Commonwealth v. Santiago , 93 Mass. App. Ct. 792 ( 2018 )


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    17-P-1009                                              Appeals Court
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   WILFREDO SANTIAGO.
    No. 17-P-1009.
    Essex.      April 4, 2018. - August 22, 2018.
    Present:   Rubin, Sacks, & Singh, JJ.
    Firearms. Constitutional Law, Search and seizure, Probable
    cause, Arrest. Search and Seizure, Motor vehicle, Probable
    cause, Arrest. Probable Cause. Arrest.
    Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on October 15, 2014.
    A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by James
    F. Lang, J., and the cases were tried before Mary K. Ames., J.
    Edward Crane for the defendant.
    David F. O'Sullivan, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    SACKS, J.    Following a jury trial, the defendant was
    convicted of possession of a firearm, second offense,1 and
    1 After a jury trial on the underlying charge, the defendant
    pleaded guilty to the subsequent offense portion of the
    indictment.
    2
    possession of a loaded firearm.    On appeal, the defendant argues
    that a Superior Court judge (motion judge) erred in denying his
    motion to suppress the firearm and some cash discovered during a
    stop of the vehicle in which the defendant was a passenger.     The
    defendant asserts that police conduct during the stop --
    including boxing the vehicle in and approaching with guns drawn
    -- escalated the encounter to an arrest, for which probable
    cause was lacking.
    After considering the circumstances as a whole, we conclude
    that the officers' show of force was sufficiently significant to
    convert the stop to an arrest.    Because the Commonwealth
    concedes that there was no probable cause to arrest the
    defendant at the time, the motion to suppress should have been
    allowed.   Accordingly, we reverse the convictions.
    1.     Background.   We summarize the motion judge's detailed
    findings of fact, supplementing with additional facts from
    testimony that the judge implicitly credited.     See Commonwealth
    v. Isaiah I., 
    448 Mass. 334
    , 337 (2007), S.C., 
    450 Mass. 818
    (2008).    Here, the defendant concedes that police had reasonable
    suspicion to conduct an investigatory stop of the vehicle in
    which he was traveling, based on evidence of drug dealing as
    well as traffic violations.    We therefore focus our recitation
    on the facts relevant to the defendant's challenge on appeal.
    3
    In the summer of 2014, State police were conducting an
    investigation into suspected drug dealing in Lawrence, centering
    on the defendant, and using a confidential informant.    During
    the investigation, officers determined that the defendant was
    known to the Lawrence police and had a prior conviction of a
    firearms offense.    The confidential informant told police that
    the defendant was selling cocaine and was "involved with
    firearms."
    On August 6, 2014, police initiated surveillance of the
    defendant based on the informant's report that the defendant
    would be traveling to Lynn to pick up cocaine to bring to
    Lawrence.    The surveillance team comprised multiple officers
    from the State police, the Federal Drug Enforcement
    Administration, and the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
    Firearms and Explosives, in unmarked vehicles.    During the
    course of the surveillance, officers observed the defendant,
    along with three other men about whom police apparently had no
    information,2 depart a home in Lawrence in a red GMC Envoy sport
    utility vehicle.    The defendant was seated in the right rear
    passenger's seat.    The surveillance team followed the GMC
    surreptitiously.    After making a number of stops in Lawrence and
    then in Lynn, at about 6:00 P.M. the defendant and his
    2 There was no evidence at the suppression hearing that
    officers knew the men's identities or of any criminal history
    they may have had.
    4
    companions proceeded in the GMC to Route 114 westbound toward
    Lawrence.
    When the GMC reached a point where the road widened from
    one to two lanes and motorists often accelerate to pass slower
    vehicles, it suddenly more than doubled its speed, operating
    well over the posted speed limit.   Believing that the GMC's
    occupants had detected the surveillance, officers decided to
    stop the GMC, rather than waiting for its expected return to
    Lawrence, as they had originally planned.
    Officers contacted a uniformed State trooper who was
    patrolling the area in a marked cruiser and asked him to stop
    the vehicle.   The trooper observed the GMC cross the double
    yellow line in the middle of the road twice.   He turned on his
    cruiser's flashing lights, and the GMC pulled over promptly.
    The trooper's cruiser and at least three other unmarked police
    cars moved in around the GMC, effectively boxing it in.
    Four or five officers simultaneously approached the GMC's
    four doors, yelling for the occupants to raise their hands.     At
    least two of the officers had their guns drawn.   As one officer
    neared the GMC, he observed the defendant, who was still sitting
    in the right rear passenger's seat, reach forward, pull open the
    seat-back pocket in front of him, and stuff an object into it.
