THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
STATE OF DELAWARE, )
)
v. ) ID No. 2105007121
)
LOUIS KENT )
)
Defendant. )
Submitted: August 31, 2022
Decided: October 7, 2022
MEMORANDUM ORDER
On this 7th day of October 2022, upon consideration of Defendant, Louis
Kent’s (“Defendant”) Motion to Suppress Evidence (“Motion”), 1 the State’s
Response, 2 testimony and evidence adduced at a suppression hearing, 3 and the
parties’ supplemental briefing, 4 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant’s
Motion is DENIED for the following reasons:
I. Factual and Procedural History
1. On May 14, 2021, Wilmington Police Department officers Justin Wilkers
and Logan Crumlish, observed a black Chrysler 300 with “heavy window tint,”
1
D.I. 14.
2
D.I. 20.
3
The Court held a two-day suppression hearing on June 24 and July 13, 2022. This Order will
cite to the hearing transcripts as “June 24 Hr’g. Tr. at [page number]” and “July 13 Hr’g. Tr. at
[page number],” respectively.
4
D.Is. 32, 33.
driven by Defendant. The vehicle came to a stop at the intersection of 7th and
Monroe Streets, and then “abruptly pull[ed] off from the stop at a high rate of speed,”
endangering a mother and child who were crossing the street. 5 Officer Wilkers
testified that the near collision with the pedestrian was what initially drew his
attention to the vehicle. He however recalled that he had seen the vehicle in the area
before, because it had a dealer tag which made it “stand out.”6
2. The officers stopped Defendant’s vehicle at the 700 block of North
Madison Street. 7 Officer Wilkers asked about the status of the vehicle’s registration
due to the dealer tag. Defendant was unable to provide proper registration
documents for the vehicle.8 Officer Wilkers testified that he smelled the odor of
unburnt marijuana immediately upon his approach to Defendant’s vehicle.9 Officer
Wilkers also testified that he asked Defendant if there was illegal contraband in the
vehicle, and Defendant replied “Yeah, there’s some weed in the car. I smoke
5
June 24 Hr’g. Tr. at 13. Defendant testified that he accelerated at a normal speed, at about 15-
20 mph, after stopping at the intersection, and denied that he endangered anyone in the street. July
13 Hr’g. Tr. at 43. Defendant also produced witnesses that corroborated his testimony. See June
24 Hr’g. Tr. at 116-18.
6
June 24 Hr’g. Tr. at 13.
7
Officer Wilkers testified that, by the time they caught up with Defendant’s vehicle, Defendant
was already parked and in the process of exiting the vehicle. The officers then ordered Defendant
back into the car. Id. at 19.
8
Id. at 28-29. According to Officer Wilkers, Defendant told him the vehicle was owned by a
dealership of which Defendant was an employee. Defendant also stated to Officer Wilkers that
the car was purchased with a salvage title and was in the process of being repaired. Id.
9
Id. at 20.
2
weed.”10 Defendant denies making that statement. Defendant testified that he was
asked by the officer whether there was marijuana in his car, but he replied “no”.11
3. Officer Wilkers directed Defendant out of the vehicle to perform a search
of his person. Officer Wilkers testified that at this point Defendant became
“extremely argumentative” and “verbally combative.”12 Defendant refused to exit
the car and indicated he needed to call his attorney.13 Officer Wilkers also observed
that Defendant was “extremely nervous” began stuttering and was evasive when
answering questions.14
4. Defendant eventually complied with the officer’s order after talking to his
attorney on the phone and exited the vehicle. The officers did a pat-down search of
Defendant and recognized a handgun magazine in Defendant’s waistband area.15
Officer Wilkers testified that at this point Defendant began to look up and around as
if looking for an escape route.16 Officer Wilkers placed his taser against Defendant
10
Id. at 29.
11
July 13 Hr’g. Tr. at 47.
12
June 24 Hr’g. Tr. at 29.
13
Id. Officer Wilkers testified that the situation struck him as “odd,” based on his thirteen years
of experience, because Defendant initially had no issues exiting the car before the officers
approached him and later refused to do so. Id. at 29-30.
