Com. v. Thomas, N. ( 2015 )


Menu:
  • J-S79022-14
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                       IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellee
    v.
    NOLTON THOMAS
    Appellant                        No. 283 EDA 2014
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence January 24, 2014
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County
    Criminal Division at No(s): CP-23-CR-0007304-2012
    BEFORE: ALLEN, OLSON and STRASSBURGER,* JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY OLSON, J.:                              FILED MARCH 13, 2015
    Appellant, Nolton Thomas, appeals from the judgment of sentence
    entered on January 24, 2014.        We are constrained to vacate Appellant’s
    convictions and remand for a new trial.
    On August 22, 2012, Appellant was arrested and charged with
    possession of cocaine and possession of cocaine with the intent to deliver
    (hereinafter “PWID”).    On April 29, 2013, Appellant filed a motion to
    suppress the physical evidence in his case. As Appellant claimed, all of the
    evidence against him must be suppressed because “[Appellant] . . . was
    subjected to search and seizure without probable cause or reasonable
    suspicion” and because the search of the vehicle that Appellant was driving
    “far   exceeded   the   permissible   areas   to    be    searched   under   the
    circumstances.” Appellant’s Motion to Suppress, 4/29/13, at 1-2.
    *Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S79022-14
    On May 2, 2013, the trial court held an initial hearing on Appellant’s
    suppression motion.       During this initial hearing, the Commonwealth relied
    solely upon the testimony of City of Chester Police Officer Joshua Dewees,
    who was the officer that made the traffic stop of Appellant’s vehicle. From
    Officer Dewees’ testimony, the trial court made the following findings of fact:
    1. On August 22, 2012[,] at approximately 5:01 p.m.,
    Officer Joshua Dewees . . . was in [the] area of East 11 th
    Street and Walnut Street[, in the City of Chester,] checking
    the area for a complaint of shots fired. [N.T. Suppression
    Hearing, 5/2/13, at 12-13.]
    2. Officer [James] Fiore of the Chester City Police
    Department also responded to the complaint. [Id. at 16-
    17.]
    3. While responding to the call, the officers were monitoring
    radio transmissions concerning the incident. [Id. at 16-17
    and 39.]
    4. A description was broadcast of the suspect being a black
    male wearing [a] red []shirt fleeing[1] the area on East 12th
    Street toward Potter Street.[2, 3] [Id. at 13, 28, and 31.]
    ____________________________________________
    1
    We note that, during Officer Dewees’ suppression hearing testimony,
    Officer Dewees alternatively testified that dispatch described the possible
    suspect as “fleeing” the area, “leaving” the area, and “walking away” from
    the area. See N.T. Suppression Hearing, 5/2/13, at 13 (testified that
    dispatch relayed “a description of a black male . . . seen leaving the area . .
    . north on Walnut towards 12th Street”); N.T. Suppression Hearing, 5/2/13,
    at 28-32 (testified that dispatch described the possible suspect as “fleeing
    the area”); N.T. Suppression Hearing, 5/2/13, at 31 (acknowledged that,
    during Appellant’s preliminary hearing, Officer Dewees testified that the
    description was of the “possible shooter wearing [a red shirt] walking on
    West 12th Street”).
    -2-
    J-S79022-14
    5. Officer Fiore observed a suspect matching that
    description operating a maroon Volvo S80 with Pennsylvania
    Registration number [H_____6]. . . .[4] [Id. at 14-15, 16-
    17, and 46.]
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    2
    During the initial suppression hearing, Officer Dewees testified that
    dispatch informed him that the possible suspect was seen leaving the area
    “north on Walnut towards 12th Street.” N.T. Suppression Hearing, 5/2/13, at
    13 and 31. We note that, during the supplemental suppression hearing,
    Officer Dewees confirmed that he had earlier testified at Appellant’s
    preliminary hearing and that, during Appellant’s preliminary hearing, Officer
    Dewees had testified: “[a] description was given to us by dispatch as a
    subject leaving the area wearing, I believe it was [a] red shirt headed
    westbound on 12th Street towards Potter Street right Walnut.”           N.T.
    Suppression Hearing, 7/9/13, at 19.
    3
    We have omitted a portion of the trial court’s fourth numbered factual
    finding, as it is unsupported by the evidence of record. Within the trial
    court’s fourth numbered factual finding, the trial court declared that the
    broadcast description of the possible suspect was of “a black male wearing
    [a] red t-shirt.” Trial Court Opinion and Order, 6/7/13, at 1 (emphasis
    added). However, no record evidence supports the trial court’s declaration
    that the broadcast described the possible suspect as specifically wearing a
    “t-shirt.”  Rather, the only evidence of record is that the broadcast
    description was of “a black male wearing a red shirt.” N.T. Suppression
    Hearing, 5/2/13, at 31 (“[o]kay, at this time, Officer [Fiore] reported by way
    of radio communication between the parties that the person wearing the red
    shirt was walking north on Walnut Street”); N.T. Suppression Hearing,
    7/9/13, at 19 (“[a] description was given to us by dispatch as a subject
    leaving the area wearing, I believe it was [a] red shirt”); N.T. Trial,
    11/20/13, at 50 (“at which time I [saw] the driver matching the description
    that was given out, a black male wearing a red shirt”).
