Com. v. Barr, T. ( 2020 )


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  • J-A13005-20
    
    2020 PA Super 236
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant               :
    :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    TIMOTHY OLIVER BARR II                     :   No. 2347 EDA 2019
    Appeal from the Order Entered August 2, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-39-CR-0000279-2019
    BEFORE:      BENDER, P.J.E., LAZARUS, J., and STRASSBURGER, J.*
    OPINION BY BENDER, P.J.E.:                         FILED SEPTEMBER 25, 2020
    This is a Commonwealth appeal from the trial court’s order granting
    Appellee’s, Timothy Oliver Barr II, motion to suppress and habeas corpus
    petition (“habeas petition”). In granting Appellee’s suppression motion, the
    trial court held that the odor of marijuana no longer provides police with
    probable cause to search a motor vehicle from which the odor emanates
    because a substantial number of Pennsylvania citizens can now consume
    marijuana legally, calling into question the so-called plain smell doctrine.
    After careful review, we agree with the trial court that the odor of marijuana
    does not per se establish probable cause to conduct a warrantless search of a
    vehicle.    However, because the trial court failed to afford that factor any
    weight, and did not appear to evaluate any other factors in conjunction with
    the odor of marijuana in its probable cause analysis, we vacate the portion of
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A13005-20
    the order granting suppression and remand for reconsideration by the trial
    court. We also vacate the portion of the order granting Appellee’s habeas
    petition, and remand for reconsideration by the trial court following resolution
    of the suppression issue.
    The Commonwealth charged Appellee with person not to possess a
    firearm, 18 Pa.C.S. § 6105, possession of a firearm without a license, 18
    Pa.C.S. § 6106, and possession of a small amount of marijuana (“PSAM”), 35
    Pa.C.S. § 780-113(a)(31)(i), following a warrantless search of his vehicle
    conducted on November 7, 2018. Appellee filed a motion to suppress the
    seized firearm and marijuana, and a habeas corpus petition seeking dismissal
    of all charges.1    The trial court conducted a suppression hearing on July 17,
    2019. The court summarized its factual findings from that hearing as follows:
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    1. On November 7, 2018, at approximately 12:30 A.M., Trooper
    Edward Prentice and Trooper Danielle Heimbach of the
    Pennsylvania State Police, Fogelsville Barracks, Troop M, were on
    routine patrol in full uniform and in a marked police unit on Emaus
    Avenue in the area of the Liberty Park at Allentown apartment
    complex, Allentown, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania.5 At that time,
    Trooper Prentice observed a silver Chrysler 300 sedan making a
    U-turn in the Liberty Park at Allentown apartment complex on
    Allenbrook Drive, and then proceeding east on Emaus Avenue.
    Trooper Prentice turned his cruiser around and decided to follow
    the vehicle.6
    5 Trooper Prentice was Trooper Heimbach’s mentor, as
    Trooper Heimbach graduated from the police academy on
    ____________________________________________
    1 Both the suppression motion and habeas corpus petition were incorporated
    in an omnibus pre-trial motion filed on April 3, 2019.
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    October 12, 2018. On that night, Trooper Prentice was
    operating the police cruiser and was Trooper Heimbach’s
    training officer.
    6 No criminal activity was observed at this time. Trooper
    Prentice based his decision to follow the vehicle on the fact
    that no other cars were around, the car appeared to be
    traveling at a fast rate of speed, and the early hour of the
    night.
    2. The subject vehicle drove eastbound on Emaus Avenue and
    made a left onto Devonshire Road/Mack Boulevard, Allentown,
    Lehigh County. Trooper Prentice noted that the vehicle was
    traveling at a fast rate of speed. However, the vehicle slowed
    down prior to approaching an overpass on which the vehicles are
    constrained to pass one at a time. Trooper Prentice and Trooper
    Heimbach observed that the subject vehicle failed to stop at the
    solid white stop line on the road at the stop sign controlling the
    single lane railroad overpass at Mack Boulevard and South 8th
    Street, Allentown, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania.7 Consequently,
    observing this motor vehicle violation, a traffic stop was
    effectuated. The subject vehicle pulled over immediately.
    7 Both the front and rear tires passed over the solid white
    stop lines prior to slowly rolling through the single lane
    railroad overpass.    At that time, another vehicle was
    approaching the railroad pass from a distance from the
    opposite lane of travel. As this vehicle was far away, no
    danger or safety risk was present.
    3. As Trooper Prentice was “coaching” or training Trooper
    Heimbach, Trooper Heimbach took the lead and exited the police
    cruiser to investigate.8    Trooper Heimbach approached the
    passenger side of the vehicle to speak with the occupants. As she
    approached, she smelled the odor of burnt marijuana. The driver
    of the vehicle was a white female, later identified as Teri Barr,
    [Appellee]’s wife. [Appellee] was seated in the front passenger
    seat and was speaking with Trooper Heimbach.9
    8 Trooper Prentice briefly remained in the police cruiser to
    perform a records check of the vehicle, as well as to notify
    dispatch of the traffic stop. The subject vehicle was owned
    by [Appellee]’s mother.
    9 Co-Defendant Luiz Monteiro was seated in the rear
    passenger seat behind [Appellee]. He appeared to be either
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    passed out or in and out of sleep. There was limited
    interaction with Mr. Monteiro. Co-Defendant Monteiro did
    not present a medical marijuana card at the time of the
    traffic stop.
    4. After Trooper Prentice completed his tasks in the police cruiser,
    he approached the vehicle on the driver’s side. Upon approach,
    Trooper Prentice could smell the odor of both burnt and raw
    marijuana through the open window of the vehicle.10 At that time,
    Trooper Prentice asked the driver to exit the vehicle so that he
    could interview her and confirm that she was not under the
    influence and incapable of safe driving. He stepped back to make
    room for her egress from the vehicle. When Trooper Prentice
    overheard the passenger arguing with Trooper Heimbach and
    stating[,] “no one is getting out of this fucking car,” Trooper
    Prentice walked back to the driver’s side door. The argument
    ensued for approximately two (2) to three (3) minutes, until
    members of the Allentown Police Department arrived as backup.11
    When members of the Allentown Police Department arrived,
    [Appellee]’s attitude changed and he became more cooperative.
    He exited the vehicle, along with the other occupants. They were
    patted down for officer safety.
    10 Trooper Prentice testified that he could smell the odor of
    raw and burnt marijuana through the open window when he
    was at the rear of the vehicle. This [c]ourt takes issue with
    this testimony of Trooper Prentice and finds it not to be
    credible. Indeed, it is only reasonable to conclude that one
    (1) odor would trump the other odor, and that Trooper
    Prentice was not able to detect both raw and burnt
    marijuana. Also, this [c]ourt notes that the amount of raw
    marijuana located in the vehicle in a sealed Ziploc bag was
    only .79 grams. It is unfathomable to this [c]ourt that
    Trooper Prentice was able to detect the odor of both raw and
    burnt marijuana.
    11 Trooper Prentice had called for assistance when he
    realized that [Appellee] was not being cooperative and was
    preventing his wife from complying with [the trooper’s]
    commands and exiting the vehicle.
    5. Trooper Prentice advised the occupants of the vehicle that he
    could search the vehicle pursuant to Commonwealth v. Gary, …
    
    91 A.3d 102
     ([Pa.] 2014), as the odor of marijuana provided them
    with probable cause. At that time, [Appellee] presented Trooper
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    Prentice with a medical marijuana identification card that allows
    him to possess and ingest medical marijuana pursuant to this
    license.12 Trooper Prentice admitted that while he knew that
    green leafy marijuana was legal for medical purposes, he was not
    familiar with how a person ingests green leafy medical
    marijuana.13 Also, Trooper Prentice was under the misconception
    that medical marijuana, when ingested through a vaping pen, has
    no odor.14
    12At the time of the hearing, [Appellee] presented a receipt
    for medical flower marijuana purchased from a dispensary
    on November 2, 2018, totaling $85.00. Neither Trooper
    Prentice nor Trooper Heimbach recalled that [Appellee]
    presented this receipt to them at the time of the traffic stop.
    13 While in the presence of the Allentown Police Department
    and captured on the body cam of a member of the Allentown
    Police Department, Trooper Prentice indicated that “if he’s
    allowed to have it, I’m fine with that. I’m not going to
    fucking worry about it.”
    14 Trooper Heimbach was frank with this [c]ourt and stated
    that she did not know how medical marijuana was ingested.
    She also indicated that at the time of the preliminary
    hearing in this matter (and consequently, at the time of the
    vehicle stop) she was under the misimpression that green
    leafy marijuana was illegal and not used for medical
    purposes.
