Rondever Williams, s/k/a Rondever Geovagia Williams v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2020 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    UNPUBLISHED
    Present: Judges Huff, O’Brien and Senior Judge Frank
    Argued by teleconference
    RONDEVER WILLIAMS, S/K/A
    RONDEVER GEOVAGIA WILLIAMS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 1972-18-1                                      JUDGE GLEN A. HUFF
    APRIL 14, 2020
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SOUTHAMPTON COUNTY
    Carl E. Eason, Jr., Judge
    S.H. Weaver, Sr., for appellant.
    A. Anne Lloyd, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Pursuant to a conditional guilty plea, Rondever Geovagia Williams (“appellant”) was
    convicted of possession of cocaine and sentenced to two years’ incarceration with one year and
    nine months suspended. On appeal, he challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to
    suppress. Specifically, appellant contends that law enforcement lacked a reasonable, articulable
    suspicion to conduct a successive traffic stop of his vehicle because it followed an initial
    stop-and-frisk of appellant that discovered no contraband.
    This Court agrees. An initial search that finds no contraband necessarily diminishes the
    suspicion which justified it. Therefore, law enforcement must discover some new information to
    justify a second stop or search. Here, the only new information was an unreliable, bare
    accusation that an individual levied only after being arrested. Given the totality of the
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    circumstances, that accusation was insufficient to revive any reasonable, articulable suspicion
    which justified the initial stop-and-frisk of appellant.
    I. BACKGROUND
    On June 18, 2008, members of the Franklin Police Department were conducting narcotics
    surveillance in the area of Elm Street and Chestnut Street. That area was known to the officers
    as having high drug activity. The officers were patrolling in an unmarked vehicle and wore plain
    clothes with tactical vests on top.
    On the corner of Elm Street and Chestnut Street, the officers saw multiple individuals,
    including: appellant, Marcellus Smallwood, and Michael Scott. The officers observed a red
    truck pull up to the corner and appellant, Smallwood, and Scott approached the vehicle. After
    speaking with the driver of the truck, either Smallwood or Scott reached into their pocket and
    appeared to hand something to the driver. Based on these observations, the officers believed that
    a hand-to-hand drug transaction had occurred.
    The officers exited their vehicle, approached on foot, and directed all of the individuals to
    stand still. As the officers approached, the truck sped off at a high rate of speed. At the same
    time, Smallwood ran from the scene on foot. Appellant and Scott complied with the officers’
    command and stayed at the street corner. Two officers pursued Smallwood while the others
    approached appellant and Scott.
    As the officers approached appellant and Scott, they asked if they had “anything on them,
    weapons or anything of the sort.” Appellant and Scott said they did not. The officers then
    conducted a pat down of both appellant and Scott. No weapons, drugs, or other types of
    contraband were recovered from appellant. After the pat down, appellant was told he was free to
    leave. Appellant walked away and got in a car that was parked a short distance away.
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    Meanwhile, two other officers pursued Smallwood. The two officers saw Smallwood
    throwing items away from his person. The officers apprehended Smallwood and then recovered
    the items he had thrown on the ground. The items that were thrown turned out to be small
    baggies containing “white rock substances” that were consistent with the appearance of crack
    cocaine. The officers placed Smallwood under arrest. Smallwood “made a statement
    immediately, once the handcuffs were placed on him,” that the “real dealer” is the man that’s
    getting in the car down the street, referring to appellant.
    Upon receiving Smallwood’s tip, the arresting officers contacted the officers who had
    remained on the corner of Elm Street and Chestnut Street and relayed the tip. Those officers
    then conducted a traffic stop of the vehicle in which appellant was riding as a passenger. The
    officers asked appellant to step out of the vehicle. After appellant complied, the officers
    searched his person. In his pants’ pocket, they found a razor blade and a plastic baggie
    containing white residue which was “wrapped up inside” a dollar bill. Appellant was arrested for
    possession of cocaine. Subsequent testing confirmed that the white residue was cocaine.
    On July 10, 2009, appellant filed a motion to suppress. Appellant argued that the officers
    lacked justification to either stop his vehicle or conduct the second search of his person. During
    the hearing on the motion, the Commonwealth attempted to bolster the reliability of
    Smallwood’s tip via the testimony of Officer Howell, the officer to whom Smallwood provided
    the tip. Officer Howell testified that he had known Smallwood for four years by virtue of
    Smallwood being on the high school football team. Officer Howell explained that he has a
    relationship with the football coach and often speaks to the team and/or individual players to
    “help steer the player in the right directions.” Officer Howell did not provide any further
    information about his relationship with Smallwood.
