Maurice Dontrell Boykins v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2016 )


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  •                                               COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Chief Judge Huff, Judge Russell and Senior Judge Bumgardner
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia
    MAURICE DONTRELL BOYKINS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.      Record No. 0972-15-1                                     CHIEF JUDGE GLEN A. HUFF
    MAY 17, 2016
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF SUFFOLK
    L. Wayne Farmer, Judge1
    Gregory K. Matthews (Gregory K. Matthews, PC, on brief), for
    appellant.
    Craig W. Stallard, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Maurice Dontrell Boykins (“appellant”) appeals his conviction of possession of heroin, in
    violation of Code § 18.2-250. Following a jury trial in the Circuit Court of the City of Suffolk
    (“trial court”), appellant was sentenced to six years and six months of incarceration. On appeal,
    appellant challenges the denial of his motion to suppress which was based on three assignments
    of error:
    1. The trial court erred when it ruled that the police stop of the car
    in which [appellant] had been a passenger because of a faulty
    license-tag light was valid.
    2. The trial court erred when it ruled under these circumstances
    that the police officer could detain a passenger at a traffic stop.
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    1
    Judge Farmer presided over the sentencing hearing; Judge Carl E. Eason, Jr. presided
    over the motion to suppress hearing.
    3. The trial court erred when it ruled that the officer’s use of a
    taser in his seizure of [appellant] was reasonable.
    For the following reasons, this Court affirms appellant’s conviction.
    I. BACKGROUND
    “When reviewing a denial of a motion to suppress evidence, an appellate court considers the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth and will accord the Commonwealth the
    benefit of all reasonable inferences fairly deducible from that evidence.” Branham v.
    Commonwealth, 
    283 Va. 273
    , 279, 
    720 S.E.2d 74
    , 77 (2012). So viewed, the evidence is as
    follows.
    On October 22, 2012, Officer A. Diggs (“Diggs”) of the Suffolk Police Department
    observed a white Toyota Camry with its left license plate light out. Perceiving a possible
    violation of Code § 46.2-1013,2 Diggs initiated a traffic stop of the vehicle but when the vehicle
    stopped, the passenger, appellant, exited the vehicle and began walking away. Diggs instructed
    appellant at least three times to return to the vehicle, which appellant ignored. Instead, appellant
    opened the front door to a nearby house and proceeded to enter. At that moment, Diggs
    deployed his Taser, which hit appellant in the back. Diggs testified that he used his Taser on
    appellant because he was concerned about where the passenger was going, who the driver was,
    and whether the passenger was entering the house to retrieve a weapon.
    2
    Code § 46.2-1013 provides as follows:
    Every motor vehicle . . . shall carry at the rear . . . [s]uch tail
    lights . . . so mounted in their relation to the rear license plate as to
    illuminate the license plate with a white light so that the same may
    be read from a distance of 50 feet to the rear of such vehicle.
    Alternatively, a separate white light shall be so mounted as to
    illuminate the rear license plate from a distance of 50 feet to the
    rear of such vehicle.
    -2-
    When struck by the Taser, appellant fell into the living room of the house, then got up
    and went towards a back bedroom of the house. Appellant later exited the residence, and Diggs
    placed him under arrest for obstruction of justice. During the search incident to arrest, Diggs
    recovered marijuana from appellant’s pants pocket along with two bags of a “white powdery
    substance” later determined to be heroin. At some point during these events, the driver fled the
    scene.
    Appellant was subsequently charged with possession of heroin and filed a motion to
    suppress. The trial court denied the motion finding that Diggs had reasonable suspicion to stop
    the vehicle, that Diggs had the right to command appellant to remain at the vehicle, and finally,
    that the use of the Taser was reasonable under the circumstances. This appeal followed.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “‘We are bound by the trial court’s findings of historical fact unless “plainly wrong” or
    without evidence to support them,’ but we review de novo the trial court’s application of legal
    standards . . . to the particular facts of the case.” McCracken v. Commonwealth, 
    39 Va. App. 254
    , 258, 
    572 S.E.2d 493
    , 495 (2002) (quoting McGee v. Commonwealth, 
    25 Va. App. 193
    , 198,
    
    487 S.E.2d 259
    , 261 (1997) (en banc)). “We give deference to the circuit court’s factual findings
    and inferences drawn from those facts, but independently determine whether the manner in
    which the evidence was obtained satisfies the Fourth Amendment.” Jones v. Commonwealth,
    