    6. Trooper Heimbach and Trooper Prentice then conducted a
    probable cause search of the vehicle based on the odor of
    marijuana that they detected therein. The search of the vehicle
    yielded marijuana “shake”15 throughout the cabin area, as well as
    a sealed Ziploc plastic bag containing marijuana16 between the
    front passenger seat and the center console. The marijuana
    weighed .79 grams. The Ziploc plastic bag did not have any
    markings or barcodes on it that would be indicative of coming from
    a medical marijuana dispensary.17 Trooper Prentice indicated that
    the odor of burnt marijuana got stronger in the area of the center
    console of the vehicle.
    15Trooper Prentice explained that marijuana “shake” served
    as evidence that marijuana was being smoked in the
    vehicle, but did not amount to a prosecutorial amount.
    Indeed, generally “shake” is a residual amount of
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    marijuana. No photos of the “shake” were taken at the time
    of the traffic stop.
    16 The suspected      marijuana    field-tested   positive   for
    marijuana.
    17Trooper Prentice testified that he was trained that medical
    marijuana has to remain in the original packaging that it is
    received in from the dispensary, from the time that it is
    opened until the time that the contents are totally
    consumed. As the baggie located in the vehicle had no
    markings on it that were indicative of being medical
    marijuana, Trooper Prentice grew concerned and skeptical
    that the contents were medical marijuana.           However,
    Trooper Prentice did acknowledge that he did not know if
    the packaging of medical marijuana included an inner
    baggie like the one located in the center console of the
    vehicle. Similarly, Trooper Heimbach indicated that she did
    not know how medical marijuana was packaged.
    7. In addition, Trooper Prentice searched the rear of the vehicle.
    On the floor of the rear passenger compartment, tucked halfway
    under the front driver’s seat, Trooper Prentice located a jacket
    with “OBH” markings on it rolled up in a ball. Therein, Trooper
    Prentice found a loaded black handgun, with one (1) bullet in the
    chamber and four (4) rounds in the magazine. Trooper Prentice
    believed the jacket to belong to [Appellee].        Consequently,
    Trooper Prentice advised the members of the Allentown Police
    Department to detain the three (3) occupants of the vehicle.
    Further search of the vehicle yielded an Apple logo baggie with
    new clear plastic baggies therein. These small baggies were
    located in the trunk of the vehicle. Trooper Prentice testified that
    they were consistent with the packaging of drugs for distribution,
    as well as the baggie of marijuana found between the front
    passenger seat and the center console.
    8. David Gordon, M.D., a retired heart and lung surgeon in the
    Lehigh Valley and an expert in the field of medical marijuana, is
    one of the pioneer physicians in Pennsylvania to assess patients
    and determine if they have a qualifying condition under the law to
    be prescribed medical marijuana. Dr. Gordon was the physician
    who made the recommendation that [Appellee] qualified for a
    medical marijuana card based on his underlying medical
    condition/diagnosis.
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    9. Dr. Gordon explained that there is no distinguishable physical
    difference between the green leafy medical marijuana and regular
    marijuana purchased on the streets.         Indeed, the chemical
    compositions are the same. Dr. Gordon further explained how a
    person lawfully ingests green leafy medical marijuana.        He
    indicated that the green leafy marijuana is placed in a battery-
    operated vaping pen that heats up the marijuana without
    combustion, producing a vapor. A person then breathes in the
    vapors through the vaping pen. Dr. Gordon indicated it is a
    violation of regulations to smoke medical marijuana without a
    vaping pen, such as placing it into cigarettes or pipes.
    10. Dr. Gordon stated that there is no difference in odor of
    ingesting the medical marijuana when utilizing a vaping pen and
    the odor of smoking regular marijuana from an unlawful source.
    11. Dr. Gordon is familiar with the packaging of medical marijuana
    and explained that it can be dispensed in a plastic container similar
    to a pill bottle, which then has a plastic bag in it containing the
    medical marijuana. Dr. Gordon believed that the inner plastic bag
    does contain some marking on it to reflect that it was purchased
    at a medical marijuana dispensary, but he was not certain. Dr.
    Gordon advises all of his patients to maintain their receipts to
    evidence what was purchased.
    12. As of now, there are more than 143,000 patients in
    Pennsylvania legalized to obtain, possess, and ingest medical
    marijuana.
    13. Dr. Gordon opined that there is a clear disconnect between
    the medical community and the law enforcement community with
    respect to the legalization of marijuana.
    Trial Court Opinion (TCO), 8/2/19, at 2-8 (citations to hearing exhibits
    omitted).
    On August 2, 2019, the trial court issued an opinion and order granting
    both Appellee’s suppression motion and his             habeas petition.2       The
    ____________________________________________
    2The order granted suppression of all evidence obtained during the search of
    Appellee’s vehicle. Order, 8/2/19, at 1 (single page). The order is somewhat
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    Commonwealth filed a timely notice of appeal on August 8, 2019. On August
    15, 2019, the trial court ruled that its August 2, 2019 order granting Appellee’s
    suppression motion and habeas petition was a final order.                   See Order,
    8/15/19, at 1 (single page) (citing Pa.R.A.P. 341(c) (permitting “the trial
    court” to “enter a final order as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims
    and parties only upon an express determination that an immediate appeal
    would facilitate resolution of the entire case” which then “becomes appealable
    when entered”)).        The court did not order the Commonwealth to file a
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement. The trial court filed a Rule 1925(a) opinion,
    which     fully   adopted    its    August     2,   2019   opinion,   to   address   the
    Commonwealth’s claims.             See Rule 1925(a) Opinion, 8/14/19, at 2.           In
    addition to the briefs filed by the Commonwealth and Appellee, the Defender
    Association of Philadelphia and the American Civil Liberties Union of
    Pennsylvania filed an Amici Curiae brief (“Amici Brief”) in support of the order
    granting suppression.
    The Commonwealth now presents the following questions for our
    review:
    I. Did the trial court err in granting [Appellee]’s motion to
    suppress the drugs and firearm seized by Pennsylvania State
    ____________________________________________
    inconsistent with regard to the habeas petition. Appellee sought dismissal of
    all charges in his habeas petition, and the order initially indicated that the
    habeas petition was granted. 
    Id.
     However, the order then stated that only
    the PSAM charge was dismissed. 
    Id.
     The lower court docket also reflects that
    only the PSAM charge was dismissed by the trial court.
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    Police where the search of the vehicle in which [he] was a
    passenger was supported by probable cause?
    II. Did the trial court err in granting [Appellee]’s [habeas petition]
    with regard to Count 3, [PSAM,] at the same time it granted [his]
    [m]otion to [s]uppress and where the Commonwealth established
    that it was more probable than not that [he] possessed the
    marijuana in violation of the Controlled Substances Act, 35 P.S. §
    780-113(a)(31)(i)?
    Commonwealth’s Brief at 4.
    I
    The Commonwealth’s first claim presents a multipart argument that the
    trial court erred in determining that the police lacked probable cause to
    conduct a warrantless search of Appellee’s vehicle.3
    We begin by noting that where a motion to suppress has been
    filed, the burden is on the Commonwealth to establish by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the challenged evidence is
    admissible. In reviewing the ruling of a suppression court, our
    task is to determine whether the factual findings are supported by
    the record. If so, we are bound by those findings. Where, as
    here, it is the Commonwealth who is appealing the decision of the
    suppression court, we must consider only the evidence of the
    defendant’s witnesses and so much of the evidence for the
    prosecution as read in the context of the record as a whole
    remains uncontradicted.
    Commonwealth v. DeWitt, 
    608 A.2d 1030
    , 1031 (Pa. 1992) (citations
    omitted).
    Both the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and
    Article I, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution protect
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    3 We refer to “Appellee’s vehicle” for convenience, while we recognize that
    Appellee was a passenger in the vehicle that his wife was driving. In any
    event, the Commonwealth makes no claims that Appellee lacked standing to
    challenge the search of the vehicle, nor does it claim that he lacked a
    reasonable expectation of privacy therein.
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    individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures by police in
    areas where individuals have a reasonable expectation of privacy.
    An expectation of privacy exists if a person has a subjective
    expectation of privacy that society is willing to recognize as
    legitimate and reasonable. Where there exists a reasonable
    expectation of privacy, Article I, Section 8 and the Fourth
    Amendment generally require police to obtain a warrant, issued
    by a neutral and detached magistrate and founded upon probable
    cause, prior to conducting a search or seizure of a person and/or
    a person’s property, unless one of the few well delineated
    exceptions apply.     One such exception is the automobile
    exception, adopted by this Court in Gary, which permits the
    search and/or seizure of a motor vehicle if supported by probable
    cause—no separate finding of exigent circumstances is required.
    Commonwealth v. Loughnane, 
    173 A.3d 733
    , 741 (Pa. 2017) (some
    citations omitted).
