Com. v. Woods, R. ( 2019 )


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  • J-A15004-19
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA,                 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
    OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    RASHEED WOODS,
    Appellant               No. 1340 EDA 2018
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered March 27, 2018
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-23-CR-0006139-2016
    BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., GANTMAN, P.J.E., and COLINS, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY BENDER, P.J.E.:                       FILED AUGUST 30, 2019
    Appellant, Rasheed Woods, appeals from the judgment of sentence of
    an aggregate term of four to eight years’ incarceration, followed by five years’
    probation, imposed after a jury convicted him of possession with intent to
    deliver a controlled substance (PWID), 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(30), and
    conspiracy to commit PWID, 18 Pa.C.S. § 903. On appeal, Appellant solely
    challenges the trial court’s denial of his pretrial motion to suppress. After
    careful review, we affirm.
    Appellant was arrested and charged with the above-stated offenses after
    undercover officers observed him and his co-defendant, Kaleke Burrell,1
    engage in a sale of narcotics to an unidentified, white male on July 21, 2016.
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    1Burrell has also filed an appeal with this Court, which is docketed at 1432
    EDA 2018.
    J-A15004-19
    Appellant and Burrell were arrested shortly after the sale, and found to be in
    possession of large quantities of crack cocaine and U.S. currency.
    Prior to trial, both Appellant and Burrell filed motions to suppress the
    evidence recovered following their warrantless arrests, arguing that police
    lacked probable cause. A suppression hearing was conducted on April 20,
    2017.     There, Officer Anthony Salvatore of the Darby Borough Police
    Department testified.       N.T. Suppression Hearing, 4/20/17, at 4.     Officer
    Salvatore explained that in February of 2016, he received information from
    Andrew Heffer, a then-confidential informant,2 that Appellant “was the leader
    of a drug trafficking organization selling heroin and crack through southwest
    Philadelphia and Delaware County.” Id. at 6. The officer investigated Heffer’s
    claims by checking police reports and speaking with Sergeant Mike Davis of
    the 12th District in Philadelphia. Id. That investigation showed that Appellant
    “had been arrested numerous times for drug trafficking [and] firearm
    violations.” Id. at 7. Officer Salvatore deemed Heffer’s tip about Appellant
    reliable, and set up a controlled purchase of drugs between Heffer and
    Appellant. Id. During the controlled buy, Appellant sold Heffer cocaine. Id.
    ____________________________________________
    2 Officer Salvatore testified that Heffer’s identity was subsequently revealed,
    id. at 6, and that after the controlled buy from Appellant, Heffer was
    “deactivated” as an informant because he began “getting high and getting
    drugs from other sources[,]” id. at 21, 23.
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    at 9. Over the ensuing months, Officer Salvatore and other officers “kept
    continuous[,] non-routine surveillance on [Appellant].” Id. at 9-10.3
    In March of 2016, an individual named Brian Burnett-McCullough
    contacted Officer Salvatore, claiming that Appellant “was the leader of a drug
    trafficking organization” that “controlled the area of 72nd and 73rd Street[s] in
    Southwest Philadelphia.” Id. at 10. Officer Salvatore again spoke to Sergeant
    Davis, who confirmed that he had received “the same information” from other
    sources. Id. at 11. Officer Salvatore also discovered that Appellant had been
    arrested by Cherry Hill Police in New Jersey after a search of an apartment, in
    which Appellant was present and mail addressed to him was found, had
    uncovered “about a kilo of cocaine….” Id. at 12.
    On July 21, 2016, Officer Salvatore received information that Appellant
    was going to be making a narcotics transaction in the area of Andrews Avenue
    and Bluntston Avenue in Collingdale, Pennsylvania.       Id. at 12-13.    Officer
    Salvatore set up surveillance at that location, and observed Appellant arrive
    in the area around 2:00 p.m., driving a silver Toyota Scion with non-tinted
    windows. Id. at 13. Using binoculars, Officer Salvatore could see that another
    man, later identified as co-defendant Kaleke Burrell, was a passenger in the
    ____________________________________________
    3Officer Salvatore explained that by “non-routine surveillance,” he meant that
    officers would conduct surveillance of Appellant “at least once a week and if
    [officers were] able to do more than one day a week[,] then more than one
    day a week [was] done.” Id. at 25. However, no surveillance logs or other
    documentation was turned over to the Delaware County District Attorney’s
    Office, and nothing of “evidentiary value” was observed during the five months
    of surveillance between the controlled buy and the incidents surrounding
    Appellant’s arrest on July 21, 2016, discussed infra. Id. at 24-25.