14
Id. at 30.
15
Id. at 31. Officer Wilkers initiated a pat-down but, due to the growing crowd, quickly passed
Defendant off to officer Crumlish who conducted a more thorough pat-down.
16
Id.
3
and Defendant remained compliant.17 Officer Crumlish removed from Defendant a
black in color, 9mm Polymer80 semiautomatic handgun that contained an extended
magazine, an obliterated serial number and 13 live rounds of ammunition.18 The
officers took Defendant into custody and transported him back to the police station.
Defendant granted written consent to search the vehicle, and a plastic bag containing
26 grams of marijuana was located on the front passenger seat. 19 In addition to the
firearm, cash worth $2,714 of U.S. Dollars was found on Defendant’s person.20
5. On July 21, 2021, Defendant was indicted on the charges of Possession of
a Firearm by a Person Prohibited, Possession of Ammunition by a Person Prohibited,
Possession of a Weapon with a Removed, Obliterated or Altered Serial Number,
Carrying a Concealed Deadly Weapon, Drug Dealing, Drag Racing and Other Speed
Contests, Operation of an Unregistered Motor Vehicle, and Operation of a Vehicle
with Noncompliant Window Tinting.
6. On May 31, 2022, Defendant filed this Motion to exclude from use at trial
all evidence seized from Defendant and his vehicle, including all statements that he
made. The State filed a Response on June 21, 2022. The Court held a suppression
17
Id.
18
Id.
19
Id. at 32.
20
Id. at 31.
4
hearing on June 24 and July 13, 2022. Thereafter, the Court requested supplemental
briefing from the parties which was submitted on August 31, 2022. This matter is
now ripe for the Court’s consideration and decision.
II. Parties’ Contentions
7. Defendant contends that the purported reason for the traffic stop – a rapid
acceleration of the vehicle which placed a woman and child in danger – is refuted
by credible evidence provided by multiple eyewitnesses. In addition, even if the
traffic stop is deemed valid, Defendant argues that the pat-down search was illegal
because there was no reasonable, articulable suspicion to believe that Defendant was
involved in criminal activity or that Defendant was armed or presented an immediate
danger to the officers.
8. The State argues that the initial traffic stop and subsequent detention and
pat-down were valid under the totality of the circumstances. Specifically, the State
points to the police testimony that: (i) Defendant drove his vehicle erratically, which
endangered a mother and child, (ii) Defendant did not have a tint waiver, despite
having heavy tint, and (iii) Defendant did not have a valid registration, all of which
together provided reasonable suspicion of a traffic violation which justified the
traffic stop. The State contends that the pat-down was justified by: (i) the smell of
raw marijuana, (ii) Defendant’s admission of possession of marijuana, (iii)
5
Defendant’s nervous and combative behavior, and (iv) officer Wilkers’ pre-existing
knowledge of Defendant’s criminal record.
III. Standard of Review
9. Superior Court Criminal Rule 12(b)(2) permits a defendant to file a motion
to suppress evidence prior to trial.21 “On a Motion to Suppress, the State bears the
burden of establishing that the challenged police conduct comported with the rights
guaranteed [the defendant] by the United States Constitution, the Delaware
Constitution, and Delaware statutory law.”22 The burden of proof on a motion to
suppress is by a preponderance of the evidence.23
IV. Analysis
A. The traffic stop of Defendant’s vehicle was valid.
10. “Police may stop and detain a motorist whom they reasonably suspect of
criminal activity, which includes violation of our traffic laws.”24 “A determination
of reasonable suspicion must be evaluated in the context of the totality of the
circumstances as viewed through the eyes of a reasonable, trained police officer in
21
Super. Ct. Crim. R. 12(b)(2). Defendant sought and was granted leave to file his Motion to
Suppress out of time.
22
State v. Kang, 2001 WL 1729126, at *3 (Del. Super. Nov. 30, 2001) (internal citation omitted).
23
Id. (internal citation omitted).
24
Houston v. State, 251 A.3d 102, 108-109 (Del. 2021) (internal citation omitted).