    In the case sub judice, it is undisputed that the automobile exception
    applies if the police possessed probable cause to believe that a search of the
    vehicle would uncover evidence of a crime. “In determining whether probable
    cause exists, we apply a totality of the circumstances test.” Commonwealth
    v. Thompson, 
    985 A.2d 928
    , 931 (Pa. 2009). “Probable cause is a practical,
    nontechnical conception: it is a fluid concept-turning on the assessment of
    probabilities in particular factual contexts not readily, or even usefully,
    reduced to a neat set of legal rules.” Commonwealth v. Glass, 
    754 A.2d 655
    , 663 (Pa. 2000) (cleaned up).
    The Commonwealth first asserts that it has long been the case that the
    odor of marijuana is alone sufficient to demonstrate probable cause to conduct
    a search.   Commonwealth’s Brief at 14-15.      Second, the Commonwealth
    argues that, contrary to the trial court’s analysis, this long-held rule has
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    neither been altered by intervening legislation, namely, the Medical Marijuana
    Act (“MMA”), 35 P.S. § 10231.101 et seq., nor by our Supreme Court’s recent
    decision in Commonwealth v. Hicks, 
    208 A.3d 916
     (Pa. 2019) (holding that
    the presence of a concealed firearm, alone, does not provide police with
    reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot). Commonwealth’s Brief at
    16-32. Third, the Commonwealth contends that even if the odor of marijuana
    does not itself establish probable cause, it is nonetheless a relevant fact that,
    in conjunction with other factors, may contribute to a finding of probable
    cause. Id. at 32-36. Under that view, the Commonwealth argues that the
    trial court erred by affording the odor of marijuana no weight in assessing the
    at-issue search under the totality of the circumstances test for probable cause,
    and by failing to consider other relevant factors.
    Prior Precedent
    The Commonwealth first argues that prior precedent firmly establishes
    that the odor of marijuana, alone, provides probable cause to search a vehicle.
    Appellee partially concedes this point. See Appellee’s Brief at 12-13 (stating
    that in Commonwealth v. Stoner, 
    334 A.2d 633
     (Pa. Super. 1975), “the
    [C]ourt adopted the rationale in United States v. Ventresca, 
    380 U.S. 102
    (1965)[,] and Johnson v. United States, 
    333 U.S. 10
     (1948)[,] that an odor
    may be sufficient to establish probable cause for the issuance of a search
    warrant[,]” and that … “Pennsylvania courts held thereafter that the plain
    smell of marijuana alone was sufficient to establish probable cause due to
    marijuana’s distinctive odor and illegal status”). Appellee rejects the notion
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    that the Stoner Court adopted a per se legal rule.        However conceived,
    Appellee maintains, and the trial court agreed, that the plain smell doctrine
    was contingent upon the previously universal factual premise that the
    possession of marijuana was always and necessarily illegal; i.e., the detection
    of marijuana by smell was previously always evidence of criminal activity.
    They argue that the MMA changed that universal factual assumption in
    Pennsylvania and, applying the reasoning of Hicks, the odor of marijuana is
    no longer alone sufficient to establish probable cause to believe criminal
    activity is afoot.
    Initially, we agree with the Commonwealth that prior cases in this
    Commonwealth established that the odor of marijuana may be alone sufficient
    to establish probable cause for a search, as conceded by Appellee. We need
    not belabor that point; however, clarification of the nature of that rule is
    warranted.    The Commonwealth seems to further argue that the odor of
    marijuana is always sufficient to establish probable cause under the prior
    precedent, suggesting the existence of a per se rule of law that applies
    regardless of any other circumstances known to an officer prior to his
    conducting a search.    We disagree with this conception of the plain smell
    doctrine as a per se legal rule.
    To the contrary, courts have routinely held that the odor of marijuana
    is a factor for consideration in a determination of the existence of probable
    cause, a factor that was dispositive, or almost always controlling, in the prior
    factual context of the substance’s universal illegality. As this Court stated in
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    Commonwealth v. Trenge, 
    451 A.2d 701
     (Pa. Super. 1982), “[a]t least
    since the Supreme Court of the United States decided Johnson v. United
    States, 
    333 U.S. 10
     … (1948), it has been clear that probable cause may be
    established” by the odor of marijuana alone.        Trenge, 
    451 A.2d at 706
    (emphasis added). In Johnson, the Supreme Court explained:
    If the presence of odors is testified to before a magistrate and he
    finds the affiant qualified to know the odor, and it is one
    sufficiently distinctive to identify a forbidden substance,
    this Court has never held such a basis insufficient to justify
    issuance of a search warrant. Indeed it might very well be found
    to be evidence of most persuasive character.
    Johnson, 
    333 U.S. at 13
     (emphasis added). Justice Jackson did not articulate
    a per se rule regarding the odor of obvious contraband in Johnson. Instead,
    he clearly expressed that the odor of a “forbidden” substance is a factor that
    “might” constitute evidence of the “most persuasive character” when
    considered in the totality-of-the-circumstances test for probable cause. 
    Id.
    In Stoner, this Court explicitly adopted the reasoning of Johnson,
    stating that the “Supreme Court of the United States has held that an odor
    may be sufficient to establish probable cause for the issuance of a search
    warrant.” Stoner, 344 A.2d at 635 (citing Johnson) (emphasis added). The
    Stoner Court further opined that it “would have been a dereliction of duty for
    [an officer] to ignore the obvious aroma of an illegal drug which he was trained
    to identify.” Id.   Stoner neither departed from nor exceeded the rationale
    of Johnson, that the detection of an odor of a prohibited substance may be
    sufficient by itself to establish probable cause.    Applying that rule in the
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    context of a legal environment where virtually every instance of possession of
    marijuana is illegal, the odor of marijuana becomes dispositive in establishing
    probable cause to conduct a search for that substance.
    This is assuming, of course, yet another factual premise upon which all
    plain smell cases are contingent—that the odor in question is emanating from
    the location sought to be searched. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Scott,
    
    210 A.3d 359
    , 365 (Pa. Super. 2019) (holding “the odor of burnt marijuana
    and small amount of contraband recovered from the passenger compartment
    of the vehicle did not create a fair probability that the officer could recover
    additional contraband in the trunk” because, citing the suppression court in
    that case, the “officers could only smell burnt marijuana as a result of [the
    defendant’s] having just smoked a blunt in the car and therefore they could
    not discern the odor of fresh marijuana that would lead them to reasonably
    believe additional narcotics had been concealed within the vehicle”). While
    that factor is not at issue in this case, it further serves to demonstrate the
    absence of a per se rule giving police carte blanche authority to search based
    on the odor of marijuana despite any circumstances that might serve to
    undermine the otherwise strong inference of criminal activity that the odor
    typically implied. A per se rule undermines the very nature of the totality-of-
    the-circumstances test for probable cause, which is “a fluid concept-turning
    on the assessment of probabilities in particular factual contexts not
    readily, or even usefully, reduced to a neat set of legal rules.” Glass, 754
    A.2d at 663 (emphasis added).
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    Thus, contrary to the Commonwealth’s claim, there is no preexisting,
    per se rule that the odor of marijuana is always sufficient to establish
    probable cause to believe a crime is being committed.     Rather, the existing
    rule, properly stated, is that the odor of marijuana may alone be sufficient to
    establish probable cause to search in particular factual contexts. In practical
    terms, historically, the circumstances wherein the odor of marijuana would
    not alone be sufficient to establish probable cause were necessarily rare or
    even nonexistent when marijuana was, in all or virtually all circumstances,
    illegal to possess. To the extent that the Commonwealth suggests a per se
    rule existed prior to, much less survived the MMA, and that the trial court
    erred by failing to mechanically follow that rule once it deemed credible that
    the odor had been detected by the police, we deem that aspect of its claim to
    be meritless. The trial court was free to weigh the inference of criminality
    implied by the odor of marijuana against other relevant facts known to the
    officers in determining whether they possessed probable cause to conduct the
    search.
    MMA
    Next, the Commonwealth contends that the MMA “did not legalize nor
    did it render possession or use of marijuana presumptively legal.”
    Commonwealth’s Brief at 18. Thus, the Commonwealth argues that the “MMA
    merely constitutes one limited exception” to the Controlled Substance, Drug,
    Device, and Cosmetic Act (“CSA”) and that “Pennsylvania’s long[-]standing
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    precedent that the smell of marijuana establishes probable cause …
    control[s].” Id.
    In Commonwealth v. Jezzi, 
    208 A.3d 1105
     (Pa. Super. 2019), this
    Court described the interplay between the MMA and the CSA as follows:
    This appeal involves the interplay of two public safety statutes;
    the first statute is the CSA, which describes five schedules of
    controlled substances. 35 P.S. § 780-104. In outlining the
    Schedule I substances, the Act states:
    § 780-104. Schedules of controlled substances
    (1) Schedule I—In determining that a substance comes
    within this schedule, the secretary shall find: a high
    potential for abuse, no currently accepted medical use in the
    United States, and a lack of accepted safety for use under
    medical supervision. The following controlled substances are
    included in this schedule:
    ***
    (iv) Marihuana.