    4
    We have omitted a portion of the trial court’s fifth numbered factual
    finding, as it is unsupported by the evidence of record. With respect to this
    factual finding, the trial court declared:
    5. Officer Fiore observed a suspect matching that
    description operating a maroon Volvo S80 with Pennsylvania
    Registration number [H_____6] turn onto Walnut Street
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
    -3-
    J-S79022-14
    6. Officer Fiore radioed Officer Dewees a description of a
    vehicle including the registration number that Officer Fiore
    believed the subject that matched the description from the
    shots fired was headed in Officer [Dewees’] direction. [Id.]
    7. Officer Dewees spotted the vehicle and conducted a
    traffic stop in the 800 Block of Morton Avenue. [Id. at 17
    and 69.]
    8. Officer Dewees was unable to see into [the] vehicle
    because it had tinted windows. Officer Dewees ordered the
    driver to roll down the windows but received no response.
    [Id. at 19 and 50.]
    9. At this time[,] Captain [Charles] Fell arrived on scene.
    He and Officer Dewees approached the vehicle and ordered
    the driver to exit the vehicle. [Id. at 19-21.]
    10. The driver was identified as [Appellant]. There were no
    other occupants in the vehicle. [Id. at 19.]
    11. It was determined that [Appellant] had a suspended
    driver’s license. [Id. at 24-25.]
    12. [Appellant] was patted down for weapons and none
    were found on his person. [Id. at 19-20.]
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    from East 12th Street coming from [the] area of Potter
    Street.
    Trial Court Opinion and Order, 6/7/13, at 2 (emphasis added).
    Officer Dewees was the only witness to testify during the initial and
    supplemental suppression hearings – and Officer Dewees never testified that
    Officer Fiore witnessed the vehicle “turn onto Walnut Street from East 12 th
    Street coming from [the] area of Potter Street.” 
    Id. Rather, with
    respect to
    the direction of the vehicle at the time Officer Fiore spotted the car, the only
    evidence that exists was given at trial, by Officer Fiore. Moreover, at
    Appellant’s trial, Officer Fiore specifically testified that, when he first spotted
    the vehicle, the vehicle was “travel[ing] south down the 1100 block.” N.T.
    Trial, 11/20/13, at 50 (emphasis added).
    -4-
    J-S79022-14
    13. Officer Dewees entered [the] driver’s area of [the]
    vehicle to check for weapons. [Id. at 22.] This was the
    area where [Appellant] was sitting. [Id.]
    14. Officer Dewees found a yellow “[I]ce [B]reakers
    [S]ours” candy container under [the driver’s] seat. [Id.]
    When Officer Dewees moved the item he noticed it had
    more weight to it than an empty container[] but no moving
    objects inside as there would normally be. [Id. at 64-66.]
    15. Officer Dewees looked in [the] container and found
    several bags containing white powder and [a] rock
    substance[, which he] believed [] to be cocaine. [Id. at 22-
    23.]
    16. [Appellant] was arrested and placed into custody. [Id.]
    17. Captain Fell determined [Appellant’s] vehicle posed
    public safety and efficient movement of traffic concerns and
    ordered it towed. [Id. at 25.]
    18. The Chester City Police Department towing procedures
    require that all impounded vehicles be routinely secured and
    the contents inventoried. [Id. at 25 and 91.]
    Trial Court Opinion and Order, 6/7/13, at 1-3 (some internal capitalization
    omitted).
    Officer Dewees testified that, before he made the initial traffic stop of
    Appellant’s vehicle, he did not personally see the driver of the vehicle.
    Therefore, Officer Dewees acknowledged that, “at the time [he] stopped
    [Appellant’s] vehicle, [he was] not sure if [Appellant] . . . fit the description
    of the individual” that was given to dispatch.      N.T. Suppression Hearing,
    5/2/13, at 48.    Instead, Officer Dewees testified, he stopped Appellant’s
    vehicle because Officer Fiore had told him to stop a maroon Volvo S80 with
    Pennsylvania Registration number “H_____6” – and Officer Fiore “indicated
    -5-
    J-S79022-14
    [to Officer Dewees that the vehicle] had a person matching the description”
    of the possible suspect.5 
    Id. at 46.
    On June 7, 2013, the trial court denied Appellant’s motion to suppress.