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    The trial court ultimately denied appellant’s motion to suppress. On March 9, 2010,
    appellant entered a conditional guilty plea that preserved his right to appeal the trial court’s
    ruling on the motion to suppress. Appellant’s sentencing hearing was not held until December 6,
    2018, due to an unrelated term of incarceration imposed by the state of North Carolina. The trial
    court sentenced appellant to two years’ incarceration with one year and nine months suspended.
    This appeal followed.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A review of a defendant’s claim that he was “seized” in violation of the Fourth
    Amendment presents mixed questions of law and fact that are reviewed de novo. Brooks v.
    Commonwealth, 
    282 Va. 90
    , 94 (2011). In making this determination, Virginia courts give
    deference to any factual findings of the trial court, Harris v. Commonwealth, 
    276 Va. 689
    , 694
    (2008), but “determine independently whether, under the law, the manner in which the evidence
    was obtained satisfies constitutional requirements,” McCain v. Commonwealth, 
    261 Va. 483
    ,
    489 (2001). The appellant has the burden to “show that the [trial court’s] ruling, when the
    evidence is considered in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, constituted reversible
    error.” Ford v. Commonwealth, 
    28 Va. App. 249
    , 255 (1998).
    III. ANALYSIS
    Appellant contends that Smallwood’s tip, in conjunction with all the information
    available to the officers at the time of the stop, did not constitute reasonable suspicion to conduct
    the traffic stop.1 This Court agrees. The stop of appellant here came in the form of a successive
    1
    The Commonwealth asserts that appellant’s assignment of error was not preserved in
    the proceedings below and is thus barred from consideration by Rule 5A:18. Yet, the record
    reflects that counsel for the appellant presented his motion to suppress by arguing that appellant
    was “stopped later illegally” and in overruling appellant’s motion to suppress, the court
    specifically remarked that the police “had the right to stop” appellant’s vehicle. Moreover, the
    Commonwealth concedes in a footnote on page 6 of their brief that “the trial court . . . ruled on
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    stop following an initial stop-and-frisk. That initial stop-and-frisk diminished the reasonable,
    articulable suspicion undergirding it.2 Smallwood’s tip lacked indicia of reliability and,
    therefore, failed to revive the reasonable, articulable suspicion needed to justify the second stop.
    Accordingly, the officers violated appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights when they subjected
    appellant to that stop.
    The Fourth Amendment protects individuals against unreasonable searches and seizures.
    U.S. Const. amend. IV. Warrantless searches and seizures are “presumptively unreasonable.”
    Osburn v. Virginia Dep’t of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 
    295 Va. 10
    , 17 (2018). “Although
    limited in purpose and length of detention, an investigative traffic stop constitutes a seizure
    within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.” 
    Harris, 276 Va. at 694
    (citing Delaware v.
    Prouse, 
    440 U.S. 648
    , 653 (1979)).
    In order for an investigative traffic stop, or a Terry stop, to satisfy the Fourth
    Amendment, law enforcement must have “reasonable suspicion, based upon specific and
    articulable facts, that criminal activity is ‘afoot’” to justify the stop.
    Id. (citing United
    States v.
    Sokolow, 
    490 U.S. 1
    , 7 (1989)). Reasonable suspicion requires more than an “inchoate and
    unparticularized suspicion or ‘hunch.’” Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 27 (1968). It must be based
    on “fair inference in light of [the officer’s] experience.” Reid v. Georgia, 
    448 U.S. 438
    , 441
    (1980). Ultimately, whether law enforcement has reasonable suspicion to justify a stop of a
    person depends on the “totality of [the] circumstances,” Parker v. Commonwealth, 
    255 Va. 96
    ,
    the legality of the stop of the vehicle in which [appellant] was traveling.” Therefore, this Court
    determines that appellant’s argument regarding reasonable, articulable suspicion is preserved.
    Because this argument is dispositive, this Court need not determine whether appellant properly
    presents on appeal any argument that the officers lacked probable cause to conduct the second
    search of his person.
    2
    Because appellant challenges only the second stop, this Court assumes, without
    deciding, that the first stop-and-frisk was justified by a reasonable, articulable suspicion.
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    104 (1998), where the court views the facts “objectively through the eyes of a reasonable police
    officer” and determines if such an officer “could have entertained an articulable and reasonable
    suspicion that the defendant was involved in unlawful activity,” Murphy v. Commonwealth, 
    9 Va. App. 139
    , 144 (1989) (citing Zimmerman v. Commonwealth, 
    234 Va. 609
    , 612 (1988)).
