State of Washington v. Wesley James Weyand ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                               FILED
    JAN 27, 2015
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                           )
    )          No. 31868-1-111
    Respondent,              )
    )
    v.                                      )
    )
    WESLEY JAMES WEYAND,                           )          UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.                )
    FEARING,1.      Daddy, Don't You Walk So Fast. Wayne Newton.
    Once again we are asked to rule whether law enforcement had individualized
    articulable suspicion to stop and question an accused. The accused, Wesley Weyand,
    exited from a known drug house, walked quickly to a car, and looked up and down the
    street before entering the car. As a result of a stop of the car, a police officer arrested
    Weyand on a warrant, and, pursuant to a search incident to arrest, the officer found heroin
    on Weyand's person. After denying Weyand's suppression motion, the trial court found
    No. 31868-1-111
    State v. Weyand
    Weyand guilty of unlawful possession ofa controlled substance. Weyand appeals the
    denial of the motion. We affirm.
    FACTS
    Critical to the trial court's denial of the motion to suppress is a two-year history of
    95 Cullum, to which Corporal Henry testified during the motion hearing. Henry is a drug
    recognition expert with the City of Richland Police Department. During the early
    morning of December 22,2012, Corporal Bryce Henry patrolled the area near 95 Cullum,
    Richland, a known drug house.
    On June 10, 2011, law enforcement conducted a search warrant at 95 Cullum.
    Police then arrested Gerald Hyde for possession of methamphetamine, and Hyde told
    officers he purchased methamphetamine from Blake Hendon at 95 Cullum. Officers
    found methamphetamine inside the home during the search and arrested numerous
    individuals for possession of a controlled substance.
    On January 9, 2012, the Richland Police Department received a call from a person
    who inquired about helping Michelle Eggers, a methamphetamine user. Eggers lived at
    95 Cullum.
    On January 10, 2012, law enforcement journeyed to 95 Cullum to arrest resident
    John Gray, sought on felony warrants. Officers found Gray at the residence, apprehended
    him, and found a controlled substance on his person.
    On March 9, 2012, Richland officers went to 95 Cullum to locate a suspect. They
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    No. 31868-1-II1
    State v. Weyand
    found and arrested Apolonio Saldana and Melissa Eggers on misdemeanor warrants.
    On May 18, 2012, an anonymous caller to law enforcement complained that four
    or five residents of95 Cullum look to be "tweaking" on narcotics. Clerk's Papers (CP) at
    69. Michelle Eggers, Tracy Wilson, and John Gray then lived at the house.
    On June 16,2012, Richland Police Officer Nash spoke to a resident of the
    neighborhood on an unrelated topic. The neighbor complained of a high flow of short
    stay foot traffic at 95 Cullum, and he requested extra patrols in the area. On June 20,
    2012, the Richland Police Department sent a landlord notification letter to Barbara
    Wilson, the owner of 95 Cullum, due to residents at the home with extensive criminal
    histories.
    On August 5, 2012, police officers arrested Ubiquitous Melissa Eggers for a
    warrant while she rode in a vehicle with Derrick Cady and Jason Lebert. Cady was a
    violent offender with safety alerts due to his being a suspect in a home invasion burglary.
    Lebert had been arrested three times for possession of a controlled substance and once for
    unlawful possession of a firearm. During the arrest, Eggers stated she and her two
    companions just left 95 Cullum.
    On September 26, 2012, law enforcement officers saw Melisa Eggers and Eric
    Marple on a Richland street. Both ran. Police stopped Eggers, who they found under the
    influence of methamphetamine. She also displayed track marks on her arms. Officers
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    No. 31868-1-111
    State v. Weyand
    found Marple hiding in a backyard. He also was high on methamphetamine. Eggers
    stated they both just exited 95 Cullum.
    On October 27,2012, officers arrested Melissa Eggers at 95 Cullum. On
    November 6,2012, officers cruised to 95 Cullum to locate John Gray. Police approached
    Michelle Eggers on the porch, and she advised Gray was not home. Gray nonetheless
    exited the residence and police arrested him. Three purses and a glass smoking device
    with residue sat next to Eggers on the porch. Officers obtained a search warrant for the
    purses. A crystal substance in paper, a broken glass pipe with burnt residue, a plastic bag
    with a green powdery substance, a silver marijuana pipe with residue, and a wood and
    plastic smoking device with residue therein rested in the purses. Law enforcement
    arrested Eggers for possession of a controlled substance.
