Com. v. Mathis, D. , 125 A.3d 780 ( 2015 )


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  • J. A18001/15
    
    2015 Pa. Super. 201
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA              :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :          PENNSYLVANIA
    v.                    :
    :
    DARRIN ORLANDO MATHIS,                    :          No. 2099 MDA 2014
    :
    Appellant        :
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence, November 25, 2014,
    in the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County
    Criminal Division at No. CP-22-CR-0000174-2014
    BEFORE: FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E., STABILE AND MUSMANNO, JJ.
    OPINION BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.:                FILED SEPTEMBER 22, 2015
    Darrin Orlando Mathis appeals from the judgment of sentence entered
    on November 25, 2014, in the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County
    following his conviction for possession of a firearm by a prohibited person,1
    small amount of marijuana,2 and possession of drug paraphernalia.3 In this
    appeal, we are asked to determine if a state parole agent is legally
    authorized to detain, question, and perform a protective frisk of a person,
    other than the parolee, who was present during a routine check of the
    1
    18 Pa.C.S.A. § 6105(a)(1).
    2
    35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(31).
    3
    35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(32).
    J. A18001/15
    parolee’s approved residence when the parole agent has a reasonable
    suspicion that the person is armed and dangerous.
    On December 2, 2013, at approximately 8:00 p.m., Michael Welsh and
    Gregory Bruner, agents for the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
    conducted a routine parole check of parolee Gary Waters at 2503 Agate
    Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Agent Welsh described the area as a “high
    crime, high drug area.”   (Suppression hearing transcript, 7/28/14 at 4-5.)
    Agent Welsh had supervised Waters on and off since 2010 and had made
    several previous parole checks at this approved residence.
    Upon arrival, Agent Welsh made contact with Waters and was invited
    into the residence.   Agent Welsh testified that when he got to the door,
    there was a strong odor of marijuana, and he noticed the smell of marijuana
    increasing as he went throughout the house.      (Id. at 7.)   Appellant was
    seated in the kitchen and Waters, a barber by trade, was giving him a
    haircut. Waters introduced Agent Welsh as his parole officer. Agent Welsh
    then took Waters into the center room, talked to him about the marijuana,
    and placed Waters in handcuffs. (Id. at 7-8.)
    In the meantime, while Agent Welsh dealt with Waters, Agent Bruner
    maintained visual eye contact on appellant. As Agent Welsh was speaking to
    Waters, Agent Bruner said, “hey, Mike.     He came over, got my ear real
    quick” and said that appellant “was now standing in the kitchen on his cell
    phone pacing back and forth. Said he seemed pretty nervous.” (Id. at 9.)
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    Agent Welsh then went to the kitchen to “establish some type of rapport
    with [appellant].” (Id.) Agent Welsh asked appellant to put away his cell
    phone. Appellant was compliant but “was still kind of moving around a little
    bit.” (Id.) Agent Welsh said, “hey, I want to get you out of here as soon as
    I possibly can. Could you do me a favor, grab your personal belongings and
    come to the front room.”       (Id. at 10.)    Agent Welsh “wanted to have
    everybody in a centralized location so [he] could maintain a visual on
    everyone.” (Id. at 10.) Agent Welsh explained that it is typical for agents
    to check all individuals in the residence for warrants to see if they are
    wanted persons and to know with whom parolees are associating since it is a
    violation to be with persons convicted of drug or gun offenses. (Id. at 23.)
    Agent Welsh noticed a green jacket on the bench beside appellant.
    Agent Welsh testified, “It was kind of funny how he picked it up.” (Id. at
    10.) Instead of putting the jacket on, appellant “real gently placed a hand
    underneath the jacket and over top of the jacket and kind of held it up to his
    body like it was a football” and was “holding this thing like it was a baby . . .
    being real gentle with it.” (Id. at 10-11.) Agent Welsh testified that “kind
    of raised some concerns with me, that and his nervous demeanor at the
    time.” (Id. at 11.) Agent Welsh described the situation:
    [A]s I had him walking out there, he was
    protecting, he, like, had a protecting type of grip
    over top this jacket. And I was thinking, this isn’t
    right. Maybe he’s trying to remove contraband from
    my offender’s house, maybe he has something that
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    could be unsafe to my partner or my offender that’s
    sitting in the front room.
    As he was walking around, he was kind of
    turning away from me.       At that point in time,
    whenever he was passing me when I was in the --
    what would be the formal dining room, I guess, right
    before the living room, I noticed that there was a
    bulge in it.