6
the same or similar circumstances, combining objective facts with such an officer’s
subjective interpretation of those facts.” 25 “In determining whether there was
reasonable suspicion to justify a detention, the court defers to the experience and
training of law enforcement officers.”26
11. The record in this case demonstrates that the officers were parked at the
corner of 7th and Monroe Streets when Defendant’s vehicle pulled up to the stop
sign on Monroe Street. The officers observed the dark tint and dealer tag on
Defendant’s vehicle, which gave rise to a reasonable suspicion of a violation of 21
Del. C. § 4313 and 2 Del. Admin. Code § 2277. In addition, the officers observed
that Defendant abruptly accelerated his vehicle from the stop sign at a high rate of
speed and almost struck a mother and child who were crossing the street. This
created a reasonable suspicion of a violation of 21 Del. C. § 4175 and/or 21 Del. C.
§ 4175A.
12. At the hearing, Defendant attempted to isolate the reason for the stop to
the near collision with the pedestrian and discredit that reason as untrue. Defendant
argues that, although the officers noticed the heavy window tint and dealer tag on
Defendant’s vehicle, the actual reason they cited for their stop of Defendant’s
25
Jones v. State, 745 A.2d 856, 861 (Del. 1999) (internal citations omitted).
26
Flowers v. State, 195 A.3d 18, 27 (Del. 2018) (internal citation omitted).
7
vehicle was the near collision with the pedestrian.27 However, there can be multiple
bases for which an officer stops an individual, any one of which could give the
officer reasonable suspicion to stop. Here, even though the officers articulated the
near collision as the basis for the stop, they could have validly stopped and
questioned Defendant based solely on the heavy tint and/or dealer tag.
13. Moreover, the Court finds the officers’ testimony regarding Defendant’s
excessive acceleration and near collision with the pedestrian to be credible. The
Defendant’s testimony diverges from the officers’ testimony on this issue.
Defendant denied that he accelerated at a high rate of speed and called several
witnesses in an attempt to corroborate his testimony. Specifically, Defendant called
Sharnagia Watson as the woman who was allegedly almost struck by Defendant’s
vehicle. She testified that Defendant did not drive abruptly when pulling off from
the stop sign, and that she was not in the street at that time or in any way endangered
by Defendant’s vehicle.28 The officers contend that Ms. Watson was not the woman
that was almost struck by Defendant’s vehicle. 29 Officer Crumlish testified that the
woman on the date in question was taller and thinner and when he saw Ms. Watson,
27
See June 24 Hr’g. Tr. at 16.
28
July 13 Hr’g. Tr. at 32.
29
Defendant contends that Officer Wilkers can be heard, in a cell phone video of him questioning
Defendant at the scene, mentioning Ms. Watson by name as the victim. Def.’s Mot. to Suppress,
Ex. 1. After review of the cell phone video, the Court does not hear any of the officers refer to
Ms. Watson by name.
8
it “did not bring [to him] any memory at all.”30 Officer Wilkers also testified that
Ms. Watson’s physical appearance and stature was “totally inconsistent” with the
female that was crossing the street that day.31
14. The Court sits as the finder of fact at a pretrial suppression hearing and
determines witness credibility.32 The Court finds the officers’ testimony concerning
the basis for the stop to be credible. The officers could have easily invoked
Defendant’s heavily tinted vehicle as the basis for the stop. Because Defendant
failed to provide a valid tint waiver33, this would have objectified the validity of the
stop and obviated any need to engage in an assessment of credibility. Instead, the
officers testified that while they noticed the heavy tint on Defendant’s vehicle, the
impetus for which they initiated the stop was his abrupt acceleration and near
collision with a woman and her child. It is highly unlikely that the officers would
fabricate such a story, particularly because they had a bulletproof justification for
the stop if they needed one. For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that the stop
of Defendants’ vehicle was based upon reasonable, articulable suspicion.
B. The pat-down search was justified by reasonable suspicion that
Defendant was engaged in criminal activity and might be armed.