    The purpose of a Terry stop is “to permit an officer with reasonable suspicion of criminal
    activity to quickly confirm or dispel that suspicion.” Davis v. Commonwealth, 
    35 Va. App. 533
    ,
    539 (2001) (citing Illinois v. Wardlow, 
    528 U.S. 119
    , 126 (2000)). Accordingly, when an officer
    initiates a Terry stop, searches the individual, and finds no contraband, the reasonable suspicion
    justifying the stop has necessarily diminished. See, e.g., United States v. Peters, 
    10 F.3d 1517
    ,
    1522 (10th Cir. 1993) (“[W]hen reasonable suspicion has been dispelled or probable cause has
    not developed, the conduct upon which the officer originally based his suspicions has proved to
    be an illusory ground for suspicion under the particular circumstances, and thus, has been
    exhausted.” (citing United States v. Place, 
    462 U.S. 696
    , 717 (1983))), cited with approval by
    Jackson v. Commonwealth, 
    22 Va. App. 347
    , 354-55 (1996). Furthermore, successive stops of
    an individual are “inherently more intrusive and coercive than the first.” See United States v.
    Padilla-Esparza, 
    798 F.3d 993
    , 1000 (10th Cir. 2015) (quoting United States v. Ilazi, 
    730 F.2d 1120
    , 1126 (8th Cir. 1984)).
    Nevertheless, successive Terry stops “are not per se unlawful.” 
    Jackson, 22 Va. App. at 354
    . As with all other Terry stops, successive stops are assessed by examining the totality of the
    circumstances. Jha v. Commonwealth, 
    18 Va. App. 349
    , 354 (1994). Even if law enforcement
    “find[s] nothing illegal from a first Terry stop, ‘they [a]re not required to ignore the facts that
    triggered it.’” 
    Jackson, 22 Va. App. at 355
    (quoting 
    Jha, 18 Va. App. at 354
    ). Neither may they
    ignore the fact that the first search found nothing and, therefore, tends to negate the reasonable
    suspicion which supported that first search. Accordingly, a successive Terry stop must be
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    supported by some new information sufficient to revive the officer’s reasonable, articulable
    suspicion. See
    id. at 355-56;
    Jha, 18 Va. App. at 354
    .
    Here, the only new information which could have revived the officer’s reasonable,
    articulable suspicion towards appellant was Smallwood’s tip. Therefore, before reaching the
    totality of the circumstances, it is incumbent upon this Court to assess the reliability of
    Smallwood’s tip.
    The weight a tip receives in the totality of the circumstances depends on the interplay
    between the informant’s reliability and basis of knowledge. See Jackson v. Commonwealth, 
    267 Va. 666
    , 673 (2004). A tip with a relatively low degree of reliability may be offset by showing
    the informant had a strong basis of knowledge; and vice versa.
    Id. To this
    end, two categories of
    informants have emerged from the jurisprudence: anonymous informants and known informants.
    “An anonymous tip has a relatively low degree of reliability, requiring more information to
    sufficiently corroborate the information contained in the tip.” Harris v. Commonwealth, 
    276 Va. 689
    , 695 (2008) (citing Florida v. J.L., 
    529 U.S. 266
    , 270 (2000)). Tips from a known
    informant, on the other hand, generally carry a higher degree of reliability because their
    “reputation can be assessed” and they “can be held responsible if [their] allegations turn out to be
    fabricated.”
    Id. The universe
    of known informants is diverse, however. Information provided by a
    disinterested citizen is more reliable and may be given more weight than “a criminal informer,
    whose motives are less likely to be pure.” Reed v. Commonwealth, 
    36 Va. App. 260
    , 267-68
    (2001). Furthermore, criminal informants “typically provide information after they have been
    apprehended by the police and after it is apparent to them that the police already know of their
    own involvement in the serious offense.” Russell v. Commonwealth, 
    33 Va. App. 604
    , 616
    (2000) (quoting 2 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 3.3(c), at 128 (3d ed. 1996)).
    -7-
    Therefore, in order for law enforcement to rely on a criminal informant’s tip as a basis for
    finding reasonable suspicion, “some indicia of [the] informant’s credibility [is] required.”