    And I kind of just reached out -- well, I asked
    him. I’m like, hey, hold on a second bud, I need to
    pat you down. I’m a little concerned with the way
    you’re acting.      He told me he did not feel
    comfortable with me patting him down and pulled
    the jacket closer to his body.
    At that point, I noticed the bulge in the jacket,
    reached out just to touch it. Felt it, what I felt to be
    an identifiable handle of a firearm.
    
    Id. at 11-12.
    Agent Welsh’s initial thought was, “Oh, [expletive] I just grabbed a
    gun by the handle.” (Id. at 36.)
    Next, Agent Welsh “grabbed [the jacket] pretty forcefully” to try and
    pull it away from appellant. Appellant pulled back on it. Agent Welsh pulled
    once again and threw it down to the floor behind him.            (Id. at 12.)
    Agent Welsh illuminated his Taser on appellant4 and instructed appellant to
    put his hands behind his back.     Appellant complied and was handcuffed.
    4
    Agent Welsh did not “tase” appellant. He only illuminated him with the
    light to make the presence of the taser known, in order to gain immediate
    compliance, at which time appellant was compliant. Appellant did not need
    to be tased. (Id. at 13.)
    -4-
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    Agent Bruner walked over to the jacket and confirmed the presence of a
    firearm. (Id. at 12-14.)
    Agent Welsh told appellant to sit on the couch. A pat-down search did
    not reveal any further contraband. Agent Welsh noticed a bag of marijuana
    on the floor in between appellant’s feet. (Id. at 13-14.) Agent Welsh called
    police dispatch for assistance.   Officer Allison Shuff of the Harrisburg City
    Police Department arrived on the scene.     Appellant was read his Miranda
    rights and agreed to speak without an attorney.       (Id. at 40.)   Appellant
    claimed ownership of the firearm and the marijuana. Officer Shuff collected
    the firearm for evidence, which contained a magazine and a round in the
    chamber.   (Id. at 41.)    Officer Shuff ran appellant’s criminal history and
    found he was a person not to possess a firearm due to prior charges.
    Appellant moved to suppress evidence on June 18, 2014.                 A
    suppression hearing was held on July 28, 2014.         The trial court denied
    appellant’s suppression motion on October 29, 2014.5
    5
    Apparently, due to emergency health reasons, the suppression court did
    not enter findings of fact or conclusions of law on the record at the
    conclusion    of    the    suppression    hearing     in  accordance     with
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 581(I). Furthermore, the court did not file a Rule 1925(a)
    opinion.    However, in these particular circumstances, this poses no
    substantial impediment to our meaningful and effective appellate review. It
    is abundantly clear that the suppression court credited Agent Welsh’s version
    of events and concluded that Agent Welsh had a reasonable basis to detain
    and frisk appellant. We have carefully reviewed the suppression hearing
    transcript and note that appellant presented no uncontradicted evidence.
    Further, the question concerning the scope of the power and authority of
    state parole agents is a pure question of law. As with any question of law,
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    A stipulated bench trial was held on November 25, 2014, after which
    appellant was found guilty. He was sentenced the same day to an aggregate
    term of 32 to 64 months in a state correctional institution.
    On appeal, appellant argues that there is no statutory authority
    conferred on state parole agents to question or perform an investigative
    detention of non-parolees or guests of parolees.               He asserts that
    Section 6153 of the Prisons and Parole Code, 61 Pa.C.S.A. § 6153,
    authorizes state parole agents to detain and conduct searches of their
    parolee only. He argues that Agent Welsh had no authority to interact with
    him in any capacity because he was not a parolee.       He contends that the
    discovery of the marijuana, paraphernalia, firearm, and his admission were
    all illegally obtained and should have been suppressed.          Appellant also
    argues that, assuming arguendo, Agent Welsh had some authority over
    him, Agent Welsh lacked reasonable suspicion to conduct a Terry6 frisk in
    violation of the Fourth Amendment.
    Our standard of review in addressing a challenge to the denial of a
    suppression motion is limited to determining whether the suppression court’s
    factual findings are supported by the record and whether the legal
    conclusions drawn from those facts are correct. Because the Commonwealth
    our review of the trial court’s decision is plenary and de novo. West
    Mifflin Area Sch. Dist. v. Zahorchak, 
    4 A.3d 1042
    , 1048 (Pa. 2010).
    6
    Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    (1968).
    -6-
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    prevailed before the suppression court, we may consider only the evidence
    of the Commonwealth and so much of the evidence for the defense as
    remains uncontradicted when read in the context of the record as a whole.