    Suspecting that the defendant had attempted to conceal a
    firearm, the officer opened the left rear door and ordered the
    5
    rear seat passengers not to move.      He observed a firearm in the
    seat-back pocket in front of the defendant.
    Officers ordered the defendant and other passengers out of
    the GMC and recovered a loaded revolver from the seat-back
    pocket.   The defendant was arrested and searched, and just under
    $5,500 in cash was found on his person.      No drugs were found.
    2.   Discussion.   The defendant agrees on appeal that the
    stop of the GMC was lawful and supported by observed traffic
    violations as well as reasonable suspicion of drug dealing.       He
    maintains, however, that his motion to suppress was improperly
    denied because police conduct escalated the seizure to an arrest
    without probable cause.3   We agree.
    In reviewing a ruling on a motion to suppress, we accept
    the judge's subsidiary findings unless clearly erroneous, see
    Commonwealth v. White, 
    374 Mass. 132
    , 137 (1977), aff'd, 
    439 U.S. 280
     (1978), and make an "independent determination on the
    correctness of the judge's 'application of constitutional
    principles to the facts as found.'"      Commonwealth v. Haas, 
    373 Mass. 545
    , 550 (1977), S.C., 
    398 Mass. 806
     (1986), quoting from
    Brewer v. Williams, 
    430 U.S. 387
    , 403 (1977).
    3 Based in part on concerns about the reliability of the
    confidential informant, the motion judge concluded that
    "[u]nquestionably, the police did not have probable cause to
    arrest at the time that the stop was made," and on appeal, the
    Commonwealth concedes the point.
    6
    "The Constitution does not require officers 'to gamble with
    their personal safety,' Commonwealth v. Robbins, 
    407 Mass. 147
    ,
    152 (1990), and police officers conducting a threshold inquiry
    may take reasonable precautions, including drawing their
    weapons, when the circumstances give rise to legitimate safety
    concerns."   Commonwealth v. Haskell, 
    438 Mass. 790
    , 794 (2003).
    "Such steps do not automatically turn a stop into an arrest."
    Commonwealth v. Dyette, 
    87 Mass. App. Ct. 548
    , 556 (2015),
    quoting from Commonwealth v. Williams, 
    422 Mass. 111
    , 117
    (1996).
    Whether a police seizure has been transformed into an
    arrest "depends on the proportional relationship of the degree
    of intrusiveness on the defendant to the degree of suspicion
    that prompted the intrusion."   Commonwealth v. Willis, 
    415 Mass. 814
    , 819 (1993).   This determination is highly fact-specific,
    and in assessing the reasonableness of the officers' conduct, we
    view the facts and circumstances "as a whole."   Williams, 422
    Mass. at 116.
    We have held that "[a]n approach with drawn guns is
    generally thought excessive in the absence of any suggestion
    that the defendant is armed or other circumstances suggesting
    the possibility of violence."   Commonwealth v. Fitzgibbons, 
    23 Mass. App. Ct. 301
    , 308 (1986).   Even with information
    suggesting that a defendant possesses a firearm illegally,
    7
    however, police are not generally justified in drawing their
    guns in the absence of additional "fear-provoking
    circumstances."     Commonwealth v. Bottari, 
    395 Mass. 777
    , 782
    (1985).   When considering a vehicle stop, "we also look to the
    number of police used to effectuate the stop and whether the
    movement of the automobile was impeded."     Commonwealth v.
    Sanderson, 
    398 Mass. 761
    , 766 (1986).
    Here, the police response, viewed as whole, included the
    presence of multiple cars and officers, the use of four police
    vehicles to box the GMC in, and the approach of at least two
    officers with guns drawn.     We conclude that this was
    disproportionate "to the degree of suspicion that prompted the
    intrusion" and constituted an arrest.     Willis, 
    415 Mass. at 819
    .
    The surrounding circumstances here lacked factors present in
    other cases that held such precautions justified even absent
    probable cause.
    Here, "[t]he officers' use of force was not precipitated by
    any actions of the defendant[], nor did the officers testify
    that they feared for their safety or the safety of others at the
    time they approached the [GMC] with their guns drawn."     Bottari,
    
    395 Mass. at 782
    .     Though it is certainly relevant that police
    had information as to the defendant's prior nonspecific
    "involvement" in firearms and knew the defendant to have had a
    prior firearms conviction, they had no particular information
    8
    suggesting that he possessed a firearm at the time of the stop.
