Court Opinion

ID: 6340644
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-13 16:13:24.928163+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:02:51.405933
License: Public Domain

J-A09033-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                       Appellant               :
                                               :
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
    ANTHONY BREELAND                           :   No. 1560 EDA 2021

                  Appeal from the Order Entered July 2, 2021
      In the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County Criminal Division at
                        No(s): CP-45-CR-0000976-2020

BEFORE: NICHOLS, J., SULLIVAN, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY PELLEGRINI, J.:                              FILED MAY 13, 2022

        The Commonwealth appeals the order of the Court of Common Pleas of

Monroe County granting a suppression motion in favor of Anthony Breeland

(Breeland). We affirm.

        On June 1, 2020, Breeland was sitting in a parked vehicle at a Clarion

Inn Hotel in Monroe County. Two Pennsylvania State troopers who were on

patrol found his presence there to be suspicious, so they approached him and

eventually had Breeland exit the vehicle.          A search of Breeland’s person

yielded crack and powder cocaine, leading the officers to then search

Breeland’s vehicle, where additional controlled substances and contraband

____________________________________________

*   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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were retrieved.      During the encounter, Breeland also made incriminating

statements.

       After he was charged with four drug-related offenses, Breeland moved

to exclude from the evidence at trial the retrieved substances and his

statements on the grounds that the initial search of his person violated his

Fourth Amendment right to be free from an unreasonable search and seizure.

At the suppression hearing, the sole witness was one of the two arresting

officers, Trooper Anthony Spegar.              See Suppression Hearing Transcript,

2/1/2021, at pp. 10-72.

       Trooper Spegar testified that he was on a routine patrol in a marked

police car near the Clarion Inn Hotel in Monroe County, which, according to

Trooper Spegar, was a high-crime area where he had made a number of drug-

related arrests.1 On the night in question, at about 9:45 p.m., Trooper Spegar

saw Breeland sitting alone in a parked Toyota sedan. After looking up the

vehicle’s registration, he found that it was linked to a woman from Allentown

who clearly was not Breeland.

       At around 10:00 p.m., Trooper Spegar parked his patrol vehicle and

approach Breeland on foot. As he neared, the officer saw Breeland make what

appeared to be furtive movements toward the center console of the Toyota.

____________________________________________

1 Officer Spegar was accompanied by his partner, who did not testify at the
suppression hearing.

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He also noticed that Breeland had with him four cellular phones, and that there

was a white powdery substance on the center console. The officer testified

that Breeland appeared to be nervous, as evidenced by the movement of his

hands, a lack of eye contact, and the vague yet inconsistent reasons Breeland

gave him for sitting in the hotel’s parking lot.2 Suspecting that Breeland could

be concealing some kind of criminal activity, Trooper Spegar asked Breeland

to step out of the vehicle.

       Initially, Breeland hesitated, asking why the request had been made.

Breeland’s reluctance to comply made the officer even more suspicious,

prompting the officer to order Breeland out of the car. Id. at p. 54. Breeland

again asked why he was being ordered to step out, and without clarifying, the

officer again demanded that he exit the vehicle.

       When he agreed to step out, Breeland assumed what the officer

described as a “bladed” or “fight or flight” stance, leading the officer “to

believe that he may have a weapon on him[.]”        Id. at p. 16.   The officer

described this stance as a movement of Breeland’s hands from “down by his

sides” to “his lower chest area.” Id. at p. 29.

____________________________________________

2 The officer clarified during cross-examination that Breeland had at first
explained that he was sitting in his vehicle to avoid an argument with his
girlfriend. At some point later during the conversation, Breeland said that he
was not having an argument, and that he just wanted to listen to the radio in
the vehicle. See Suppression Hearing Transcript, 2/1/2021, at pp. 47-49.

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      The officer then asked Breeland to consent to a pat-down search or frisk

of his person to determine whether he was armed. Breeland asked why that

request was made and “backed away” a few feet from the officer. Id. at p.

55. Moments later, however, he complied.

      During the pat-down search for weapons, Trooper Spegar touched

Breeland’s pant pocket and felt “a rock-like substance” in a plastic bag. Id.

Based on his training and experience, he thought the bag could contain “a

number of different types of narcotics.”     Id. at p. 16.    The officer asked

Breeland directly what the bag contained, and Breeland said that he did not

know.

