To be sure, there was a dispute among the justices in Colyar about whether the defendant
had, in fact, conceded that the encounter began as a valid Terry stop. The majority and the
concurrence believed that the defendant had so conceded. See Colyar, 2013 IL 111835, ¶¶ 41,
58; see also id. ¶ 68 (Thomas, J., concurring). The dissent believed that no such concession had
been made, further noting that the trial court had found the encounter to have been consensual.
Id. ¶¶ 79, 89-94. That dispute among the justices does not change our takeaway from the case.
The majority opinion considered the encounter to have begun as a valid Terry stop; in construing
that decision as precedent, we obviously must do so as well.
¶ 89 So Colyar does not answer our question. However much the justices disagreed on the
defendant’s concession in that case, ultimately the decision merely stands for the proposition
that, in the course of a valid Terry stop—that is, where officers have a reasonable suspicion of
criminal activity justifying an initial detention—officers may conduct a reasonable search for
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No. 1-17-0406
weapons if they develop a reasonable belief that one of the detainees is armed. Our question is
different.
¶ 90 Our question is whether, in the context of a suspicionless (but reasonable) seizure, the
later development of a reasonable suspicion that the detainee is armed justifies a patdown of that
individual. Though Justice Thomas pondered that very question in his concurrence (see id. ¶¶ 71-
77), the majority did not reach that question. We do so now.
¶ 91 We believe the answer is yes. In the course of detaining an individual during a
suspicionless but reasonable seizure, an officer may frisk the individual if the officer develops a
reasonable suspicion that the individual is armed.
¶ 92 We draw this conclusion from the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Arizona v. Johnson,
555 U.S. 323, 334 (2009), which held that the passenger of a stopped car, not himself suspected
of engaging in criminal behavior, could be patted down for weapons when officers developed a
reasonable suspicion that he was armed. There, officers stopped a car after a license-plate check
showed a suspended registration. Id. at 327. Inside the car were three individuals—a driver, a
front-seat passenger, and a back-seat passenger. Id. “In making the stop[,] the officers had no
reason to suspect anyone in the vehicle of criminal activity.” Id.
¶ 93 One officer instructed the driver to step out of the car. Id. at 328. Another officer
observed that the back-seat passenger—the defendant—was acting in a nervous and suspicious
manner, was dressed in a manner that suggested affiliation with a certain street gang, and had a
police scanner in his back pocket. Id. The officer talked to the defendant and learned some
information that furthered her suspicion that he might be a gang member and “might have a
weapon on him.” Id. She ordered the defendant out of the car, patted him down, and felt the butt
of a gun. Id.
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¶ 94 The Supreme Court noted that the stop was a Terry stop, as are most stops of cars on the
road. Id. at 330. But even if the police had reason to suspect that the driver of the car had
engaged in criminal activity—a traffic infraction—the Court acknowledged the obvious fact that
this suspicion did not extend to the passengers of the car. Id. at 331 (citing Maryland v. Wilson,
519 U.S. 408, 413 (1997), for same proposition).
¶ 95 The Supreme Court held, however, “[t]he police need not have, in addition, cause to
believe that any occupant of the vehicle is involved in criminal activity.” (Emphasis added.) Id.
at 327. As long as the officer had a reasonable suspicion that the passenger was armed, the
officer could frisk that individual even absent a pre-existing suspicion that the passenger was
engaged in criminal activity. Id.
¶ 96 Johnson controls the outcome here. When a car is pulled over for a traffic offense, the
passenger of the car is seized no less than the driver. Id. at 332; Brendlin v. California, 551 U.S.
249, 256-59 (2007). So the passenger in Johnson stood in the same shoes as Respondent here—
he was reasonably seized without individualized suspicion of criminal wrongdoing. Johnson
holds that if, in the course of such an encounter, the officer develops a reasonable suspicion that
the individual is armed, he may frisk the individual for weapons. It follows that, when Officer
Ludwich developed a reasonable suspicion that Respondent was armed, he was entitled to frisk
him for weapons.