    35 P.S. § 780-104(1)(iv) (effective June 14, 1972).
    The second statute is the MMA, which states in its declaration of
    policy:
    § 10231.102. Declaration of policy
    The General Assembly finds and declares as follows:
    (1) Scientific evidence suggests that medical
    marijuana is one potential therapy that may mitigate
    suffering in some patients and also enhance quality of
    life.
    (2) The Commonwealth is committed to patient
    safety. Carefully regulating the program which allows
    access to medical marijuana will enhance patient
    safety while research into its effectiveness continues.
    (3) It is the intent of the General Assembly to:
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    J-A13005-20
    (i) Provide a program of access to medical
    marijuana which balances the need of patients
    to have access to the latest treatments with
    the need to promote patient safety.
    (ii) Provide a safe and effective method of
    delivery of medical marijuana to patients.
    (iii) Promote high quality research into the
    effectiveness and utility of medical marijuana.
    (4) It is the further intention of the General Assembly
    that any Commonwealth-based program to provide
    access to medical marijuana serve as a temporary
    measure, pending Federal approval of and access to
    medical marijuana through traditional medical and
    pharmaceutical avenues.
    35 P.S. § 10231.102(1)-(4) (emphasis added). In essence, the
    MMA creates a temporary program for qualified persons to access
    medical marijuana, for the safe and effective delivery of medical
    marijuana, and for research into the effectiveness and utility of
    medical marijuana. Id.; 35 P.S. § 10231.301. Significantly, the
    MMA does not declare that marijuana is safe and effective for
    medical use; instead, the MMA is a temporary vehicle to access
    the substance pending research into its medical efficacy and
    utility. 35 P.S. § 10231.102(1)-(4).
    Section 10231.303 of the MMA allows for the limited lawful use of
    medical marijuana, and pertinent to this case, Section 10231.304
    emphasizes the unlawful use of medical marijuana:
    § 10231.304. Unlawful use of medical marijuana
    (a) General rule.—Except as provided in section 303,
    section 704, Chapter 19 or Chapter 20, the use of medical
    marijuana is unlawful and shall, in addition to any other
    penalty provided by law, be deemed a violation of the [CSA].
    (b) Unlawful use described.—It is unlawful to:
    (1) Smoke medical marijuana.
    (2) Except as provided under subsection (c), incorporate
    medical marijuana into edible form.
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    J-A13005-20
    (3) Grow medical marijuana unless the grower/processor
    has received a permit from the department under this act.
    (4) Grow or dispense medical marijuana unless authorized
    as a healthy medical marijuana organization under Chapter
    19.
    (5) Dispense medical marijuana unless the dispensary has
    received a permit from the department under this act.
    (c) Edible medical marijuana.—Nothing in this act shall
    be construed to preclude the incorporation of medical
    marijuana into edible form by a patient or a caregiver in
    order to aid ingestion of the medical marijuana by the
    patient.
    35 P.S. § 10231.304. Further, the MMA states: “The growth,
    processing, distribution, possession and consumption of medical
    marijuana permitted under [the MMA] shall not be deemed a
    violation of the [CSA]” and “[i]f a provision of the [CSA] relating
    to marijuana conflicts with a provision of [the MMA], [the MMA]
    shall take precedence.” 35 P.S. § 10231.2101. In other words,
    compliance with the MMA will not constitute a crime under the
    CSA. Id.
    Jezzi, 208 A.3d at 1111–12 (footnotes omitted).
    As established above, the plain smell doctrine is a specific application of
    the totality-of-the-circumstances test for probable cause, crafted in light of
    the previously universal fact of marijuana’s illegality and its distinctive odor.
    The MMA has clearly altered the underlying factual context in which that
    probable cause test applies. See Amici Brief at 5 (“The logical nexus between
    smelling marijuana in a car and the likelihood of finding unlawfully possessed
    narcotics is not immune to the effects of time and changes in law; it is affected
    and altered by both.”). This much is true: marijuana is a prohibited substance
    - 18 -
    J-A13005-20
    under the CSA, despite the passage of the MMA.4 However, it is undisputed
    that a substantial number of Pennsylvania citizens may now possess and
    consume marijuana legally pursuant to the MMA.5 Previously, every instance
    in which marijuana was detected by smell indicated the commission of a crime.
    Soon, hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvanians will become potential lawful
    sources of that same odor. Thus, the strength of the inference of illegality
    stemming from the odor of marijuana has necessarily been diminished by the
    MMA in Pennsylvania.
    The Commonwealth cites several post-MMA cases by this Court,
    implying that the MMA has not affected the plain smell doctrine. However,
    the cited decisions do not preclude a finding by a suppression court that
    probable cause is lacking, despite a credible finding that police smelled
    marijuana coming from the location to be searched, nor do they provide
    analogous facts to the instant case that are controlling here.
    First, in Commonwealth v. Handley, 
    213 A.3d 1030
     (Pa. Super.
    2019), the police responded to a report that Handley had an argument with a
    utility worker outside of his home, and that he had threatened to get a gun
    from inside the house. Id. at 1033. The worker also reported that he heard
    ____________________________________________
    4 As the Jezzi Court held, “the CSA and the MMA can be read in harmony and
    given full effect….” Jezzi, 208 A.3d at 1115.
    5 As noted by Amici Curiae, nearly 163,000 Pennsylvania have active medical
    marijuana cards in Pennsylvania, and some 70,000 more are pending
    approval. See Amici Brief at 4. The Commonwealth does not dispute these
    statistics.
    - 19 -
    J-A13005-20
    “four or five gunshots” after Handley returned to his residence. Id. When
    police arrived, they detected “a strong odor of marijuana” coming from the
    house. Id. Handley did not respond when the officers knocked on his door.
    Id. Additionally, the police observed a firearm inside the house from their
    vantage point on the front porch, and they further discovered marijuana
    leaves and stems protruding from garbage bags that were outside the home.
    Id. at 1033-34. Based on this information, the police obtained a warrant to
    search the home. Id. at 1034. A subsequent search yielded “33 marijuana
    plants and numerous jars containing marijuana.”          Id.   Handley filed a
    suppression motion, which was denied.
    On appeal, Handley argued that the police lacked probable cause to
    secure the search warrant. The Handley Court disagreed, stating, inter alia,
    that a “strong smell of marijuana emanating from a residence creates probable
    cause to procure a search warrant” and that “the odor of marijuana, in and of
    itself, was sufficient to support issuance of a warrant.” Id. at 1035 (citing
    Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    68 A.3d 930
     (Pa. Super. 2013) (hereinafter,
    “PA Johnson,” and Commonwealth v. Waddell, 
    61 A.3d 198
     (Pa. Super.
    2012)).
    On first glance, Handley may appear to support the Commonwealth’s
    position. However, under further scrutiny, it is easily distinguishable from the
    case sub judice. Although Handley was decided after passage of the MMA,
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    J-A13005-20
    the search at issue in that case occurred several years prior.6 Thus, at the
    time the warrant in Handley was secured, there was no possibility that
    Handley lawfully possessed the marijuana detected by the investigating
    officers pursuant to the MMA, and Handley presented no such claim on appeal.
    The Handley Court relied on prior expressions of the plain smell doctrine in
    PA Johnson and Waddell, both cases that were issued several years before
    the MMA could have contributed to the factual context in which a probable
    cause determination is made, and both of which involved facts that far
    exceeded the mere smell of marijuana as the justification for a search.7
    ____________________________________________
    6As noted by the Handley Court, the MMA “took effect on May 17, 2016.”
    Id. at 1036. Handley’s home was searched nearly a year before on August
    27, 2015. Id. at 1033.
    7 In Waddell, this Court did not ‘hold’ that the odor of marijuana was in-and-
    of-itself sufficient to establish probable cause. Indeed, Waddell was not even
    a probable cause case.           The issue in Waddell was whether exigent
    circumstances existed to search a home without a warrant, not whether police
    possessed probable cause for the search. Waddell, 
    61 A.3d at 207
    . In any
    event, numerous facts supported a determination of probable cause in that
    case, including: a tip from an informant that the home was used for
    distributing marijuana; observations of suspicious persons going to and from
    the residence with backpacks purportedly containing marijuana; and a person
    stopped after leaving Waddell’s residence, who was in possession of a large
    quantity of marijuana, told the police that he had obtained the marijuana from
    Waddell’s home. 
    Id. at 208-29
    . Only after recounting all those contributing
    facts did the Waddell Court state that “the evidence certainly surpassed the
    threshold necessary to establish probable cause after [police] detected the
    smell of marijuana emanating” from Waddell’s home. On appeal, Waddell
    even conceded that probable cause existed. 