    However, on June 17, 2013, Appellant filed a motion to reconsider the order
    denying his motion to suppress.           Within Appellant’s motion to reconsider,
    Appellant first claimed that the initial stop of his vehicle was unconstitutional
    because “the description [of the possible suspect] was impermissibly vague.”
    Appellant’s Motion to Reconsider, 6/7/13, at 1. Appellant also claimed that
    he was entitled to relief because Officer Dewees “exceeded the scope of any
    permissible search under the circumstances.” 
    Id. at 2.
    By order entered June 28, 2013, the trial court granted Appellant’s
    reconsideration motion.        Trial Court Order, 6/28/13, at 1.   The trial court
    thus vacated its order denying Appellant’s motion to suppress and scheduled
    a second evidentiary hearing on the suppression motion.            Further, as the
    trial court’s order declared, the second suppression hearing was to be a
    supplemental hearing where “either [Appellant] or the Commonwealth” could
    ____________________________________________
    5
    We note that, during the initial suppression hearing, Officer Dewees
    testified that the area in which he finally effectuated the traffic stop – “the
    800 Block of Morton Avenue” – constituted a “high crime area.” N.T.
    Suppression Hearing, 5/2/13, at 69-73.          However, there is no record
    evidence that the area in which Appellant was originally spotted by Officer
    Fiore constituted a “high crime area.”
    -6-
    J-S79022-14
    “present additional evidence or argument” on whether suppression was or
    was not warranted. 
    Id. On July
    9, 2013, the trial court held the supplemental suppression
    hearing and, during the hearing, the Commonwealth presented additional
    testimony from Officer Dewees.     Specifically, Officer Dewees testified that
    Appellant was not the registered owner of the Volvo S80 automobile that
    was involved in the August 22, 2012 traffic stop.     Instead, the registered
    owner of the vehicle was an individual named Lashawn Smith.               N.T.
    Suppression Hearing, 7/9/13, at 17. Appellant presented no evidence that
    he owned the vehicle or that the registered owner had given him permission
    to use the vehicle on the day in question. See 
    id. at 12-47.
    Further, during the supplemental suppression hearing, Officer Dewees
    testified that, “[p]rior to getting behind the vehicle in which [Appellant] was
    [] driving,” Officer Dewees was able to determine that shots were fired from
    the intersection at 11th and Walnut Streets – and Officer Dewees testified
    that he was able to determine that shots were fired in this specific area
    “[b]ased off the evidence found there, shell casings.” 
    Id. at 22-23.
    The trial court denied Appellant’s motion to suppress on August 9,
    2013. As is relevant to the current appeal, the trial court explained that it
    denied the suppression motion because it determined that “Officer Dewees
    had reasonable suspicion to make [the initial] traffic stop of [Appellant’s
    vehicle]” and Appellant failed to demonstrate that he possessed “an
    -7-
    J-S79022-14
    expectation of privacy in the area searched.” Trial Court Opinion, 8/9/13, at
    6-7.
    Appellant proceeded to a jury trial.       During this jury trial, the
    Commonwealth presented testimony from Officer Fiore.           As Officer Fiore
    testified, on August 22, 2012, he “received notice of an emergency situation
    in the area of East 11th and Walnut Street[s]” in the City of Chester.
    Further, Officer Fiore testified that dispatch informed him that the possible
    suspect was a black male “wearing a red shirt” and that the possible suspect
    was “fleeing north on Walnut Street in the 1100 block.”             N.T. Trial,
    11/20/13, at 48 and 49 (emphasis added).
    Officer Fiore testified that he arrived at the 1100 block of Walnut
    Street less than one minute after the dispatch and that, when he reached
    the 1100 block of Walnut Street, he exited his patrol car and began to
    investigate. 
    Id. at 49-50.
       According to Officer Fiore, at some unspecified
    time “during the course of that investigation,” he observed a maroon Volvo
    automobile “travel[ing] south down the 1100 block [by a] . . . driver
    matching the description that was given out, a black male wearing a red
    shirt.” 
    Id. at 50
    (emphasis added). Officer Fiore testified that he radioed to
    officers in the vicinity that he wanted to have the maroon Volvo automobile
    pulled over; Officer Fiore testified that he later observed that Officer Dewees
    had pulled over the particular vehicle that he had spotted. 
    Id. at 51-52.