    On December 9, 2012, law enforcement stopped a vehicle in the area of the
    Richland Winco grocery store. The driver of the vehicle, Dexter Wallace, eluded officers
    by running from the vehicle. Police captured Wallace, and a search of his vehicle
    produced methamphetamine. Occupants of the vehicle informed police that they had just
    left Richland's 95 Cullum. On December 18,2012, Richland police executed a search
    warrant at 95 Cullum. During the search, an occupant of the familiar home told police
    that Wallace had sought to buy methamphetamine, at the home, before his December 9
    arrest.
    On December 12,2012, Ivan Tyshchuk was arrested for being under the influence
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    No. 31868-1-111
    State v. Weyand
    of heroin, after exiting a stolen vehicle parked 150 feet from 95 Cullum. Tyshchuk stated
    that he was staying at 95 Cullum.
    On December 18, 2012, police officers on patrol located a stolen vehicle in the
    driveway of 95 Cullum. Michelle Eggers, Apolonio Saldana, Genesis Garza, Francisco
    Nunez, Abby McDowell, and Tracy Wilson then occupied the home. Officers obtained a
    search warrant for the residence. The officers seized two smoking pipes containing
    methamphetamine, a clear plastic baggy containing methamphetamine, a broken glass
    pipe, a cropper with a clear liquid, a kit with an eyeglass case, two silver colored spoons
    with residue inside the kit, plastic baggie pieces, and small bits of cotton that appeared
    burned. Police arrested Nunez for possession of stolen property, Eggers for possession of
    a controlled substance, McDowell for possession of a controlled substance and taking a
    motor vehicle without permission, and Saldana for taking a motor vehicle. Every
    individual in the house possessed a drug history. During her arrest, Abby McDowell told
    officers that she hated staying at 95 Cullum but she had nowhere else to go. She said "a
    ton of people" are always inside the residence and she is weary of the "methjunkies" that
    frequent the house. CP at 71. McDowell named known drug offenders that frequented
    95 Cullum.
    During the motion to suppress hearing, the State of Washington argued that the
    history of 95 Cullum established that individuals visiting and inhabiting 95 Cullum often
    possessed and used controlled substances. Individuals visited 95 Cullum in order to
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    No. 31868-1-111
    State v. Weyand
    purchase controlled substances.
    We forward to December 22,2012. At 2:40 a.m., Richland Corporal Bryce Henry
    drove by 95 Cullum. Twenty minutes later, Corporal Henry again drove by 95 Cullum.
    He then saw a tan Buick, not earlier present, parked 50 feet north of the house. Henry
    parked his vehicle along the street so that he could see the Buick and the entrance to 95
    Cullum.
    Two minutes later, Corporal Bryce Henry saw two men exit 95 Cullum. They
    walked quickly to the tan Buick, and both looked around the area. We are not told if the
    Buick was parked on the same side of the street as the location of the house or whether
    the two men crossed the street to access the car. We are not informed of the clothing
    worn by the two. The male entering the driver's side of the Buick looked down Cullum
    both ways again and then, after a few seconds, entered the car. The car traveled down
    Cullum. Based on his knowledge of drug activity at 95 Cullum and suspicious conduct of
    the two men, Bryce Henry believed the men inside the car may possess a controlled
    substance. Therefore, he stopped the Buick.
    Corporal Bryce Henry waited a few minutes for a cover officer to arrive before
    approaching the Buick. Henry spoke first to the vehicle's driver and then to its
    passenger, Wesley Weyand. Dispatch informed Henry of an outstanding warrant for
    Weyand's arrest. Corporal Henry arrested Weyand. In searching Weyand's person
    incident to arrest, Henry found a capped syringe filled with heroin.