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    car. Id. at 13, 14. The vehicle turned into a driveway and “[a] female came
    out of the house, walked over to the driver side of the silver Scion[,] [l]eaned
    into the driver side window[,] [w]as there for approximately 30 seconds, and
    then walked right back into the house.” Id. at 13-14.
    Appellant then drove the vehicle out of the driveway and proceeded to
    Andrews Avenue and Blunston Avenue, where the car “pulled over again and
    met with a white male.” Id. at 14. The man handed U.S. currency “into the
    passenger window….” Id. at 16. “The white male then received something
    small and white in return and put it in his pocket, turned around and walked
    right back across the street and into a house.”      Id. at 14.    On re-direct
    examination, Officer Salvatore further described the item received by the
    white male as a small, clear, Ziploc bag that contained a white substance,
    which the officer believed was crack cocaine, based on his experience of seeing
    “cocaine numerous times” and conducting “hundreds of arrests involving crack
    cocaine.” Id. at 30-31.
    After the man went back into the house, the vehicle driven by Appellant
    “pulled off” and was stopped shortly thereafter by Lieutenant Richard Gibney.
    Id. at 34. Lieutenant Gibney testified that Appellant’s vehicle was pulled over
    and blocked in by several police cars. Id. The officers exited their vehicles
    with their guns drawn and ordered Appellant and Burrell to show their hands.
    Id. Lieutenant Gibney testified that Appellant and Burrell were “jumping all
    over the car, they were reaching into their waistbands, they were reaching all
    over … the car.” Id. Ultimately, the men were removed from the vehicle and
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    detained, after which they were transported to the police station. Id. at 35,
    37. During a subsequent search of the vehicle, officers recovered “13 knotted
    sandwich bags containing a large amount of [a] hard white chunky substance.”
    Id. at 17. Additionally, in Appellant’s possession, officers found $2,110 in
    U.S. currency, as well as a large bag holding “37 small[,] clear plastic bags
    containing a hard[,] white[, and] chunky substance and … one loose[,] clear
    bag containing a hard[,] white[, and] chunky substance.”         Id.   Burrell
    possessed “two knotted sandwich bags with a hard[,] white[, and] chunky
    substance” and $52 in U.S. currency. Id. at 17, 18. The substance was later
    determined to be crack cocaine.
    Based on this evidence, the court denied Appellant’s and Burrell’s
    motions to suppress. Their cases proceeded to a jury trial in January of 2018,
    at the close of which both men were convicted of PWID and conspiracy to
    commit PWID. On April 10, 2018, Appellant was sentenced to the aggregate
    term of incarceration and probation stated supra.     He filed a timely post-
    sentence motion that was denied. He then filed a timely notice of appeal, and
    he also complied with the court’s order to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise
    statement of errors complained of on appeal. Herein, Appellant raises the
    following issue for our review:
    1. Police officers arrested and searched a driver after witnessing
    his passenger exchange a white substance in a plastic bag for an
    unspecified amount of cash on a single occasion. Should the trial
    court have suppressed evidence recovered incident to the driver’s
    arrest because police lacked probable cause?
    Appellant’s Brief at 2.
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    Our standard of review of Appellant’s issue is well-settled:
    We are limited to determining whether the lower court’s factual
    findings are supported by the record and whether the legal
    conclusions drawn therefrom are correct. We may consider the
    evidence of the witnesses offered by the Commonwealth, as
    verdict winner, and only so much of the evidence presented by
    [the] defense that is not contradicted when examined in the
    context of the record as a whole. We are bound by facts supported
    by the record and may reverse only if the legal conclusions
    reached by the court were erroneous.
    Commonwealth v. Feczko, 
    10 A.3d 1285
    , 1287 (Pa. Super. 2010) (en banc)
    (citation omitted).
    Preliminarily, Appellant notes that,
    [t]he Commonwealth has not disputed [that] probable cause is
    the governing standard, nor does [Appellant] believe it would now
    do so on appeal.[4]     To summarize that conclusion briefly,
    however, police detained [Appellant] by forcefully stopping his car
    at gunpoint, demanding that he put his hands up, dragging him
    out of his car and taking him to the police station, all without a
    warrant. These actions are an arrest, for which probable cause is
    necessary. See generally Com[monwealth] v. White, 
    669 A.2d 896
    , 901 (Pa. 1995) (quoting Com[monwealth] v.
    Rodriquez, 
    614 A.2d 1378
    , 1384 (Pa. 1992) (defining an arrest
    as “any act that indicates an intention to take a person into
    custody and that subjects him to the actual control and will of the
    person making the arrest”)[)].
    Appellant’s Brief at 7 n.1.