    Officer Dewees also testified at Appellant’s trial.   As Officer Dewees
    testified: following Officer Fiore’s radio alert, Officer Dewees observed the
    -8-
    J-S79022-14
    maroon Volvo being driven “south on Chestnut Street;” Officer Dewees
    pursued the vehicle and initiated a vehicle stop of the automobile on “the
    800 block of Morton Avenue;” after stopping the vehicle, Officer Dewees
    “activated the [public address] system [on his patrol car] and asked the
    driver of the vehicle [(who was later identified as Appellant)] to roll down
    the windows;” after Appellant refused Officer Dewees’ third demand to roll
    down the windows, Officer Dewees and Captain Fell approached the driver’s
    side door and removed Appellant from the vehicle; the officers patted
    Appellant down for weapons; following the pat-down, Officer Dewees “went
    [into the vehicle] and [] checked the area [that had been within Appellant’s]
    wing span;” Officer Dewees found an Ice Breakers Sours candy container
    under the driver’s seat of the vehicle; when Officer Dewees opened the
    container, Officer Dewees discovered “five zip[-]style bags with suspected
    cocaine and two sandwich bags with suspected cocaine;” Officer Dewees
    took Appellant into custody and, during the search incident to arrest, Officer
    Dewees discovered 25 $20.00 bills and six $1.00 bills (totaling $506.00) on
    Appellant’s person; and, the total weight of the cocaine in the bags was 8.9
    grams. 
    Id. at 64,
    65-72, 76-78, and 180-181.
    Moreover, during Appellant’s trial, the Commonwealth presented the
    testimony of Lieutenant Michael Boudwin, whom the trial court accepted as
    an expert in the field of drug and drug investigations. 
    Id. at 190-191.
    As
    Lieutenant Boudwin testified, the cocaine that was found in the Ice Breakers
    -9-
    J-S79022-14
    Sours container was possessed with the intent to deliver and had a total
    street value of approximately $500.00. 
    Id. at 192
    and 195.
    At the conclusion of Appellant’s trial, the jury found Appellant guilty of
    possession of cocaine and PWID.6               N.T. Trial, 11/21/13, at 142-143.
    Further, the jury specifically found that the cocaine Appellant possessed with
    the intent to distribute weighed between two and ten grams. 
    Id. at 143.
    On January 24, 2014, the trial court sentenced Appellant to the
    mandatory minimum term of three to ten years in prison, pursuant to 18
    Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(a)(2)(i), as Appellant was convicted of possession of
    cocaine with the intent to deliver where “the aggregate weight of the
    compound or mixture containing the substance involved [was] at least 2.0
    grams and less than 10 grams” and, at the time of sentencing, Appellant
    “ha[d] been convicted of another drug trafficking offense.”         18 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 7508(a)(2)(i); N.T. Sentencing, 1/24/14, at 32 and 35.
    Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal and Appellant now raises the
    following claims to this Court:7
    [1.] Whether the trial court erred in denying [Appellant’s]
    suppression motion[?]
    ____________________________________________
    6
    35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(16) and (30), respectively.
    7
    The trial court ordered Appellant to file and serve a concise statement of
    errors complained of on appeal, pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate
    Procedure 1925(b). Appellant complied with the trial court’s order and,
    within his Rule 1925(b) statement, Appellant listed the claims he currently
    raises on appeal.
    - 10 -
    J-S79022-14
    [2.] Whether the trial court had sufficient evidence to
    present this case to the jury and if the trial court erred in
    not granting [Appellant’s] motion on weight of the
    evidence[?]
    [3.] Whether the trial court committed error during the trial
    which prejudiced [Appellant] and contributed to his guilty
    verdict which requires reversal for [a] new trial[?]
    [4.] Whether the trial court entered an illegal sentence as to
    the minimum mandatory sentence for subsequent
    conviction for [PWID] in violation of [Alleyne v. United
    States, ___ U.S. ___, 
    133 S. Ct. 2151
    (2013)] and if it
    further abused its discretion in sentencing [Appellant] to a
    lengthy tail[?]
    Appellant’s Brief at 4.
    At the outset, Appellant contends that the trial court erred when it
    denied his motion to suppress. In particular, Appellant claims that the trial
    court should have suppressed the evidence against him, as both the initial
    stop and the subsequent search of his vehicle were unconstitutional. We are
    constrained to find that the initial stop of Appellant’s vehicle was not
    supported by reasonable suspicion. As such, we are compelled to conclude
    that Appellant was subjected to an illegal seizure of his person and that the
    fruits of this illegal seizure must be suppressed. We must, therefore, vacate
    Appellant’s convictions and remand for a new trial.
    “Once a motion to suppress evidence has been filed, it is the
    Commonwealth’s burden to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that
    the challenged evidence was not obtained in violation of the defendant’s
    rights.”     Commonwealth v. Wallace, 
    42 A.3d 1040
    , 1047-1048 (Pa.
    - 11 -
    J-S79022-14
    Super. 2012) (en banc); see also Pa.R.Crim.P. 581(H). With respect to an
    appeal from the denial of a motion to suppress, our Supreme Court has
    declared:
    Our standard of review in addressing a challenge to a trial
    court’s denial of a suppression motion is whether the factual
    findings are supported by the record and whether the legal
    conclusions drawn from those facts are correct. When
    reviewing the ruling of a suppression court, we must
    consider only the evidence of the prosecution and so much
    of the evidence of the defense as remains uncontradicted
    when read in the context of the record as a whole. Where
    the record supports the findings of the suppression court,
    we are bound by those facts and may reverse only if the
    legal conclusions drawn therefrom are in error.