30
July 13 Hr’g. Tr. at 72.
31
Id. at 80.
32
Turner v. State, 957 A.2d 565, 571 (Del. 2008).
33
See June 24 Hr’g. Tr. at 73.
9
15. The Court next considers the validity of the pat-down search of
Defendant. Police officers may conduct a Terry stop and frisk when they have
“reasonable, articulable suspicion that a suspect is armed and engaged in criminal
activity.”34 “A Terry stop must be limited, justified at its inception, and ‘reasonably
related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first
place.”35 The form of search deemed reasonable under these circumstances is also
limited to “a ‘frisk’ or pat down to find weapons.”36
16. The Court finds that the officers had reasonable suspicion that Defendant
was engaged in criminal activity before they conducted the pat-down search. Here,
Defendant first failed to produce a valid title or registration to the vehicle. Officer
Wilkers testified that, upon approaching Defendant’s vehicle, he “immediately”
smelled the odor of unburned marijuana. When asked by Officer Wilkers whether
there was any illegal contraband in his vehicle, Defendant answered in the
affirmative and further stated “I smoke weed.” In addition to the odor and admission
of possession of marijuana, Defendant displayed nervous and pugnacious behavior,
refused to comply with the officers’ commands, and took a flight stance after exiting
34
Flowers, 195 A.3d at 23 (internal citations omitted).
35
Id. at 25 (internal citations omitted).
36
Id. at 26 (citing Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 26 (1968)).
10
the car. Considering all of these pertinent factors, the Court finds that reasonable
suspicion of criminal activity was established under the totality of the circumstances.
17. Defendant relied upon State v. Juliano, 37 arguing that the smell of
marijuana is an insufficient basis to establish reasonable suspicion of criminal
activity. In Juliano, a juvenile was placed under arrest and subjected to a warrantless
search of her person at the scene, after the police officer detected a strong odor of
marijuana emanating from the vehicle and from the place where the juvenile sat.38
The Delaware Supreme Court held that the odor of marijuana alone, without any
other observations, did not provide the required probable cause for the arrest and
search of the juvenile.39
18. This case is distinguishable from Juliano in several respects. First, in
Juliano, the juvenile was placed under arrest before any search was conducted, and
the issue before the Court was whether probable cause was established to justify the
arrest. Here, Defendant was subjected to a Terry stop and frisk, and the State needs
to only demonstrate reasonable, articulable suspicion, a less stringent standard than
probable cause.40 Moreover, in this case, the officers’ suspicion of criminal activity
37
260 A.3d 619 (Del. 2021).
38
Id. at 623.
39
Id. at 631-34. The Court conducted its analysis and came to its conclusion in light of the 2015
decriminalization of possession of personal use quantities of marijuana.
40
Flowers, 195 A.3d at 23 (internal citations omitted).
11
was based on a variety of factors besides the odor. Here, Defendant admitted that
he had marijuana in his vehicle. Defendant also displayed behaviors that were
characterized by the officers as “extremely nervous,”41 combative, and evasive. The
Court finds that these facts, when evaluated under a totality of the circumstances,
are sufficient to support a reasonable, articulable suspicion that Defendant was
engaged in criminal activity.
19. Besides the suspicion of criminal activity, the objective facts also made it
reasonable for the officers to suspect that Defendant was armed with a weapon and
posed a threat to officer safety. Under Delaware law, a police officer may conduct
a pat-down search for weapons if “he has reason to believe that he is dealing with an
armed and dangerous individual, regardless of whether he has probable cause to
arrest the individual for a crime.”42 “The officer need not be absolutely certain that
the individual is armed; the issue is whether a reasonable prudent man in the
circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his safety or that of others was
in danger.”43
20. Here, Officer Wilkers testified that he was familiar with Defendant’s
criminal record prior to the stop, which includes a 2014 conviction of assault first
41
Defendant’s behaviors included stuttering speech, heavy breathing, and sweating. See June 24
Hr’g. Tr. at 30; July 13 Hr’g. Tr. at 13.
42
Flowers, at 28.