    The suppression court’s legal conclusions are not binding on an appellate
    court, whose duty it is to determine if the suppression court properly applied
    the law to the facts. Thus, the conclusions of law of the courts below are
    subject to our plenary review.   Commonwealth v. Jones, 
    988 A.2d 649
    ,
    654 (Pa. 2010) (citations, quotations, and ellipses omitted).      Moreover,
    appellate courts are limited to reviewing only the evidence presented at the
    suppression hearing when examining a ruling on a pre-trial motion to
    suppress. See In re L.J., 
    79 A.3d 1073
    , 1083-1087 (Pa. 2013).
    State parole agents are employed by the Pennsylvania Board of
    Probation and Parole. The Prisons and Parole Code sets forth the authority
    of state parole agents. Section 6152 of the Prisons and Parole Code declares
    parole officers to be “peace officers” and gives them limited police power
    and authority to arrest, without warrant, parolees under the supervision of
    the Parole Board.
    6152. Status as peace officers.
    An agent is declared to be a peace officer and is
    given police power and authority throughout this
    Commonwealth to arrest without warrant, writ, rule
    or process any parolee or probationer under the
    supervision of the board for failing to report as
    required by the terms of his probation or parole or
    for any other violation of the probation or parole.
    -7-
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    61 Pa.C.S.A. § 6152 (emphasis added).
    Section 6153 of the Prisons and Parole Code sets forth the bounds in
    which parole agents may search offenders:
    6153. Supervisory relationship to offenders
    (a)   General rule.--Agents are in a supervisory
    relationship with their offenders. The purpose
    of this supervision is to assist the offenders in
    their rehabilitation and reassimilation into the
    community and to protect the public.
    Supervision practices shall reflect the balance
    of enforcement of the conditions of parole and
    case management techniques to maximize
    successful parole completion through effective
    reentry to society.
    (b)   Searches and seizures authorized.--
    (1)   Agents may search the person and
    property      of offenders     in
    accordance with the provisions of
    this section.
    (2)   Nothing in this section shall be
    construed to permit searches or
    seizures   in    violation  of   the
    Constitution of the United States or
    section 8 of Article I of the
    Constitution of Pennsylvania.
    (c)   Effect of violation.--No violation of this
    section shall constitute an independent ground
    for suppression of evidence in any probation or
    parole proceeding or criminal proceeding.
    (d)   Grounds for personal search of offender.--
    (1)   A personal search of an offender
    may be conducted by an agent:
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    (i)     if there is a reasonable
    suspicion to believe that
    the offender possesses
    contraband      or  other
    evidence of violations of
    the      conditions    of
    supervision;
    (ii)    when an offender is
    transported or taken into
    custody; or
    (iii)   upon      an       offender
    entering or leaving the
    securing enclosure of a
    correctional institution, jail
    or detention facility.
    (2)   A    property  search   may    be
    conducted by an agent if there is
    reasonable suspicion to believe
    that the real or other property in
    the possession of or under the
    control of the offender contains
    contraband or other evidence of
    violations of the conditions of
    supervision.
    (3)   Prior approval of a supervisor shall
    be obtained for a property search
    absent exigent circumstances. No
    prior approval shall be required for
    a personal search.
    (4)   A written report of every property
    search conducted without prior
    approval shall be prepared by the
    agent who conducted the search
    and filed in the offender’s case
    record. The exigent circumstances
    shall be stated in the report.
    (5)   The offender may be detained if
    he is present during a property
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    search.   If the offender is not
    present during a property search,
    the agent in charge of the search
    shall make a reasonable effort to
    provide the offender with notice of
    the search, including a list of the
    items seized, after the search is
    completed.
    (6)   The    existence   of  reasonable
    suspicion to search shall be
    determined in accordance with
    constitutional search and seizure
    provisions as applied by judicial
    decision. In accordance with such
    case law, the following factors,
    where applicable, may be taken
    into account:
    (i)     The     observations     of
    agents.
    (ii)    Information provided by
    others.
    (iii)   The   activities   of   the
    offender.
    (iv)    Information provided by
    the offender.
    (v)     The experience of agents
    with the offender.
    (vi)    The experience of agents
    in similar circumstances.
    (vii) The prior criminal and
    supervisory history of the
    offender.
    (viii) The     need    to    verify
    compliance      with    the
    conditions of supervision.
    - 10 -
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    61 Pa.C.S.A. § 6153 (emphasis added).
    The Prisons and Parole Code speaks in terms of the parole agent’s
    police power and authority with respect to the supervision of his parolees,
    probationers, and/or offenders only. It gives parole agents all of the powers
    of a police officer with respect to offenders under their jurisdiction.   The
    Prisons and Parole Code does not empower parole agents to act as police
    officers with respect to non-offenders or private citizens.