    Commonwealth v. Eichinger, 
    915 A.2d 1122
    , 1134 (internal citations
    omitted).8 “It is within the suppression court’s sole province as factfinder to
    ____________________________________________
    8
    On October 30, 2013, our Supreme Court decided In re L.J., 
    79 A.3d 1073
    , 1087 (Pa. 2013). In L.J., our Supreme Court held that our scope of
    review from a suppression ruling is limited to the evidentiary record that was
    created at the suppression hearing. In re L.J., 
    79 A.3d 1073
    , 1087 (Pa.
    2013). Prior to L.J., this Court routinely held that, when reviewing a
    suppression court’s ruling, our scope of review included “the evidence
    presented both at the suppression hearing and at trial.”                   See
    Commonwealth v. Charleston, 
    16 A.3d 505
    , 516 (Pa. Super. 2011),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Chacko, 
    459 A.2d 311
    , 317 n.5 (Pa. 1983).
    L.J. thus narrowed our scope of review of suppression court rulings to the
    evidence presented at the suppression hearing.
    However, L.J. declared that the new procedural rule of law it announced was
    not retroactive, but was rather “prospective generally” – meaning that the
    rule of law was applicable “to the parties in the case and [to] all litigation
    commenced thereafter.” In re 
    L.J., 79 A.3d at 1089
    n.19. Since the
    litigation in the current case commenced before L.J. was filed, the new
    procedural rule of law announced in L.J. does not apply to the case at bar.
    See 
    id. - 12
    -
    J-S79022-14
    pass on the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given their
    testimony.” Commonwealth v. Gallagher, 
    896 A.2d 583
    , 585 (Pa. Super.
    2006).
    “The Fourth Amendment to the [United States] Constitution and Article
    I, Section 8 of [the Pennsylvania] Constitution protect citizens from
    unreasonable searches and seizures.”               Commonwealth v. McAdoo, 
    46 A.3d 781
    , 784 (Pa. Super. 2012). To safeguard our right to be free from
    unreasonable searches and seizures, “courts require police to articulate the
    basis for their interaction with citizens in [three] increasingly intrusive
    situations.” 
    McAdoo, 46 A.3d at 784
    . Our Supreme Court has categorized
    these three situations as follows:
    The first category, a mere encounter or request for
    information, does not need to be supported by any level of
    suspicion, and does not carry any official compulsion to stop
    or respond.       The second category, an investigative
    detention, derives from Terry v. Ohio[9] and its progeny:
    such a detention is lawful if supported by reasonable
    suspicion because, although it subjects a suspect to a stop
    and a period of detention, it does not involve such coercive
    conditions as to constitute the functional equivalent of an
    arrest. The final category, the arrest or custodial detention,
    must be supported by probable cause.
    Commonwealth v. Smith, 
    836 A.2d 5
    , 10 (Pa. 2003).
    The parties agree that, when the police initially stopped Appellant’s
    vehicle, the police did not have probable cause to believe that Appellant had
    ____________________________________________
    9
    Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    (1968).
    - 13 -
    J-S79022-14
    committed a crime.      See N.T. Suppression Hearing, 5/2/13, at 46-47
    (Officer Dewees testified that, prior to stopping Appellant’s vehicle, Officer
    Dewees “did not observe . . . [the vehicle] commit[] any moving
    violations”).   Moreover, Appellant does not challenge the trial court’s
    determination that the initial vehicle stop constituted an investigatory
    detention; Appellant claims only that the initial traffic stop – and the
    resulting seizure of his person – was unsupported by reasonable suspicion.
    Appellant’s Brief at 17; see also Commonwealth v. Cruz, 
    21 A.3d 1247
    ,
    1250 (Pa. Super. 2011) (“the forcible stop of a vehicle constitutes an
    investigative detention such that there must be reasonable suspicion that
    illegal activity is occurring”); Brendlin v. California, 
    551 U.S. 249
    , 263
    (2007) (holding that a vehicle passenger was “seized from the moment [the
    driver’s] car came to a halt on the side of the road”).       We agree with
    Appellant.
    We have explained:
    Our Supreme Court has mandated that law enforcement
    officers, prior to subjecting a citizen to an investigatory
    detention, must harbor at least a reasonable suspicion that
    the person seized is then engaged in unlawful activity. The
    question of whether reasonable suspicion existed at the
    time of an investigatory detention must be answered by
    examining the totality of the circumstances to determine
    whether the officer who initiated the stop had a
    particularized and objective basis for suspecting the
    individual stopped.      Thus, to establish grounds for
    reasonable suspicion, the officer must articulate specific
    observations which, in conjunction with reasonable
    inferences derived from those observations, led him
    reasonably to conclude, in light of his experience, that
    - 14 -
    J-S79022-14
    criminal activity was afoot and that the person he stopped
    was involved in that activity.
