Court Opinion

ID: 9391846
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-05-03 15:03:43.729372+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:19.435481
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE,                     )
                                       )
      v.                               )      Case No.: 2203016715
                                       )
JARROD PENN,                           )
                                       )
                    Defendant.         )

                             Submitted: April 26, 2023
                              Decided: May 1, 2023

                             OPINION AND ORDER

           Upon Consideration of Defendant’s Motion to Suppress Evidence:
                                     DENIED.

Jillian Schroeder, Deputy Attorney General, of the DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF
JUSTICE, Wilmington, Delaware, for the State of Delaware.

Andrew Witherell, Esquire, of the WITHERELL LAW FIRM, Wilmington, Delaware, for
Jarrod Penn.

JONES, J.
                                            INTRODUCTION
         A New Castle County Grand Jury indicted Defendant Jarrod Penn for Drug

Dealing, Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Felony, Possession of a

Firearm by a Person Prohibited, Possession or Control of Ammunition by a Person

Prohibited, Carrying a Concealed Deadly Weapon, and Resisting Arrest. This case

centers on drugs and a handgun seized from Mr. Penn on March 31, 2022.

         Mr. Penn filed a motion to suppress, which the Court took under advisement after

an evidentiary hearing on April 14, 2023 and the additional briefing that followed.1 For

the reasons stated herein, the motion is DENIED.

                                        FACTUAL OVERVIEW
         The Court finds the State has proven the following facts by a preponderance of

the evidence.2

         Sergeant Deshaun Ketler, a member of the Wilmington Police Department Street

Crimes Unit, investigates crimes involving guns and drugs.3                             Sergeant Ketler has

extensive training for his work.4 On March 31, 2022, Sergeant Ketler was on patrol in

an unmarked car in the area of Cityview Avenue and 30th Street in Wilmington,

Delaware.5

1
  Mr. Penn filed his additional briefing on April 23, 2023, and the State filed its additional briefing on April 26,
2023.
2
  State v. Holmes, 2022 WL 4353455, at *3 (Del. Super. Sept. 9, 2022) (“On a defendant’s motion to suppress
evidence that was obtained without a warrant, the State must substantiate the propriety of the challenged intrusion
by a preponderance of the evidence.”).
3
  Supp. Hr’g. Tr. (Apr. 14, 2023) at 18:12-16; 20:1-5.
4
  Id. at 20:18-23; 21:1-23; 22:1-23; 23:1-23; 24:1-4.
5
  Id. at 25:1-4.

                                                          2
         Sergeant Ketler was traveling down 30th Street towards Pine Street Park.6 At that

time, the Street Crime Unit, which Sergeant Ketler supervised, was conducting a traffic

stop.7 Police were initially present because the region was well-known as a high-crime

and high-drug area.8 Sergeant Ketler was en route to assist with the vehicle stop down

the street.9

         As Sergeant Ketler traveled towards the stop, a pedestrian wearing a puffy jacket

(later identified as Mr. Penn) crossed the street in front of him without using a

crosswalk.10 Sergeant Ketler noticed that the right side of Mr. Penn’s jacket hung

significantly lower than the left side, as if a heavy object were weighing it down.11 Mr.

Penn’s “main focus” appeared to be on the unrelated Pine Street Park traffic stop12 and

he failed to notice Sergeant Ketler’s presence.13 Based on his eyewitness observations

coupled with his training and experience, Sergeant Ketler strongly suspected Mr. Penn

was carrying a handgun in his right pocket.14

         Abandoning his prior task, Sergeant Ketler decided to continue investigating Mr.

Penn.15 He drove past the traffic stop, turned around on 28th Street, and stopped outside

of Pine Street Park.16 There, Sergeant Ketler observed Mr. Penn, now in the park, sit on

6
  Id. at 25:22-23.
7
  Id. at 25:8-9.
8
  Id. at 20:15-17.
9
  Id. at 27:9-10.
10
   Id. at 27:17-20.
11
   Id. at 28:1-5.
12
   Id. at 28:13-15.
13
   Id. at 28:22-23.
14
   Id.
15
   Id.
16
   Id. at 29:11-18.