    6
    No. 31868-1-II1
    State v. Weyand
    PROCEDURE
    The State of Washington charged Wesley Weyand with unlawful possession of a
    controlled substance in violation of RCW 69.5004013(1). Weyand moved to suppress
    statements and evidence under CrR 3.5 and CrR 3.6. Weyand, relying on State v.
    Doughty, 
    170 Wash. 2d 57
    , 
    239 P.3d 573
    (2010), argued that Corporal Bryce Henry lacked
    the requisite articulable suspicion to stop the Buick. The trial court conducted a hearing
    on Weyand's suppression motion. Corporal Bryce Henry testified to the history of 95
    Cullum. He admitted that he had never previously encountered Wesley Weyand and had
    no knowledge of Weyand frequenting 95 Cullum.
    The trial court denied Weyand's motion to suppress, reasoning that Doughty was
    distinguishable based on the history of 95 Cullum as a drug house. By stipulated facts,
    the court at trial found Weyand guilty. The trial court sentenced Weyand to twelve
    months and one day incarceration.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    The trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law based on evidence
    at the suppression hearing. The findings enumerated the history at 95 Cullum. Weyand
    does not challenge those findings on appeal. Therefore, we accept the history related by
    Bryce Henry as to the home at 95 Cullum as a verity. The rule in Washington is that
    unchallenged findings entered after a suppression motion hearing are verities on appeal.
    State v. O'Neill, 148 Wn.2d 564,571,62 P.3d 489 (2003); State v. Hill, 
    123 Wash. 2d 641
    ,
    7
    No. 31868-1-III
    State v. Weyand
    647, 
    870 P.2d 313
    (1994). Although we accept the facts found by the trial court as true,
    we review the constitutionality of the warrantless stop de novo as a question of law.
    State v. Gatewood, 
    163 Wash. 2d 534
    , 539, 
    182 P.3d 426
    (2008).
    As a general rule, warrantless searches and seizures are per se unreasonable, in
    violation of the Fourth Amendment and article I, section 7 of the Washington State
    Constitution. State v. Duncan, 
    146 Wash. 2d 166
    , 171,43 P.3d 513 (2002). Wesley
    Weyand does not argue that the Washington Constitution provides him any added
    protection.
    There are a few jealously and carefully drawn exceptions to the warrant
    requirement, which include exigent circumstances, searches incident to a valid arrest,
    inventory searches, plain view searches, and Terry investigative stops. State v. Garvin,
    
    166 Wash. 2d 242
    , 249, 
    207 P.3d 1266
    (2009). This appeal concerns a Terry stop, named
    for Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    , 
    20 L. Ed. 2d 889
    (1968). The State bears
    the burden of demonstrating that a warrantless seizure falls into a narrow exception to the
    rule. State v. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 61
    . A seizure is not justified by what a subsequent
    search discloses. State v. Lesnick, 
    84 Wash. 2d 940
    , 944, 
    530 P.2d 243
    (1975).
    The purpose of a Terry stop is to allow the police to make an intermediate
    response to a situation for which there is no probable cause to arrest but which calls for
    further investigation. State v. Armenta, 
    134 Wash. 2d 1
    , 16,948 P.2d 1280 (1997); State v.
    Moreno, 
    173 Wash. App. 479
    , 492, 
    294 P.3d 812
    , review denied, 177 Wn.2d 1021,304
    8
    No. 31868-1-111
    State v. Weyand
    P.3d 115 (2013). To justify a Terry stop, the police officer must identify specific and
    articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts,
    reasonably warrant an intrusion. 
    Terry, 392 U.S. at 21
    ; State v. 
    Armenta, 134 Wash. 2d at 10
    . The officer's actions must be justified at their inception. 
    Gatewood, 163 Wash. 2d at 540
    .
    The level of articulable suspicion necessary to support an investigative detention is
    "a substantial possibility that criminal conduct has occurred or is about to occur." State
    v. Kennedy, 107 Wn.2d 1,6, 726 P~2d 445 (1986). Use of the word "possibility" suggests
    that the information known to the officer need not support a probability of criminal
    activity. The requisite level of suspicion is considerably less than proof of wrongdoing
    by a preponderance of the evidence. United States v. Sokolow, 
    490 U.S. 1
    , 7, 109 S. Ct.