      The officer then removed the bag from Breeland’s pocket, at which point

Breeland stated that he was not at the hotel for drugs and that he did have a

“drug problem.” Id. at p. 17. The officer identified the substance in the plastic

bag as possibly being either crack cocaine or powder cocaine. Breeland then

admitted that he had just picked up the crack cocaine, but he would not say

where he had gotten it. Trooper Spegar also found in Breeland’s pocket a few

hundred dollars wrapped in rubber bands. The officer testified that carrying

cash in this manner was indicative of drug trafficking. Breeland’s demeanor

was described as aggressive, defensive and non-cooperative and he was

arrested. Over Breeland’s objection, Trooper Spegar searched the Toyota,

yielding drug packaging, a scale with drug residue on it, and over $3,000 in

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cash. It was discovered after Breeland’s arrest that his driver’s license had

been suspended.

      Crucially, Trooper Spegar admitted that at the time he ordered Breeland

out of the vehicle and prior to any of the searches, he “could not pinpoint a

specific criminal activity that was occurring.” Id. at p. 58. While the officer

had a general suspicion that crime was afoot, he could not “deduce it to a

specific criminal activity [without further investigation].” Id. Further, when

the officer initially felt the plastic baggie in Breeland’s pocket during the pat-

down search, he could only generally ascertain that “the rock-like substance

was consistent with the feel of cocaine, or heroin, meth, something in a rock-

like form.” Id. at p. 60.

      Breeland moved to suppress the evidence obtained from the pat-down

search of his person on the ground that Trooper Spegar had been unable to

identify any contraband prior to removing the plastic bag in his pocket.

Further, Breeland argued that the illegality of that pat-down search made the

subsequent     vehicle   search   and    Breeland’s   incriminating   statements

inadmissible at trial.

      The trial court granted Breeland’s motion to suppress the evidence

obtained from his person, as well as the resulting statements and evidence

obtained by the police thereafter. In its opinion, the trial court reasoned that

the pat-down search was unlawful because Trooper Spegar lacked probable

cause to believe that the bag he felt in Breeland’s pocket was contraband prior

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to removing it. See Trial Court Opinion, 7/2/2021, at 7-9. That is, the officer

had been unable to articulate how the feel of a rock-like substance in a plastic

bag could be distinguished from any number of “legitimate, small, hard objects

in a baggie.” Id. at 7.

       By removing the item from Breeland’s pocket before it could be

identified as contraband, the officer exceeded the scope of a lawful frisk and

did not satisfy the “plain feel” exception to the warrant requirement.3 The

evidence obtained in that search (including Breeland’s statements and the

items seized from the vehicle he occupied) was also subject to exclusion from

trial as the product of the initial illegality. See id. at 10-11.

       The Commonwealth timely appealed the suppression order and the trial

court entered a 1925(a) opinion outlining why the order should be upheld.

See 1925(a) Opinion, 9/25/2021, at 1-2.          The trial court reiterated and

incorporated by reference the facts and reasoning discussed in its earlier

opinion: “In our Opinion and Order filed on July 2, 2021, we determined that

the record is devoid of evidence that the suspected crack cocaine had an

____________________________________________

3   The “plain feel” doctrine “allows an officer to seize non-threatening
contraband detected through the officer’s sense of touch during a Terry frisk,
if the officer is lawfully in a position to detect the presence of contraband, the
incriminating nature of the contraband is immediately apparent from its tactile
impression, and the officer has a lawful right of access to the object.”
Commonwealth v. Stevenson, 744 A.2d 1261, 1265 (Pa. 2000).

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identifiable mass or contour to immediately identify it as such based upon a

preponderance of the evidence.” Id. at 2.

       The Commonwealth now raises a single issue in its brief:

       Whether the [trial court] erred as a matter of law when it applied
       a preponderance of evidence analysis and failed to conduct a
       probable cause inquiry into the totality of the circumstances
       surrounding the pat-down search as required by the Plain Feel
       Doctrine[.]

Appellant’s Brief, at 6.4

       The Commonwealth’s main contention in this appeal is that the trial

court applied an incorrect legal standard when determining whether the

officer’s pat-down search of Breeland comported with the “plain-feel doctrine.”

According to the Commonwealth, the trial court incorrectly weighed the

evidence under a preponderance standard rather than the appropriate

standard of probable cause under the totality of the circumstances.                  The

Commonwealth         argues    further    that,   based   on   the   totality   of   the

circumstances, the arresting officer had probable cause, as a matter of law,

____________________________________________

4 The Commonwealth’s appellate claims are limited to the trial court’s findings
as to the initial search of Breeland’s person. Accordingly, it is not necessary
for us review the portions of the trial court’s order concerning the suppression
of Breeland’s subsequent statements and the items later seized from the
vehicle he was occupying.

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to believe that the plastic bag retrieved from Breeland’s pocket contained

contraband.5

       First, the record establishes that the correct legal standard was applied.