    Id. at 212
    . Needless to say,
    there were ample facts supporting a finding of probable cause to conduct the
    search at issue in Waddell independent of the odor detected, and the
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    J-A13005-20
    Additionally, there were more circumstances known to the officer in Handley
    when he obtained the warrant beyond the mere odor of marijuana. The officer
    responded to a reported threat and a report of shots fired, observed a firearm
    inside the residence, and discovered marijuana leaves and stems in the
    garbage outside the residence. The Commonwealth’s extraction of a single
    sentence from the Handley opinion, outside that greater factual context in
    which the probable cause determination was made, does not convince us that
    the rule derived from Stoner and Johnson evolved into a per se test.
    The Commonwealth also cites Scott, where police were patrolling in a
    high crime area when they stopped Scott’s vehicle due to a malfunctioning
    brake light. Scott, 210 A.3d at 360-61. When the officer approached the
    vehicle, he smelled burnt marijuana, saw “smoke was still emanating from
    the vehicle,” and then further observed Scott “attempt to place a [marijuana]
    ____________________________________________
    Waddell Court had simply opined in dicta that the odor of marijuana was the
    proverbial icing on the cake.
    Similarly, in PA Johnson, which itself relied on Waddell, police
    received tips from two anonymous sources that the ultimately-searched trailer
    park home was being used for the sale of marijuana and prescription pills, and
    the sources gave a specific description of one of the female suspects. See PA
    Johnson, 
    68 A.3d at 931
    . When they arrived at the scene, police observed a
    woman who fit the provided description near the identified home. 
    Id. at 932
    .
    When they approached the home, they detected the smell of burnt marijuana.
    
    Id.
     Based on those facts, the PA Johnson Court concluded that probable
    cause existed once the police detected the smell of marijuana. The PA
    Johnson Court did not state nor suggest that the smell of marijuana was
    alone sufficient to establish probable cause independent of the preceding tips
    and partial corroboration of those tips.
    - 22 -
    J-A13005-20
    blunt” in the center console.         Id. at 361 (emphasis added).   The officer
    conducted a search of the passenger compartment and recovered the blunt
    and a small jar of marijuana. The officer then searched the trunk of Scott’s
    vehicle, where he discovered an illegal firearm.
    On appeal, Scott challenged only the search of his trunk, essentially
    conceding probable cause existed to search the passenger compartment.
    While presenting boilerplate law on the plain smell doctrine, the Scott Court
    correctly stated the standard that “an odor may be sufficient to establish
    probable cause[.]” Id. at 363 (quoting Stoner). It then cited the application
    of that rule in another case, which was just another rephrasing of the rule in
    Stoner, but from which the Commonwealth again attempts to construe a
    statement of a per se rule from a poorly-crafted recitation of boilerplate law
    that was not critical to the issue of probable cause in that case.8 Indeed, the
    Scott Court held that, despite the odor of marijuana emanating from the
    vehicle, police did not possess probable cause to further search the trunk after
    having already discovered the likely source of the odor. Id. at 365 (“Under
    these circumstances, the odor of burnt marijuana and small amount of
    ____________________________________________
    8 The Scott Court quoted Commonwealth v. Stainbrook, 
    471 A.2d 1223
    ,
    1225 (Pa. Super. 1984), wherein this Court stated: “In Stoner, we analogized
    a plain smell concept with that of plain view and held that where an officer is
    justified in being where he is, his detection of the odor of marijuana is
    sufficient to establish probable cause.” As discussed at length above, the
    applicable rule from Stoner is not a per se test. There is no suggestion in
    Stainbrook that the Court’s omission of the word ‘may’ in its recitation of the
    standard was intentional, much less relevant to the holding in that case.
    - 23 -
    J-A13005-20
    contraband recovered from the passenger compartment of the vehicle did not
    create a fair probability that the officer could recover additional contraband in
    the trunk.”).
    Moreover, although Scott was stopped a few months after the passage
    of the MMA, he did not present officers with a medical marijuana card, nor did
    he present an argument on appeal that the MMA altered the factual context in
    which probable cause is assessed based on the odor of marijuana. Indeed,
    the Scott Court did not address any issue related to the passage of the MMA.
    Accordingly, Scott also does not support the Commonwealth’s arguments.
    Next, in Commonwealth v. Batista, 
    219 A.3d 1199
     (Pa. Super. 2019),
    this Court addressed the odor of marijuana’s effect on probable cause
    determinations in light of the MMA, and that decision does provide some
    guidance in the instant matter.    However, it does not decide the question
    before us, because it is distinguishable in several respects. In that case, the
    police received a tip from an unidentified source that Batista’s home was being
    used to grow large quantities of marijuana, and that the odor of fresh
    marijuana was emanating from an exhaust vent on the first floor. Id. at 1201.
    When the police went to the house to investigate, they detected a strong smell
    of fresh marijuana coming out of a first-floor exhaust vent. Id. The police
    further testified that the exhaust vent and smell were consistent with all other
    grow houses they had previously investigated. Id. Based on those facts, they
    secured a warrant to search the premises, and upon execution of the warrant,
    they discovered 91 marijuana plants growing in Batista’s home, and charged
    - 24 -
    J-A13005-20
    him with possession with intent to deliver marijuana. Batista challenged the
    warrant for lack of probable cause, but the suppression court denied the
    suppression motion, and Batista was ultimately convicted. Id. at 1201-02.
    On appeal, Batista claimed, inter alia, that “the smell of fresh marijuana
    can no longer serve as an element of probable cause in Pennsylvania” after
    passage of the MMA.      Id. at 1204–05.       The Batista Court disagreed,
    reasoning:
    The [MMA] is a limited exception to [the CSA].             Only a
    “grower/processor” or “dispensary”, as defined under the MMA,
    may “receive a permit to operate as a medical marijuana
    organization to grow, process, or dispense medical marijuana.”
    35 P.S. § 10231.601. A grower is a “natural person, corporation,
    partnership, association, trust or other entity, or any combination
    thereof, which holds a permit from the Department [of Health]
    under this act to grow and process medical marijuana.” 35 P.S. §
    10231.103.
    To receive a grower permit under the MMA, a person must
    undergo an extensive application and permitting process through
    the Department. See 35 P.S. § 10231.602 (requiring, among
    other things, full, financial disclosure of all backers; descriptions
    of responsibilities within the partnership or corporation; criminal
    background checks; statements of “good moral character[”;] title
    searches for the land use; and personal information for all
    investors).
    The number of authorized growers and processors who have
    completed that administrative process is currently very small. The
    General Assembly has capped the number of permits for growers.
    “The department may not initially issue permits to more than 25
    growers/processors.” 35 P.S. § 10231.616.
    Given the extremely limited number of permits that the
    Department has issued, we hold that, when an officer smells fresh
    marijuana emanating from a building that is a reported grow-
    house there still exists a fair probability that the marijuana inside
    is illegal. Law enforcement still holds the power and the duty to
    investigate that probability.
    - 25 -
    J-A13005-20
    Thus, Batista has failed to persuade us that enactment of the MMA
    abrogates our precedents holding that the aroma of marijuana
    contributes to the finding of probable cause.
    Batista, 219 A.3d at 1205 (footnote omitted).
    Contrary to the Commonwealth’s claim that a per se, plain-smell rule
    exists, the Batista Court did not apply such a rule, instead characterizing the
    prior precedents as establishing the rule that the odor of marijuana may
    contribute to a finding of probable cause. Id. The Court considered whether
    the odor of marijuana, in conjunction with other circumstances, contributed
    to a finding of probable cause, and concluded that it did—a wholly unnecessary
    task if the odor of marijuana was alone sufficient to establish probable cause
    to search Batista’s home.
    The additional circumstances considered were both specific to the case
    and universal; specific in that the odor of marijuana, and its location, had
    directly corroborated a tip that marijuana was being illegally grown there, and
    universal in the sense that the Court deliberated on the likelihood that the
    detected marijuana might have complied in some sense with the MMA.
    Because the odor corroborated the tip, in addition to the fact that it was
    extremely unlikely that Batista had been granted one of a handful of licenses
    to grow marijuana under the MMA, the Batista Court concluded that the
    search warrant was supported by probable cause to believe that the marijuana
    detected was illegal.
    Here, there was no tip suggesting that Appellee or the other passengers
    in the vehicle were illegally using marijuana, and Appellee presented the
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    J-A13005-20
    officers with his MMA card prior to the search at issue.      Moreover, while
    licenses to grow marijuana under the MMA are extremely limited—on the order
    a few dozen statewide—hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvania citizens will
    soon legally possess and consume marijuana pursuant to the MMA.          Thus,
    the likelihood that police will encounter the lawful possession and use of
    marijuana through its odor pursuant to the MMA is exponentially greater than
    the likelihood that they will discover a lawful grow house, and no facts known
    to police before the search was conducted supported the belief that marijuana
    was being manufactured or sold in or from Appellee’s vehicle. Thus, Batista
    does not control here.
