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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant
v.
TROY DEVON MARTIN
No. 1855 WDA 2015
Appeal from the Order Entered November 3, 2015
In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
Criminal Division at No(s): CP-02-CR-0012366-2013
BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., BOWES, J., and SOLANO, J.
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED MARCH 31, 2017
The Commonwealth appeals from the order granting Troy Devon
Martin’s motion to suppress. We reverse and remand.
This matter arose after Pittsburgh City police officers received
information that illegal narcotics were being sold from a particular location
on Mercer Street in Pittsburgh, Allegheny County. After conducting an
investigation, the police sought and obtained a search warrant for the
residence in question. The affidavit of probable cause in support of the
search warrant, attested to by Officers Michael Lafferty and Michael Slatcoff,
indicated the following:
Within the past several weeks, Officers received
information from a confidential source [(“CI”)], who stated that
large amounts of heroin are being stored inside the residence of
714 Mercer Street Pittsburgh, PA 15219 [(“714 Mercer Street”)].
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The [CI] stated that the males operating this drug organization
out of 714 Mercer Street are only known to him/her as “Ryder”
and “Troy”. The [CI] stated that they drive around in a newer
rental van model Chrysler Mini Van, and the van has dark tinted
windows. The [CI] stated that “Ryder” always sits in the back of
the mini van to avoid being seen by police. The [CI] stated that
“Ryder” occasionally has other people drive the van and make
deliveries also, during which time the narcotics are transported
in the male[’]s groin areas to avoid detection. The [CI]
described 714 Mercer Street as a nice red brick house, with a
large rear deck. The [CI] stated that this house was the first
house on your left when turning off Bedford Avenue, onto Mercer
Street. The [CI] stated that older relatives of “Troy” own the
house and allow the young males to use the house to hide their
narcotics.
The [CI] stated that “Ryder” and “Troy” also use the house
at 714 Mercer Street to smoke marijuana, party, and have sex
with woman [sic]. The [CI] stated that “Ryder” is a black male
with tattoo’s on his face and all over his body.
Officers know the nick name “Ryder” as a male named
Chauncey Howard . . . who frequents the Hill District area.
Officers showed the [CI] a picture of Howard and he/she
positively identified Howard as the male he/she knows as
“Ryder”.
Officers searched 714 Mercer Street on the Allegheny
County Assessment website. Officers found that the residence is
owned by Albert Martin[.] Officer Slatcoff then recalled an arrest
made by Lt Lando where a Troy Martin was arrested for
possession of a small amount of marijuana. Officer Slatcoff then
researched Lt Lando’s arrests in the Quick Arrest System where
he found a Troy Martin . . . was arrested by Lt. Lando on
05/06/2013 CCR # 13-86792, in the Oak Hill area of the City of
Pittsburgh. The arrest paperwork showed that Troy Martin used
the address 714 Mercer Street as the place he receives mail.
Officer Slatcoff contacted Lt. Lando via phone and confirmed that
he arrested a Troy Martin who used the address 714 Mercer
Street, as reflected in the arrest paperwork. Officer Slatcoff
showed the CI a picture of Troy Martin, who he/she positively
identified as the male he/she knows as “Troy”.
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A JNet search of Chauncey Howard[‘s] . . . criminal history
was conducted. Howard was charged with 13a30 Possession
with intent to deliver charge on 04/08/2010. Martin was also
recently charged for 13a31 Possession of small amount of
marijuana.
With[in] the past several weeks, Officer Slatcoff was
leaving court, heading back to Zone 2 Station. While on Bedford
Avenue, Officer Slatcoff observed a new, black, Chrysler Town
and Country van parking directly in front of 714 Mercer Street.
Officer Slatcoff passed the vehicle and he observed an unknown,
young black male exiting the driver seat. Officer Slatcoff was
able to obtain the registration plate of the vehicle and it is HZR-
7279. Officer Slatcoff ran the vehicles registration through index
and it came back to the rental company Ean Holdings LLC.
Officers found that this van was consistent with the information
received from the [CI].
Within the past several weeks, Officers formulated plans to
conduct surveillance on 714 Mercer Street. Officers were located
in a fixed position, with a clear unobstructed view of 714 Mercer
Street. Within an hour of beginning surveillance of the house, I
observed a new, black Chrysler Town and Country van pull up
directly outside of 714 Mercer Street. I observed an unknown,
young black male driving the vehicle. I observed Troy Martin
exit the front passenger seat of the vehicle, and enter 714
Mercer Street. Several minutes later, I observed Martin quickly
exit 714 Mercer Street and enter the van. The van then drove
away from the residence. The van that came to 714 Mercer
Street was the same black Chrysler van that Officer Slatcoff
observed on a previous date, with the same registration
information (HZR-7279). The information received from the [CI]
corroborated with what Officers observed while conducting
surveillance of the residence.