    In Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    916 A.2d 695
    (Pa.Super. 2007), appeal
    denied, 
    937 A.2d 445
    (Pa. 2007), this court reviewed the scope of a county
    probation officer’s police power and authority over a private citizen under
    the 1941 Parole Act, formerly 61 P.S. § 331.27.7
    In Scott, Jonathan Scott visited the home of his uncle, Mark McDowell,
    an offender serving probation. When he arrived, two Northumberland and
    Union County probation officers were waiting at the door to conduct a
    routine home visit.   Scott knocked on the door, which caused it to open.
    Scott entered the home, and the probation officers followed.      Scott then
    picked up a black bag that belonged to him and was leaving the home when
    one of the probation officers commanded him to stop. 
    Scott, 916 A.2d at 697
    . The probation officers then questioned Scott about the bag, asking him
    7
    Former § 331.27 of the 1941 Parole Act went into effect January 16, 1996,
    and is now codified at 61 Pa.C.S.A. § 6152 and § 6153 (the Prisons and
    Parole Code).
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    who it belonged to, and whether they could look inside. Scott stated that
    the bag was his and he refused their request to open it. 
    Id. The probation
    officers stated that they had a right to look into the bag because it came
    from an offender’s residence. Believing the probation officers had authority
    to search the bag, Scott handed it to them. The probation officers opened
    the bag to discover marijuana and scales. 
    Id. The trial
    court granted suppression, finding the probation officers’
    claim of authority was false as the probation officers only possessed
    statutory authority to search the uncle.     This court affirmed and held that
    the probation officers possessed police power and authority only as to
    offender McDowell, and none as to Scott. Scott was “a private citizen not
    subject to any supervisory authority of the probation officers. They had no
    right to interact with him in any official capacity.”   
    Id. at 697-698.
      This
    court explained:
    [U]nless there are exigent circumstances, none of
    which existed here, a search of McDowell’s residence
    must have been supported by reasonable suspicion
    that ‘the real or other property in the possession of
    or under control of the offender contains contraband
    or other evidence of violations of the conditions of
    supervision.’   That is to say, if there had been
    evidence McDowell was under supervision for a drug
    offense, then perhaps the officers would have had
    reasonable suspicion for the search, but they still
    would have needed a supervisor’s approval absent
    exigent circumstances.      Here, no such suspicion
    existed; in fact, Officer Yasenchak testified his sole
    purpose for being at McDowell’s residence was to
    conduct a routine home visit, and Officer Kerstetter
    testified he went along on the ‘spur of the moment.’
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    Even if one were to concede the officers had the
    ‘right’ to conduct a Terry stop, which this Court
    specifically denies, the officers had no reasonable
    basis (suspicion) upon which to detain [Scott]. Once
    the bag was removed from the premises by [Scott],
    the officers had no authority to detain [Scott],
    search the bag that he removed from McDowell’s
    residence, or do anything other than perhaps call the
    police on McDowell’s behalf, if they believed the bag
    was being stolen. No evidence was presented to
    suggest the officers believed [Scott] to be
    armed and dangerous, warranting a search for
    their protection.
    
    Id. at 698
    (emphasis added) (citations and footnote omitted).
    At first glance, Scott appears to control. However, because the case
    at hand involves a factual scenario which is measurably different than in
    Scott, we hesitate to apply Scott summarily without further analysis.
    In Scott, there were no “exigent circumstances” which justified a
    search of McDowell’s residence or the bag.8 The officers had no reasonable
    basis to suspect that the bag contained contraband or other evidence of
    8
    Absent exigent circumstances, a “property” search may be conducted by
    an agent with prior approval from his supervisor if there is reasonable
    suspicion to believe that the real or other property in the possession or
    under the control of the offender contains contraband or other evidence of
    violations of the conditions of supervision. 61 Pa.C.S.A. § 6153(d)(2).
    Parole officers are authorized to “arrest without warrant, writ, rule or
    process any parolee or probationer under the supervision of the board for
    failing to report as required by the terms of his probation or parole or for
    any other violation of the probation or parole.” 61 Pa.C.S.A. § 6152.
    A “personal” search of an offender may be conducted by an agent if
    there is reasonable suspicion to believe that the offender possesses
    contraband or other evidence of violations of the conditions of supervision.
    61 Pa.C.S.A. § 6153(d)(1).
    - 13 -
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    violations of the conditions of McDowell’s supervision.   Having no right to
    conduct a search of the bag, the probation officers had no legal basis to
    detain Scott, ask to inspect the bag, or prevent him from removing the bag
    from the residence. Further, as the Scott court pointed out, there was no
    evidence that the probation officers believed Scott to be “armed and
    dangerous” which would have warranted a search of the bag “for their
    protection.” 