¶ 97 The fact that Johnson involved a vehicle with multiple occupants, whereas this case
involves one person on a bike, does not suggest a different outcome. It is true that Johnson,
relying on previous decisions, noted the unique risks that vehicle stops pose to officers—the lack
of information about the occupants, the possibility they might employ violence to avoid detection
of other unknown criminal conduct, the ability to hide weapons in many places—risks that are
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multiplied by the number of the occupants inside. See, e.g., Johnson, 555 U.S. at 331 (noting that
“the risk of a violent encounter in a traffic-stop setting ‘stems not from the ordinary reaction of a
motorist stopped for a speeding violation, but from the fact that evidence of a more serious crime
might be uncovered during the stop’ ”) (quoting Wilson, 519 U.S. at 414); Michigan v. Long, 463
U.S. 1032, 1047 (1983) (noting that traffic stops are “especially fraught with danger to police
officers”); Pennsylvania v. Mimms, 434 U.S. 106, 110 (1977) (recognizing “the inordinate risk
confronting an officer as he approaches a person seated in an automobile”); Wilson, 519 U.S. at
413-414 (noting stop of vehicle with multiple passengers “increases the possible sources of harm
to the officer,” as “the motivation of a passenger to employ violence ... is every bit as great as
that of the driver”).
¶ 98 And we acknowledge that the stop of a single bicyclist does not pose the same risks, or at
least not to the same magnitude, as the stop of a car with multiple occupants. Occupants of a
vehicle are usually less visible to an officer than a bicyclist and have many more places to hide a
weapon within the car.
¶ 99 But if the risks are less in the context of a stop of a bicyclist, they are not eliminated
altogether. A bicyclist could have a weapon on his person, as Respondent did here. And bicycles
sometimes have compartments that could hide a weapon. But more importantly, once we reach
the point that an officer has developed a reasonable suspicion that the bicyclist is armed—as he
did here—any distinction between a biker and a car full of people breaks down. A weapon in the
hands of a bicyclist is no less a threat to officer safety than a weapon in the hands of a back-seat
passenger.
¶ 100 Our holding does not give carte blanche to officers to randomly stop whomever they
please and then, if they develop a suspicion that the individual is armed, to frisk that person. We
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emphasize that we have found here that officers had a valid, albeit suspicionless, basis for
seizing Respondent in the first instance—before Officer Ludwich approached Respondent and
observed the outline of a weapon in his jeans. That is no minor detail; without that valid basis for
the initial stop, without a reasonable seizure having first taken place, any resulting frisk or other
search would be invalid. Harris, 2011 IL App (1st) 103382, ¶ 17; Adams, 407 U.S. at 146 (“So
long as the officer is entitled to make a forcible stop, and has reason to believe that the suspect is
armed and dangerous, he may conduct a weapons search limited in scope to this protective
purpose.” (Emphasis added.)).
¶ 101 We also emphasize that our holding is limited to the context of this case: When officers
effect a suspicionless but reasonable seizure, they may conduct a protective patdown for
weapons if they have developed a reasonable suspicion that the individual they have seized is
armed.
¶ 102 We do not address here other types of suspicionless encounters with police—“consensual
encounters” (which are not seizures at all) or seizures effected pursuant to the non-investigatory
“community caretaking” function concerning public safety or assistance. See Luedemann, 222
Ill. 2d at 544-49. We express no opinion on whether our holding might vary in those other
contexts.
¶ 103 Respondent does not challenge the full search of Respondent that followed the frisk.
Recall that, upon frisking Respondent, Officer Ludwich’s suspicion that Respondent was armed
was confirmed (or at least enhanced), at which point the officer asked Respondent what was in
his pocket. Respondent admitted to having a gun. The officers then searched him and found the
gun in that very pocket. Respondent has challenged the initial stop as well as the frisk,
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unsuccessfully in our eyes, but does not challenge the actual search. Having found against him
on the arguments he has raised, we have no occasion to go further.
¶ 104 In sum, the officers seized Respondent when they stopped him in the middle of the street
on his bike. Their seizure was reasonable, in that they targeted Respondent for questioning as a
witness, not a suspect, in the most serious of crimes, a homicide. And once they had effected a
reasonable seizure and only then developed a reasonable suspicion that Respondent was armed,
the officers were entitled to conduct a protective patdown of Respondent for weapons.
¶ 105 D.
¶ 106 Respondent’s final contention regarding the trial court’s decision to deny his motion to
suppress is that the court abused its discretion when it sua sponte ordered him to produce his
jeans and examined the gun during the hearings on the State’s motion to reconsider. The State
responds that the trial court properly considered the size of the gun and the pants that Respondent
wore on the day of the incident to ensure that justice was done.