    We conclude, therefore, that the post-MMA cases cited by the
    Commonwealth do not control our decision and, consequently, we consider
    the question before us in the first instance. The Commonwealth contends that
    the MMA did not make marijuana presumptively legal, and that it remains
    presumptively illegal, despite the MMA. As a factual matter, the trial court
    credited expert testimony that there is no distinction between legal medical
    marijuana and contraband marijuana that can be detected through odor alone.
    See TCO at 7. Nevertheless, the Commonwealth maintains that all marijuana
    remains presumptively illegal, and that medical marijuana exists only as a
    limited exception to the CSA. As far as the Commonwealth asserts that the
    MMA is a limited exception to the CSA, we agree.    See Batista, 219 A.3d at
    1205. It does not follow that the odor of marijuana is always sufficient to
    establish probable cause, or, relatedly, that the MMA is irrelevant to the test
    - 27 -
    J-A13005-20
    for probable cause. It would strain credulity to think the legislature intended
    that all medical marijuana users under the MMA—hundreds of thousands of
    Pennsylvanians already—may be presumptively subjected to searches by law
    enforcement due to the odor of marijuana alone.                However, we need not
    read into the intent of the legislature here, because there is no statutory
    question before us. Lawful users of medical marijuana do not surrender their
    4th Amendment rights merely because other citizens will continue to possess
    contraband marijuana in contravention of the CSA. The MMA has altered the
    fact of marijuana’s previously universal illegality, and probable cause is a fact-
    driven standard “not readily, or even usefully, reduced to a neat set of legal
    rules.” Glass, 754 A.2d at 663. Thus, we conclude that the trial court did not
    err in merely considering the passage of the MMA as a relevant fact in its
    probable cause analysis. The question remains, however, whether the lower
    court abused its discretion in concluding that the odor of marijuana cannot
    contribute to a finding of probable cause in the post-MMA environment.
    Hicks
    Next, the Commonwealth argues that the trial court erroneously applied
    the reasoning of Hicks in granting Appellee’s suppression motion. In Hicks,
    our Supreme Court held that possession of a concealed firearm by an
    individual in public is not sufficient to create a reasonable suspicion that the
    individual may be dangerous or committing a criminal offense, explicitly
    overruling   this   Court’s   longstanding     decision   in    Commonwealth     v.
    Robinson, 
    600 A.2d 957
     (Pa. Super. 1991).          Hicks, 208 A.3d at 947. Here,
    - 28 -
    J-A13005-20
    the trial court “applied” Hicks in determining “that the plain smell of
    marijuana alone no longer provides authorities with probable cause to conduct
    a search of a subject vehicle. As marijuana has been legalized in Pennsylvania
    for medical purposes, the plain smell of burnt or raw marijuana is no longer
    indicative of an illegal or criminal act.” TCO at 14-15 (emphasis added).
    The Commonwealth contends that Hicks is distinguishable because it was
    expressly limited to the possession of firearms, and that the rationale of Hicks
    cannot apply here because the possession of a concealed firearm is ostensibly
    not analogous to the possession of medical marijuana.          Essentially, the
    Commonwealth maintains that possession of marijuana under the MMA is in a
    distinct legal category that makes it presumptively illegal in a manner that
    does not apply to the possession of a concealed firearm.
    In Hicks,
    at approximately 2:30 a.m., a remote camera operator conducting
    live surveillance of a gas station and convenience store … notified
    police officers that a patron of the establishment was in possession
    of a firearm. According to the suppression court’s factual
    recitation, the camera operator advised officers that the observed
    individual showed the firearm to another patron, put the firearm
    in his waistband, covered it with his shirt, and walked inside the
    convenience store.
    The observed individual was Michael Hicks. It later emerged that
    Hicks possessed a valid license to carry a concealed firearm. See
    18 Pa.C.S. § 6109(a) (“A license to carry a firearm shall be for the
    purpose of carrying a firearm concealed on or about one’s person
    or in a vehicle throughout this Commonwealth.”). Hicks was not
    statutorily prohibited from possessing a firearm. Accordingly, on
    the morning in question, and at the observed location, there was
    nothing unlawful about Hicks’ possession of his handgun, nor the
    manner in which he carried it.
    - 29 -
    J-A13005-20
    While responding police officers were en route, Hicks entered and
    exited the convenience store, then reentered his vehicle. Before
    Hicks could exit the parking lot, numerous police officers in
    marked vehicles intercepted and stopped Hicks’ vehicle. Believing
    that Hicks had moved his hands around inside the vehicle, Officer
    Ryan Alles drew his service weapon as he approached Hicks’
    vehicle and ordered Hicks to keep his hands up.
    Hicks, 208 A.3d at 922 (cleaned up).
    The police conducted a Terry9 search and discovered a bag of marijuana
    in Hicks’ possession. Hicks sought to suppress the evidence based on the
    theory that the police lacked reasonable suspicion to conduct the Terry search
    merely because he was observed with a concealed firearm. The suppression
    court denied his motion, relying on Robinson, where the Superior Court held
    that possession of a concealed weapon in public creates a reasonable suspicion
    justifying an investigatory stop in order to investigate whether the person is
    ____________________________________________
    9   See Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968). Importantly,
    [o]ur Supreme Court has defined three forms of police-citizen
    interaction: a mere encounter, an investigative detention, and a
    custodial detention. Commonwealth v. Boswell, … 
    721 A.2d 336
    , 340 (Pa. 1998). A mere encounter between police and a
    citizen “need not be supported by any level of suspicion, and
    carr[ies] no official compulsion on the part of the citizen to stop
    or to respond.” Commonwealth v. Riley, 
    715 A.2d 1131
    , 1134
    (Pa. Super. 1998).
    An investigatory stop, which subjects a suspect to a stop and a
    period of detention, but does not involve such coercive conditions
    as to constitute an arrest, requires a reasonable suspicion that
    criminal activity is afoot. See Terry…, 392 U.S. [at] 21…. A
    custodial detention is an arrest and must be supported by
    probable cause. 
    Id.
    Commonwealth v. Fuller, 
    940 A.2d 476
    , 478–79 (Pa. Super. 2007).
    - 30 -
    J-A13005-20
    properly licensed (the “Robinson rule”). See Robinson, 
    600 A.2d at
    960-
    61. After this Court affirmed the order denying suppression, our Supreme
    Court reversed, thereby overturning Robinson.
    The Hicks Court began with an examination of the laws regulating the
    possession of firearms.    The Court concluded that carrying a firearm in
    Pennsylvania is generally legal but subject to a few exceptions, one of which
    being a prohibition on carrying a concealed firearm without a license. Hicks,
    208 A.3d at 926.    Nevertheless, the court recognized that “there can be no
    doubt that a properly licensed individual who carries a concealed firearm in
    public engages in lawful conduct. Indeed, millions of people lawfully engage
    in this conduct on a daily basis.” Id. The Robinson rule, the Hicks Court
    reasoned, “characterizes the carrying of a concealed firearm as per se
    reasonable suspicion authorizing” a Terry stop “in order to investigate
    whether the person is properly licensed.”     Id. at 928.   Hicks argued that
    nothing about his conduct gave rise to reasonable suspicion of criminal
    activity, including his carrying of a concealed weapon, which is lawful in
    Pennsylvania when licensed, and that Robinson was, inter alia, a
    misapplication of Terry. Id. The Commonwealth maintained “that the per se
    approach of Robinson is a justifiable application of the Terry doctrine,” and
    it emphasized that, “under the totality of the circumstances, ‘wholly lawful
    conduct might justify the suspicion that criminal activity [is] afoot.’” Id. at
    928–29 (quoting Reid v. Georgia, 
    448 U.S. 438
    , 441 (1980)).
    - 31 -
    J-A13005-20
    After a thorough review of 4th Amendment case law from this and other
    jurisdictions, the Hicks Court found “no justification for the notion that a
    police officer may infer criminal activity merely from an individual’s possession
    of a concealed firearm in public.”    Id. at 936. Thus, the “Robinson rule
    improperly dispenses with the requirement of individualized suspicion and, in
    so doing, misapplies the overarching totality of the circumstances test.” Id.
    at 937. The Court explained:
    Although the carrying of a concealed firearm is unlawful for a
    person statutorily prohibited from firearm ownership or for a
    person not licensed to do so, see 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 6105-06, there is
    no way to ascertain an individual’s licensing status, or status as a
    prohibited person, merely by his outward appearance. As a
    matter of law and common sense, a police officer observing an
    unknown individual can no more identify whether that individual
    has a license in his wallet than discern whether he is a criminal.