    Id. at 698
    .9
    Here, Agent Welsh’s contact with appellant involved an investigative
    detention and protective frisk based on his belief that appellant had
    something that was unsafe to his partner and Waters.        The Scott court
    plainly left unsettled the situation where, as here, a parole officer, while
    performing his official duties in an offender’s home, encounters a person,
    other than the parolee, whom the parole agent reasonably believes might be
    armed and dangerous. In fact, the Scott court leaves open the possibility
    that in some limited “exigent” circumstances, a frisk may be warranted.
    9
    Appellant also relies on Commonwealth v. Dobbins, 
    934 A.2d 1170
    (Pa.
    2007), as another example of a “person in a non-police authoritative
    position.”   (Appellant’s brief at 20.)   In Dobbins, our supreme court
    concluded that absent specific statutory authorization, sheriffs lacked
    authority to conduct independent investigations under the Controlled
    Substances Act, including the seeking of search warrants where no breach of
    the peace or felony occurred in their presence. We find Dobbins to be
    distinguishable because it did not involve, as here, the legality of
    spur-of-the-moment action taken by the sheriffs to prevent the removal of
    contraband from the residence and/or minimize their risk of harm.
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    Unfortunately, there is little guidance in the way of published law in
    this Commonwealth. However, we find instructive the decisions of courts in
    other jurisdictions that have considered this question. In Ohio v. Barnes,
    
    1996 WL 501464
    (Ohio App. 2 Dist. 1996),10 two parole officers visited the
    home of Henry Harris for the purpose of arresting Harris for violations of the
    conditions of his parole. Kyle Barnes was in a bedroom with Harris on the
    second floor of the home. The parole officers immediately arrested Harris.
    The parole officers noticed that Barnes was behind a dresser, wearing a
    waist-length coat on a warm day.        The parole officers also noticed that
    Barnes’ hands were concealed from view, and he avoided eye contact. The
    parole officers asked Barnes to step aside so they could search the area
    where Barnes stood.      Barnes moved aside, removed his hands from his
    pockets, and began moving towards the parole officers. One parole officer
    told Barnes that he was going to have to pat him down for the parole
    officers’ own safety. Before the parole officers could pat him down, Barnes
    admitted to having a gun, withdrew a .38 caliber revolver, and placed the
    gun on a dresser.    The parole officers then handcuffed Barnes and placed
    10
    While Barnes was an unpublished decision, it has since been accepted as
    the law in Ohio. See Washington v. Department of Rehabilitation and
    Correction, 
    853 N.E.2d 372
    (Ohio App. 2006); Washington v. Ohio
    Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, 
    2004 WL 1945675
    (Ohio
    App. 2004) (parole officer has authority to search a third party when
    arresting a parolee while the third party is present at the time of the arrest if
    parole officer has a reasonable suspicion that her safety and safety of the
    other officers present is in danger).
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    him in a chair until Dayton police arrested him. After he was convicted of
    various firearm offenses, Barnes appealed.       Barnes challenged the parole
    officers’ legal authority to detain a non-parolee. He argued that under Ohio
    Revised Code, RC 2967.15, parole officers were law enforcement officers for
    the limited purpose of exercising their statutory authority to arrest parole
    violators.   The issue before the court was whether the parole officers
    possessed some “ancillary authority” to pat down and arrest Barnes in the
    course of arresting Harris, who was a known parole violator.            The Ohio
    appeals court held that the parole officers possessed a legal basis to demand
    to pat down Barnes.
    The Ohio appeals court held that the parole officers’ Terry frisk of
    Barnes was supported based on the confined space the officers were working
    in, drugs in extremely close proximity to the third party, his demeanor, the
    parole officers’ inability to see his hands, unusual attire (a coat on a warm
    day), and his movement towards one parole officer. The court explained:
    Under these circumstances, we believe the officers
    possessed a reasonable fear for their safety and a
    reasonable suspicion that Barnes might be armed.
    Consequently, in addition to their statutory authority
    to arrest Harris, we believe they also possessed the
    ancillary authority to conduct a weapons frisk of
    Barnes. Indeed, it would be anomalous to hold that
    parole officers may carry weapons like peace
    officers, place themselves in peril like peace officers,
    yet not protect themselves in the face of apparent
    dangers.     Thus, in the context of their limited
    statutory authority to arrest parole violators, we hold
    that parole officers possess the concomitant
    authority to conduct a weapons frisk of a
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    non-parolee when the facts and circumstances would
    warrant a reasonably prudent peace officer in doing
    the same.