¶ 107 As noted earlier, the basis for the State’s motion to reconsider was that the court erred in
its application of the law, and that a police officer is not required to ask questions before
recovering a weapon. The State argued that the officer’s reasonable belief that Respondent was
armed was enough to allow for a protective frisk in the interest of officer safety.
¶ 108 In granting the State’s motion to reconsider, the court reasoned as follows:
“I think I made a mistake in this case in my application of the law to the
facts. It’s true that [Respondent] was not committing a crime. He was not doing
anything illegal. They were approaching him as a witness. But the officer testified
that based on his experience, he immediately knew it was a gun. He saw a gun in
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No. 1-17-0406
the pants pocket of [Respondent’s] jeans. And, you know, I was uncertain as to
the size. He said what the size was, but I wasn’t sure that a 22 caliber could be
that big. And now I see that it is.
He testified that it appeared to be a handgun, a silhouette of a handgun. He
knew that based on his experience. He was within four feet of [Respondent]. This
officer had been a police officer for 23 years. He’s recovered hundreds of
handguns. He was within four feet and getting closer when he saw this silhouette
of a handgun, and as soon as he tapped it, he knew what it was.
So I’m reversing my ruling.”
¶ 109 We review de novo the trial court’s ruling on a motion to reconsider that is based only on
the trial court’s application of existing law. People v. Pollitt, 2011 IL App (2d) 091247, ¶ 18.
When based on new information or argument on a different issue, we ask whether the trial
court’s reconsideration was an abuse of discretion. Id. As we have just held above, the State was
correct on the law—Respondent was not entitled to suppression of the gun from evidence. But
because the court relied on new facts, we apply an abuse-of-discretion standard. A trial court
abuses its discretion where it acts arbitrarily without the employment of conscientious judgment
or, in view of all the circumstances, exceeds the bounds of reason and ignores recognized
principles of law such that substantial prejudice results. Id.
¶ 110 Respondent claims that the trial court erred in reopening the proof without a motion from
the State. In requesting to view the pants Respondent wore at the time of the stop as well as the
gun recovered by police, the court, in Respondent’s view, “discarded its neutral robes and
became an advocate for the State.” And he insists that the trial court relied on a fact never
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introduced into evidence—that Respondent was wearing a certain kind of “skinny” jeans—in
reaching his conclusion. We reject each of these arguments.
¶ 111 First, trial courts have the inherent power to correct their previous rulings. People ex rel.
Daley v. Crilly, 108 Ill. 2d 301, 310 (1985). A court also has the authority to allow the State to
reopen its case, even without a motion from the State, including during a suppression hearing.
People v. Gonzalez-Carrera, 2014 IL App (2d) 130968, ¶ 21; People v. Kuntz, 239 Ill. App. 3d
587, 592 (1993) (“while motions to reopen are usually made by one of the parties, the court may
take such action on its own motion where a sound basis for the action appears in the record”).
¶ 112 Nor did the trial court assume the role of advocate. “As a general proposition it is never
improper for a judge to aid in bringing out the truth in a fair and impartial manner.” People v.
Franceschini, 20 Ill. 2d 126, 131-32 (1960). As the supreme court explained:
“ ‘It is the judge’s duty to see that justice is done, and where justice is liable to
fail because a certain fact has not been developed or a certain line of inquiry has
not been pursued it is his duty to interpose and either by suggestions to counsel or
an examination conducted by himself avoid the miscarriage of justice, but in so
doing he must not forget the function of the judge and assume that of the
advocate.’ ” Id. at 132. (quoting People v. Lurie, 276 Ill. 630, 641 (1917)).
¶ 113 In Franceschini, the defendant was convicted of burglary. Id. at 128. On appeal, he
argued that the trial court committed prejudicial error when, after both sides had rested and oral
argument had begun, the court suggested to the prosecutor that he put on evidence showing how
the burglar entered the apartment. Id. at 128, 131. Our supreme court disagreed. Id. at 132.
¶ 114 As the court explained: “It is in the sound discretion of the trial court whether a case may
be opened up for further evidence, and this discretion will not be interfered with except where it
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is clearly abused.” Id. The court determined that, where the trial judge merely remarked that he
had heard no evidence on the point and suggested that, if such evidence existed, it might be
offered at that time, the trial judge did not assume the function of an advocate. Id. The court
found no abuse of discretion. Id.