    Unless a police officer has prior knowledge that a specific
    individual is not permitted to carry a concealed firearm, and
    absent articulable facts supporting reasonable suspicion that a
    firearm is being used or intended to be used in a criminal manner,
    there simply is no justification for the conclusion that the mere
    possession of a firearm, where it lawfully may be carried, is alone
    suggestive of criminal activity.
    Id. at 936–37. Thus, the Hicks Court held that the Robinson rule violated
    the principles of the 4th Amendment because, “with no other criterion beyond
    the fact of an individual’s possession of a concealed firearm necessary to
    justify a seizure, the Robinson rule allows a police officer to base the decision
    to detain a particular individual upon an ‘inchoate and unparticularized
    suspicion’ or ‘hunch’ that the individual is unlicensed and therefore engaged
    in wrongdoing.” Id. at 946 (quoting Terry, 
    392 U.S. at 27
    ).
    - 32 -
    J-A13005-20
    We agree with the Commonwealth that the trial court’s direct application
    of Hicks to the circumstances of this case constituted an abuse of discretion.
    First, as is obvious, the holding in Hicks could not directly apply because it
    concerned what constitutes reasonable suspicion of criminality justifying a
    Terry stop when possession of a concealed firearm is observed, not whether
    probable cause to search a vehicle exists based on the odor of marijuana
    alone. Moreover, even assuming the trial court merely adopted the reasoning
    of Hicks, the respective conduct is not sufficiently analogous to compel an
    identical result.   The possession of a firearm is generally legal, with limited
    exceptions.   The possession of marijuana, by contrast, remains generally
    illegal, but for the limited exception of lawful possession of medical marijuana
    pursuant to the MMA.
    Thus, we simply cannot sustain the trial court’s conclusion, based on
    Hicks, that because “marijuana has been legalized in Pennsylvania for medical
    purposes, the plain smell of burnt or raw marijuana is no longer indicative of
    an illegal or criminal act.” TCO at 15. The odor of marijuana may still be
    indicative of an illegal or criminal act, because the possession of marijuana
    remains generally illegal. This is especially true when other circumstances
    suggest that the detected marijuana cannot be in compliance with the MMA,
    such as was the case in Batista.
    However, the reasoning in Hicks is not completely irrelevant here. While
    there is a legal distinction to be made between possession of marijuana and
    possession of a concealed firearm, the Hicks decision was not premised solely
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    on the general legality of firearms. See Hicks, 208 A.3d at 945 (“The seizure
    at issue was not unconstitutional due to the statutory classification of Hicks’
    license; it was unconstitutional because the police officers had no way of
    determining from Hicks’ conduct or appearance that he was likely to be
    unlicensed and therefore engaged in criminal wrongdoing.”). It remains a fact
    that police cannot distinguish between contraband marijuana and medical
    marijuana legally consumed by a substantial number of Pennsylvanians based
    on odor alone,10 just as police cannot determine from a person’s possession
    of a concealed firearm that he or she is unlicensed to carry it concealed.
    The Commonwealth argues that there is no way for law enforcement to
    determine     whether      someone      is     complying   with   the   MMA   “absent
    investigation,” and therefore the MMA “cannot have a negative impact on an
    officer’s assessment of probable cause.” Commonwealth’s Brief at 27. The
    second proposition does not flow from the first. It is precisely because the
    police cannot discern lawful from unlawful conduct by the odor of marijuana
    alone that the police may need to rely on other circumstances to establish
    probable cause to believe that the possession of marijuana detected by that
    odor is criminal.
    ____________________________________________
    10 The Commonwealth contests this point, arguing that the smell of burnt
    marijuana indicates that the substance had been smoked, which is illegal
    under the MMA. Commonwealth’s Brief at 31. However, the trial court
    credited the expert witness’s testimony that vaporizing medical marijuana,
    which is a legal method of consumption under the MMA, produces an identical
    odor to burning marijuana. See TCO at 14.
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    To the extent that the Commonwealth implies that the MMA exists only
    as an affirmative defense to the CSA, and that compliance with the MMA is a
    matter irrelevant to the probable cause test, there is no statutory support for
    such a claim. Although marijuana is generally illegal under the CSA, nowhere
    in the MMA does the legislature purport to create an affirmative defense to
    CSA crimes. Rather, the MMA declares that medical marijuana is legal, and
    that it takes precedence over conflicting provisions in the CSA. See 35 Pa.C.S.
    § 10231.2101.
    In any event, even if the MMA provides an affirmative defense to the
    CSA, the Hicks Court rejected the so-called “element-or-defense” test for 4th
    Amendment questions:
    The element-or-defense test amounts to a “seize now and sort it
    out later” approach. This is antithetical to the foundational
    protections of the Fourth Amendment. It casts too wide a net,
    with no regard for the number of law-abiding citizens ensnared
    within.
    Hicks, 208 A.3d at 944. The Court further elaborated that “it is certainly the
    legislature’s prerogative to define the elements of crimes and to set forth
    affirmative defenses. However, the constitutionality of enforcement tactics is
    a matter of judicial concern.” Id. at 943.
    One of the primary concerns when courts consider the constitutionality
    of a search or seizure is whether individualized suspicion is present.
    In addition to the reasonableness of the search and seizure, the
    Fourth Amendment generally requires the presence of
    individualized suspicion to justify a seizure. City of Indianapolis
    v. Edmond, 
    531 U.S. 32
    , 37 (2000); …. The courts of this
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    Commonwealth and federal courts have recognized limited
    circumstances where the general rule does not apply.
    Commonwealth v. Mistler, 
    912 A.2d 1265
    , 1271 (Pa. 2006). No recognized
    exceptions apply in this case, and the Commonwealth presents no argument
    to that effect. As such, particularized suspicion was required to justify the
    search. In this regard, the Hicks Court instructs:
    When many people are licensed to do something, and violate no
    law by doing that thing, common sense dictates that the police
    officer cannot assume that any given person doing it is breaking
    the law. Absent some other circumstances giving rise to a
    suspicion of criminality, a [search or] seizure upon that basis alone
    is unreasonable.
    Hicks, 208 A.3d at 945.
    Here, ‘many people’ are licensed to consume marijuana under the MMA,
    and ‘violate no law’ by doing so. The odor of marijuana alone, absent any
    other circumstances, cannot provide individualized suspicion of criminal
    activity when hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvanians can lawfully produce
    that odor. What it does provide to police is a general, probabilistic suspicion
    of criminal activity based on the fact that most citizens cannot legally consume
    marijuana. Thus, it is a factor that can contribute to a finding of probable
    cause, consistent with prior precedent discussed above, assuming some other
    circumstances supply more individualized suspicion that the activity is
    criminal. This does not imply a change in the probable cause test, because,
    previously, the possession of marijuana was universally illegal. That universal
    factual circumstance established particularized suspicion of criminal activity,
    because every instance of possession of marijuana was previously a crime.
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    However, here, the trial court afforded the odor of marijuana no weight in its
    determination that police lacked probable cause to search Appellee’s vehicle.
    That extreme view is not justified by the Hicks decision. The general illegality
    of marijuana under the CSA cannot simply be ignored merely because it is
    lawfully used in limited circumstances under the MMA and, thus, we must
    reject the trial court’s conclusion that the odor of marijuana provides no
    indication of criminal activity. At the same time, those who act in compliance
    with the MMA should not be subjected to searches based solely on a
    generalized suspicion that is provided by that odor when the 4th Amendment
    also requires particularized suspicion.
    Other Factors Supporting a Finding of Probable Cause
    In the Commonwealth’s final suppression argument, it contends that,
    even assuming the odor of marijuana does not alone establish probable cause,
    it can still be a contributing factor to a finding of probable cause. As discussed
    above, we agree with this general statement of the state of the plain smell
    doctrine. The Commonwealth further argues that “there were ample other
    uncontradicted factors in addition to the smell of burnt marijuana that when
    considered in their totality and objectively, provided police with … probable
    cause to support the search of the vehicle.” Commonwealth’s Brief at 32.
    Specifically, the Commonwealth contends that the following factors were not
    adequately considered by the trial court: 1) Trooper Prentice’s training and
    experience with regard to narcotics investigations; 2) Trooper Prentice’s
    identification of the area where Appellee’s vehicle was stopped as a high crime
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    area; 3) Appellee’s numerous statements prior to the search; and 4)
    Appellee’s change in demeanor upon the arrival of more police officers. Id.
    at 33-34. The Commonwealth asserts that a “common sense and objective
    view of these facts” adds up to probable cause to believe that criminal activity
    was afoot. Id. at 34.
    Assuming the trial court found the officers’ testimony entirely credible,
    it should have considered those factors, in addition to the odor of marijuana,
    in determining whether police possessed probable cause to search Appellee’s
    vehicle. Unfortunately, and perhaps because the trial court afforded no weight
    to the odor of marijuana as a contributing factor to a finding of probable cause
    based on its misapplication or overstatement of Hicks’s applicability here, the
    court failed to provide us with discrete credibility assessments relevant to the
    other potential factors affecting probable cause in its opinion.