    Although a police officer’s knowledge and length of
    experience weigh heavily in determining whether reasonable
    suspicion existed, our Courts remain mindful that the
    officer’s judgment is necessarily colored by his or her
    primary involvement in the often competitive enterprise of
    ferreting out crime. Therefore, the fundamental inquiry of a
    reviewing court must be an objective one, namely, whether
    the facts available to the officer at the moment of the
    intrusion warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief
    that the action taken was appropriate. This inquiry will not
    be satisfied by an officer’s hunch or unparticularized
    suspicion.
    Commonwealth v. Reppert, 
    814 A.2d 1196
    , 1203-1204 (Pa. Super. 2002)
    (en   banc)   (internal   quotations,    citations,   corrections,   and   emphasis
    omitted).
    “To have reasonable suspicion, police officers need not personally
    observe the illegal or suspicious conduct, but may rely upon the information
    of third parties, including ‘tips’ from citizens.”     Commonwealth v. Lohr,
    
    715 A.2d 459
    , 461 (Pa. Super. 1998).             With respect to these third-party
    “tips,” we have held:
    Reasonable suspicion, like probable cause, is dependent
    upon both the content of information possessed by police
    and its degree of reliability. Both factors – quantity and
    quality – are considered in the “totality of the circumstances
    – the whole picture,” that must be taken into account when
    evaluating whether there is reasonable suspicion. Thus, if a
    tip has a relatively low degree of reliability, more
    information will be required to establish the requisite
    quantum of suspicion than would be required if the tip were
    reliable.
    When the underlying source of the officer’s information is an
    anonymous call, the tip should be treated with particular
    - 15 -
    J-S79022-14
    suspicion. However, a tip from an informer known to the
    police may carry enough indicia or reliability for the police
    to conduct an investigatory stop, even though the same tip
    from an anonymous informant would likely not have done
    so.
    Indeed, identified citizens who report their observations of
    criminal activity to police are assumed to be trustworthy, in
    the absence of special circumstances, since a known
    informant places himself at risk of prosecution for filing a
    false claim if the tip is untrue, whereas an unknown
    informant faces no such risk. When an identified third party
    provides information to the police, we must examine the
    specificity and reliability of the information provided. The
    information supplied by the informant must be specific
    enough to support reasonable suspicion that criminal
    activity is occurring. To determine whether the information
    provided is sufficient, we assess the information under the
    totality of the circumstances. The informer’s reliability,
    veracity, and basis of knowledge are all relevant factors in
    this analysis.
    Commonwealth v. Barber, 
    889 A.2d 587
    , 593-594 (Pa. Super. 2005)
    (internal quotations and citations omitted).
    Further, we observe that police may conduct “a vehicle stop based
    upon a radio bulletin.”     
    Id. at 594
    (internal quotations and citations
    omitted). However, for such a stop to be valid:
    someone in the police department must possess sufficient
    information to give rise to reasonable suspicion. The officer
    with the reasonable suspicion, usually the dispatcher, need
    not convey all of this background information to the officer
    who actually effectuates the stop. Thus, the police may
    justify the search by presenting sufficient evidence at the
    suppression hearing that someone in the chain of command
    had reasonable suspicion before the stop, even if the
    arresting officer did not.
    This is not to say, however, that the Commonwealth may
    generate information giving rise to reasonable suspicion for
    - 16 -
    J-S79022-14
    the first time after the stop took place. In other words,
    even though the evidence of reasonable suspicion may be
    presented at a later suppression hearing, the police must
    have this evidence prior to the stop itself.
    
    Id. (internal quotations
    and citations omitted).
    Finally, we note that, since reasonable suspicion depends upon the
    totality of the circumstances, the facts and circumstances giving rise to (or
    failing to give rise to) reasonable suspicion will vary depending upon the
    specific facts of the case. In the case at bar, the facts of this case reveal
    that a number of different factors are relevant to our reasonable suspicion
    analysis. These factors include: the source of the original tip (i.e. whether
    the source of the tip was an anonymous caller or was a known caller or
    victim of the crime); the source of the tipster’s knowledge; the specificity of
    the tip; the investigating officer’s training and experience; the physical
    proximity of the individual seized to the scene of the crime or the location
    given by the tipster; the temporal proximity from the time of the crime to
    the time of the tipster’s call; the temporal proximity from the time of the
    receipt of the information to the time the officer came upon the individual
    seized; whether the tip was predictive of the individual’s future behavior;
    whether, before the seizure, the officer witnessed the individual act
    suspiciously or irregularly or whether the officer witnessed the individual act
    normally; the time and place of the stop; police corroboration of the tip;
    and, police corroboration of any alleged criminal activity.