¶ 115 Here, the trial court wanted to see the gun and the pants to further test the credibility of
Officer Ludwich’s testimony that he was able to see the outline of the gun inside the pants
pocket. The pants could not be produced, but the gun was. That additional evidence could have
cut either way. It could have supported his previous skepticism of Ludwich’s testimony. Instead,
it had the opposite effect. The trial court stated that the gun was larger than it had originally
thought, lending credence to the officer’s testimony. But the fact that this new evidence hurt
rather than helped Respondent does not mean that the court was on an “activist mission to find
grounds to reverse.” It means the court was on a mission to uncover the truth.
¶ 116 Finally, Respondent claims that, when the pants could not be produced, the trial court
improperly “relied upon the officers’ off-the-record comment that [Respondent] was wearing
skinny jeans at his arrest to reverse itself,” what Respondent deems “improper fact-finding” that
“colored the court’s perception of the case throughout the proceedings.”
¶ 117 The record does not support that claim. The fact that the court wanted to view the pants
indicates to us that it did not have a pre-existing opinion about them. The court never stated
anything about Respondent’s jeans in his factual findings and legal conclusions when granting
the motion to reconsider. The court’s off-handed, wry comment that Respondent “could ‘wear
his skinny jeans to the appellate court’ ” does not convince us that we should disregard the
court’s factual findings and find error.
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¶ 118 The court did not abuse its discretion in reopening the proof, did not act as an advocate,
and did not improperly rely on information outside the evidentiary process.
¶ 119 For all of these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress.
¶ 120 II.
¶ 121 There are two remaining challenges in this appeal, one contested and one uncontested.
The contested challenge is to the sufficiency of the evidence as to one of the two adjudications of
delinquency for AUUW, the one regarding his possession of a firearm without a valid FOID
card. See 720 ILCS 5/24-1.6(a)(1), (a)(3)(C) (West 2016). Respondent does not challenge the
sufficiency of his other AUUW adjudication. See 720 ILCS 5/24-1.6(a)(1), (a)(3)(I) (West
2016). Nor does Respondent challenge his UPF adjudication on sufficiency grounds.
¶ 122 The other issue is uncontested. The parties agree that, based on the one-act, one-crime
doctrine, Respondent’s possession of one gun is subject to only one adjudication, not the three he
sustained. See People v. Johnson, 237 Ill. 2d 81, 97 (2010) (one-act, one-crime rule prohibits
multiple convictions “that are based upon precisely the same single physical act”). Under this
rule, if a defendant is convicted of more than one offense arising from the same single physical
act, the conviction for the less serious offense must be vacated. Id. The rule applies in juvenile
delinquency proceedings. See In re Samantha V., 234 Ill. 2d 359, 375 (2009).
¶ 123 The parties also agree that all three offenses are class 4 felonies with the same
punishments, and thus it is impossible to differentiate which of these offenses is the more
serious. Cf. 720 ILCS 5/24-1.6(d)(1) (West 2016) with 720 ILCS 5/24-3.1(b) (West 2016). Thus,
the parties agree that, rather than remand this matter to the trial court to determine which offense
is the most serious—an impossible task—this court should vacate and merge the UPF and one of
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the AUUW convictions into the other AUUW adjudication. See, e.g., People v. Price, 221 Ill. 2d
182, 194 (2006) (supreme court vacated one of two theft convictions rather than remand to trial
court, where punishments were same and where defendant “expressed no preference” for which
of two to vacate); People v. Gordon, 378 Ill. App. 3d 626, 642 (2007) (where three DUI
convictions were equally serious, merging two convictions with third conviction without remand
to trial court).
¶ 124 We agree with the parties that the UPF adjudication, and one of the AUUW
adjudications, should be vacated and merged into the second AUUW adjudication. The parties
have expressed no preference as to which of the AUUW adjudications to vacate. Legally, it
makes no difference to Respondent.
¶ 125 So we will vacate and merge the UPF adjudication and the AUUW adjudication premised
on section 24-1.6(a)(1), (a)(3)(C) (regarding the lack of a FOID card) into the remaining AUUW
adjudication under section 24-1.6(a)(1), (a)(3)(I). Thus, it is unnecessary to reach the question of
whether Respondent was proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of violating section 24-
1.6(a)(1), (a)(3)(C). Rather than reverse that conviction, as Respondent requests, we will vacate
it—for all practical purposes the same relief, but based on the one-act, one-crime rule.
¶ 126 III.
