Title: Foltz v. Commonwealth

State: virginia

Issuer: Virginia Supreme Court

Document:

Present:  Kinser, C.J., Lemons, Goodwyn, and Millette, JJ., and 
Carrico, Russell and Lacy, S.JJ. 
 
DAVID L. FOLTZ, JR., 
s/k/a DAVID LEE FOLTZ, JR. 
 
v.  Record No. 110832 
 
 
OPINION BY SENIOR JUSTICE 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    ELIZABETH B. LACY 
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA  
 
    September 14, 2012 
 
FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA 
 
In this appeal we consider whether the admission of certain 
eyewitness testimony constituted reversible error. 
Background 
Beginning in November 2007, Fairfax County police officers 
investigated a series of sexual assaults that had similar 
characteristics.  Fairfax County Police Detective Erik Stallings 
obtained the identities of registered sex offenders who lived 
and worked in the vicinity of the assaults.  David Lee Foltz, 
Jr. was among the sex offenders identified. 
In early January 2008, retired Fairfax County Police 
Detective James Kraut heard about the assaults and contacted 
Lieutenant Brenda Akre, supervisor of the Fairfax Police 
Department sex crimes unit.  Kraut told Akre that the recent 
assaults sounded “amazingly like” the modus operandi of an 
individual he had investigated in 1990.  Kraut could not recall 
the individual’s name, but described the assaults and stated 
that the person had been convicted and imprisoned in 1990.  Akre 
conferred with another active duty senior detective about the 
  
 
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past assaults who told her the person Kraut had investigated was 
Foltz.  Akre relayed this information to Stallings. 
Stallings then reviewed Foltz’ parole record, driving 
record and the department’s investigative management system, 
which provided detailed information about Foltz’ prior crimes 
that were similar to the assaults under investigation.  The 
detective also requested an update from the sex offender 
registry on Foltz’ employment status and his current schedule.  
This information revealed that Foltz was attending probation-
related meetings in the vicinity of and at the times of the 
assaults under investigation.  The information also showed that 
assaults had occurred in the vicinity of Foltz’ work and home. 
Stallings asked for and obtained approval from Akre for 
surveillance assistance by means of a global positioning system 
(“GPS”) device.  The police attached the GPS device to the 
bumper of Foltz’ employer-owned work van on February 1, 2008, 
while the van was parked on a public street outside Foltz’ 
house. 
The police first accessed the data from the GPS device on 
February 5, 2008.  That data showed that Foltz had been driving 
in and out of residential neighborhoods.  Stallings requested 
assistance to conduct physical surveillance of Foltz, but 
assisting officers were not available.  That evening, Stallings 
responded to a call reporting another assault similar to those 
  
 
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he was investigating.  When the officers reviewed the GPS data 
later that night it showed that at the time of the February 5 
assault the van Foltz was driving was “a block or two away” from 
the assault. 
The police initiated physical surveillance of Foltz around 
4:00 p.m. on the afternoon of February 6.  The officers first 
observed Foltz as he left his house, driving his personal 
vehicle.  After approximately three hours of surveillance, two 
of the officers saw Foltz get out of his vehicle and follow a 
woman walking down a sidewalk in the City of Falls Church.  The 
officers followed Foltz and saw him grab the woman and quickly 
pull her under a large evergreen tree.  The officers intervened 
to rescue the woman and, after a struggle, arrested Foltz.  The 
Fairfax officers contacted the Falls Church Police Department, 
which then took custody of Foltz. 
Foltz was indicted for violation of Code § 18.2-48, 
abduction with intent to defile, and Code § 18.2-67.5:3, 
commission of a subsequent violent sexual assault.  Prior to 
trial, Foltz filed a motion to suppress the testimony of the 
officers regarding their surveillance of Foltz on the evening of 
the attack.  Foltz argued that the police officers, without 
first obtaining a search warrant, unlawfully installed the GPS 
device on his vehicle and unlawfully tracked his movements 
through use of the device and, therefore, under Warlick v. 
  
 
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Commonwealth, 215 Va. 263, 208 S.E.2d 746 (1974), the officers’ 
testimony was subject to the exclusionary rule because it was 
“fruit of the poisonous tree” of an unlawful search in violation 
of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and 
Article 1, Section 10 of the Constitution of Virginia. 
The trial court denied the motion, holding that the use of 
the GPS device did not violate the federal or state 
constitutions.  The trial court limited the officers’ testimony 
to the events they observed on the evening of the assault and 
the jury was instructed not to speculate about why the officers 
were following Foltz. 
At trial, the officers testified that they observed Foltz 
driving his own vehicle and stopping in residential areas; that 
at one point he got out of the car and was seen walking behind a 
female pedestrian; that he drove on to the City of Falls Church 
and again exited the car at a Grand Mart store; and that he 
drove on and ultimately parked his car and followed another 
female pedestrian for approximately four-tenths of a mile.  At 
that point, according to the officers, Foltz pulled a mask over 
his face, attacked the woman from behind, moved her off the 
sidewalk, threw her to the ground under a tree, put his hand 
over her mouth and prevented her from getting up.  One officer 
testified that Foltz had his hands at the woman’s waistline.  
  