    ____________________________________________
    4 In its brief, the Commonwealth addresses Appellant’s arguments under both
    the reasonable suspicion and probable cause standards, making no explicit
    distinction regarding which standard should apply. Notably, however, at the
    suppression hearing, the Commonwealth argued only that probable cause
    supported the warrantless arrest and search of Appellant and Burrell. See
    N.T. Suppression Hearing at 45-47.
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    We need not definitively determine whether Appellant and Burrell were
    simply detained, or effectively arrested, when their vehicle was stopped by
    police because, even under the more imposing, probable-cause standard, we
    deem the conduct of the police officers lawful. Our Court has explained that:
    Probable cause to arrest exists when the facts and
    circumstances within the police officer’s knowledge and of which
    the officer has reasonably trustworthy information are sufficient
    in themselves to warrant a person of reasonable caution in the
    belief that an offense has been committed by the person to be
    arrested.
    Probable cause justifying a warrantless arrest is determined
    by the totality of the circumstances. [P]robable cause does not
    involve certainties, but rather the factual and practical
    considerations of everyday life on which reasonable and prudent
    men act. It is only the probability and not a prima facie showing
    of criminal activity that is a standard of probable cause. To this
    point on the quanta of evidence necessary to establish probable
    cause, the United States Supreme Court recently noted that finely
    tuned standards such as proof beyond a reasonable doubt or by a
    preponderance of the evidence, useful in formal trials, have no
    place in the probable-cause decision.
    Commonwealth v. Dommel, 
    885 A.2d 998
    , 1002 (Pa. Super. 2005)
    (cleaned up).
    In this case, Appellant first contends that in assessing whether Officer
    Salvatore had probable cause to conduct his warrantless arrest, we may
    consider only the “single incident” that occurred on July 21, 2016. Appellant’s
    Brief at 8. He insists that the officer’s prior “investigation into [him] does not
    matter to the probable cause determination.” 
    Id.
     Notably, Appellant cites no
    legal authority to support this argument. We deem it meritless. As explained
    above, we must consider the totality of the facts and circumstances known to
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    the officer at the time of the warrantless arrest when assessing whether the
    officer had probable cause. See Dommel, 
    supra.
     Here, the totality of the
    circumstances known by Officer Salvatore includes the information he learned
    during his investigation and surveillance of Appellant during the five months
    prior to Appellant’s July 21, 2016 arrest.
    Moreover, we also reject Appellant’s argument that the tip Officer
    Salvatore received, that Appellant would be selling drugs at a specific location
    on July 21, 2016, “is entitled to no independent evidentiary weight.”
    Appellant’s Brief at 9. While Appellant claims that Officer Salvatore did no
    “investigative work to corroborate” the tip, that is patently false. 
    Id.
     Officer
    Salvatore set up surveillance at the location and observed Appellant arrive in
    the area on the date specified. He further watched as Appellant parked at a
    home from which a woman emerged, briefly went to the driver’s side window
    of Appellant’s vehicle, and then went back inside the residence. Appellant
    then travelled to another house, from which the white male emerged and
    approached the car, handed cash into the car through the passenger window,
    received in exchange a small bag containing a white substance, and then
    quickly entered a nearby residence. Officer Salvatore’s observations of all of
    this constituted his investigation into, and verification of, the reliability of the
    tip that Appellant was selling drugs at that location.
    Finally, we also find meritless Appellant’s argument that “Officer
    Salvatore offered essentially no explanation of why he believed that
    [Appellant’s] passenger was selling drugs other than to assert that he has a
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    great deal of experience with drug cases….” Id. at 10. As explained above,
    in addition to his observations on July 21, 2016, Officer Salvatore had received
    a tip that Appellant planned to sell drugs on that date and at that location; he
    had previously witnessed Appellant sell drugs to Heffer; and he had received
    information from other police departments about Appellant’s drug activity,
    including that Appellant had been arrested in a residence where a large
    amount of cocaine was subsequently found.          With this knowledge as a
    backdrop, Officer Salvatore arrived at the location of the alleged drug deal on
    July 21, 2016, and observed two individuals approach, and then quickly leave,
    Appellant’s vehicle.   The second person — the white male — exchanged
    currency with someone in the car and received in exchange a small, clear bag
    containing a white, chunky substance.       Thus, Officer Salvatore’s probable
    cause to arrest Appellant was premised on the totality of these facts, not
    simply his training and experience.
    Moreover, contrary to Appellant’s argument, Officer Salvatore clearly
    explained how his training and experience led him to conclude that the white
    substance was crack cocaine. Specifically, Officer Salvatore testified at the
    suppression hearing that he has been a patrolman for over 13 years. N.T.