    
    Id. With regard
    to the parole officers’ arrest of Barnes, the Ohio appeals
    court held that despite the limited statutory authority to arrest parole
    violators, the parole officers possessed the authority, along with any private
    person, to conduct a warrantless arrest when they have reasonable grounds
    to believe that a felony has been committed.      “At that point, the parole
    officers possessed the same authority as any other person to place Barnes
    under ‘citizen’s arrest.’” 
    Id. In People
    v. Rios, 122 Cal.Rpt.3d 96 (5th Dist. 2011), a juvenile
    probation officer acted within his authority as a peace officer to enforce
    conditions of probation when he detained and patted down an individual who
    was present in a probationer’s house. There, six probation officers went to a
    probationer’s residence to conduct a routine home visit of a high risk
    juvenile probationer.     The probationer was subject to gang and drug
    probation conditions. When the probation officers entered the home, they
    observed Florencio Rios sitting on the couch.     Rios had what reasonably
    appeared to be visible gang tattoos on his face and hand.          When the
    probation officers asked Rios his name and why he was at the residence,
    Rios was evasive and belligerent. Given the heat of the day, the probation
    officers found it unusual that Rios was wearing layers of clothing.    
    Id. at -
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    101. As one probation officer moved in front of Rios, Rios turned his body
    away and leaned forward slightly.     Each time the probation officer took a
    step further in front of him, Rios leaned forward farther, pushing his right
    forearm against his waist and turning his shoulder away from the officer.
    
    Id. at 102.
         Based on everything he noticed, including Rios’ clothing,
    evasiveness, and mannerisms, the probation officer believed Rios was trying
    to hide a weapon.    He asked Rios to stand up so he could pat him down.
    Rios resisted.   Believing Rios had a weapon, and concerned for his safety
    and that of the other officers, the probation officer and another officer forced
    Rios to the ground and handcuffed him. Officers found a loaded gun and a
    switch blade on Rios.
    At the suppression hearing, Rios argued that he could not be lawfully
    detained merely because he was a visitor in a probationer’s home.           The
    California court of appeals disagreed and found that once probation officers
    were lawfully on the premises, it was reasonable for the officers to
    determine whether the probationer’s association with Rios was a probation
    violation.   Next, Rios argued that the search of his person was illegal
    because under Section 830.5 of the California Penal Code, the probation
    officers’ “peace officer powers” extended only to the juvenile probationer.
    The California appeals court, relying on Terry, first held that the probation
    officers acted reasonably under the circumstances in performing the
    pat-down of Rios to determine if he was armed and dangerous. The court
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    also found that the probation officers were acting within the scope of their
    authority   under   Section   830.5(a)(1)     of   the   Penal   Code   when   they
    encountered Rios, and “[t]his authority included the right to detain Rios and,
    under the situation as it developed, to frisk him for weapons.” 
    Id. at 110.
    The court reasoned:
    [T]o hold otherwise would mean that juvenile
    probation officers could not detain or investigate
    anyone on the same premises as the juvenile
    probationer, no matter the circumstances or officer
    safety issues unless they were accompanied by
    police or other law enforcement officers. We decline
    to give section 830.5 subdivision (a) such a limited,
    unreasonable reading.
    
    Id. In State
    v. Jones, 
    78 So. 3d 274
    (La. App. 2011), two probation and
    parole officers went to a residence to arrest Sharon Evans for absconding
    from probation supervision.     As the probation and parole officers walked
    down the hallway, they encountered Ernest Jones leaving a bathroom. One
    officer discovered a .22 rifle in a closet and informed the other officer who
    had remained with Jones. Jones was handcuffed for safety reasons. Prior to
    patting Jones down, the parole officer asked Jones if he had any weapons.
    Jones denied having weapons but admitted to having narcotics. Jones was
    later convicted of possession with the intent to deliver.        On appeal, Jones
    challenged the denial of his motion to suppress.           Jones argued that the
    probation and parole officers did not have the authority to interrogate,
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    J. A18001/15
    detain, handcuff, and search him because he was not a probationer or
    parolee being supervised by those probation officers. 
    Id. at 280.
    On appeal, the Louisiana court of appeals affirmed.      Noting that law
    enforcement officers should not be required to take unnecessary risks in
    performing their duties, the court held that due to safety concerns the
    probation officer was justified in handcuffing Jones once the other officer
    alerted him that a gun was found.
    We find these cases persuasive, especially the court’s reasoning in
    Barnes. Our state and federal courts have consistently acknowledged the
    dangers facing police officers during execution of search warrants and have
    sanctioned their ability to conduct a Terry frisk of nonresident visitors (not
    named in the warrant) to insure officer safety. Ybarra v. Illinois, 
    444 U.S. 85
    (1979); Commonwealth v. Eichelberger, 
    508 A.2d 589
    (Pa.Super.
