J-S34019-17
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
v.
JASON STRANGE
Appellant No. 2770 EDA 2016
Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Dated August 3, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
Criminal Division at No(s): CP-51-CR-0001639-2016
BEFORE: BOWES, J., SOLANO, J., and PLATT, J.*
MEMORANDUM BY SOLANO, J.: FILED SEPTEMBER 11, 2017
Appellant Jason Strange appeals from the judgment of sentence
entered following his convictions for possession with intent to deliver an
illegal substance and knowing and intentional possession of an illegal
substance1 on the basis that his motion to suppress should have been
granted by the trial court. We affirm.
On June 9, 2016, the trial court held a hearing on Appellant’s motion
to suppress the illegal drugs recovered by the police at the time of his
arrest. Appellant contended that the police improperly seized him without
reasonable suspicion or probable cause. At the hearing, Officer Brian
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*
Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
1
35 P.S. §§ 780-113(a)(30) and (a)(16), respectively.
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Schneider testified that on November 28, 2015, he had been on patrol with
his partner in Philadelphia when he observed William Wible hand money to
Appellant in exchange for small unidentifiable objects. Officer Schneider had
made several narcotics arrests during his nineteen years with the police, and
he suspected that he had witnessed a drug transaction. Officer Schneider
and his partner exited their vehicle and approached the men. As they
approached, Wible dropped the objects he had just received from Appellant
onto the ground, and Appellant dropped a sandwich bag and an amber pill
bottle. Officer Schneider yelled “Don’t move,” and he and his partner
arrested Wible and Appellant. The officers recovered eight blue pills that
Wible had dropped, and the sandwich bag and pill bottle that Appellant had
dropped. The sandwich bag contained 28 blue pills and the pill bottle
contained four different blue pills and several large crystal rocks of
methamphetamine.2 Appellant also had $374 on his person at the time of his
arrest.
The trial court denied Appellant’s motion to suppress, and, following a
bench trial, Appellant was found guilty of both charges.3 Appellant was
sentenced to eleven and one-half to twenty-three months’ incarceration with
five years’ consecutive probation. This timely appeal followed.
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2
All of the blue pills were determined to be Xanax.
3
Officer Schneider’s partner, Officer John Martin, testified at Appellant’s
bench trial.
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Appellant raises the following issue for our review: “Whether the trial
court erred in denying the Motion to Suppress because Appellant was seized
without reasonable suspicion prior to discarding drugs?” Appellant’s Brief at
vi.
Our review of a trial court’s suppression ruling is guided by the
following:
Our standard of review in addressing a challenge to a trial
court’s denial of a suppression motion is limited to determining
whether the factual findings are supported by the [suppression 4]
record and whether the legal conclusions drawn from those facts
are correct. Where the prosecution prevailed in the suppression
court, we may consider only the Commonwealth’s evidence and
so much of the evidence for the defense as remains
uncontradicted when read in the context of the record as a
whole. Where the record supports the factual findings of the trial
court, we are bound by those facts and may reverse only if the
legal conclusions drawn therefrom are in error.
In re J.E., 937 A.2d 421, 425 (Pa. 2007) (citations omitted).
Appellant argues that the drugs should be suppressed because they
were recovered after the police unlawfully seized him. First, according to
Appellant, he “was seized by police when two uniformed, armed officers
stopped their marked patrol car within ten feet of him and immediately
began walking towards him to detain him.” Appellant’s Brief at xi, 2-4 (citing
Commonwealth v. Bennett, 604 A.2d 276, 282-83 (Pa. Super. 1992)
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4
“[O]ur scope of review is limited to the evidence presented at the
suppression hearing.” Commonwealth v. Davis, 102 A.3d 996, 999 (Pa.
Super. 2014) (citation omitted), appeal denied, 113 A.3d 278 (Pa. 2015).
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(“[e]xamples of circumstances that might indicate a seizure, even where the
person did not attempt to leave, would be the threatening presence of
several officers, the display of a weapon by an officer, some physical
touching of the person of the citizen, or the use of language or tone of voice
indicating that compliance with the officer’s request might be compelled”)).
