Com. v. Gant, J. ( 2016 )


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  • J-A07009-16, J-A07010-16
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA              IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    JOHN GANT AND JEREMIAH DARYLE
    GANT
    Appellant               No. 596 WDA 2015
    Appeal from the Order Entered March 10, 2015
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-56-CR-0000020-2014
    CP-56-CR-0000021-2014
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA              IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    JOHN GANT,
    Appellant
    ________________________________
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    JEREMIAH DARYLE GRANT
    Appellant
    No. 603 WDA 2015
    J-A07009-16, J-A07010-16
    Appeal from the Order Entered March 10, 2015
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-56-CR-0000020-2014
    CP-56-CR-0000021-2014
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., MUNDY, J., and JENKINS, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY JENKINS, J.:                             FILED JULY 22, 2016
    The Commonwealth appeals at 596 WDA 2015 from an order
    suppressing evidence seized from a vehicle pursuant to a search warrant
    following a videotaped traffic stop on the Pennsylvania Turnpike on October
    21, 2013. For the following reasons, we affirm.1
    On October 21, 2013, John and Jeremiah Gant were charged with
    possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance, possession of a
    controlled substance, criminal conspiracy and providing false identification to
    a law enforcement officer.2 Each defendant filed a motion to suppress, and
    on December 10, 2014, the trial court held a hearing on the motions. On
    March 10, 2015, the court entered a memorandum and order granting the
    motions to suppress.        The Commonwealth filed a timely notice of appeal,
    ____________________________________________
    1
    Appellees, Jeremiah and John Gant, filed a cross-appeal at 603 WDA 2016
    in which they raised various grounds for upholding the suppression order.
    Only aggrieved parties are entitled to appeal. Pa.R.A.P. 501. The Gants are
    not aggrieved parties because the trial court granted their motion to
    suppress.    Commonwealth v. Dellisanti, 
    831 A.2d 1159
    , 1163 n.7
    (Pa.Super.2003), reversed on other grounds, 
    876 A.2d 366
     (Pa.2005)
    (“one is not an aggrieved party when one prevails …”). Accordingly, we will
    quash the Gants’ cross-appeal. 
    Id.
     (quashing Commonwealth’s appeal
    because it prevailed in proceedings below).
    2
    35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(30) & (16), 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 903, 4914, respectively.
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    and both the Commonwealth and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P.
    1925.
    The Commonwealth raises the following issues in its appeal:
    1. Whether the lower court erred in finding that the officer in this
    matter did not possess the requisite reasonable suspicion to
    justify an investigative detention of the [Gants]?
    2. Whether the lower court erred in not finding that the officer in
    this matter had reasonable suspicion to conduct a canine search
    of the [Gants’] vehicle?
    Brief For Commonwealth, at 4.
    When reviewing an order granting a motion to suppress,
    we are required to determine whether the record supports the
    suppression court's factual findings and whether the legal
    conclusions drawn by the suppression court from those findings
    are accurate. In conducting our review, we may only examine
    the evidence introduced by appellee along with any evidence
    introduced by the Commonwealth which remains uncontradicted.
    Our scope of review over the suppression court's factual findings
    is limited in that if these findings are supported by the record we
    are bound by them. Our scope of review over the suppression
    court's legal conclusions, however, is plenary.
    Commonwealth v. Henry, 
    943 A.2d 967
    , 969 (Pa.Super.2008).                      In
    addition, “this court may uphold the decision of a lower court if it can be
    sustained for any reason, even if the reasons given by the lower court to
    support its decision are erroneous.” In Re Estate of Klink, 
    743 A.2d 482
    ,
    485 (Pa.Super.1999).
    The trial court made the following findings of fact:
    On or about October 21, 2013, [the Gants] were traveling
    eastbound on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in a tan colored
    Chevrolet Cruze bearing Georgia Vehicle Registration: PPY1252.