43
Robertson v. State, 596 A.2d 1345, 1352 (Del. 1991) (quoting Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. at 27).
12
degree with a firearm. 44 Officer Wilkers also testified that he had responded at
various times to incidents of crimes, including drug sales, disorderly persons, and
loud music in the area of the city where the stop and frisk at issue occurred, and that
he had interaction with Defendant during some of those investigations.45 The Court
finds that this specific pre-existing knowledge of and interaction with Defendant,
coupled with Defendant’s confession of possession of marijuana, his nervous and
obstreperous behavior, and his failure to comply with the officers’ commands,
constitute sufficient facts to justify a reasonable concern for the officers’ safety.46
21. This case is analogous to Robertson v. State.47 In Robertson, a police
officer’s questioning of the defendant, after an initial stop based on a noise violation,
made the officer believe that the car driven by the defendant might have been stolen.
The officer asked the defendant to exit the car and proceeded to pat him down for
weapons. The Delaware Supreme Court found that the pat-down search was
justified by the fact that the area where the incident occurred “had been frequently
reported for drug activity,” that the officer “at the moment was alone confronting
44
June 24 Hr’g. Tr. at 20, 61.
45
Id. at 53-54.
46
See U.S. v. Cole, 425 F.Supp.3d 468, 488-89 (W.D. Pa. 2019) (finding officers possessed a
reasonable belief that the detainee might be armed in a drug-related investigation based on facts
that “drug dealers often carry firearms,” that the place the detainee visited shortly before the traffic
stop was known for drug activity, that the detainee was on federal probation, that the detainee’s
companion was visibly nervous, and that officers saw an unnatural bulge in the detainee’s pants).
47
596 A.2d 1345 (Del. 1991).
13
three individuals,” that “the defendant was seated in a motor vehicle,” and that “the
officer suspected that the car was stolen.”48 Three of the four factors found by the
Robertson Court to support a valid pat-down search are also present here, as there
were previous incidents of drug sales reported in the area at issue, Defendant was
seated in a motor vehicle, and Defendant confessed that he possessed marijuana in
his car. 49 There are also pertinent facts in this case that were not present in
Robertson, including Officer Wilkers’ personal knowledge of the gun-related
criminal history of Defendant and Defendant’s nervous, combative, and evasive
behavior when asked to exit the car.
22. Also, this case is distinguishable from the recent Delaware Supreme Court
precedent, Holden v. State. 50 There, the Court found a pat-down search of the
defendant, a passenger in a vehicle with a fictitious tag, illegal because the police
officer immediately asked the defendant out of the vehicle and frisked him, after the
driver was unable to answer questions regarding the vehicle’s ownership. 51 The
48
Robertson, 596 A.2d at 1353. The Robertson Court noted that (“[I]nvestigative detentions
involving suspects in vehicles are especially fraught with danger to police officers.” Id. (quoting
Michigan v. Long, 463 U.S. 1032, 1047 (1983)).
49
The fourth factor in Robertson, that the police officer was outnumbered by the suspects he
confronted, was not present in this case. However, although the Robertson Court listed that as a
fact supporting the validity of the pat-down search, what happened there is that, up to the point the
police officer asked the defendant to exit the car, he was the sole officer on the scene. But as the
defendant stepped out of the vehicle, two other officers arrived.
50
23 A.3d 843 (Del. 2011).
51
Id. at 848-50.
14
Holden Court held that a pat-down search is generally justified based on “the nature
of the suspected crime, a sudden reach by the individual, a bulge, or a history with
the specific individual” and found none of those factors were present there. Here,
unlike Holden, Defendant was suspected of a drug-related crime52 and the police
officers had specific knowledge about the criminal history of Defendant. The
Holden Court also noted that “[n]othing in the record indicates that this was a high
crime area” and that “[the defendant] cooperated with the investigation.”53 In this
case, there were reported drug activities in the area at issue and Defendant was not
initially compliant with the officers’ commands to exit the car. For the foregoing
reasons, the Court finds that the officers possessed an objectively reasonable belief
that Defendant was engaged in criminal activity and was presently dangerous. Thus,
the pat-down search was justified.