    Suppression Hearing at 5. During that time, he had “worked narcotics and
    then [been] assigned to the DEA Narcotics Task Force,” in which he was then
    in his third year. Id. He attended “DEA Narcotics Investigation School[,]” as
    well as “numerous narcotics conferences involving different trainings.” Id.
    When pressed to explain why he believed that the white, chunky substance
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    he observed in the small bag given to the white male was crack cocaine, the
    officer testified that he has “seen crack cocaine numerous times” and he has
    “had hundreds of arrests involving crack cocaine.” Id. at 30.
    This testimony makes the present case easily distinguishable from the
    two decisions on which Appellant relies: Commonwealth v. Randolph, 
    151 A.3d 170
     (Pa. Super. 2016), and Commonwealth v. Whitlock, 
    69 A.3d 635
    (Pa. Super. 2013). In Randolph, we held that there was no probable cause
    to issue a search warrant for a box welded to the undercarriage of Randolph’s
    car where the officer submitting the warrant application stated the following
    facts therein about his stop of Randolph’s car:
    I ... initiated a canine search of the vehicle with [c]anine ‘Draco’.
    During the search, Draco increased his breathing around the
    driver’s seat floor area, but did not indicate. I then initiated a hand
    search of the vehicle with Tpr. Rowland. During the search, we
    located multiple cell phones[,] one of which was ringing, [but] no
    luggage to indicate a long trip. I then looked at the undercarriage
    of the vehicle and observed an aftermarket modification between
    the floor (sic) that did not match the remainder of the
    undercarriage. Based on my training and experience[,] I
    recognized this modification to be a hidden compartment
    commonly used to transport guns, drugs and U.S. currency. I
    related this information to Randolph and noticed a drastic change
    in attitude...[.] Canine Draco is trained and certified by the
    Pennsylvania State Police to detect the odors of cocaine, heroin,
    marijuana and methamphetamines.
    Randolph, 151 A.3d at 183 (citation to record omitted). We deemed these
    facts insufficient to demonstrate probable cause to issue the search warrant
    for two reasons:
    First, the police dog, Draco, did not alert when it sniffed the area
    in which Corporal Hanlon subsequently discovered the
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    compartment. … Second, Corporal Hanlon failed to explain how
    his “training and experience” led him to recognize that the
    compartment was “commonly used to transport guns, drugs and
    U.S. currency.” He neglected to list what classes he has attended
    or certifications he has received on this subject, the number or
    type of cases he has participated in where officers discovered
    hidden compartments containing drugs or weapons, or even how
    long he has been a law enforcement officer. Thus, his claim of
    “knowledge and experience” was an empty phrase that failed to
    tilt the scales toward probable cause.
    Id. at 184.
    Unlike in Randolph, Officer Salvatore premised his probable cause
    determination on much more than his training and experience, but he also
    explained how his training and experience applied to the circumstances at
    hand and led him to conclude that he had witnessed a drug sale of crack
    cocaine from Appellant and Burrell to the white male. Thus, Randolph is
    distinguishable from this case.
    We also find Appellant’s reliance on Whitlock unconvincing. There, we
    held that no probable cause existed where “the Commonwealth’s assertions
    in support of probable cause consist[ed] of no more than [a police officer’s]
    testimony that he was an experienced narcotics investigator and that he
    observed [Whitlock] withdrawing a newspaper-wrapped package from his
    pocket and depositing it in a bucket on his own porch, which triggered his
    suspicion that the package contained heroin.” Whitlock, 
    69 A.3d at 641
    .
    Clearly, these facts and the question addressed by the Whitlock panel — i.e.,
    whether “the Commonwealth established that the incriminating nature of the
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    object was immediately apparent under the totality of the circumstances” —
    are not analogous to the present case.
    In sum, Appellant has not convinced us that the trial court erred in
    denying his motion to suppress. Officer Salvatore testified that Appellant’s
    arrest was premised on: the information he gleaned during his months-long
    investigation of Appellant, including the controlled purchase of drugs from
    Appellant by Heffer; the tip that Appellant would be selling drugs at a specific
    location on July 21, 2016; the officer’s observation, at that location, of a
    female approaching Appellant’s car and quickly returning to her home; and
    the officer’s seeing the white male hand cash through the window on Burrell’s
    side of the vehicle, and receive in exchange a small, clear bag containing a
    white, chunky substance that, due to the officer’s training and experience, he
    believed to be crack cocaine.      Based on the totality of these facts and
    circumstances, Officer Salvatore had probable cause to order the warrantless
    arrest of Appellant.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 8/30/19
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Document Info

Docket Number: 1340 EDA 2018

Filed Date: 8/30/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/30/2019