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    At approximately 9:15 a.m., Pennsylvania State Police Trooper
    John P. Isoldi (hereinafter, the ‘Trooper’ or ‘Trooper Isoldi’)
    departed the Pennsylvania State Police Barracks and entered
    onto the Pennsylvania Turnpike at or near milepost 114. Soon
    after entering onto the Pennsylvania Turnpike, the Trooper
    began following [the Gants]. After following the vehicle for
    approximately one-half of a mile, the Trooper was able to
    ascertain the vehicle's speed by utilizing his speedometer. Upon
    determining that the vehicle was traveling 71 miles per hour on
    a freeway where there was a posted 65 miles-per-hour speed
    limit, a violation of 75 Pa.C.S. § 3362, the Trooper effectuated a
    traffic stop near milepost 118. Trooper Isoldi approached the
    vehicle from the passenger's side, away from traffic, and
    requested information from [the Gants]. Defendant Jeremiah
    Gant, the driver, provided to the Trooper a Maryland driver's
    license and paperwork which documented ownership of the
    vehicle and proof of insurance. The Trooper was soon able to
    determine that Jeremiah Gant's driver's license was in fact
    suspended,[2] and the vehicle was registered to and owned by a
    third party, Connie Gant.         Defendant John Gant, the lone
    passenger, provided to the Trooper the false name of ‘Byron
    Warren,’ with a date of birth of ‘9/24/1964.’ Trooper Isoldi
    attempted a search for the name ‘Byron Warren,’ which yielded
    no results. Trooper Isoldi then requested that Jeremiah Gant exit
    the vehicle, at which time the Trooper escorted him to the front
    of the patrol car, directly in front of the patrol car's mobile video
    recording unit (hereinafter, the ‘MVR’). The Trooper handed
    Jeremiah Gant a written warning for the traffic violation,
    returned his information, and advised him that he was free to
    leave the scene.[3] Before Jeremiah Gant could enter the vehicle
    to depart the scene, Trooper Isoldi once again made contact with
    him. In fact, Jeremiah Gant was unable to take more than three
    steps and had not yet reached the rear of the vehicle before the
    Trooper re-engaged him for further questioning. The Trooper
    asked Jeremiah Gant if he knew the name of the passenger, to
    which Jeremiah Gant responded that he ‘just call[s] him Uncle
    Bry.’ The Trooper then asked for consent to search the vehicle
    for identification belonging to the passenger, as well as
    suspected contraband. Jeremiah Gant denied consent to search
    the vehicle. After being denied consent, Trooper Isoldi called for
    a canine unit to come to the scene for assistance.
    [2]
    The Trooper was, at some point, able to determine that
    Jeremiah Gant had prior drug convictions. Exactly when
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    the Trooper was able to ascertain this information is not
    clear from the record.
    [3]
    Although the Trooper advised Jeremiah Gant that he was
    free to leave, the Trooper testified at the suppression
    hearing that [the Gants] were never actually free to leave
    the scene because neither of [the Gants] had a valid
    driver’s license. In fact, the Trooper testified that he
    advised Jeremiah Gant that he was free to leave because
    ‘case law dictates that I have to advise the operator[] [he
    is] free to leave and [he has] to feel free to leave prior to
    me again contacting that individual to ask for consent to
    search the vehicle.’ …
    Soon after the Trooper called for assistance, Trooper Mike Volk
    arrived at the scene, followed by Canine Trooper Brett Kahler
    (hereinafter, ‘Trooper Kahler’ or ‘Kahler’) and his canine, Kubko
    (hereinafter, ‘Kubko’ or the ‘Canine’). Upon his arrival, Trooper
    Kahler approached the vehicle from the passenger side and
    placed his head inside the vehicle via the open passenger's side
    window. It appears that Trooper Kahler visually inspected the
    interior of the vehicle, with his head remaining inside the vehicle
    for approximately four seconds. Trooper Kahler then retrieved
    Kubko and proceeded to walk to the front of the vehicle, where
    the pair waited for approximately twenty seconds before
    beginning the exterior sniff search. To begin the sniff search,
    Trooper Kahler and Kubko quickly jogged around the exterior of
    the vehicle, ending their initial run-around at the front of the
    vehicle. Kahler and Kubko then began a slower walk around the
    vehicle, during which Trooper Kahler pointed to various locations
    on the vehicle. The Canine appeared to sniff at or near every
    location Trooper Kahler pointed towards. After approximately
    twelve seconds of searching, Trooper Kahler and Kubko reached
    the passenger side of the vehicle, directly in line with the open
    window. After a few quick sniffs, Kubko jumped onto the side of
    the vehicle, and placed his paws on the door and his head
    through the open window. With his head inside the vehicle, it
    appears that Kubko sniffed the interior of the vehicle for a few
    seconds. For the next twenty seconds, Kubko continued to jump
    onto the vehicle and place his head and paws inside the vehicle.