C. The Officers possessed independent probable cause to search
Defendant’s vehicle.
23. In this case, the pat-down search uncovered a firearm on Defendant’s
person, which resulted in his arrest and the subsequent search of the vehicle. Even
if the Court found that the pat-down search was illegal or the officers did not uncover
52
See Cole, 425 F.Supp.3d at 489 (“[W]here there are drugs, there are often guns.”) (internal
citation omitted).
53
Holden, at 850.
15
the firearm, there is still independent probable cause for the officers to search
Defendant’s vehicle.
24. Under Delaware law, a search of “any area of the vehicle” is authorized
“[i]f there is probable cause to believe a vehicle contains evidence of criminal
activity.”54 Here, after a valid traffic stop, the officers smelled a strong odor of raw
marijuana upon approaching Defendant’s car. Moreover, Defendant admitted that
he had marijuana in his car. These facts are analogous to those in Valentine v.
State.55 In Valentine, the Delaware Supreme Court found that the search of the
defendant’s car was valid after the police officer stopped the car and “smelled
marijuana, although [the officer] could not tell if it was burnt or raw.”56 In this case,
the police officers not only smelled an odor of raw marijuana, but also obtained
Defendant’s confession that he possessed marijuana in his car. These facts, coupled
with Defendant’s nervous and combative behavior and resistance in complying with
the officer’s order to exit the car, created probable cause for the officers to search
the car.
25. Defendant, again relying upon Juliano, argued that an odor of marijuana
alone does not establish the required probable cause to search his car or person. As
54
Hall v. State, 981 A.2d 1106, 1114 (Del. 2009) (quoting Arizona v. Gant, 556 U.S. 332, 347
(2009)).
55
207 A.3d 166 (TABLE), 2019 WL 1178765 (Del. March 12, 2019).
56
Id. at *1.
16
illustrated by a recent decision of this Court, Juliano “explicitly declined to
determine whether the odor of marijuana was sufficient to establish probable cause
for the search of the vehicle.”57 Defendant argued that the odor of raw marijuana is
insufficient to create probable cause, citing the Delaware Medical Marijuana Act,58
which decriminalized personal use quantities of marijuana. However, as observed
in Valentine, even with the Delaware Medical Marijuana Act in place, marijuana still
“was, and remains, contraband subject to forfeiture” and the odor and possession of
marijuana, “raw or burnt,” is still relevant to determination of probable cause.59
D. Miranda Warnings were not required before the officers questioned
Defendant about marijuana.
26. In addition to the challenges to the initial traffic stop and the subsequent
pat-down, Defendant also argues that he should have been given a Miranda Warning
before the officers questioned him about contraband in the car. 60 Defendant’s
argument is misplaced. The Court finds that, because those questions were prompted
by the course of events after a valid traffic stop, including the officers’ smell of odor
57
State v. Harrison, 2022 WL 2783810, at *4 (Del. Super. July 14, 2022).
58
16 Del. C. §§ 4901A-28A.
59
Valentine, at *2.
60
The Miranda issue was not raised in Defendant’s Motion but was raised for the first time at the
suppression hearing. While this should be a basis for a waiver of that argument, the Court here
considers and rules on it.
17
of marijuana, a Miranda Warning is not required as Defendant was not under
custodial arrest at that time.61
V. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, the State has met its burden and established a
reasonable articulable suspicion for the traffic stop and the subsequent pat-down of
Defendant’s person which uncovered the weapon and ammunition. There is also
independent justification for the search of Defendant’s vehicle. Therefore,
Defendant’s Motion to Suppress is hereby DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Sheldon K. Rennie, Judge
Original to Prothonotary
Cc: Karin M. Volker, DAG
Joseph W. Benson, Esquire
61
See Loper v. State, 8 A.3d 1169, 1176 (Del. 2010) (“[P]ersons temporarily detained pursuant to
[traffic] stops are not ‘in custody for purposes of Miranda.”) (citing Berkemer v. McCarty, 468
U.S. 420, 440 (1984)).
18