                                              3
a bench.17 Mr. Penn appeared nervous and continued to monitor the traffic stop from his

seat18 before standing up, sitting back down, and then exiting the park after a couple of

minutes.19

         Sergeant Ketler followed Mr. Penn back to East 30th Street, where Mr. Penn stood

on the steps between the residences located at 31 and 33 East 30th Street.20 Mr. Penn

continued his focus on the traffic stop and, after a few seconds, came back onto the

sidewalk in front of the residences to get a better look down the street.21 As Mr. Penn

stood on the sidewalk, Sergeant Ketler approached him and asked if they could speak.22

         Upon approach, a startled Mr. Penn asked Sergeant Ketler “Why are you messing

with me?”23 to which Sergeant Ketler replied “[Because] I believe you have a firearm.”24

Mr. Penn, again, asked why Sergeant Ketler was “fucking with him,” and raised his right

hand towards his pocket.25                Sergeant Ketler took this to mean Mr. Penn was

subconsciously checking his pocket for the handgun and ordered Mr. Penn to keep his

hands at his side.26

17
   Id. at 29:17-28.
18
   Id. at 32:22-23.
19
   Id. at 33:1-3. Mr. Penn notes the inconsistency between Sergeant Ketler’s police report and his testimony at the
suppression hearing. In his police report, Sergeant Ketler claimed Mr. Penn only stood in the park and made no
mention of Mr. Penn sitting on a bench. But at the hearing, Sergeant Ketler testified that Mr. Penn sat down on the
bench before standing up. In the Court’s view, this discrepancy between report and testimony is harmless, but even
if not, the Court finds Ketler’s suppression testimony more credible.
20
   Id. at 33:10-13.
21
   Id. at 36:3-9.
22
   Id. at 38:21.
23
   Id. at 39:1-2; 40:19.
24
   Id. at 41:1.
25
   Id. at 41:7-9.
26
   Id. at 41:13-21.

                                                          4
         Prior to this point, Sergeant Ketler had radioed for backup.27 Investigators Liro

and Akio, who had just disengaged from the traffic stop outside of Pine Street Park,

responded to the scene.28 When Mr. Penn saw the additional officers, he ran.29 A quick

chase ensued.30 After the officers caught Mr. Penn, Investigator Liro retrieved a loaded

handgun out of Mr. Penn’s right jacket pocket and a tier weight quantity of crack cocaine,

packaged in a way indicative of drug dealing, from his left pocket.31

                                      STANDARD OF REVIEW
         Where, as here, the basis for a motion to suppress is a warrantless search, the State

bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the challenged

search comported with the defendant’s constitutional rights.32

                                                 ANALYSIS
         The question before the Court is whether Sergeant Ketler was justified in stopping

Mr. Penn – thereby seizing his person – in the first place. If Sergeant Penn acted without

a reasonable and articulable suspicion of criminal activity when he first confronted Mr.

Penn, then the “fruits” of that conduct must be suppressed.33 On the other hand, if

Sergeant Ketler acted with a reasonable and articulable suspicion when he confronted

Mr. Penn, then the ensuing search was justified.

27
   Id. at 43:9. At the suppression hearing, Sergeant Ketler testified that he radioed the other officers for backup
after Mr. Penn exited the park. In the radio call, Sergeant Ketler warned that he was watching an individual
“possibly” armed with a firearm. Id. at 33:10-13.
28
   Id. at 44:16-18.
29
   Id. at 46:9-13.
30
   Id. at 45:19-22.
31
   Id. at 46:3; 69:13-15.
32
   State v. Maddrey, 2020 WL 901490, at *2 (Del. Super. Feb. 25, 2020); Holmes, 2022 WL 4353455, at *3.
33
   Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471, 484 (1963).

                                                          5
        I.       The Consent
        Briefly, the Court will address the issue of when, exactly, Sergeant Ketler placed

Mr. Penn in custody. At the suppression hearing, Sergeant Ketler testified that he

converted a consensual encounter into a seizure when he ordered Mr. Penn to keep his

hands by his side.34 The Court agrees.