    Cf. Willis, 
    415 Mass. at 815-816, 819
     (officers had detailed
    information that defendant with previous arrest for armed
    robbery was carrying loaded stolen gun at time of seizure);
    Haskell, 438 Mass. at 793-794 (officers received reliable report
    that defendant was seen publicly loading handgun in high-crime
    area at 2:00 A.M.); Commonwealth v. McKoy, 
    83 Mass. App. Ct. 309
    , 314 (2013) (defendant and companion were coming from
    direction of reported shooting, were only persons on street, and
    had hands in pockets).
    The officers had no information about any history of
    violent conduct on the part of the defendant.   Cf. Commonwealth
    v. Ruiz, 
    51 Mass. App. Ct. 346
    , 347-351 (2001) (police show of
    force did not transform seizure into arrest, where defendants
    were suspected of just having committed home invasion).     Though
    police information regarding the defendant's possible drug
    dealing is relevant in our analysis, "case law often observes
    that the mere fact that drugs are involved does not support the
    view that guns or other weapons are present."   Commonwealth v.
    Cabrera, 
    76 Mass. App. Ct. 341
    , 348 (2010).   See Commonwealth v.
    Washington, 
    449 Mass. 476
    , 482 (2007) ("we are reluctant to
    adopt a blanket rule that all persons suspected of drug activity
    are to be presumed armed and dangerous for constitutional
    purposes").
    9
    We acknowledge, as the Commonwealth argues, "that drug
    offenses frequently involve drug dealers being armed and that,
    in many cases, shootings and killings occur when a drug dealer
    is confronted by police, when a drug deal goes 'bad,' or when
    others try to steal the drugs."   Commonwealth v. Hines, 
    449 Mass. 183
    , 189 (2007).    See Commonwealth v. Cannon, 
    449 Mass. 462
    , 470 (2007) (same).   But neither Hines nor Cannon involved
    any question whether a police display of force was
    disproportionate in particular circumstances.4   Neither decision
    suggested that police are justified in drawing their weapons
    whenever they approach a drug suspect.5   Cf. Commonwealth v.
    Jimenez, 
    438 Mass. 213
    , 216-220 (2002) (that drug dealers may
    often have guns does not justify no-knock search warrant in
    every drug case; what is required is probable cause to believe
    4 The court in Hines made the quoted observation in support
    of its interpretation of a statute providing enhanced punishment
    for felonies when a firearm was involved. Hines, 449 Mass. at
    189. In Cannon, the court repeated the observation in the
    course of holding that the jury could reasonably infer that the
    felony-murder defendant knew that one of his coventurers was
    carrying a weapon when they robbed a drug dealer. Cannon, 449
    Mass. at 470.
    5 The Commonwealth also relies on Commonwealth v. Moses, 
    408 Mass. 136
    , 143 (1990) (drug trafficking is "fraught with
    violence"), and Commonwealth v. Va Meng Joe, 
    40 Mass. App. Ct. 499
    , 510 n.13 (1996), S.C., 
    425 Mass. 99
     (1997) (noting
    "frequent association of guns with drug dealing"). Both of
    those decisions involved protective searches for weapons of drug
    suspects who had just made furtive gestures, not (as here)
    officers' display of their own weapons in effecting stops.
    10
    officer safety would be jeopardized by observing knock and
    announce rule in the particular circumstances).
    At the time of the show of force here, police had not
    observed any furtive conduct by the defendant or his companions.
    Concerns about flight raised by the GMC's increase in speed
    would have been substantially alleviated when the vehicle
    promptly and uneventfully stopped when signaled by the marked
    cruiser.6   Nor had any of the GMC's four occupants refused any
    police orders.   Cf. Commonwealth v. Torres, 
    433 Mass. 669
    , 670-
    671 (2001) (officer did not escalate stop to arrest by drawing
    gun, after passengers in vehicle he had stopped had "bent over"
    to "mess[] with something" on vehicle floor and three of them
    failed to obey instruction to place hands on heads).
    The officers were a part of an organized surveillance team
    comprising multiple State and Federal officers and were not
    outnumbered by the defendant and his companions.   Cf. Cabrera,
    76 Mass. App. Ct. at 349 (two officers, outnumbered by five drug
    suspects in dead-end alley at night, had legitimate safety
    concerns justifying call for backup before patfrisk).   There was
    no evidence that the location of the stop was associated in any
    6 The officer who gave the order to stop the GMC testified,
    "[I]f they were aware of surveillance, the chance for them
    fleeing when [the trooper] turned the lights on, in my opinion,
    had just gone way up."