    It was at this point that Kubko pulled his front paws off of the
    vehicle and sat on his haunches. Kubko remained in a seated
    position for approximately three seconds, during which time
    Trooper Kahler made several motions with his right arm. Then,
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    without any discernable warning, Kubko launched himself
    through the open window and into the vehicle. Trooper Kahler
    immediately released Kubko's leash and allowed him to run
    throughout the vehicle. The Canine remained inside for
    approximately one minute before Kahler was able to coax him
    out of the vehicle. At this point, according to his testimony,
    Trooper Isoldi believed that the canine sniff search had ended.
    As a result of the canine sniff search, [the Gants] and the vehicle
    were detained and transported to the Pennsylvania State Police
    Turnpike Barracks, Somerset. Trooper Isoldi applied for a search
    warrant in order to search the vehicle for identification and
    narcotics, and said warrant was granted. A search of the vehicle
    revealed numerous controlled substances in varying quantities.
    Memorandum, at 2-4 (footnotes omitted).
    Multiple additional details deserve mention.3 First, Trooper Isoldi, the
    only witness at the suppression hearing, testified that both men in the car
    were “breathing heavily [and] shaking.”          N.T., 12/10/14, at 13.      When
    Trooper Isoldi asked the passenger in the car for identification, he claimed
    that “he … lost his ID somewhere in Ohio over the weekend.”           Id.     The
    trooper testified that the passenger gave his name as Byron Warren with a
    birth date of September 24, 1964, all the while “hesitating and stumbling
    over his words. Appeared to me he was guessing.” Id. Later, after Trooper
    Isoldi summoned the canine unit, but before the unit arrived, the passenger
    admitted that “he was in fact lying about his name. He was concerned he
    ____________________________________________
    3
    We may take these details into account because the Gants did not
    introduce any contradictory evidence on these points. Henry, 943 A.2d at
    969.
    -6-
    J-A07009-16, J-A07010-16
    may or may not have had a warrant. And he advised me that he had had
    previous violations of the Drug Device and Cosmetic Act.” Id. at 15.
    Second, we find significant the videotape of the traffic stop that the
    trial court admitted into evidence during the suppression hearing.              The
    videotape did not have an audio soundtrack, so it did not record what
    anyone said during the traffic stop.           The videotape showed Kubko circling
    the vehicle with his handler, Trooper Kahler, while sniffing the exterior. On
    the passenger side of the vehicle, Kubko twice stood up on his hind legs and
    pushed his head inside the car interior, all while Trooper Kahler appeared to
    make encouraging gestures.          Kubko then sat down on his haunches in an
    “alert” position.    Moments later, as Trooper Kahler continued to gesture,
    Kubko jumped through an open passenger side window into the vehicle and
    circled the passenger compartment.4
    Third, while Trooper Isoldi is not trained as a canine officer, he
    testified that he “helps and assists with the training of canines.”            N.T.,
    12/10/14, at 18.         He has worked with canine officers in hundreds of
    narcotics cases, and he has made over 350 arrests in undercover and
    highway interdiction cases.         Id. at 18-19.      Trooper Isoldi testified that
    through his years of experience, he understands when a dog alerts to drugs:
    ____________________________________________
    4
    Trooper Kahler did not testify at the suppression hearing.