    1581,104 L. Ed. 2d 1 (1989). Although a Terry stop may be based upon "suspicion," use
    of the modifier "articulable" suggests the suspicion must be clear and explainable.
    Another formulation of the Terry stop rule requires facts to form the suspicion. An
    officer's reasonable suspicion that a suspect is engaged in criminal activity is insufficient
    if the officer cannot articulate objective facts warranting the reasonable suspicion. State
    v. Richardson, 
    64 Wash. App. 693
    , 697, 
    825 P.2d 754
    (1992). A hunch alone does not
    warrant police intrusion into people's everyday lives. State v. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 63
    .
    Innocuous facts alone do not justify a stop. State v. Tijerina, 
    61 Wash. App. 626
    , 629, 
    811 P.2d 241
    (1991).
    9
    No. 31868-I-II1
    State v. Weyand
    The law enforcement officer must observe more than criminal activity in the
    vicinity of someone he stops. The circumstances must suggest a substantial possibility
    that the particular person has committed a specific crime or is about to do so. State v.
    Garcia, 125 Wn.2d 239,242,883 P.2d 1369 (1994); State v. Martinez, 
    135 Wash. App. 174
    , 180, 
    143 P.3d 855
    (2006). There must be some suspicion ofa particular crime and a
    particular person, and some connection between the two. State v. Martinez, 135 Wn.
    App. at 181-82.
    When reviewing the merits of an investigatory stop, a court must evaluate the
    totality of circumstances presented to the investigating officer. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 62
    . Those circumstances include the officer's training and experience. State v. Glover,
    116 Wn.2d 509,514,806 P.2d 760 (1991); State v. 
    Moreno, 173 Wash. App. at 492
    . A
    police officer may rely on his experience to evaluate apparently innocuous facts.
    
    Martinez, 135 Wash. App. at 180
    ; State v. Samsel, 
    39 Wash. App. 564
    , 570-71,694 P.2d 670
    (1985). Facts which appear innocuous to the average person may appear incriminating to
    a police officer in light of past experience. 
    Samsel, 39 Wash. App. at 570
    . Police officers
    are not required to set aside that experience. 
    Samsel, 39 Wash. App. at 570
    -71; State v.
    
    Moreno, 173 Wash. App. at 493
    .
    Despite framing the propriety of a Terry stop in terms of it being an issue of fact
    and based on the totality of the circumstances, Washington courts have ruled as a matter
    of law that certain facts do not constitute articulable suspicion. Being in a high-crime
    10
    No. 31868-1-111
    State v. Weyand
    area at night is not enough to justify a stop when there is no evidence that a particular
    crime had been committed. 
    Glover, 116 Wash. 2d at 514
    ; State v. Thompson, 93 Wn.2d
    838,842,613 P.2d 525 (1980). Exiting a suspected drug house late at night does not
    justify a stop. State v. 
    Doughty, 170 Wash. 2d at 62
    , 64. The reputation of a home,
    building, or neighborhood is general in nature, whereas suspicion must be specific to an
    individual. 
    Richardson, 64 Wash. App. at 697
    . Consorting with a suspected drug dealer
    late at night in a high-crime area does not justify a Terry stop. State v. 
    Richardson, 64 Wash. App. at 697
    . A person of any race being out of place in a particular neighborhood
    can never be used as a basis for suspecting criminal behavior. State v. Gleason, 70 Wn.
    App. 13, 17,851 P.2d 731 (1993). The police may not stop and question citizens on the
    street simply because they are unknown to the police or look suspicious, or because their
    purpose for being abroad is not readily evident. 
    Terry, 392 U.S. at 14
    n.ll; State v.
    
    Martinez, 135 Wash. App. at 181
    .
    Before the trial court and on appeal, Wesley Weyand emphasized State v.
    Doughty, 
    170 Wash. 2d 57
    (2010) as controlling our decision. Doughty holds importance to
    the resolution of this appeal, but, because of diverging facts, Doughty does not alone
    provide an answer. We must look to other Washington and even foreign decisions for a
    complete answer.