 
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The officers also testified about their actions in stopping the 
attack and subduing Foltz.   
The victim testified that while she was walking on the 
sidewalk she was grabbed from behind, dragged under a tree, and 
pinned to the ground.  She testified that the attacker covered 
her mouth with one of his hands and with his other hand “tried 
to unbutton my pants.”  She struggled to “prevent him from doing 
it,” bit the hand that was covering her mouth, and started 
screaming.  When questioned further, the victim explained that 
Foltz’ hand was “[b]elow [her] abdomen.”  At the court’s 
direction, the victim stood and pointed to the area on her body 
which Foltz touched.  The record reflects that the victim 
pointed to the exterior of her pants in the vaginal area.  The 
victim also testified that she sustained scratches to her face 
and mouth in the attack. 
Evidence of Foltz’ prior rape conviction was presented to 
establish the elements of the charged violation of Code § 18.2-
67.5:3, a subsequent sexually violent assault. 
Foltz was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court of 
Arlington County and sentenced to life imprisonment. 
Foltz appealed to the Court of Appeals of Virginia 
contending, as relevant here, that the trial court erred by 
denying his motion to suppress the testimony of the police 
officers.  In a published opinion, a panel of the Court of 
  
 
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Appeals affirmed Foltz’ conviction, holding that the use of the 
GPS tracking device was not an unlawful search or seizure and 
therefore the officers’ testimony was not subject to the 
exclusionary rule.  Foltz v. Commonwealth, 57 Va. App. 68, 90-
91, 698 S.E.2d 281, 292-93 (2010). 
 
On rehearing en banc, the Court of Appeals affirmed the 
conviction but did not address the constitutionality of the use 
of the GPS tracking device, holding instead that the 
exclusionary rule would not bar the officers’ testimony because 
the assault that the officers observed was a new and distinct 
offense from the previously committed crimes that the officers 
were investigating.  Foltz v. Commonwealth, 58 Va. App. 107, 
117-18, 706 S.E.2d 914, 919-20 (2011).*  The Court of Appeals 
held the officers’ observations of the attack on February 6 
“were sufficiently attenuated from any argued taint arising from 
the placement and use of the GPS device to track the movements 
of [Foltz’] assigned work van” and the admission of the 
officers’ testimony was not error.  Id. at 118, 706 S.E.2d at 
920.  We granted Foltz an appeal. 
 
                     
* Consideration of arguments not made in the court below is 
appropriate under the doctrine of the right result for the wrong 
reason where additional factual matters are not necessary to 
resolve a newly-advanced rationale.  Banks v. Commonwealth, 280 
Va. 612, 617, 701 S.E.2d 437, 440 (2010)(quoting Perry v. 
Commonwealth, 280 Va. 572, 580, 701 S.E.2d 431, 436 (2010)). 
  
 
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Discussion 
 
In his petition for appeal filed in this Court, Foltz 
argued that the Court of Appeals erred in not declaring the 
placement and use of the GPS device unconstitutional and in 
holding that the officers’ testimony was admissible.  Subsequent 
to the filing of the appeal, the United States Supreme Court 
decided United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 945 
(2012), holding that the government’s placement of a GPS 
tracking device on the bumper of a vehicle and its use of that 
device to monitor the vehicle's movements is a “classic 
trespassory search” which, in the absence of a valid search 
warrant, is a violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United 
States Constitution.  Id. at ___, 132 S.Ct. at 949, 954.  
Applying Jones to this case means that the installation of the 
GPS device on Foltz’ work van and the use of that device to 
gather information about Foltz’ movements by the police, without 
a valid search warrant, constituted an unconstitutional search. 
The issue now before this Court is whether the admission of the 
officers’ testimony was error. 
Constitutional error, like other types of error, remains 
subject to analysis under the doctrine of harmless error.  
Crawford v. Commonwealth, 281 Va. 84, 100, 704 S.E.2d 107, 117 
(2011).  Therefore, if the officers’ testimony was the “fruit of 
the poisonous tree,” Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471, 
  
 
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488 (1963), and its admission was error, the error may be 
harmless and the conviction sustained if the error was 
“ ‘harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ”  Crawford, 281 Va. at 
101, 704 S.E.2d at 117 (quoting Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 
18, 24 (1967)).  For the reasons that follow, assuming without 
deciding that the admission of the officers’ testimony was 
error, we conclude the admission of that testimony was harmless 
beyond a reasonable doubt.  
Conviction of the charges in violation of Code § 18.2-48 
required proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Foltz, by force 
and without legal justification or excuse, transported the 
victim with the intent to deprive the victim of her personal 
liberty and with the intent to sexually molest her, Crawford, 
281 Va. at 102-03, 704 S.E.2d at 118, and that this assault was 
subsequent to a previous conviction for a sexually violent 
assault, from which Foltz was at liberty, and that the previous 
conviction was not part of a common act, transaction or scheme 
with this offense.  Code § 18.2-67.5:3.  There was no dispute 
that Foltz assaulted the victim, that he had previously been 
convicted of rape, and that he was at liberty from that 
conviction at the time of the offense at issue here. 
The victim testified unequivocally that she was attacked 
from behind by force, that she was dragged to a place off the 
sidewalk on which she had been walking, that she was deprived of 
  
 
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her liberty because she was pinned on the ground by her 
attacker, and that her attacker placed his hand on her pants in 
the area of her vagina.  The Commonwealth, at trial and in oral 
argument in this Court, pointed to this testimony as proof that 
Foltz abducted the victim with intent to defile her. 
There is nothing in the record to suggest that the victim 
was not a credible witness.  Her testimony regarding the attack 
and Foltz’ intent was clear and specific.  She believed he was 
going to “do it.”  She testified and demonstrated that he was 
attempting to sexually molest her.  The testimony of the 
officers regarding the assault was cumulative of the victim’s 
own testimony.  The officers’ testimony regarding Foltz’ conduct 
for the hours prior to the assault may have supported the theory 
that Foltz was stalking or following female pedestrians, but it 
did not extend to indicating the purpose of his stalking – 
whether to rob, assault, sexually molest, abduct or engage in 
some other activity.  Based on this record, admission of the 
officers’ testimony was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 
Accordingly, for the reasons stated, we will affirm the 
judgment of the Court of Appeals. 
Affirmed.