    279 Va. 521
    , 527, 
    690 S.E.2d 95
    , 99 (2010). “Further, ‘in reviewing a trial court’s denial of a
    motion to suppress, the burden is upon [the appellant] to show that the ruling . . . constituted
    reversible error.’” Aldridge v. Commonwealth, 
    44 Va. App. 618
    , 638, 
    606 S.E.2d 539
    , 549
    (2004) (quoting 
    McGee, 25 Va. App. at 197
    , 487 S.E.2d at 261).
    -3-
    III. ANALYSIS
    Appellant’s assignments of error seek application of the exclusionary rule to suppress the
    heroin that was recovered incident to his arrest because he alleges that certain seizures that
    occurred prior to his arrest were illegal. The Fourth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
    effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” Even so, the occurrence of a Fourth
    Amendment violation does not automatically exclude all evidence that is recovered
    simply because it would not have come to light but for the illegal
    actions of the police. Rather, the more apt question in such a case
    is “whether . . . the evidence to which instant objection is made has
    been come at by exploitation of that illegality or instead by means
    sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.”
    Fitchett v. Commonwealth, 
    56 Va. App. 741
    , 746, 
    697 S.E.2d 28
    , 31 (2010) (quoting Wong Sun
    v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 487-88 (1963)). “Evidence is obtained by means ‘sufficiently
    distinguishable’ if it is ‘evidence attributed to an independent source’ or ‘evidence where the
    connection has become so attenuated as to dissipate the taint.’” 
    Id. (quoting Warlick
    v.
    Commonwealth, 
    215 Va. 263
    , 266, 
    208 S.E.2d 746
    , 748 (1974)). In other words,
    [s]ince “the purpose of the exclusionary rule [i]s to deter police
    misconduct,” Johnson v. Commonwealth, 
    21 Va. App. 172
    , 175,
    
    462 S.E.2d 907
    , 909 (1995), the remedy of excluding illegally
    obtained evidence is available only when the evidence is “obtained
    either during or as a direct result” of the illegal search or seizure,
    Wong 
    Sun, 371 U.S. at 485
    .
    
    Id. at 747,
    697 S.E.2d at 31 (emphasis added).
    Therefore, in Fitchett, this Court held that a handgun that fell out of the defendant’s pants
    would not be suppressed because its recovery was not a product of the allegedly unlawful seizure
    of the defendant. 
    Id. at 749,
    697 S.E.2d at 32. In Fitchett, an officer stopped the defendant to
    investigate a possible open container of alcohol violation but when he attempted to pat down the
    -4-
    defendant for weapons, the defendant ran and while running a gun fell out of the defendant’s
    waistband. 
    Id. at 743-44,
    697 S.E.2d at 30. This Court rejected the defendant’s argument that
    the handgun should be suppressed because of the illegal attempt to frisk the defendant. 
    Id. at 743,
    744, 697 S.E.2d at 29
    , 30. Significant to this Court’s analysis was the fact that at the time
    the handgun was discovered, the defendant had “ceased submitting to [the officer’s] authority”
    and therefore the evidence was not “first discovered during [the officer’s] seizure of [the
    defendant].” 
    Id. at 748,
    697 S.E.2d at 32. Considering the purpose of the exclusionary rule, this
    Court reasoned that the evidence should not be excluded because its discovery did not result
    from “the ‘foreseeable consequence[] of the police’s illegal conduct.’” 
    Id. (alteration in
    original)
    (quoting Arizona v. Washington, 
    585 P.2d 249
    , 253 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1978)). “Put another way,
    [the officer’s] discovery of the handgun was not a direct result of his seizure of [the defendant],
    but rather was the result of [the defendant] accidentally tripping and falling while he fled from
    the officer.” 
    Id. (citing California
    v. Hodari D., 
    499 U.S. 621
    , 625 (1991) (“If, for example, [the
    officer] had laid his hands upon Hodari to arrest him, but Hodari had broken away and had then
    cast away the cocaine, it would hardly be realistic to say that that disclosure had been made
    during the course of an arrest.”)).
    Even more plainly, in this case, Diggs’s recovery of the heroin from appellant did not
    occur “during or as a direct result” of any allegedly unlawful seizures and is therefore not subject
    to suppression. Even assuming the traffic stop and use of the Taser to be unlawful seizures3 as
    3
    “[T]here is no seizure without actual submission; otherwise, there is at most an
    attempted seizure, so far as the Fourth Amendment is concerned,” 
    Brendlin, 551 U.S. at 254
    , and
    “neither usage nor common-law tradition makes an attempted seizure a seizure,” Hodari 
    D., 499 U.S. at 626
    n.2. Although this opinion assumes for clarity of the analysis that the traffic stop and
    Taser were seizures, under these facts, appellant does not appear to have been seized by the
    traffic stop, see Brendlin v. California, 
    551 U.S. 249
    , 262 (2007) (explaining that “what may
    amount to submission depends on what a person was doing before the show of authority;”
    therefore, in the case of a traffic stop, a passenger may “submit by staying inside the vehicle”),
    -5-
    appellant contends, no evidence was recovered as a product of either. Instead, the discovery of
    the heroin occurred during the search incident to the arrest of appellant for obstruction of justice.
    Appellant does not challenge that arrest. Thus, the heroin recovered during the search incident to
    the unchallenged arrest cannot be suppressed. Therefore, this Court finds no error in the trial
    court’s denial of appellant’s suppression motion and, accordingly, affirms the ruling of the trial
    court.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, this Court affirms the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motion
    to suppress.
    Affirmed.
    and even if appellant was briefly seized by the Taser, he had “ceased submitting to [that]
    authority,” Fitchett, 56 Va. App. at 
    748, 697 S.E.2d at 32
    , well before he was arrested.
    -6-