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    J-A07009-16, J-A07010-16
    “They’ll sit down, they’ll stare, they go on point, which means they stop …
    just like a bird dog when you’re pheasant hunting.” Id. at 20.
    Fourth, Trooper Isoldi’s search warrant application did not mention
    that Kubko placed his head in the interior of the vehicle during the canine
    sniff and jumped into the vehicle at his handler’s direction. All that Trooper
    Isoldi averred with regard to the canine sniff was: “Trooper … [Kahler], PSP
    Canine Drug Detection Handler[,] conducted an exterior search of the
    vehicle and related to me that his K-9 dog Kubko indicated positively to an
    odor of a controlled substance coming from the interior of the vehicle.”
    Suppression Hearing, Commonwealth Exhibit A (search warrant and affidavit
    of probable cause).
    At the conclusion of the suppression hearing, the trial court ordered
    the parties to brief their respective positions.        The Gants’ opening
    memorandum argued, inter alia, that the search warrant was defective
    because Kubko sniffed the interior of the vehicle before alerting.         The
    Commonwealth ignored this point in its response. The Commonwealth simply
    characterized Kubko’s search as an “exterior canine sniff” and asserted:
    “[T]he video clearly shows [Trooper] Kahler and Kubko going around the
    vehicle and the dog alerting at the right front passenger’s side of the vehicle
    by sitting down and refusing to move.” Commonwealth’s Brief In Opposition
    To Defendants’ Omnibus Motion To Suppress, at 8-9.
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    The trial court concluded that Trooper Isoldi lacked reasonable
    suspicion to detain the Gants further after issuing Jeremiah Gant a traffic
    warning.    We conclude that suppression was proper, but for different
    reasons.    See In Re Estate of Strahsmeier, 
    54 A.3d 359
    , 364 n.17
    (Pa.Super.2012) (Superior Court may affirm for any reason and is not
    constrained to affirm on grounds relied upon by trial court).
    We agree with the Commonwealth’s first argument on appeal that
    Trooper Isoldi had reasonable suspicion to detain the Gants for further
    investigation after issuing Jeremiah Gant a traffic warning. We have defined
    “reasonable suspicion” as follows:
    [T]he officer must articulate specific observations which, in
    conjunction with reasonable inferences derived from these
    observations, led him reasonably to conclude, in light of his
    experience, that criminal activity was afoot … In order to
    determine whether the police officer had reasonable suspicion,
    the totality of the circumstances must be considered. In making
    this determination, we must give due weight … to the specific
    reasonable inferences [the police officer] is entitled to draw from
    the facts in light of his experience. Also, the totality of the
    circumstances test does not limit our inquiry to an examination
    of only those facts that clearly indicate criminal conduct. Rather,
    even a combination of innocent facts, when taken together, may
    warrant further investigation by the police officer.
    Commonwealth v. Smith, 
    917 A.2d 848
    , 852 (Pa.Super.2007) (citations
    omitted).   Reasonable suspicion is less demanding than probable cause,
    which is “a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be
    found in a particular place.”   Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    42 A.3d 1017
    ,
    1031 (Pa.2012).
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    During a traffic stop, the officer “may ask the detainee a moderate
    number of questions to determine his identity and to try to obtain
    information confirming or dispelling the officer’s suspicions.” Berkemer v.
    McCarthy, 
    468 U.S. 420
    , 439 (1984). “[I]f there is a legitimate stop for a
    traffic violation … additional suspicion may arise before the initial stop’s
    purpose has been fulfilled; then, detention may be permissible to investigate
    the new suspicions.”   Commonwealth v. Chase, 
    960 A.2d 108
    , 115 n.5
    (Pa.2008).