    1986), alloc. denied, 
    531 A.2d 427
    (Pa. 1987); Commonwealth v.
    Luddy, 
    422 A.2d 601
    (Pa.Super. 1980). Pennsylvania has also embraced a
    rule which permits a police officer, during an arrest, to (1) briefly detain and
    direct the movement of an “arrestee’s companion” regardless of whether a
    reasonable suspicion exists that the companion is involved in criminal
    activity; and (2) conduct a pat-down search of the companion if the officer
    has a reasonable and articulable suspicion that the arrestee’s companion is
    armed and dangerous.        Commonwealth v. Graham, 
    685 A.2d 132
    (Pa.Super. 1996), rev’d on other grounds, 
    721 A.2d 1075
    (Pa. 1998).
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    J. A18001/15
    See also, In re N.L., 
    739 A.2d 564
    (Pa.Super. 1999) (an arrestee’s
    companion may be stopped and frisked by a police officer when there is
    reasonable suspicion that the companion is armed and dangerous).
    Within the context of their limited statutory authority over parolees,
    we must recognize a parole officer’s concomitant authority to conduct a
    weapons frisk of a non-parolee when the facts and circumstances would
    warrant a reasonably prudent police officer in doing the same. Parole agents
    face the same extreme safety risks as police officers, and routinely
    encounter persons other than the parolee, who are present during an arrest
    and/or search of an approved residence. It is irrational to presume that a
    parole agent will only ever encounter his parolee during an arrest or home
    visit. We believe that while a parole agent is performing his official statutory
    duties, he is entitled to the same protections this Commonwealth has
    afforded to police officers with respect to his interaction with third parties,
    other than the parolee.     Accordingly, we conclude that a parole agent’s
    statutory authority to detain and arrest parolees includes the ancillary
    authority to conduct a weapons frisk of any person present, during an arrest
    or home visit, where the parole agent has a reasonable suspicion that a
    person searched may be armed and dangerous.
    Appellant contends that, even assuming arguendo, Agent Welsh had
    some authority over him, Agent Welsh did not have “reasonable suspicion”
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    J. A18001/15
    that appellant was armed and dangerous to warrant a Terry frisk.11
    Appellant asserts that he was subjected to an illegal frisk of his jacket based
    on Agent Welsh’s “hunch” or “unparticularized suspicion” that he was either
    removing drugs or concealing a weapon.              Appellant contends that
    Agent Welsh saw a bulge in appellant’s jacket; however, he did not
    necessarily know it was a firearm. Agent Welsh testified,
    Q.    And what made you think it was a firearm?
    A.    I didn’t necessarily know it was a firearm. It
    was some kind of contraband.        There was
    something inside the jacket. I could tell there
    was a shape inside of that jacket. I didn’t
    want him removing contraband and/or
    weapons from that house, and I did not want
    him taking a potential weapon where I had
    unaware people, like my partner, and
    Mr. Waters.
    11
    Appellant also claims that his “mere presence” during the routine parole
    visit was an insufficient ground, in and of itself, for a protective pat-down.
    Ybarra; Appeal of J.V., 
    762 A.2d 376
    (Pa.Super. 2000) (police executing a
    search warrant for drugs at a residence may not perform a pat-down for
    weapons on anyone merely present on the premises. Where the warrant
    does not authorize the search of the individual, police must be able to cite
    specific facts establishing a reasonable belief that the individual was armed
    and dangerous to legitimize a Terry frisk). He argues that Pennsylvania
    courts have rejected the “guns follow drugs” justification for protective
    sweeps for weapons. Commonwealth v. Grahame, 
    7 A.3d 810
    (Pa.
    2010). In Grahame, the court held that a police officer lacked reasonable
    suspicion to conduct a warrantless search of a woman’s handbag for safety
    reasons based solely on the fact that she was present inside a residence in
    which another individual had been selling drugs approximately ten minutes
    earlier. There, the officers did not detect any unusual behavior or furtive
    movements on the woman’s part nor did they observe a suspicious bulge in
    the purse. While Grahame stands for the principle that a companion may
    not be “automatically” patted down, appellant was not detained and frisked
    merely because he was present at Waters’ approved residence getting a
    haircut.
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    J. A18001/15
    Suppression hearing transcript, 7/28/14 at 13.
    First, Agent Welsh did not place his hand on appellant’s jacket based
    solely on his observation of the “bulge.” Agent Welsh testified that, even
    before he saw the bulge, he thought appellant “possibly could have been
    armed” or trying to remove other contraband from his parolee’s residence.