¶ 127 We affirm Respondent’s adjudication of delinquency for AUUW under section 24-
1.6(a)(1), (a)(3)(I) of the Criminal Code of 2012. We vacate Respondent’s remaining
adjudications under the one-act, one-crime rule.
¶ 128 Affirmed in part, vacated in part.
¶ 129 JUSTICE McBRIDE specially concurs.
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¶ 130 Although I agree with the decision to affirm the circuit court’s denial of the respondent’s
motion to suppress, I do not agree that respondent was seized when the police officers stopped
their vehicle to question him as a possible witness to a homicide.
¶ 131 As I will discuss below, this case presents circumstances notably different from the
majority of search and seizure cases because respondent here was not the subject of police
suspicion when he was approached by the officers. The officers’ purpose in engaging with
respondent was not to gain information about respondent, but to have a conversation with him
regarding information he could provide about an unrelated murder investigation.
¶ 132 As our supreme court has recognized, “the law clearly provides that a police officer does
not violate the fourth amendment merely by approaching a person in public to ask questions if
the person is willing to listen.” People v. Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d 530, 549 (2006). Law
enforcement officers may approach persons on the street or in public places to seek their
cooperation or assistance, or to request or impart information, without being required to
articulate a certain level of suspicion to justify that encounter. Therefore, a police officer may
approach a person to inquire about witnessing a crime, if that person is willing to talk to the
officer. Likewise, police officers in their investigative capacity do not run afoul of the
constitution by approaching and asking citizens to assist them in solving crimes.
¶ 133 To determine whether and when a person is seized, we must examine the circumstances
surrounding the encounter. Id. A person has been considered seized only when considering the
totality of the circumstances presented, a reasonable person would believe that he or she was not
free to leave. Mendenhall, 446 U.S. at 554. When considering whether an encounter between the
police and a minor was consensual, as in this case, the standard will be modified to take the
minor’s age and other relevant factors into account. In re Elijah W., 2017 IL App (1st) 162648,
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¶¶ 27, 32. On a motion to suppress, respondent, as the movant, bears the burden of proof that the
search and seizure were unlawful. People v. Fields, 2014 IL App (1st) 130209, ¶ 18.
¶ 134 The supreme court has stated that the following factors would be indicative of a seizure:
(1) the threatening presence of several officers, (2) the display of a weapon by an officer, (3)
some physical touching of the person, or (4) the use of language or tone compelling the
individual to comply with the officer’s request. Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d at 553. In the language of
our supreme court,
“the absence of [these] factors, while not necessarily conclusive, is highly
instructive. If those factors are absent, that means that only one or two officers
approached the defendant, they displayed no weapons, they did not touch the
defendant, and they did not use any language or tone of voice indicating that
compliance with their requests was compelled. Obviously, a seizure is much less
likely to be found when officers approach a person in such an inoffensive
manner.” Id. at 554.
¶ 135 With these concepts in mind, we turn to the circumstances provided by this case. The
testimony presented at the pretrial hearing came not from respondent, but from a single witness,
Chicago Police Officer Ludwich, who testified that he and his partner, Officer Rottman, were
patrolling in an unmarked car and looking for respondent, whom they believed to be a potential
witness to a homicide. The officers did not know the respondent, but they had his name and a
photograph, and they were aware that he was about 17 years old and that he lived in the area they
were patrolling. The officers were looking for respondent with the specific purpose of asking
him if he would be willing to come to the police station to provide information as a possible
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witness. Officer Ludwich testified, however, that he had no intention of bringing respondent into
the station unless he agreed.
¶ 136 When the officers saw respondent on a bicycle and determined that he appeared to match
the photograph they had of the potential witness, they stopped their vehicle directly east and
some 10 feet ahead of the path of respondent to confirm his identity by name. The officers—who
were not in uniform but were wearing vests, identifying badges, and name tags—stepped out of
their vehicle. Officer Rottman asked respondent what his name was, and respondent replied that
his name was Tyreke H. Respondent was described as “cooperative,” and there was no evidence
of a tone or language compelling the respondent to stop, and no evidence of physical touching or
contact with Respondent at the time the officers initially approached.
¶ 137 Respondent was standing near the vehicle’s driver’s side door when Officer Ludwich saw
a “bulge” of what appeared to be the “silhouette” of a gun in respondent’s right front pants
pocket. Moments later, the officer touched the object on the outside of respondent’s clothing.