    Here, the Commonwealth’s evidence was insufficient to prove that the
    initial stop of Appellant’s vehicle was supported by reasonable suspicion.
    - 17 -
    J-S79022-14
    Therefore, we must conclude that the Commonwealth did not satisfy its
    “burden [of] prov[ing], by a preponderance of the evidence, that the
    challenged evidence was not obtained in violation of the defendant’s rights.”
    
    Wallace, 42 A.3d at 1047-1048
    . The trial court thus erred when it denied
    Appellant’s motion to suppress.
    In the case at bar, the Commonwealth relied solely upon the testimony
    of Officers Dewees and Fiore to oppose Appellant’s suppression motion.
    However, Officers Dewees and Fiore were only able to testify that dispatch
    had informed them that there was “a complaint of shots fired . . . in [the]
    area of East 11th Street and Walnut Street” and that dispatch had
    informed them that the possible suspect was “a black male wearing a red
    shirt” who was seen fleeing the area either “north on Walnut Street” or “on
    East 12th Street toward Potter Street.” Even assuming that the dispatcher’s
    source of knowledge originated from a citizen’s 911 call, the Commonwealth
    did not introduce the audio recording of the 911 call, a transcription of the
    911 call, a report of the 911 call, or the testimony of the dispatcher.
    Therefore, there is no evidence as to:        the name of the tipster; the
    telephone number from which the tipster placed the call; the source of the
    tipster’s knowledge regarding the “shots fired” (i.e. whether the tipster
    personally witnessed the shots being fired or whether the tipster heard
    another person speak of shots being fired); the time at which the shots were
    fired; or, the time at which the possible suspect was seen fleeing the area.
    - 18 -
    J-S79022-14
    Further, even assuming that the source of the dispatcher’s knowledge
    originated from a tipster’s telephone call to 911, the tipster here was
    anonymous. As explained above, under our precedent, anonymous tips of
    criminality have “a relatively low degree of reliability” and must “be treated
    with particular suspicion.”   We note that, in this case, Officers Fiore and
    Dewees must be commended for not only arriving at the scene so soon after
    they were dispatched but for also “treating [the] tip with particular
    suspicion”: indeed, Officer Dewees testified that, prior to the vehicle stop,
    the officers investigated the scene and discovered shell casings on the 1100
    block of Walnut Street. In doing so, Officers Fiore and Dewees were able to
    partially corroborate the tipster’s report that shots were fired at that
    location.
    However, even though the officers were able to partially corroborate
    the report that criminal activity occurred at the particular location, the
    officers did not possess reasonable suspicion in this case to stop Appellant.
    This is because no one in the chain of command – neither the officers nor
    dispatch – had reasonable suspicion to believe that Appellant was involved
    in the criminal activity. Indeed, with respect to the remaining factors that
    we have identified as relevant to our reasonable suspicion analysis, we
    observe:
       The physical description of the possible suspect in this case – a “black
    male wearing a red shirt” – was extraordinarily vague and all-
    - 19 -
    J-S79022-14
    encompassing and could have described any number of men in the
    vicinity.
       As was already explained, since we do not know the source of the
    tipster’s knowledge, there is no evidence as to when the alleged
    shooting occurred; therefore, there is no evidence as to whether
    Appellant’s physical proximity to the scene was also temporally
    proximate to the crime.
       Even though Officer Fiore testified that he arrived at the 1100 block of
    Walnut Street “less than one minute” after the dispatch, Officer Fiore
    did not specifically testify as to when he first observed Appellant;
    instead, Officer Fiore merely testified that he observed Appellant
    “during the course of [his] investigation.” Thus, there is no evidence
    regarding the temporal proximity from the time of the dispatch to the
    time Officer Fiore first viewed Appellant.
       The tip was not predictive of Appellant’s future behavior.
       Officer Fiore was unable to corroborate the tipster’s statement that the
    possible suspect was fleeing the area either “north on Walnut Street”
    or “on East 12th Street toward Potter Street.”
       The tipster did not describe the possible suspect as driving a vehicle
    and, when Officer Fiore first saw Appellant, Appellant was driving a
    vehicle.
       When Officer Fiore first saw Appellant, Appellant was neither traveling
    “north on Walnut Street” nor “on East 12th Street toward Potter
    - 20 -
    J-S79022-14
    Street.” Instead, Appellant was in a vehicle, “travel[ing] south down
    the 1100 block.”
       There is no evidence that Appellant behaved suspiciously or irregularly
    prior to the vehicle stop.10
       There is no evidence that, when Officer Fiore first viewed Appellant,
    Appellant was in a high crime area.