    In State v. Doughty, Officer Derek Bishop of the Spokane Police Department
    observed, at 3 :20 a.m., Walter Doughty park his car, approach a house, return to his car
    11
    No. 31868-1-III
    State v. Weyand
    less than two minutes later, and drive away. Bishop did not see any of Doughty's actions
    at the house or if Doughty interacted with anybody inside. Neighbors previously
    complained of frequent short stay traffic at the house, prompting police to identify the
    residence as a "drug house." The State presented no evidence of unlawful drug usage or
    illegal drug purchases at the home. The State lacked evidence of known drug users or
    dealers frequenting the house.
    Officer Derek Bishop stopped Walter Doughty's car, arrested him for driving
    without a license, and searched Doughty and his car. Bishop seized a glass pipe and
    methamphetamine. The Doughty court held: "Police may not seize a person who visits a
    location--even a suspected drug house-merely because the person was there at 3 :20
    a.m. for only two 
    minutes." 170 Wash. 2d at 63
    . Police never saw any of Doughty's
    interactions at the house. He may not have even interacted with anybody there. As far as
    Officer Bishop knew, Doughty knocked and nobody answered. Doughty may have
    approached the wrong house. The two-minute length of time Doughty spent at the
    suspected drug house and the time of day did not justify the police's intrusion into
    Doughty's private affairs.
    Our trial court distinguished Doughty in that 95 Cullum was known to be a drug
    house. The home in Doughty was only suspected to be a drug pavilion. We recognize
    this distinction but doubt the difference alone justifies the stop of Wesley Weyand.
    Doughty does not hold that exiting a known, as opposed to suspected, drug house late at
    12
    No. 31868-1-I1I
    State v. Weyand
    night supports reasonable, articulable suspicion.
    Other decisions are important to resolving this appeal. In State v. Richardson, 
    64 Wash. App. 693
    , 
    825 P.2d 754
    (1992), the court held the investigative detention to be
    unlawful. At the time of the seizure, the officer knew only that Jerry Ray Richardson was
    in a high crime area, late at night, walking near someone the officer suspected of running
    drugs. Consorting with a suspected drug dealer late at night in a high-crime area did not
    justify a Terry stop. The officer needed individualized suspicion directed at Richardson.
    Although the officer had a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity by Richardson, the
    officer did not articulate the suspicion based upon objective facts.
    A decision that emphasizes finding articulable suspicion based upon the law
    enforcement officer's experience and training is State v. 
    Moreno, 173 Wash. App. at 492
    .
    Dispatch informed Yakima Police Sergeant Joe Salinas of multiple reports of gunfire in a
    city block. Sergeant Salinas had considerable experience with gangs in this
    neighborhood and knew the Surefio gang controlled the area. Upon responding to the
    neighborhood, Salinas observed a car driving hurriedly out of an alley. The driver,
    Joshua Bojorquez, wore a red shirt, associated with the rival Nortefio gang. Based on
    these facts, Salinas stopped the car. We upheld the stop on the ground that Sergeant
    Salinas, based on his education and wisdom, reasonably believed the car was involved in
    the drive-by shooting or had information that would help solve the crime.
    13
    No. 31868·1-111
    State v. Weyand
    Of more importance is State v. Gleason, 70 Wn. App. 13,851 P.2d 731 (1993). In
    Gleason, this court repeated the rule that a person of any race being out of place in a
    particular neighborhood can never be used as a basis for suspecting criminal behavior.
    Police saw Anglo John Gleason, dressed in clean casual clothes, leaving an apartment
    complex principally occupied by Hispanics, where narcotics had been sold in the past.
    Based on the totality of the circumstances, the Gleason court held it improper to seize a
    person merely for exiting an apartment complex that had a history of drug sales. The
    court noted that Gleason had not been seen in the area before, the officers did not know
    what occurred inside the apartment complex, and neither officer saw him involved in the
    purchase of drugs. Police did not see Gleason acting suspiciously or carrying any
    unusual objects. Although officers saw Gleason enter an apartment complex rather than a
    specific unit of housing, Gleason may support a conclusion that even exiting a known
    drug house lacks a basis for a stop. Its facts are closer to the circumstances on appeal
    than are the facts in Doughty.