Appellant claims that the circumstances “showed an immediate intent on the
part of the officers to detain” him. Id. at 4.
Second, Appellant contends that at the time he was seized, the officers
lacked reasonable suspicion or probable cause to detain him. Appellant’s
Brief at 4-5. He points out that the officers had not at that point seen any
drugs, and there was no testimony establishing the area as a high-crime
neighborhood. Id. (citing Commonwealth v. Thompson, 985 A.2d 928
(Pa. Super. 2009) (holding that probable cause may exist where trained
narcotics officers observe the exchange of money for small objects in a high-
crime area)). Appellant asserts that the “forced abandonment doctrine”
therefore mandates that the drugs he dropped after the officers’ illegal
actions should have been suppressed. Id. at 1-2 (citing Commonwealth v.
Matos, 672 A.2d 769, 773 (Pa. 1996) (holding that discarded contraband
should be suppressed where the seizure was lacking in reasonable suspicion
or probable cause)).
The trial court found that (1) at the point the officers exited their
vehicle and observed Appellant discard items on the ground, they had
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“displayed no physical force or coercive authority towards [Appellant]” and
the encounter therefore did not rise to the level of an investigative
detention; (2) at the point Officer Schneider yelled “Don’t move,” he
initiated an investigative detention that was supported by reasonable
suspicion founded on the observation of the discarded items. See Trial Ct.
Op., 11/21/16, at 5-6 (unpaginated).
We address Appellant’s contentions pursuant to the following
framework:
Our courts have long recognized three levels of interaction that
occur between the police and citizens that are relevant to the
analysis of whether a particular search or seizure conforms to
the requirements of U.S. CONST. amend. IV and [PA.] CONST.
art. I, § 8.
The first of these is a “mere encounter” (or request for
information) which need not be supported by any level of
suspicion, but carries no official compulsion to stop or respond.
The second, an “investigative detention” must be supported by
reasonable suspicion; it subjects a suspect to a stop and period
of detention, but does not involve such coercive conditions as to
constitute the functional equivalent of arrest. Finally, an arrest or
“custodial detention” must be supported by probable cause.
Commonwealth v. Williams, 73 A.3d 609, 613 (Pa. Super. 2013) (citation
omitted), appeal denied, 87 A.3d 320 (Pa. 2014). Only the second and
third types of interactions constitute “seizures.” Commonwealth v. Lyles,
54 A.3d 76, 79 (Pa. Super. 2012), aff'd, 97 A.3d 298 (Pa. 2014). In
contrast, the first type, “a ‘mere encounter,’ occurs if the police simply
approach a person on a public street in order to make inquiries.”
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Commonwealth v. Peters, 642 A.2d 1126, 1129 (Pa. Super.) (en banc),
appeal denied, 649 A.2d 670 (Pa. 1994).5
Our courts apply an objective standard in determining whether the
police conduct amounts to a seizure, as opposed to a mere encounter
between a citizen and a police officer. Matos, 672 A.2d at 774.6 “In
evaluating the circumstances, the focus is directed toward whether, by
means of physical force or show of authority, the citizen-subject’s movement
has in some way been restrained.” Commonwealth v. Strickler, 757 A.2d
884, 890 (Pa. 2000) (footnotes and some citations omitted). Among the
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5
As the Supreme Court stated in Commonwealth v. Reid:
Law enforcement officers do not violate the Fourth Amendment
by merely approaching an individual on the street or in another
public place, by asking him if he is willing to answer some
questions, by putting questions to him if the person is willing to
listen, or by offering in evidence in a criminal prosecution his
voluntary answers to such questions.
Reid, 811 A.2d 530, 545 (Pa. 2002) (brackets and citation omitted), cert.
denied, 540 U.S. 850 (2003).