    For instance, the Commonwealth contends that Trooper Prentice
    essentially testified that Appellee’s vehicle was stopped in a ‘high crime area.’
    However, while we acknowledge the trooper testified that he had made many
    drug and gun arrests in the area of the stop, see N.T., 7/17/19, at 14, he did
    not offer an opinion as to whether that area was any more likely to produce
    gun and/or drug arrests than any other area. Thus, we cannot state that it is
    clear and uncontradicted from the record that the stop occurred in a high
    crime area, or simply in an area where Trooper Prentice has conducted arrests
    for common crimes.      The trial court did not include this aspect of Trooper
    Prentice’s testimony in the summary of its findings of fact, nor include it in its
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    legal analysis.   If this was because the court determined that Trooper
    Prentice’s testimony did not establish that the stop occurred in a high crime
    area, it did not say so.
    Similarly, the Commonwealth contends that Appellee’s statements and
    related behavior preceding the search, in conjunction with the odor of
    marijuana, should have also been considered in the trial court’s probable
    cause analysis.   Although the trial court recounted those statements in its
    findings of fact, the court did not appear to consider them at all. If the court
    believed those statements did not contribute in any way to a potential finding
    of probable cause to suspect criminal activity, it failed to explain how it
    reached that conclusion.     Nor did the trial court address the trooper’s
    observation that Appellee’s demeanor changed when backup arrived.
    In sum, the factual record before us is inadequate to conclude whether
    police possessed probable cause to search Appellee’s vehicle. While the odor
    of marijuana may contribute to a finding of probable cause, as possession of
    marijuana remains illegal generally, the odor alone does not imply
    individualized suspicion of criminal activity, and Appellee’s presentation of an
    MMA card was at least one factor that tends to undermine the inference of
    criminality. However, other potentially relevant factors were not considered
    by the trial court, and the court’s credibility assessments of the testimony
    ostensibly establishing those factors are not in the record. Thus, the most
    prudent course of action is to remand for reconsideration by the trial court
    under the appropriate standard.
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    Accordingly, we conclude that we must vacate the order granting
    suppression and remand for reconsideration of that motion by the trial court
    given the deficiencies in the court’s opinion identified herein. We instruct the
    court that while it is not compelled by case law to find that probable cause
    exists solely on the basis of the odor of marijuana, that fact may, in the totality
    of the circumstances, still contribute to a finding of probable cause to believe
    the marijuana detected by the odor was possessed illegally. The court may
    consider Appellee’s presentation of an MMA card as a factor that weighs
    against a finding of probable cause, as it provides at least some evidence
    tending to suggest the marijuana in question was possessed legally.11
    However, the court must also consider (or explain why it need not consider)
    the other factors suggested by the Commonwealth as contributing to a finding
    of probable cause, such as Appellee’s statements and demeanor during the
    stop, as well as the nature of the location of the stop.
    II
    ____________________________________________
    11 The Commonwealth complains that police cannot immediately ascertain
    whether a MMA card is valid at this time. However, even if true, that fact does
    not render presentation of an MMA card irrelevant to the court’s probable
    cause analysis. Nevertheless, the presentation of an MMA card does not
    automatically defeat a finding of probable cause, either. It is plausible that
    circumstances in a particular case might demonstrate that an officer has a
    reasonable belief that a card is invalid, or that the manner of possession of
    medical marijuana is not compliant with the MMA. It is also possible that a
    person possessing a valid MMA card may also possess contraband marijuana.
    Whether any such circumstances exist in this case is for the trial court to
    decide in the first instance.
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    The Commonwealth also contends that the trial court erred when it
    granted Appellee’s habeas motion to dismiss the PSAM charge.12 The court
    determined that the Commonwealth failed to establish a prima facie case for
    that offense due to the suppression of the seized marijuana. See TCO at 16
    n.20.    The Commonwealth argues that the court “cannot enter an order
    dismissing the charges unless the Commonwealth consents or the time for
    filing a notice of appeal [from the order granting suppression] has elapsed.”
    Commonwealth’s Brief at 37 (citing Commonwealth v. Micklos, 
    672 A.2d 796
    , 801 (Pa. Super. 1996) (en banc)). This is a pure question of law and,
    therefore, our standard of review is plenary. Commonwealth v. Karetny,
    
    880 A.2d 505
    , 513 (Pa. 2005) (stating “it is settled that the evidentiary
    sufficiency, or lack thereof, of the Commonwealth’s prima facie case for a
    charged crime is a question of law as to which an appellate court’s review is
    plenary”).
    In Micklos, an en banc panel of this Court considered “whether the
    Commonwealth may appeal from an order of court which granted a criminal
    defendant’s suppression motion and concurrently dismissed all charges filed
    against that defendant, thereby preventing the Commonwealth from pursuing
    its right to appeal the adverse rulings of a suppression court.” Micklos, 
    672 A.2d at 798
    .       The Court proceeded “under the assumption that defense
    counsel first presented the motion to suppress at the close of testimony”
    ____________________________________________
    12The offense of PSAM is defined as “the possession of a small amount of
    mari[j]uana only for personal use[.]” 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(31)(i).
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    J-A13005-20
    during a non-jury trial. Id. at 799. The trial court granted the suppression
    motion, and on that basis, dismissed the charges that were contingent upon
    the suppressed evidence.
    The Micklos Court first determined that jeopardy had attached when
    the defendant filed his suppression motion, as the evidentiary portion of the
    trial had already concluded. Id. at 800. In typical circumstances, when a
    suppression motion is timely filed in a pre-trial setting, the Commonwealth
    has, pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 311(d), the right to appeal from an adverse
    suppression ruling upon certification that the prosecution is substantially
    handicapped. See Pa.R.A.P. 311(d) (“In a criminal case, under the
    circumstances provided by law, the Commonwealth may take an appeal as of
    right from an order that does not end the entire case where the
    Commonwealth certifies in the notice of appeal that the order will terminate
    or substantially handicap the prosecution.”). Because jeopardy had already
    attached, the Micklos Court observed that “the trial court lacked power to
    dismiss before allowing the Commonwealth an opportunity to appeal the
    adverse suppression ruling.” Id. at 801.
    Appellee distinguishes this matter from Micklos, arguing that the
    procedural posture of this case, where both the suppression motion and
    habeas petition were filed and decided before trial, is critically different from
    Miklos, where the trial had already begun, and jeopardy had attached. See
    Appellee’s Brief at 35-36.    We agree.       Here, the Commonwealth was not
    deprived of the opportunity to appeal from the adverse suppression ruling, as
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    jeopardy has not yet attached to this case.         Furthermore, Appellee was
    required to file both motions pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 578. See Pa.R.Crim.P.
    578 (“Unless otherwise required in the interests of justice, all pretrial requests
    for relief shall be included in one omnibus motion.”).13 The trial court certified
    the order denying both motions for immediate appellate review pursuant to
    Pa.R.A.P. 341(c). Additionally, it is well-established that “[w]hen a charge is
    dismissed on a pre-trial writ of habeas corpus, the Commonwealth may
    appeal.” Commonwealth v. Huggins, 
    836 A.2d 862
    , 865 n.2 (Pa. 2003).
    Presently, both the suppression and habeas issues are properly before this
    Court. Accordingly, we conclude that Micklos is inapplicable here, and that
    the Commonwealth’s claim lacks merit on that basis.14
    Nevertheless, the order granting Appellee’s habeas motion cannot
    stand, given our disposition with regard to the Commonwealth’s first claim.
    The trial court explicitly conditioned its dismissal of the PSAM charge on its
    granting of suppression. See TCO at 16 (“As a result of this [c]ourt’s …
    suppression of the evidence seized from the subject vehicle, this [c]ourt finds
    that the Commonwealth failed to establish a prima facie case of [PSAM].”)
    (emphasis added).        Accordingly, we vacate the order granting Appellee’s
    ____________________________________________
    13 The official comment to Rule 578 notes that such relief includes requests
    “(3) for suppression of evidence[, and] … (5) to quash or dismiss an
    information[.]” Pa.R.Crim.P. 578 (comment).
    14 We note that the Commonwealth provides little more than a citation to
    Micklos, and no analysis of the facts of that case, in its single-page argument
    in support of this claim. See Commonwealth’s Brief at 37.
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    J-A13005-20
    habeas petition, and remand for reconsideration of that petition following the
    trial court’s reevaluation of the suppression issue.
    Order granting suppression and habeas relief vacated.              Case
    remanded for reconsideration consistent with the analysis set forth in this
    opinion. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judge Lazarus joins this opinion.
    Judge Strassburger joins and files a concurring opinion in which
    President Judge Emeritus Bender and Judge Lazarus join.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 9/25/20
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