    We believe law enforcement must observe more than the accused exiting a known
    drug home at night to justify a Terry stop. The facts in this appeal include other relevant
    activity, however, considered by Bryce Henry as suspicious. Wesley Weyand and his
    companion walked quickly from the home and looked up and down the street. The
    companion repeated this surveillance before entering the car. These factors are absent in
    Doughty and Gleason.
    14
    No. 31868-1-II1
    State v. Weyand
    The additional acts seem innocuous. Wesley Weyand and his companion just as
    likely walked fast because of a cold temperature during an early morning in December.
    They could have looked up and down the street because their respective mothers taught
    them to look both ways before crossing the road. Weyand's companion may have looked
    again, before entering the car, because he intended to pull the car into traffic. Bryce
    Henry, based on his experience and training and the totality of the circumstances, thought
    otherwise.
    We find no Washington decision that discusses the relevance of walking fast or
    peering up and down the street. Thus, we roam other jurisdictions.
    A case favorable to the accused is People v. McGill, 
    159 Misc. 2d 947
    , 
    607 N.Y.S.2d 569
    (Sup. Ct. 1993). Police Officer Howard looked inside a novelty store that
    sold shoulder holsters, knives, and jewelry. He observed Gregory McGill purchasing a
    shoulder holster. McGill exited the store, looked eastward in Howard's direction and
    then back and forth along the street, and began to walk eastbound carrying an attache
    case and a box of donuts. Howard approached McGill, told him that he saw him try on a
    holster, and asked whether he carried a gun. McGill politely and cooperatively
    responded in the negative. Howard asked McGill ifhe could inspect his briefcase, to
    which Howard testified McGill assented. The search spotted a loaded .25-caliber
    automatic pistol. The court first held that the nature of the stop required a founded
    suspicion that criminal activity was afoot. When reviewing the facts, the court mentioned
    15
    No. 31868-1-III
    State v. Weyand
    that Gregory McGill walked out of the store, looked side to side and then walk down the
    street. The court ruled that the record lacked a founded suspicion of criminality and
    granted the motion to suppress.
    All other cases support the State's position. In People v. Ocasio, 
    85 N.Y.2d 982
    ,
    
    652 N.E.2d 907
    , 
    629 N.Y.S.2d 161
    (1995), another New York decision, Officer Meehan,
    surveilled a building where drug dealing was suspected. Meehan saw Jose Ocasio and
    Joseph Torres pull up in a car in front of the building, look up and down the street, enter
    the building briefly, and then drive away. Another officer approached the car at a red
    light, tapped on the window, and asked for identification. The stop led to an officer
    finding a stolen wallet, checks, and credit cards. The court held that the questioning at
    the traffic light constituted an interference with Ocasio's rights such that the officer
    needed an articulable basis for requesting information. The court also held that the
    observations of Officer Meehan that prompted him to alert the backup officers, the nature
    of the area, and the conduct of Ocasio and Torres, met the minimum requirement. The
    court did not address what conduct contributed to the articulable basis.
    In In re Forfeiture ofa 1981 Ford A ufo., 
    520 So. 2d 631
    (Fla. Dist. Ct. App.
    1988), an anonymous caller informed police that a van parked inside A-I Canvas
    Products was being unloaded of marijuana. Detective Michael Spasaro traveled to the
    business to inspect the area. Ten minutes later a 1981 Ford LTD arrived, and the driver,
    John Coppe, parked and went inside. Coppe returned outside, as someone else raised the
    16
    No. 31868-1-III
    State v. Weyand
    business's bay door. Coppe backed the Ford into the bay area. Spasaro looked inside the
    bay area and saw a blue van with its doors open. The Ford, with its trunk open, was next
    to the back of the van. Spasaro saw Coppe and another man inside. Coppe returned
    outside and took a couple of prolonged looks up and down the street. Coppe then pulled
    the bay door down as far as possible, to the roof of the car. Five to seven minutes later
    the bay door opened and the Ford drove out. Spasaro stopped the car and approached the
    driver's side of the Ford. Spasaro identified himself to Coppe and asked him to step onto
    the sidewalk. Spasaro bent down and put his nose up against the trunk of the Ford, and
    he smelled marijuana. Coppe argued that he was unlawfully stopped, and therefore any
    evidence seized as a result of the stop was inadmissible as "fruit ofthe poisonous tree."