6
Some federal jurisprudence applies a more technical definition of a
“seizure” for Fourth Amendment purposes, focusing on whether an
application of physical force resulted in taking physical control over the
person. See California v. Hodari D., 499 U.S. 621 (1991). In light of the
greater privacy protections historically recognized under Article I, Section 8
of the Pennsylvania Constitution, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has
rejected this technical analysis in cases dealing with the abandonment of
contraband during police encounters and pursuits. See Matos, 672 A.2d at
772-76. The discussion in the text applies the relevant objective standards
without regard to those aspects of federal jurisprudence that have been
rejected in Pennsylvania. To the extent we conclude that police conduct was
valid under the Pennsylvania Constitution, it necessarily conforms to the
United States Constitution as well.
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factors considered are “the demeanor of the police officer, the manner of
expression used by the officer in addressing the citizen, and the content of
the interrogatories or statements.” Commonwealth v. Mendenhall, 715
A.2d 1117, 1119 (Pa. 1998). Still other factors include:
the number of officers present during the interaction; whether
the officer informs the citizen they are suspected of criminal
activity; the officer's demeanor and tone of voice; the location
and timing of the interaction; the visible presence of weapons on
the officer; and the questions asked. 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.
Commonwealth v. Collins, 950 A.2d 1041, 1047 n.6 (Pa.Super.2008) (en
banc) (citation omitted).
Because the question “whether the police needed some level of
requisite cause at the time they initially approached” the defendant is
“governed by the type of encounter that the police initiated when they
approached” the defendant, In re D.M., 781 A.2d 1161, 1164 (Pa. 2001),
we begin our analysis of Appellant’s issue by categorizing his encounter with
the police. We considered this question in the context of pedestrians’
abandonment of contraband upon contact with police in Commonwealth v.
Byrd, 987 A.2d 786, 791 (Pa. Super. 2009), and Commonwealth v.
Pizarro, 723 A.2d 675 (Pa. Super. 1998), and those decisions are
instructive here.
In Pizarro, two officers in a marked patrol car observed the defendant
engage in a suspected drug transaction with another man on the street. The
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defendant ran to a corner property, retrieved items from a brown paper bag,
and then gave the items to the driver of a Buick in exchange for money. As
the officers prepared to approach the defendant, a second marked patrol car
arrived on the scene. Upon seeing that patrol car, the defendant dropped the
brown paper bag on the lawn and fled in the opposite direction from that
patrol car. The two officers from the first patrol car followed the defendant
into a grocery store and detained him, and they then retrieved the brown
paper bag left behind on the lawn, which turned out to contain illegal
narcotics. In reversing that trial court’s order suppressing the narcotics, we
stated:
A police cruiser passing through the neighborhood on
routine patrol does not amount to police coercion compelling the
abandonment of contraband. When the cruiser passed through
the neighborhood, [the defendant and his cohort] were not
deprived of their freedom in any significant way, nor were they
placed in a situation in which they could believe reasonably that
their freedom of action was restricted by police conduct. None of
the police officers engaged in activity which could by any stretch
of the imagination be understood to be an act of unlawful
coercion. It was [the defendant’s] fear of detection, as opposed
to any threat or show of force by the police, that induced him to
flee the scene. [The defendant’s] sensitivity to the risk of police
detection does not establish that his abandonment was forced.
Hence, we conclude that [the defendant] voluntarily abandoned
[the brown paper bag], thus relinquishing any expectation of
privacy over the contents therein.
The suppression court found that [the police] lacked
justification to detain [the defendant] at the grocery and,
therefore, suppressed the narcotics that [the officer] had
recovered from the lawn. . . . This conclusion is fundamentally
flawed as [the defendant] had abandoned the [narcotics] when
he ran from the cruiser before the police officers initiated
pursuit. The [narcotics] were not the fruit of an illegal seizure
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because it was “seized independently of any unlawful police
conduct, i.e., it was abandoned prior to the police showing any
interest in [the defendant].”
Pizarro, 723 A.2d at 679–80 (citations and emphasis omitted).
In Byrd, a police caravan, without sirens, police lights, or high speed,
was traveling down a one-way street in the direction opposite of traffic.