The touching was described as a “tap” of respondent’s pants pocket, and the officer inquired:
“What’s this?” Respondent acknowledged that it was a gun. Officer Ludwich testified that he
then conducted a protective pat down, with respondent’s hands on the driver’s side of the car,
and respondent was not free to leave.
¶ 138 The above described facts were undisputed, and respondent provided no contrary
testimony of any kind surrounding the circumstances of the events leading up to his arrest.
¶ 139 Considering all of the factors in light of the testimony presented at the hearing on
respondent’s motion to suppress, the totality of the circumstances surrounding the officers’
encounter with respondent, which the trial court heard and accepted as credible, supports only
one conclusion—that respondent was not seized when the officer parked the squad car and
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walked up to respondent on the street. Like the hypothetical posed in Luedemann, which the
supreme court described as an “inoffensive” approach that would be unlikely to constitute a
seizure, the approach of respondent in this case involved “only one or two officers ***, [who]
displayed no weapons, *** did not touch [respondent], and *** did not use any language or tone
of voice indicating that compliance with their requests was compelled.” See Luedemann, 222 Ill.
2d at 554.
¶ 140 Instead, it was only after the officers approached respondent for the sole purpose of
asking him to accompany them to the police station as a potential witness, that Officer Ludwich
made observations that immediately established a reasonable, articulable suspicion that
respondent was armed with a firearm. Because of that reasonable, articulable suspicion, the
officer inquired further, tapping on respondent’s pocket and asking him what the object was.
Based upon respondent’s admission that the object was a gun, and upon the plain feel the officer
had after tapping on the hard metallic object he believed was a gun, the officer properly
recovered the weapon. Accordingly, the officer had a proper basis for a Terry stop, where “a
totality of the circumstances reasonably lead the officer to conclude that criminal activity may be
afoot and the subject is armed and dangerous.” People v. Colyar, 2013 IL 111835, ¶ 32 (citing
Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 30 (1968)).
¶ 141 To support his claim that he was immediately seized when the police car came to a stop,
respondent relies primarily upon the Thomas decision. He repeatedly argues that the officers
seized him because they “blocked his path,” and “forced [him] to bring his bike to a stop to avoid
hitting the car.” Respondent contends that officers’ actions here “are identical to the officers’
actions in Thomas. The majority agrees that the Thomas decision is “squarely applicable” (see
supra ¶ 38) because respondent “was halted in the middle of the road by a vehicle that abruptly
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cut off his path of travel, with two officers immediately emerging from the car to address him”
(see supra ¶ 41). I disagree. I find nothing in the record that would support respondent’s
characterization of the events leading up to his interaction with the officers. In my opinion, the
majority’s holding, which relies upon the respondent’s unfounded representations, is
unsupported by any testimony in the record. In fact, defense counsel in the pretrial proceedings
did not even argue that the police officers blocked defendant’s path with their squad car. Counsel
argued that this was “a case of actually everyone doing what they’re supposed to be doing”—that
the police officers “were there to look for [respondent]” and that respondent was “cooperative
with them.” Counsel’s position was that there was no basis for the officer’s belief that the bulge
was a gun and that defendant was seized when the officers “put [defendant] on the police car
where he clearly would not have been able to leave.”
¶ 142 Because counsel never argued that respondent was seized by the officers by stopping
their squad car in his path of travel, the record is not properly developed for a review of this
issue. The evidence elicited on how and where respondent came to a stop is scant, and the
majority’s decision to call this a seizure based on the limited record, expands Thomas beyond its
envisioned parameters.
¶ 143 Based upon the circumstances testified to here, it is my opinion that these officers never
blocked or physically positioned their vehicle to stop the forward path of respondent so that he
had nowhere else to go but into the police vehicle. Although there was testimony that the police
vehicle stopped near respondent, there was no evidence in the record that would support a
finding that the police car was pulled or turned in front of respondent’s bicycle. Instead, the
record shows that when the police vehicle was stopped, it was east and some ten feet in front of
respondent. Officer Ludwich testified that when the vehicle was stopped, respondent rode his
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bicycle right towards the driver’s side of the officers’ vehicle. He also testified that he walked
around the back of the car, and continued around to the driver’s side where respondent was
located across from and near his partner, Officer Rottman. This testimony, in my opinion, further
demonstrates that the path of respondent was not blocked by the police vehicle because
respondent was not directly behind, but was alongside, the vehicle when Officer Ludwich
approached him.