    Trooper Isoldi stopped the Gants’ vehicle on the Pennsylvania Turnpike
    for a valid reason: the Gants’ vehicle was speeding. While processing the
    speeding violation, Trooper Isoldi observed several details which indicated
    that criminal activity was afoot.    Both vehicle occupants were breathing
    heavily and shaking.      Jeremiah Gant gave Trooper Isoldi a suspended
    Maryland driver’s license.   The car was registered to a Georgia resident who
    had the same last name (Gant) but who was not in the car. Jeremiah Gant
    told Trooper Isoldi that he did not know the passenger’s name and simply
    called him “Uncle Bry”.      The passenger in turn claimed that he lost his
    identification “somewhere in Ohio.” He identified himself as “Byron Warren”
    with a birth date of September 24, 1964 but displayed so much uncertainty
    that Trooper Isoldi believed that he was guessing.    A computer search for
    Byron Warren yielded no results.         These factors provided reasonable
    suspicion to detain the Gants and continue an investigation into possible
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    criminal wrongdoing. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Jones, 
    874 A.2d 108
    ,
    117 (Pa.Super.2005) (totality of circumstances, including defendant's
    nervousness and stalling, group's prior inconsistent statements, unverifiable
    information on defendant's identification card, and police officer's experience
    and drug interdiction training, furnished reasonable suspicion of criminal
    activity and justified investigative detention following routine traffic stop).
    Indeed, these factors entitled Trooper Isoldi to continue detaining the Gants
    even after telling Jeremiah Gant that he was free to leave. Commonwealth
    v. Kemp, 
    961 A.2d 1247
    , 1262 (Pa.Super.2008) (facts gathered during valid
    traffic stop may be utilized to justify investigatory detention occurring after
    police officer has indicated that defendant is free to leave).
    We turn to the Commonwealth’s second argument on appeal: “The
    trial court erred in not finding that Trooper Isoldi had reasonable suspicion to
    conduct a canine search.”        We agree that Trooper Isoldi had reasonable
    suspicion to conduct a canine sniff of the vehicle’s exterior, but we reach a
    different conclusion with regard to Kubko’s sniffs of the vehicle’s interior.
    The use of trained dogs to sniff for the presence of drugs constitutes a
    search   under   Article   I,   section    8   of   the   Pennsylvania   Constitution.
    Commonwealth v. Johnston, 
    530 A.2d 74
    , 78 (Pa.1987).                           Before
    conducting a canine sniff of a person, the police must have probable cause
    to believe that the sniff will produce contraband or evidence of crime.
    Commonwealth v. Martin, 
    626 A.2d 556
    , 560 (Pa.1993).                      Conversely,
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    police officers only need reasonable suspicion to conduct a canine sniff of a
    place, such as the exterior of a vehicle. Commonwealth v. Rogers, 
    849 A.2d 1185
    , 1191 (Pa.2004).
    Here, Trooper Isoldi had reasonable suspicion to conduct an exterior
    sniff. As discussed above, at the time the trooper issued the traffic warning,
    he had reasonable suspicion that criminal wrongdoing was afoot. Moreover,
    after the traffic warning, but before the canine sniff began, John Gant
    admitted to the trooper that he had a record of drug-related violations, and
    that there might be a warrant for his arrest.    Collectively, these facts are
    analogous to the evidence that furnished reasonable suspicion for an exterior
    canine sniff in Rogers.     
    Id.,
     849 A.2d at 1191 (officer had reasonable
    suspicion to conduct canine sniff of vehicle exterior for drugs, where trooper
    lawfully stopped vehicle for traffic violations, defendant was in extreme state
    of nervousness, paperwork for vehicle was incomplete and conflicting,
    defendant acknowledged that address on paperwork was fictitious, trooper
    observed open boxes of laundry detergent and fabric softener sheets in
    vehicle along with packaging tape, and trooper knew from his experience in
    investigating narcotics offenses that those laundry supplies were commonly
    packaged with certain drugs to mask their odor so as to avoid detection
    during transport).