Byrd, 987 A.2d at 787-88. The defendant saw the caravan approaching from
about fifty to sixty feet away, and threw something under a parked vehicle.
Id. The police noticed the defendant’s action, frisked and detained him, and
then retrieved what he had discarded, which was a handgun. Id. We found
that the police activity did not coerce the abandonment of the gun and it was
therefore admissible into evidence. Id. at 793-94. We stated:
[The defendant] was not deprived of his freedom in any
significant way nor could he reasonably believe that his freedom
of action was being restricted by police conduct prior to
abandoning the handgun. . . . As in Pizarro, it is clear to this
Court that it was [the defendant’s] own fear of detection, as
opposed to any threat or show of force by the police, that
induced him to abandon the handgun.
Id. at 793.
Byrd and Pizarro establish that where a pedestrian defendant has
abandoned contraband in response to an approaching police vehicle, such
police behavior does not warrant the suppression of the abandoned
evidence. Similar cases establish that where law enforcement officers have
merely exited a police vehicle and approached a pedestrian defendant, prior
to communicating orders to that defendant or giving chase, no seizure has
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occurred. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Hall, 380 A.2d 1238, 1241 (Pa.
1977) (when plainclothes police officers made a u-turn, double-parked their
unmarked car, and approached a defendant, and the defendant dropped
contraband to the ground when the officers were ten feet away, the actions
of the officers did not constitute a seizure and the evidence should not have
been suppressed); see also Lyles, 97 A.3d at 300-06 (where uniformed
officers exited their marked police vehicle, without activating their sirens or
lights or brandishing weapons, and began questioning a pedestrian
defendant, no seizure had occurred).7 In light of these decisions, we agree
with the trial court that at the time Appellant abandoned the drugs, he had
not been seized by the police.
The record shows that when Appellant discarded the contraband, the
police officers had merely stopped and exited their vehicle and begun to
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7
See also Commonwealth v. McCoy, 154 A.3d 813, 818-19 (Pa. Super.
2017) (where marked police car approached defendant and began to exit
vehicle, and defendant abandoned contraband and fled in response, no
seizure had occurred at the time of abandonment); In the Interest of
Evans, 717 A.2d 542, 545 (Pa. Super. 1998) (when plainclothes officers
exited their unmarked vehicle and defendant abandoned contraband, the
evidence was not subject to suppression because “[s]tepping out of a police
car is not unlawful police action under any circumstances”), appeal denied,
736 A.2d 604 (Pa. 1999); Commonwealth v. Riley, 715 A.2d 1131, 1134
(Pa. Super. 1998) (where, “[p]rior to [the defendant’s] dropping the
[contraband], the police pulled up along the sidewalk in an unmarked car
and then exited the vehicle in order to approach [the defendant] and those
with him,” there was “nothing more than a mere approach by a law
enforcement official” that does not need to be supported by any level of
suspicion and carries no official compulsion for the citizen to stop or
respond), appeal denied, 737 A.2d 741 (Pa. 1999).
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approach him. They had not physically engaged Appellant, had not issued
any verbal commands to Appellant, and had not made any overt displays of
force that would cause a reasonable person to conclude that he was not free
to leave. See generally Strickler, 757 A.2d at 890; Collins, 950 A.2d at
1047 n.6. The simple action of stepping out of the police car, given these
facts, was insufficient to have unlawfully coerced Appellant to abandon his
property. See Evans, 717 A.2d at 545. The interaction before Appellant
discarded the drugs therefore rose at most to the level of a mere encounter,
and need not have been supported by reasonable suspicion or probable
cause. See Williams, 73 A.3d at 613.8 Because Appellant had not been
seized at the time he abandoned the narcotics, his motion to suppress was
rightfully denied, and we affirm the judgment of sentence imposed by the
trial court.
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 9/11/2017
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8
We therefore need not decide whether the officers had either reasonable
suspicion or probable cause after Appellant abandoned the drugs.
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