    11
    way with past crimes of violence.   Cf. Dyette, 87 Mass. App. Ct.
    at 549, 556-557.
    In urging that the police conduct here at issue was a stop
    rather than an arrest, the Commonwealth relies largely on Willis
    and Dyette.    That reliance is unavailing.    In Willis, the
    information available to police raised significant articulable
    safety concerns:    at the time of the stop, the defendant was
    reasonably believed to possess a loaded, stolen handgun, and the
    defendant had a prior arrest for a violent crime involving a
    weapon.   Willis, 
    415 Mass. at 815-816, 819
    .    Here, the safety
    concerns were considerably less substantial.     Police information
    as to the defendant's history with firearms was vague and did
    not involve violence, and police had no information that the
    defendant possessed any firearm at the time of the stop.
    Similarly, Dyette involved multiple factors raising safety
    concerns not present here.    In that case, officers in an
    unmarked car noticed the defendant trespassing in a park close
    to midnight.   Dyette, 87 Mass. App. Ct. at 550.    The park,
    closed and unlit, was known "as an area of high firearm
    activity, including homicides and other shootings."     Id. at 549.
    After spotting the officers, the defendant and his companion
    fled, "colliding with each other as they ran."     Id. at 550.
    Several officers gave chase on foot, but the defendant eluded
    them until a lone officer stationed at a park exit saw him,
    12
    recognized him from "numerous" prior encounters "including a
    firearm arrest," and ordered him to the ground at gunpoint.
    Ibid.
    In contrast to Dyette, where the defendant engaged in plain
    (and chaotic) flight from officers, and halted only after the
    challenged show of force, here the evidence of flight was more
    equivocal, and ameliorated by the prompt compliance by the
    driver of the GMC with the police signal to stop.   Unlike in
    Dyette, the place of the stop in this case was neither one at
    which the defendant's presence was itself suspicious nor one
    associated with past violent crime.   Additionally, Dyette
    involved a fleeing suspect's sudden encounter with a lone
    officer, who was forced to make a split-second decision about
    his own safety.   Here the officers were engaged in a coordinated
    surveillance operation in which four police vehicles
    participated in the stop of the GMC; the officers decided when
    to make the stop and had time to discuss how they would proceed
    once the GMC pulled over.7
    We recognize that the fact-specific decisional law in this
    area may at times pose a difficult dilemma for police officers:
    "If the officer approaches a suspect[] . . . with his gun still
    7 The trooper in the marked cruiser testified that he was
    given no information about the nature of the case and was
    instructed to follow the GMC and make a stop "once [he] saw a
    violation."
    13
    in his holster, he increases the risk that he will be shot.        If,
    on the other hand, he protects himself by drawing his gun, he
    increases the risk that a court will set the criminal free by
    construing his action as an illegal arrest."     Fitzgibbons, 23
    Mass. App. Ct. at 305, quoting from United States v. Jackson,
    
    652 F.2d 244
    , 249-250 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 
    454 U.S. 1057
    (1981).    And we emphasize that even when police lack probable
    cause to arrest, they may draw their guns or otherwise show
    force, to protect themselves or others, when such a display is
    "proportional . . . to the degree of suspicion" based on all
    relevant circumstances.    Willis, 
    415 Mass. at 819
    .   We have
    discussed supra some of the numerous decisions illustrating
    circumstances in which officers may reasonably draw their
    weapons.   To those, we add Commonwealth v. Emuakpor, 
    57 Mass. App. Ct. 192
    , 193-195, 199 (2003) (two officers justified in
    blocking vehicle and approaching with guns drawn, where four
    occupants were suspected of just having committing armed robbery
    with gun).
    We acknowledge that the question here is close, and our
    resolution of it necessarily "depends on the particular facts of
    [this] case."   Williams, 422 Mass. at 118.   We are constrained
    to conclude that police conduct here was not "commensurate with
    their suspicion."    Willis, 
    415 Mass. at 820
    .   The stop of the
    defendant thus constituted an arrest.    Because the Commonwealth
    14
    acknowledges that, at the time of the stop, there was no
    probable cause for an arrest, the defendant's motion to suppress
    should have been allowed.8
    Judgments reversed.
    Verdicts set aside.
    8 The Commonwealth has not argued that the gun would have
    inevitably been discovered even if the officers had not
    approached the stopped vehicle in the manner that they did, nor
    did the judge make findings on that issue. See Commonwealth v.
    O'Connor, 
    406 Mass. 112
    , 115-119 (1989) (discussing inevitable
    discovery doctrine).