        As the Delaware Supreme Court held in Brown v. State35 and Jones v. State,36

under Delaware’s more stringent standard, law enforcement officers are permitted to

initiate contact with citizens on the street for the purpose of asking questions.37 This type

of interaction, if consensual, neither amounts to a seizure nor implicates the Fourth

Amendment.38 During a consensual encounter, a person has no obligation to answer the

officer’s inquiry and is free to go about his business.39 Only when the totality of

circumstances demonstrates that the officer’s actions would cause a reasonable person to

believe he was not free to ignore police presence does a consensual encounter become a

seizure.40

        Sergeant Ketler’s actions prior to ordering Mr. Penn to keep his hands by his side

were consistent with a consensual encounter. After he exited his vehicle, Sergeant Ketler

asked Mr. Penn if they could speak. Asking for permission to converse in a public place

is, of course, the most basic way a police officer can begin a consensual encounter.

34
   Tr. at 67:12-13.
35
   2011 WL 5319900 (Del. Oct. 31, 2011).
36
   2011 WL 3890129 (Del. Sept. 2, 2011).
37
   Brown, 2011 WL 5319900, at *2 (quotations omitted).
38
   Id.
39
   Id.
40
   Id. (quoting Jones, 2011 WL 3890129, at *3).

                                                         6
Sergeant Ketler did not tell Mr. Penn to place his hands behind his back, nor did he order

Mr. Penn to the ground. In fact, Sergeant Ketler did not use, threaten, or display any

force when initiating conversation with Mr. Penn.41

        Further, Mr. Penn’s response to Sergeant Ketler suggested a willingness to engage

in conversation. Mr. Penn asked Sergeant Ketler why he was “messing with” him.42

Presumably, because Mr. Penn asked Sergeant Ketler a question, he wanted an answer

to it. Had he not wanted to engage in conversation, he easily could have said so.43 Thus,

for purposes of this case, the Court finds Sergeant Ketler initiated the stop when he told

Mr. Penn not to put his hand in his pocket.

        II.      The Stop
        Sergeant Ketler infringed on Mr. Penn’s rights by keeping him from going on his

way and ordering him to not put his hand in his pocket. In other words, this is a “stop-

and-frisk” case. The fountainhead for “stop-and-frisk” law is Terry v. Ohio.44 According

to Terry and the legions of cases following it since 1969, “police have the authority to

forcibly stop and detain a person if the police have ‘a reasonable suspicion’ of criminal

activity on the part of that person.”45 “‘Reasonable suspicion’ has been defined as the

officer’s ability to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with the

rational inferences from those facts, reasonable warrant th[e] intrusion.”46

41
   Tr. at 39:18-23; 40:1-2.
42
   Id. at 39:1-2; 40:19.
43
   Mr. Penn focuses on the fact that Sergeant Ketler did not ask him his name or business. But, as Sergeant Ketler
testified, he did not have time to ask Mr. Penn those questions. After Sergeant Ketler answered Mr. Penn’s initial
question, Mr. Penn fled on foot from police.
44
   392 U.S. 1 (1968).
45
   Coleman v. State, 562 A.2d 1171, 1174 (Del. 1989).
46
   Id. (quoting Terry, 392 U.S. at 22).

                                                         7
        Over the years, the Delaware Supreme Court has refined the standard for deciding

what does, and does not, amount to reasonable articulable suspicion justifying a Terry

stop. Now, Delaware courts must:

                 [C]onsider the totality of the circumstances as viewed
                 through the eyes of a reasonable, trained police officer . . .
                 combining objective facts with such an officer’s subjective
                 interpretation of those facts.47

        And as the Supreme Court announced in Woody v. State,48 “[i]n determining

whether there was reasonable suspicion to justify a detention, the Court defers to the

experience and training of law enforcement officers.”49

        Terry’s applicability is clearly established through Flowers v. State.50 Flowers

concerned a prosecution for drugs and firearm possession, which the police discovered

during a brief detention and pat down.51 At the hearing on the motion to suppress in

Flowers, Wilmington Police Corporal Thomas Lynch testified that he responded to a call

concerning an armed pedestrian at the high-crime intersection of Seventh and West

Streets.52 When Corporal Lynch arrived at the intersection, he observed Mr. Flowers,

who “turned his body and grabbed an object that was protruding from his waistband.” 53

The object appeared to be rectangular and was “kind of tucked under [Mr. Flowers’]

shirt,” and Mr. Flowers had his fingers wrapped around the object.54 Relying on his

47
   Backus v. State, 845 A.2d 515, 517 (Del. 2004).
48
   765 A.2d 1257 (Del. 2001).
49
   Id. at 1262 (internal citations omitted).
50
   195 A.3d 18 (Del. 2018).
51
   Id. at 22.
52
   Id.
53
   Id.
54
   Id.