    (Suppression hearing transcript, 7/28/14 at 11, 35.) Agent Welsh testified
    that he did not intend to conduct a pat-down of appellant “until appellant
    started getting nervous. Whenever he started holding that jacket like it was
    a baby, I knew through my experience, through observing people’s
    demeanors over my years of experience that something was not right.” (Id.
    at 31.)
    In any event, Agent Welsh did not need to be absolutely certain that
    the bulge was a gun to believe that his safety or the safety of others was in
    danger.   Although a weapons frisk must be strictly circumscribed by the
    exigencies that justify it, “[t]he officer need not be absolutely certain that
    the individual is armed; the issue is whether a reasonably prudent [officer]
    in the circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his safety or that
    of others was in danger.”    
    Terry, 362 U.S. at 27
    .      Commonwealth v.
    Mesa, 
    683 A.2d 643
    (Pa.Super. 1996) (police may pat down for weapons as
    safety precaution and may investigate bulge in clothing to see if it is a
    weapon); see also People v. Miles, 
    242 Cal. Rptr. 107
    , 110 (1987) (officer
    had reasonable suspicion to conduct pat-down search when he saw an
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    J. A18001/15
    “exaggerated bulge” in defendant’s left jacket pocket and the manner in
    which the jacket swung, the officer “knew it was some type of heavy object,
    possibly a gun”); Byrd v. United States, 
    579 A.2d 725
    , 729 (D.C. 1990)
    (officer had reasonable grounds to frisk defendant upon seeing a bulge in
    defendant’s pocket which officer thought could possibly be a gun). See also
    Commonwealth v. Cortez, 
    491 A.2d 111
    , 113 (Pa. 1985), cert. denied,
    
    474 U.S. 950
    (1985) (“We cannot demand of our police that they determine
    with one hundred percent certainty that criminal activity is afoot or that a
    person is armed before they take protective steps”). We do not agree with
    appellant that this was a situation, as in Stanley v. Commonwealth, 
    433 S.E.2d 512
    , 515 (Va. App. 1993), where the officer conducted a frisk based
    on some amorphous, unidentifiable bulge in the defendant’s clothing, absent
    any other circumstances which reasonably supported the conclusion that the
    defendant was armed and dangerous.       See also People v. Howard, 
    542 N.Y.S.2d 536
    , 539 (1989) (the mere observation of an undefinable bulge in
    a person’s pocket is insufficient as a basis for a frisk or search) (citations
    omitted), appeal dismissed, 
    549 N.E.2d 477
    (1989). Agent Welsh testified
    that he had concerns for his safety after he observed appellant’s nervous
    demeanor and furtive behavior with the jacket.        Agent Welsh observed
    appellant pick the jacket up very gently and protectively with one hand
    under the jacket and one hand on top.        Appellant acted nervously and
    evasively by turning away from Agent Welsh and holding the jacket against
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    J. A18001/15
    his side like a football as he was walking into the center room. That is when
    Agent Welsh first saw the bulge.      We believe that a reasonably prudent
    officer in these circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his
    safety or that of others was in danger, warranting a Terry search for his
    protection.12
    The suppression court did not err when it denied appellant’s omnibus
    pretrial motion to suppress.13
    The judgment of sentence entered on November 25, 2014, is affirmed.
    12
    Appellant asserts that “[w]ith respect to the ‘shape’ in Appellant’s jacket,
    Agent Welsh testified, ‘I had a change of heart where, like, I’m doing
    something wrong here, something is not right, I need to stop this.’”
    (Appellant’s brief at 11.) Appellant intimates that Agent Welsh’s statement
    that he was “doing something wrong” related to his decision to frisk
    appellant. However, Agent Welsh’s statements were in reference to allowing
    appellant to walk into the front room unchecked. (Suppression hearing
    transcript, 7/28/14 at 33.)
    13
    We leave open the question whether the agents had sufficient ancillary
    authority under the facts of this case to search appellant’s coat for evidence
    of contraband. Unlike in Scott, Agents Walsh and Bruner smelled a strong
    odor of marijuana upon entering the residence and therefore could arrest
    Waters immediately. Whether they could also search the residence and
    items found therein would require a separate finding of exigent
    circumstances absent a supervisor’s prior approval for a residence search.
    This issue is not before us nor is the question of whether the presence of
    appellant within the residence would subject him to a search for any
    concealment of contraband. We decide only that appellant was subject to a
    protective Terry search based on the reasonable suspicion of Agent Welsh.
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    J. A18001/15
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 9/22/2015
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