People v. Jenkins

J. T. Corden, J.

The defendants, Michael Jenkins, Danny Joiner, and Wendell Sherrer, were charged with carrying a concealed weapon, MCL 750.227; MSA 28.424. Two pistols were found in a car occupied by the defendants. Before trial, the defendants moved to suppress the pistols and a pretrial hearing was held. The trial judge held that the search of the car occupied by the defendants was illegal and that the pistols had to be suppressed as the fruit of the illegal search. The charges against the defendants were dismissed. The people appeal as a matter of right.

A clear picture of the facts leading up to the defendants’ arrest in this case is essential. On September 15, 1978, at 12:30 a.m., the defendants pulled into the Troy Drive-In Theatre, located on Maple Road, just west of the 1-75 overpass. The manager of the drive-in told the defendants that the drive-in was closed. The defendants left the drive-in and pulled into the parking lot of a restaurant next to the drive-in. The manager thought he saw someone get out of the car and move toward the drive-in property and he contacted the Troy Police Department.

The two Troy police officers responding to the call were on the look out for a "smaller type” blue *393or light blue car occupied by three back men. They observed a similar car pull out of the restaurant parking lot onto Maple Road, and they followed the vehicle. The car stopped in the middle of the road and two black men ran out from a wooded field next to the drive-in and entered the car. The car drove off, followed by the police. One of the police officers testified that the back-seat passenger was moving around, looked back toward the officers two or three times, and that he then ducked down out of the officer’s sight for a few seconds. The front-seat passenger also briefly bent down out of the sight of the officers.

The police officers stopped the car. The driver, defendant Jenkins, got out of the car and walked back toward the police car. The other two defendants remained seated in the car. One of the officers testified that Jenkins seemed extremely nervous. Jenkins got back into the car after talking to the police. One of the officers went to the car and talked to the back-seat passenger, Danny Joiner, for five to ten minutes. Joiner sat with his left leg across the seat, his right leg on the floor, and his arm on top of the seat. The other officer talked with Jenkins and with Sherrer, who remained seated in the front passenger seat.

Meanwhile, two other Troy police officers arrived on the scene. The original two officers compared the stories that the defendants had told them and realized that the stories conflicted. They ordered the defendants out of the car and placed them at the rear of their car where they were watched by the other Troy police officers. One of the officers entered the defendants’ car and searched the back-seat area. He ran his hand along the crease in the back seat and pulled out a small pistol. He also saw a newspaper sticking out *394from under the front seat. When he pulled the newspaper, a loaded revolver fell out. The defendants were arrested for carrying concealed weapons.

At the preliminary examination, the officer who searched the defendants’ car testified that he had no information prior to the search that a crime had been committed or was about to be committed. When he entered the car he did not know what he would find, but he thought the defendants had something like weapons or contraband inside the car. At the preliminary examination, the defendants moved for suppression of the evidence, but the district court magistrate denied the motion and bound the defendants over for trial. The motion to suppress was renewed before the trial judge before trial. The trial judge found that there was no probable cause to search the car and that the search was not a protective search for weapons. The pistols were suppressed as evidence and the charges against the defendants were dismissed.

On appeal, the prosecution does not contend that the police had probable cause to search or that the seizure was proper under a plain view theory. Rather, it is argued that the police had a right to conduct a limited protective search of the car based on their reasonable concern for their personal safety.

In People v Rosales, 406 Mich 624; 281 NW2d 126 (1979), cert den 444 US 1025; 100 S Ct 689; 62 L Ed 2d 659 (1980), our Supreme Court held that, when the record does not show that the search was prompted by the officer’s fear of violence while pursuing his investigation, Terry v Ohio1 does not provide authority to validate the search without a warrant. The issue to be resolved in this case, *395therefore, is whether the record shows that the police officer who searched the defendants’ car did so out of a fear for his own safety. Despite the prosecution’s efforts to distinguish the factual situation in People v Rosales, supra, we find the factual setting of the search in this case to be nearly identical in every way relevant to the determination of the police officers’ fear of violence.

In Rosales, a police officer was informed at roll call that a young black man, who had been arrested for the robbery of an "after hours” place, had escaped. The man was described as being 5'8" tall with a dark complexion. Later, the police officer saw a young black man sitting in the passenger’s seat of a van parked in front of a building where an "after hours” place was run. The defendant therein was sitting in the driver’s seat. As the officer approached the van, the defendant moved in a manner that made it appear that "something was going on in the middle section of where his body was”. The officer asked the defendant to step out of the van. He found a gun concealed under the carpeting of the vehicle. At the preliminary examination the officer testified that he was sure that there was a gun in the van by the movements of the defendant, by the way the van was illegally parked so as to block the entrance of the building, and by the fact that there had been numerous robberies of "after hours” places. The Supreme Court found that nothing in the record suggested that the police officer was acting in order to protect himself.

We reach a similar conclusion in this case and find that the pistols were properly suppressed. The prosecution stresses the police officers’ observations of "furtive movements” by the occupants of *396the car, especially by the passenger in the rear seat, defendant Joiner, while the car was being followed. One of the officers testified at the preliminary examination that he did not know what the defendants had in the car, but that he thought they had something like contraband or weapons. Yet, despite their suspicions, the police officers allowed the driver, defendant Jenkins, to return to the car after he had spoken to them. Furthermore, both officers stood at the car and spoke to the defendants for five to ten minutes. At that point they apparently did not have any fear for their safety. The prosecution points out the strange physical position maintained by defendant Joiner during the conversation with the police. Joiner sat on the right side of the back seat with his left leg extended across the seat. This strange position, however, did not trigger an immediate protective search by the police. It was only after the police compared the stories given by the defendants and found that they were inconsistent that they investigated further.

We find that the facts show that the police were not motivated by fear for their own safety, but rather by a desire to find evidence of criminal activity. We are not unmindful of the fact that the defendants were behaving in a very suspicious manner. Yet this search would be proper only if the suspicious nature of their behavior suggested that the police officers were in danger while they made this preliminary investigation. The police officers’ behavior at the time of the stop does not support a finding that they believed they were in danger. At this juncture, Rosales, supra, applies and is controlling.

Further, the information the officers received subsequent to their five- to ten-minute discussion with the defendants does not make it more likely *397that the defendants were dangerous at that time, although it does buttress the police officers’ suspicion that the defendants may have been involved in criminal activity. The prosecution concedes, however, that their suspicion did not rise to the level of probable cause. Absent probable cause, any further search by the police was improper.

We affirm the lower court’s suppression of the pistols and its dismissal of the charges against the defendants.

Affirmed.

T. M. Burns, J., concurred.

392 US 1; 88 S Ct 1868; 20 L Ed 2d 889 (1968).