    We turn to the more difficult question of whether Kubko’s interior
    sniffs were constitutional. While circling the vehicle, Kubko stood up on his
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    hind legs two times and sniffed the interior of the vehicle through open
    windows, all while Trooper Kahler appeared to make encouraging gestures.
    Only after these sniffs did Kubko alert and then jump into the vehicle. Was
    reasonable suspicion or probable cause necessary for Kubko’s interior sniffs?
    Rogers, the only Pennsylvania appellate decision we can find on the
    subject of interior canine sniffs, came close to answering this question but
    ultimately stopped short. The canine in Rogers, like Kubko here, jumped
    into the vehicle’s interior during a canine sniff. The defendant argued that
    probable cause did not exist for a canine sniff of the interior. Our Supreme
    Court observed that while canine sniffs are searches, “they are not akin to
    searches conducted by human law enforcement officers and need not in all
    instances be supported by probable cause.”         Id. at 1192.     The Court
    continued that “assum[ing] arguendo” that probable cause was necessary
    for an interior sniff, the evidence supported probable cause because “the
    police had reasonable suspicion before Rosie responded to the scene,” and
    “after [the dog] arrived, … while she was outside the automobile, she alerted
    to the driver's side door[,] [indicating] to the officers that she had detected
    narcotics.”   Id.   Thus, “reasonable suspicion of contraband in the vehicle
    ripen[ed] into probable cause.” Id.
    In a concurring opinion, Justice Castille, joined by two other justices,
    said the following:
    Turning to the [interior] sniff—Rosie [the canine]’s jumping into
    the car and sniffing the interior—there is no illegality again, not
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    because of the nature of the canine sniff, but because, by the
    time this occurred, Rosie had already positively alerted to the
    presence of narcotics while outside the driver’s side door. This
    fact, which confirmed Trooper Banovsky’s existing reasonable
    suspicion of a drug offense, gave rise to probable cause. See
    United States v. Sukiz–Grado, 
    22 F.3d 1006
    , 1009 (10th
    Cir.1994) (probable cause existed for entry of trained canine
    where dog alerted to presence of drugs when conducting canine
    sniff of exterior of vehicle). Under Pennsylvania’s version of the
    automobile exception to the search warrant requirement, given
    the mobility of the vehicle and the spontaneous arising of
    probable cause, police would have been justified in conducting
    an immediate search of the interior of the car … Since the police
    themselves could have searched the car at this point, Rosie’s
    entry into the car, and her confirmatory alert following a
    minimally intrusive sniff, was not unlawful.
    In my view, the calculus would alter significantly if police had
    released Rosie into the car solely upon reasonable suspicion,
    notwithstanding that canine sniffs are less intrusive than full-
    blown searches. See Almeida–Sanchez v. United States, 
    413 U.S. 266
    , 269–70, 
    93 S.Ct. 2535
    , 2537–38, 
    37 L.Ed.2d 596
    (1973) (‘the Carroll doctrine [Carroll v. United States, 
    267 U.S. 132
    , 
    45 S.Ct. 280
    , 
    69 L.Ed. 543
     (1925), which established
    the first exception to the warrant requirement for automobile
    searches] does not declare a field day for the police in searching
    automobiles. Automobile or no automobile, there must be
    probable cause for the search.’). But that is not what happened
    here.
    Id. at 1199 (emphasis added).
    Although Rogers cautions that probable cause is not a prerequisite for
    every interior canine sniff, we conclude that, at least in this case, probable
    cause was necessary for Kubko’s interior sniffs.      Human police officers
    clearly must have probable cause to search motor vehicle interiors without a
    warrant. Commonwealth v. Gary, 
    91 A.3d 102
    , 124, 138 (Pa.2014). It
    would dramatically erode this rule and circumvent the probable cause
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    requirement if canines could sniff vehicle interiors on the basis of reasonable
    suspicion.