    The appellate court reversed the lower court and held that the anonymous tip, combined
    with the surrounding circumstances, provided Spasaro, an experienced narcotics officer,
    with reasonable suspicion to justify a "stop." The court did not outline the relevant
    circumstances or whether the glances down the street contributed to reasonable suspicion.
    In United States v. Smith, 
    386 F. App'x 399
    (4th Cir. 2010), Officers Matthew
    Sammons and Corey Hurst patrolled a high crime area. The police dispatcher announced
    over the police radio that an anonymous 911 caller reported a fight involving a handgun
    near Church and Anne Streets. A few blocks away from the reported location of the
    fight, Officers Sammons and Hurst observed an adult male and two juveniles running
    toward the officers' police vehicle. The three individuals slowed to a fast walk as they
    17
    No. 31868-1-111
    State v. Weyand
    approached the police car. They looked straight ahead without making eye contact with
    the police officers. The officers exited the car and questioned Peter Smith and his two
    companions. Both officers observed that one of the three individuals, Brandon Curtis,
    was shoeless. Officer Hurst noticed that Brandon's left eye was red and beginning to
    swell. Officer Sammons asked Smith if he carried anything illegal, but the officer could
    not remember Smith's response. Officer Sammons advised Smith that he was going to
    pat him down and reached out toward him. Smith turned and "shuffle-stepped" away.
    Both officers grabbed Smith to prevent him from fleeing and a struggle ensued. After
    arresting Smith, Officer Hurst searched Smith's front pockets and found several rocks of
    cocaine.
    In United States v. Smith, Smith later argued that a group of men walking at a fast
    pace in a high crime neighborhood near the location of a reported fight, who slowed their
    pace and did not meet the gaze of the police upon seeing them is not sufficient to justify a
    Terry stop. The court held that it must look to the totality of the circumstances and the
    totality presented justifiable suspicion of criminal activity. The court did not answer
    whether a fast walk, or the slowing of the walk, was relevant in the calculus of reasonable
    SuspIcIOn.
    We consider the State of Washington to have presented the slimmest of evidence
    needed to justify the stop of Wesley Weyand. For this reason, we do not wish the
    opinion to become precedential and we decline publishing it. We note, nonetheless, that
    18
    No. 31868-1-111
    State v. Weyand
    Corporal Bryce Henry did not need to show by a preponderance of the evidence that
    Weyand or his companion engaged in criminal activity. A substantial possibility was
    enough. We hold that, based on the totality of the circumstances, Corporal Henry, with
    his experience and training as a law enforcement officer, had a reasonable, articulable
    suspicion that justified the stop. The circumstances included the long history of drug
    activity at 95 Cullum, the time of night, the 20 minute stop at the house, the brisk
    walking, and the glances up and down the street. When the trial court finds the officer's
    observations and impressions credible, Washington case law directs us to consider Henry
    to have some expertise in determining whether criminal activity is afoot. Persuasive
    cases suggest a fast walk and peering up and down the street may be included in the
    calculus of reasonable suspicion.
    Although we base our decision, in part, on the conclusion drawn by Bryce Henry
    grounded in his experience and training as an officer, we note a danger in giving
    deference to a law enforcement officer's experience. The officer's transmutation of
    innocuous facts into incriminating facts by his experience may be a practice that
    engenders difficulty for a court to determine if the officer articulates objective facts
    warranting reasonable suspicion. An officer could opine that his training and knowledge
    establish that one is possibly purchasing illegal substances when he exits a suspected
    drug house during earlier morning hours, a judgment that would conflict with State v.
    Doughty.
    19
    No. 31868-1-III
    State v. Weyand
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the trial court's denial of Wesley Weyand's motion to suppress and
    affirm his conviction.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    WE CONCUR:
    20