On 06/11/2013 at approximately 0300 hours, I Officer
Lafferty, formulated plans to conduct a trash pull of the
residence of 714 Mercer Street.
At approximately 0310 hours, I drove by the above
location at which time I observed (2) large black trash bags with
yellow handles, laying curbside, on Bedford Avenue, directly on
the side of 714 Mercer Street. The bags were placed right
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outside the back gate of 714 Mercer Street. I parked a short
distance from his location and retrieved these bags. I then
returned to Zone 2 Station to sort through the contents of the
bags.
While at Zone 2 Station, I opened the first black garbage
bag, with yellow handles, and began sorting through the
contents of the bag. I recovered 1 baggie diaper (a sandwich
bag with the corners torn off to resemble a diaper), 1 baggie
corner, 1 piece of indicia for Albert Martin at 714 Mercer Street,
and several small pieces of suspected marijuana strewn
throughout the bag. I tested the suspected marijuana with a
Scotts Field Test Kit and it came back positive for marijuana.
I then opened the second black garbage bag, with yellow
handles, and began sorting through the contents of the bag. I
recovered 3 empty prescription bottles for an Albert Martin.
I know from my training and experience that package
narcotics are commonly stored in sandwich bag corners. I also
know that drug dealers and users commonly rip the corners off
of sandwich bags, making the bag resemble a diaper, to store
illegal narcotics. The items found in the garbage bags I
retrieved from 714 Mercer Street are consistent with packaging
and storing illegal narcotics.
While searching through the garbage, I also recovered
small pieces of marijuana, which tested positive. Finding the
marijuana in the garbage is consistent with information that the
[CI] provided. The [CI] stated that 714 Mercer Street is not only
used by Troy Martin and Chauncey Howard to store heroin, but
they also use the residence to smoke marijuana and party.
Due to the totality of the circumstances, the information
provided by the [CI], Officers surveillance of the residence
corroborating the [CI’s] information, and the trash pull reveilling
[sic] illegal narcotics and drug parapherlilia [sic], I believe that
the occupants of 714 Mercer Street are selling heroin and using
marijuana in this address.
Affidavit of Probable Cause, 6/12/13, at 1-4. Additionally, both officers
attested that, through their training and experience, they were familiar with
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the consistency, packaging, and methods of transaction employed in the sale
and distribution of marijuana and heroin.
On June 6, 2013, the magistrate issued a search warrant for 714
Mercer Street, and a Pittsburgh Police SWAT unit executed it that same day.
Appellee and Albert Martin were present at the time of the search, and police
recovered numerous indicia that both men resided at the house. The search
also yielded a total of twenty-three bricks and four bundles of heroin, two
bags and two knotted-bags of cocaine, cocaine cutting agents, a digital
scale, narcotic packaging material, $4,220 U.S. currency, two firearms, and
an Apple iPhone. After being read his Miranda rights,1 Appellee made
incriminating statements to police.
Based on the foregoing, Appellee was charged with one count of
possession with intent to deliver, two counts of person not to possess a
firearm, one count of possession of a controlled substance, and one count of
possession of drug paraphernalia. Appellee filed a pre-trial motion to
suppress. The court ordered the parties to file briefs on the matter wherein
Appellee contended that the items seized by police and his subsequent
statements should be suppressed since the affidavit of probable cause in
support of the search warrant failed to provide a sufficient basis to find
probable cause. The trial court agreed with Appellee’s assessment, and
____________________________________________
1
Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).
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suppressed both the items seized from 714 Mercer Street, and Appellee’s
incriminating statements to police. The Commonwealth filed a timely notice
of appeal and complied with the court’s directive to file a Rule 1925(b)
statement of matters complained of on appeal. The court authored its Rule
1925(a) opinion.
The Commonwealth presents one issue for our review: “Whether the
trial court erred in ruling that the information contained within the affidavit
of probable cause was not sufficient to support the issuance of the search
warrant for the at-issue premises?” Commonwealth’s brief at 4.
We review the grant of a suppression motion under well-established
principles. We consider the evidence of the defendant, as the prevailing
party below, and any evidence of the prosecution that is uncontradicted in
the context of the suppression record. Commonwealth v. Carter, 105
A.3d 765, 768 (Pa.Super. 2014). We are bound by the factual findings of
the suppression court where the record supports those findings and may
only reverse when the legal conclusions drawn from those facts are in error.
Id. We are not bound by the legal conclusions of the suppression court. Id.
The trial court found that the affidavit failed to establish probable
cause for a variety of reasons. It reviewed the affidavit and concluded that
it did not include any information concerning the reliability of the CI, or the
basis for the CI’s assertion that “large amounts of heroin [were] being stored
inside the residence at 714 Mercer Street.” Trial Court Opinion, 6/20/16, at
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10. The court largely discredited the information provided by the CI since it
could be supplied by “any casual observer,” and it did not implicate drug
activity. Id.