    For several reasons, we conclude that the Commonwealth failed to
    demonstrate probable cause for Kubko’s interior sniffs. To begin with, the
    Commonwealth waived its right to argue that probable cause existed for
    Kubko’s interior sniffs.      The Gants argued in the trial court that probable
    cause was necessary for the interior sniffs, Gants’ Joint Brief In Support Of
    Omnibus Pretrial Motion, at 13-14. Not only did the Commonwealth ignore
    this argument in its response, but it ignored clear evidence that Kubko
    sniffed   the    vehicle    interior    twice   before   alerting.   Instead,   the
    Commonwealth asserted misleadingly that Kubko performed an exterior sniff
    and then alerted.        Commonwealth’s Brief In Opposition To Defendants’
    Omnibus Motion To Suppress, at 8-9. By disregarding the Gants’ probable
    cause argument below, the Commonwealth cannot claim probable cause
    here.5    Pa.R.A.P. 302(a) (“issues not raised in the lower court are waived
    and cannot be raised for the first time on appeal”).
    Even if the Commonwealth had preserved the right to argue probable
    cause, it would not have prevailed on this issue. We have held above that at
    the time Kubko began his exterior sniff, there was reasonable suspicion to
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    5
    Compounding this waiver is the Commonwealth’s failure to argue probable
    cause in its appellate brief. Its argument about Kubko’s search is one-half
    page long with boilerplate citations about the reasonable suspicion doctrine.
    Brief For Commonwealth, at 13.
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    believe that criminal activity was afoot. But this did not rise to the level of
    probable cause to search for drugs; there simply was not enough evidence
    for a reasonable person to believe that drugs were in the vehicle. Whereas
    probable cause arose in Rogers because the canine alerted during an
    exterior sniff, Kubko alerted only after sniffing the vehicle interior. Kubko’s
    pre-alert interior sniffs thus tainted its alert, its leap into the car, and its
    sniff around the passenger compartment.
    Conceivably, the Commonwealth might have helped its cause by
    presenting the canine handler, Trooper Kahler, as a witness during the
    suppression hearing. Assuming that Trooper Kahler qualified as an expert in
    canine handling, he might have been able to testify that Kubko did not
    obtain any useful information during his pre-alert interior sniffs and alerted
    solely on the basis of sniffing the exterior.         But Trooper Kahler did not
    testify, so there is nothing to rebut the inference arising from the videotape
    that Kubko alerted on the basis of the improper interior sniffs.6
    The absence of probable cause for Kubko’s pre-alert interior sniffs
    vitiated Trooper Isoldi’s search warrant.          He would not have obtained a
    search warrant without alleging in his affidavit of probable cause that
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    6
    Furthermore, it does not appear that Kubko decided on its own initiative to
    stand on its hind legs and sniff the interior. Instead, it appears that Kubko
    did this because of Trooper Kahler’s encouraging gestures. Once again,
    Trooper Kahler’s absence from the suppression hearing seems to have
    harmed the Commonwealth’s case, for he might have given a different
    explanation for Kubko’s actions.
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    “Trooper [Kahler] … conducted an exterior search of the vehicle and related
    to me that his K-9 dog Kubko indicated positively to an odor of a controlled
    substance coming from the interior of the vehicle.” It is clear, however, that
    Kubko’s alert was the product of interior, rather than exterior, sniffs.
    Because of this material defect in the warrant, we must affirm the trial
    court’s order granting the Gants’ motion to suppress.
    Order affirmed; case remanded for further proceedings consistent with
    this memorandum; jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judge Bowes joins in the memorandum.
    Judge Mundy concurs in the result.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 7/22/2016
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