¶ 144 Unlike the circumstances presented here, the Thomas decision involved a police officer’s
clear effort to physically block and attempt to stop an individual riding on a bicycle by
positioning the police squad directly “across” the defendant’s path of travel. People v. Thomas,
198 Ill. 2d 103, 106 (2001). At the time the officer attempted the stop, the defendant was riding
his bicycle while holding a police scanner. The officer suspected defendant was delivering drugs
from his bicycle, but admitted that he had no actual information that defendant was carrying
illegal drugs on the night in question, and conceded that it was not illegal for the defendant to
possess a scanner. Id. at 107. The officer radioed another officer to inform him of his intention to
stop the defendant. The officer then “overtook the defendant, passed him by, and positioned his
squad car across the defendant’s path of travel,” at which time, the defendant fled down an
alleyway. People v. Thomas, 315 Ill. App. 3d 849, 851 (2000).
¶ 145 Before reaching its ultimate holding, the supreme court pointed out that the officer’s
intent was to stop, detain, and interrogate the defendant based solely upon a suspicion that fell far
short of warranting any stop. Although the supreme court concluded the police officer’s
attempted road block would have been an unconstitutional seizure had the defendant submitted
to the police authority, it went on to hold that the defendant’s flight gave rise to a suspicion that
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justified investigatory stop and the subsequent police conduct in forcibly arresting the defendant
was not constitutionally infirm.
¶ 146 The Thomas decision fails to support the analysis used by the majority to reach its
conclusion as to when the seizure occurred in this case. Contrary to respondent’s contentions,
there was no testimony during these proceedings that respondent was forced to bring his bike to a
stop to avoid hitting the police car or that the car was pulled into respondent’s path. In fact, there
was no testimony at all at the hearing on the motion to suppress as to when respondent got off his
bicycle, or how or where he came to a stop.
¶ 147 As the majority recognizes, the Thomas court described the officer’s actions in the
following way:
“Officer Melton was not trying to engage in the kind of personal intercourse
between police officers and citizens that falls short of a seizure. He was trying to
effect a forceful stop and detention.
***
Officer Melton maneuvered his squad car to effect an abrupt stop of a moving
vehicle by cutting off the path ahead. This was clearly an effort to effect an
investigatory stop and detention.
*** Officer Melton sped past the defendant, made a sudden veer at a right
angle to the defendant’s travel route, and deployed his squad car in a manner
designed to cut off the defendant’s roadway.” Supra ¶ 35
¶ 148 The officer’s actions in Thomas, as described above, are nothing like the circumstances
of this case. The officers here were not “trying to effect a forceful stop and detention.” The only
evidence regarding the officers’ intentions showed that they were seeking to have a conversation
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with respondent as a potential witness to an unrelated crime, and that, if respondent did not
consent to that interaction, he would have been free to leave. There was also no testimony that
the officers “maneuvered [the] squad car to effect an abrupt stop of [respondent’s bicycle] by
cutting off the path ahead.” To the contrary, the record shows that the officers were patrolling the
area and using a photograph to try to identify and locate respondent, whom they did not know.
This evidence demonstrates that the officer was not driving the police vehicle at a high rate of
speed and instead was driving slowly and deliberately while attempting to make an
identification. Likewise, there is also no evidence to show that the officers made a “sudden veer
at a[n] *** angle” to respondent’s travel route, “cut[ting] off [his] roadway.” Instead, the
testimony from Officer Ludwich established only that the officers parked 10 or so feet in front,
and to the east, of respondent, as he was bicycling in the same direction.
¶ 149 If the record in this case showed that the officers here had “sped past” respondent, and
“made a sudden veer” of the squad car, “maneuver[ing] [it] to effect an abrupt stop” of the
respondent’s bicycle, I would not hesitate to find that a seizure occurred. However, this is not
such a case.
¶ 150 In sum, to conclude that a person is immediately “seized” when a police officer stops his
vehicle 10 feet in front of that person on a public street for the purpose of inquiring of that
person as a potential witness to a crime is not supported by well-settled precedent that allows the
police to approach a person in public and ask questions if the person is willing to listen. See
Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d at 549. Because these are essentially the only factual circumstances that
were revealed at the suppression hearing, and there is no evidence showing that officer’s blocked
respondent’s movement, I cannot agree that a seizure occurred when they initially encountered
respondent.
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¶ 151 For these reasons, and not the analysis adopted by the majority, I would affirm the circuit
court’s order denying respondent’s motion to suppress.
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