Insofar as the police attempted to corroborate the CI’s statements, the
court found that such “confirmation [added] nothing to aid in the
determination that the residence [was] being used to store large amounts of
heroin.” Id. Similarly, the court observed that Appellee’s past criminal
history did not provide a connection to drug activity at 714 Mercer Street.
Finally, the court discounted the retrieval of marijuana and drug
paraphernalia from Appellee’s garbage, opining that those items do not
support probable cause that there was “large amounts of heroin, or any
heroin” within the house. Id. at 11. Thus, the court maintained that the
totality of the circumstances did not establish probable cause to search the
residence located at 714 Mercer Street.
Preliminarily, we observe that the suppression court’s legal conclusions
were drawn from an erroneous standard of review. Our Court previously
reiterated the Supreme Court’s exposition on the matter in Commonwealth
v. Gagliardi, 128 A.3d 790 (Pa.Super. 2015). In Gagliardi, we stated,
“[a]ccording to our Supreme Court, when deciding whether to issue a search
warrant, ‘the task of the issuing authority is simply to make a practical,
common-sense decision whether, given all of the circumstances set forth in
the affidavit before him, including the ‘veracity’ and ‘basis of knowledge’ of
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persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that
contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.’” Id.
at 794, quoting Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 238 (1983). As it pertains
to a court reviewing an issuing authority’s probable cause determination:
[the] reviewing court is not to conduct a de novo review of the
issuing authority’s probable cause determination, but is simply to
determine whether or not there is substantial evidence in the
record supporting the decision to issue a warrant[.] In so doing,
the reviewing court must accord deference to the issuing
authority’s probable cause determination, and must view the
information offered to establish probable cause in a common-
sense, non-technical manner.
Id. Notwithstanding that “[r]easonable minds frequently may differ on the
question whether a particular affidavit establishes probable cause,” this
deference ensures that, “[i]f a substantial basis exists to support the
magistrate’s probable cause finding, [the trial court] must uphold that
finding even if a different magistrate judge might have found the affidavit
insufficient to support a warrant.” Id. 794-795, citing United States v.
Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 914 (1984).
Instantly, the trial court’s resolution of the motion to suppress
suggests that it did not accord the magistrate’s decision deference, but
rather, engaged in its own de novo review of the evidence proffered within
the four corners of the affidavit of probable cause. The affidavit established
that a CI provided information regarding the occupants of 714 Mercer Street,
their alleged means of distributing narcotics, and that narcotics were stored
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at that location. The police investigated the matter and were able to verify
many of the details supplied by the CI.
Beyond applying an inappropriate standard of review, the trial court
compounded this error by requiring the police to corroborate that a “large
amount of heroin” was stored at the house in order to find the CI’s
information sufficiently reliable to support probable cause. We have long
held that “the law does not require that the information in a warrant affidavit
establish with absolute certainty that the object of the search will be found
at the stated location[.]” Commonwealth v. Davis, 595 A.2d 1216 1222
(Pa.Super. 1991); Commonwealth v. Forster, 385 A.2d 416, 437-438
(Pa.Super. 1978).
Based on the relevant case law, the officers herein were not required
to substantiate that “large amounts of heroin” were onsite at 714 Mercer
Street in order to find the CI otherwise reliable. Undeniably, much of the
information provided by the CI could have been obtained by a casual
passerby. Nevertheless, the CI averred that Appellee’s older relative owned
the house, and that the criminal organization employed a rented van to
distribute the narcotics. A casual observer could not have discerned this
information. Yet this information was confirmed when police investigated
further. Indeed, the police’s investigative activities verified the vast majority
of the information provided by the CI, and disproved none of it.
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Moreover, and more importantly, the police investigation actually
uncovered evidence of a crime being committed at 714 Mercer Street when
it recovered marijuana, a Schedule I controlled substance, during the trash
pull. Contrary to the trial court’s evaluation, this alone demonstrates the
CI’s reliability and establishes a fair probability that a crime was being
committed at 714 Mercer Street since the CI supplied information of this
precise crime occurring within the confines of the house.
Also contained within Appellee’s trash were sandwich bags
manipulated in a manner that Officer Lafferty, based on his training and
experience, recognized as facilitating the distribution of heroin. Common
sense dictates that the presence of marijuana and drug paraphernalia
indicates that behavior of a criminal nature was occurring at 714 Mercer
Street. Although the items recovered from the trash may not confirm with
absolute certainty that “large” amounts of heroin or marijuana were being
stored at that location, they created a fair probability that evidence of a
crime would be discovered upon a search of the residence.
Hence, when viewing the affidavit from a common-sense, non-
technical perspective, the magistrate had substantial evidence to issue a
search warrant, and the suppression court erred in granting Appellee’s
motion to suppress. We vacate the trial court’s order and remand.
Order vacated. Case remanded. Jurisdiction relinquished.
Judge Solano joins the Memorandum
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President Judge Emeritus Bender files a Dissenting Memorandum.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 3/31/2017
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