    Polston v. Commonwealth, 
    24 Va. App. 738
    , 748 (1997). The reliability of a criminal
    informant’s tip may be established in multiple ways, including by showing that:
    (1) the informer has previously given reliable information; (2) the
    informer previously has worked with the police and has made
    controlled buys or worked in narcotic surveillance or other law
    enforcement efforts; (3) the informer provided detailed information
    that only a person who had actually observed the criminal activity
    would know; or (4) the informer has made a declaration against his
    penal interest.
    
    Russell, 33 Va. App. at 611
    (collecting cases).
    Here, Smallwood—having just been arrested for possession of crack cocaine and
    distribution—was a known, criminal informant. See 
    Polston, 24 Va. App. at 748
    (holding that a
    recent arrestee “whose cooperation with the authorities began only after his arrest” was not a
    disinterested “‘citizen’ informer”). Therefore, to justify reliance on his tip that appellant was the
    “real dealer,” there needed to be some indicia of reliability.
    Id. However, Smallwood
    had never
    given reliable information, nor had he previously participated in controlled buys. He provided
    neither predictive information that could be verified nor detailed information that only somebody
    who observed the criminal activity would know. Furthermore, his declaration that appellant was
    the “real dealer” was not a declaration against his penal interests. Indeed, if anything, it
    furthered his penal interests to try to shift blame to appellant. Such self-exculpatory statements
    are “inevitably suspect . . . given the recognized motivation to shift blame” to a co-criminal.
    Bruton v. United States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    , 136 (1968); see also 5 Wigmore, Evidence § 1477, at 358
    n.1 (J. Chadbourn rev. 1974) (recognizing that an accomplice has an interest in “confessing and
    betraying his cocriminals”).
    -8-
    Furthermore, the fact that Officer Howell previously knew Smallwood by virtue of
    working with the football team is of no import. Officer Howell provided no testimony regarding
    Smallwood’s candor, veracity, or trustworthiness. Nor did Officer Howell provide any specific
    information about his interactions with Smallwood. Without such testimony, there is no basis to
    find Smallwood’s tip any more reliable than any other criminal informant. Accordingly, this
    Court determines that Smallwood’s self-serving statement that appellant was the “real drug
    dealer” lacks any indicia of reliability.
    Returning to the totality of the circumstances, this Court holds that the officers lacked a
    reasonable, articulable suspicion to conduct a second Terry stop. Officers believed that they
    witnessed a hand-to-hand drug transaction between the driver of the truck and somebody in
    appellant’s presence. Notably, appellant did not make the hand-to-hand transaction, but was
    merely standing near the truck. After officers approached, appellant complied with their
    commands to stay and submit to a stop-and-frisk. After finding nothing, the officers released
    appellant. While the Court assumes, without deciding, that this first stop-and-frisk was
    supported by a reasonable, articulable suspicion, the fruitless stop-and-frisk necessarily
    diminished that suspicion. Therefore, some new information was required to revive it.
    The Commonwealth contends that Smallwood’s tip provided that new information. But,
    Smallwood’s “tip” was just an assertion that he wasn’t the real criminal, somebody else was. As
    noted above, that tip lacked any indicia of reliability. Furthermore, the officer who apprehended
    Smallwood had just recovered baggies containing crack cocaine. Simultaneously, other officers
    searched appellant and found no drugs. Therefore, the officers, at the time they stopped
    appellant’s vehicle, had reason to know four things: (1) appellant did not conduct the
    hand-to-hand transaction—either Smallwood or Scott did; (2) appellant did not have any drugs
    on him that were detectable by a stop-and-frisk; (3) Smallwood did possess a significant amount
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    of crack cocaine; and (4) Smallwood exclaimed immediately after being arrested that he wasn’t
    the drug dealer, but that appellant was the “real dealer.”
    Given these circumstances, this Court determines that the officers lacked a reasonable,
    articulable suspicion for the second Terry stop. Any suspicion undergirding the stop-and-frisk
    was diminished when the initial search found no contraband, and Smallwood’s unreliable “tip” is
    insufficient to revive that suspicion.
    Appellant “entered a conditional guilty plea pursuant to Code § 19.2-254, which provides
    in part that ‘[i]f the defendant prevails on appeal, he shall be allowed to withdraw his plea.’”
    Hasan v. Commonwealth, 
    276 Va. 674
    , 681 (2008). Appellant has prevailed on appeal.
    Therefore, “[h]e is entitled by statute to withdraw his plea. [Appellant] must be given the
    opportunity to reassess the admissible evidence that may be used against him and, if the
    Commonwealth wishes to continue its prosecution, demand a trial if he so desires.”
    Id. IV. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, this Court reverses the judgment of the trial court and remands
    the matter for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded.
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