    From the above, after viewing the totality of the circumstances in this
    case, we must conclude that the police did not have the necessary
    reasonable suspicion to effectuate a traffic stop of the vehicle Appellant was
    driving, as no one “in the chain of command had reasonable suspicion before
    the stop” to believe that Appellant, in particular, was “involved in [the
    reported criminal] activity.” See 
    Reppert, 814 A.2d at 1203-1204
    ; 
    Barber, 889 A.2d at 594
    .        Moreover, since the police discovered the cocaine as a
    ____________________________________________
    10
    Within the trial court’s opinion, the trial court states that “[w]hen
    [Appellant] saw Officer Fiore[, Appellant] began to back up his car and go
    down a side street.” Trial Court Opinion, 7/7/14, at 1-2. The trial court’s
    statement is unsupported by the evidence of record. During trial, Officer
    Fiore testified that, while he was investigating the report of “shots fired,”
    Officer Fiore observed Appellant driving a vehicle and traveling towards him.
    N.T. Trial, 11/20/13, at 50. Officer Fiore testified that, after he saw
    Appellant, he observed Appellant “back up and . . . take another side street
    over.” 
    Id. However, Officer
    Fiore never testified that he believed Appellant
    saw him or that Appellant’s actions were either suspicious or irregular;
    indeed, there is no evidence as to whether Officer Fiore was in uniform or in
    plain clothes at the time he first observed Appellant. Therefore, the trial
    court’s statement that “[Appellant] saw Officer Fiore” and the trial court’s
    implication that Appellant’s subsequent action was suspicious are
    unsupported by the record.
    - 21 -
    J-S79022-14
    direct result of the illegal seizure of Appellant’s person, the cocaine
    constitutes the fruit of this illegal seizure.11 The trial court thus erred when
    it denied Appellant’s motion to suppress.12
    ____________________________________________
    11
    It is of no moment to our holding that Appellant might have failed to
    demonstrate that he had an expectation of privacy in the vehicle or in
    unlabeled, unclaimed containers within the vehicle. This is because the
    initial seizure of Appellant’s person was illegal. Therefore, the evidence
    obtained pursuant to the illegal seizure of Appellant’s person was tainted and
    must be suppressed. See 
    Brendlin, 551 U.S. at 263
    (holding that a vehicle
    passenger was “seized from the moment [the driver’s] car came to a halt on
    the side of the road”); see also 
    Brendlin, 551 U.S. at 259
    , quoting 6 W.
    LaFave, SEARCH AND SEIZURE § 11.3(e) at 194, 195, and n.227 (4th ed. 2004
    and Supp 2007) (noting that, even though a passenger does not have an
    expectation of privacy in another person’s vehicle, “[i]f either the stopping of
    the car, the length of the passenger’s detention thereafter, or the
    passenger’s removal from it are unreasonable in a Fourth Amendment
    sense, then surely the passenger has standing to object to those
    constitutional violations and to have suppressed any evidence found in the
    car which is their fruit”).
    12
    On appeal, Appellant also claims that the evidence was insufficient to
    support his convictions because “the [C]ommonwealth did not sufficiently
    establish [that Appellant] personally or constructively[] possessed the drug
    items found under the driver seat.” Appellant’s Brief at 18. This claim is
    meritless. As the trial court ably explained, when the evidence is viewed in
    the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the evidence is clearly
    sufficient to prove that Appellant constructively possessed the cocaine that
    was found underneath his seat:
    The jury as the fact finder determined that [Appellant]
    constructively possessed [] the cocaine found in the yellow
    “[I]ce [B]reakers [S]ours” candy container under [the]
    driver seat. [Appellant] was the operator of the vehicle.
    There were no other occupants of the vehicle. The drugs
    were easily accessible to [Appellant]. . . .          When
    [Appellant’s] vehicle was stopped he did not obey Officer
    [Dewees’] command to exit the vehicle[; instead, Appellant]
    stalled and had to be removed from the vehicle. . . .
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
    - 22 -
    J-S79022-14
    We vacate Appellant’s convictions, reverse the trial court’s order
    denying Appellant’s suppression motion, and remand for a new trial.13
    Judgment of sentence vacated.               Case remanded.   Jurisdiction
    relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 3/13/2015
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    The [Commonwealth also presented the following
    evidence:]     Lieutenant Boudwin’s expert testimony
    regarding how the drugs were packaged[;] the amount of
    money found on [Appellant;] the fact that [Appellant] was
    driving a car that was not registered to him[; and,
    Appellant] was arrested in the area of the largest open air
    drug market in Delaware County. . . .
    [Viewed] in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth[,
    this evidence] was sufficient to sustain [Appellant’s]
    conviction for [simple possession and PWID].
    Trial Court Opinion, 7/7/14, at 7.
    We agree with the trial court’s cogent analysis and conclude that Appellant’s
    sufficiency of the evidence claim fails.
    13
    Given our disposition, Appellant’s remaining claims are moot.
    - 23 -