                                                     8
training and experience, Corporal Lynch believed Mr. Flowers’ actions were consistent

with someone attempting to conceal a firearm.55 After observing Mr. Flowers’ actions,

Corporal Lynch ordered him to the ground, conducted a pat down of his person, and

discovered a handgun.56

         Flowers’ holding turns less on the frisk and more on the stop. According to

Flowers:

            The evidence supports . . . that the officers did not stop Flowers until after
            they had independent, ample corroboration of [his] suspicious behavior
            as the officers testified. When he arrived at the scene, Corporal Lynch
            saw Flowers reach for something in his waistband and wrap his fingers
            around a rectangular object. . . . [O]nce officers arrived [at the scene],
            they observed Flowers’ conduct which justified the detention and pat
            down. Moreover, the officers had made other gun arrests that Friday
            night in Wilmington just blocks from that location. The area was known
            as a high-crime area. These are all factors properly considered in the
            reasonable suspicion analysis.57

         Like this case, Flowers involved acts that were subject to a variety of innocent

explanations. And like this case, Flowers examined Terry.58

         So, similar to Corporal Lynch’s suspicions about Flowers, Sergeant Ketler’s

suspicions of Mr. Penn were raised by behavior that could have been innocent. But just

as Corporal Lynch’s experience made him suspicious about what he saw, Sergeant

Ketler’s seventeen years of extensive training and experience made him suspicious about

Mr. Penn’s clothing and nervous behavior. Based on his experience and what he

personally observed, Sergeant Ketler decided to investigate. And, as he watched the

55
   Id.
56
   Id.
57
   Id. at 30-31.
58
   Id. at 23-24.

                                                  9
events unfold, he became suspicious that Mr. Penn was involved in specific, criminal

activity, which culminated in the stop on the sidewalk.

         In summary, Sergeant Ketler watched Mr. Penn cross the street without using a

crosswalk and immediately observed that Mr. Penn’s right coat pocket hung lower than

the left, suggesting the presence of a firearm. Sergeant Ketler then saw Mr. Penn

nervously monitor an unrelated traffic stop in a high-crime area for a span of ten minutes

and engage in suspicious activity while he was in the park area. As Sergeant Ketler

observed this behavior, the heavy object weighed down Mr. Penn’s right jacket pocket.

After leaving the park, Mr. Penn walked to the residences at 31 and 33 East 30th Street

and attempted to conceal himself between the houses.59 Finally, when confronted by

Sergeant Ketler, Mr. Penn reached for the object in his pocket after Sergeant Ketler

mentioned firearms.

         The Court is satisfied that Sergeant Ketler’s suspicions were based on his

experience, observations, and the inferences drawn from both. This was more than a

hunch. This was reasonable suspicion based on articulable facts and rational inferences.

                                              CONCLUSION

         For the foregoing reasons, Mr. Penn’s motion to suppress is DENIED.

         IT IS SO ORDERED.
                                                                 /s/ Francis J. Jones, Jr.
                                                               Francis J. Jones, Jr., Judge

59
   At the suppression hearing, the State argued that Mr. Penn attempted to “blade” himself at the 30th Street
residences in an order to hide from the officers. But on cross examination, Sergeant Ketler stated that Mr. Penn
bladed in a “neutral position,” and when asked if that meant Mr. Penn was “not really doing anything,” Sergeant
Ketler answered “Right.” Tr. at 64:16-23; 65:1. Accordingly, the Court does not find the State’s argument
regarding blading to be credible and did not consider it in deciding this motion. The Court does, however, find
Sergeant Ketler’s testimony regarding Mr. Penn’s attempts to conceal himself between the residences to be credible.

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cc:   Original to Prothonotary (Criminal Division)

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