In its opinion, the trial court thoroughly set forth the law governing the

permissible scope of a pat-down search or “frisk” for weapons, as well as the

“plain feel” doctrine, which is the narrow exception to the warrant requirement

invoked by the Commonwealth to justify the initial search of Breeland’s person

in this case. The following summary of law, taken verbatim from the trial

court’s opinion, demonstrates that the trial court used the correct legal

standards:

       It is well-established that a police officer may conduct a brief
       investigatory stop of an individual if the officer observes unusual
       conduct which leads [him or her] to reasonably conclude that
       criminal activity may be afoot. Moreover, if the officer has a
       reasonable suspicion, based on specific and articulable facts, that
       the detained individual may be armed and dangerous, the officer
       may then conduct a frisk of the individual’s outer garments for
       weapons.

____________________________________________

5 When an order granting a suppression motion is being appealed, our review
“is limited to determining whether the suppression court’s factual findings are
supported by the record and whether the legal conclusions drawn from those
facts are correct.” Commonwealth v. Stem, 96 A.3d 407, 409 (Pa. Super.
2014) (citation omitted). “[O]ur scope of review is limited to the factual
findings and legal conclusions of the suppression court.” In re L.J., 79 A.3d
1073, 1080 (Pa. 2013) (citation omitted). We defer to the suppression court,
“as factfinder[,] to pass on the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be
given to their testimony.” Commonwealth v. Elmobdy, 823 A.2d 180, 183
(Pa. Super. 2003). “[H]owever, we maintain de novo review over the
suppression court’s legal conclusions.” Commonwealth v. Brown, 996 A.2d
473, 476 (Pa. 2010).

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     Commonwealth v. Stevenson, 744 A.2d 1261, 265 (Pa. 2000)
     (citations omitted).

     Since the sole justification for a Terry [frisk] is the protection of
     the officer or others nearby, such a protective search must be
     strictly limited to that which is necessary for the discovery of
     weapons which might be used to harm the officer or others
     nearby. Thus, the purpose of the limited search is not to discover
     evidence, but to allow the officer to pursue [his or her]
     investigation without fear of violence.

     [Id.] (citations omitted).

     If the Terry protective search goes beyond what is needed to
     determine the presence of weapons, it is no longer valid, and
     evidence seized must be suppressed. Minnesota v. Dickerson,
     508 U.S. 366, 373 (1993).

     Where the police extend a frisk of an individual beyond the limited
     purposes of a Terry frisk [for officer and public safety], the
     Commonwealth needs a separate exception [to the warrant
     requirement] to justify the search and any subsequent seizure of
     the individual’s personal property.

     Commonwealth v. Graham, 721 A.2d 1075, 1078 (Pa. 1998).

     [T]he United States Supreme Court considered the question of
     whether an officer may also properly seize non-threatening
     contraband “plainly felt” during a Terry frisk for weapons.
     Answering the question in the affirmative, the [Supreme Court]
     adopted the so-called plain feel doctrine and held that a police
     officer may seize non-threatening contraband detected through
     the officer’s sense of touch during a Terry frisk, if the officer is
     lawfully in a position to detect the presence of contraband, the
     incriminating nature of the contraband is immediately apparent
     from its tactile impression, and the officer has a lawful right of
     access to the object. As [it] made clear, the plain feel doctrine is
     only applicable where the officer conducting the frisk feels an
     object whose mass or contour makes its criminal character
     immediately apparent. “Immediately apparent” means that the
     officer readily perceives, without further exploration or searching,
     that what [he or she] is feeling is contraband. If, after feeling
     the object, the officer lacks probable cause to believe that
     the object is contraband without conducting some further

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     search, the immediately-apparent requirement has not
     been met, and the plain feel doctrine cannot justify the
     seizure of the object.

     Stevenson, supra, at 1265 (citations omitted, emphasis added).

     In the course of the Terry frisk, a trooper must form
     probable cause to believe he or she is feeling contraband
     before seizing it. Dickerson, supra, at 376. “An officer’s
     subjective belief that an object is contraband is not sufficient,
     unless it is objectively reasonable in light of the facts and
     circumstances existing at the time of the frisk.” Commonwealth
     v. Zhahir, 751 A.2d 1153, 1163 (Pa. 2000).

     Further, the Commonwealth has the burden of proving
     evidence is admissible when challenged in a suppression
     motion. Pa. R. Crim. P. 581(H). Therefore, it must prove
     by a preponderance of the evidence that the suspected
     crack was immediately-apparent contraband.            See
     Commonwealth ex. Rel. Butler v. Rundle, 239 A.2d 426, 429
     (Pa. 1968).

     Courts in Pennsylvania have addressed the issue whether an
     unknown, small, hard object felt in a plastic “container” during a
     Terry frisk is immediately apparent as drugs, when thought to be
     consistent with the packaging of drugs, Stevenson, supra, at
     1267 (officer felt small, hard object wrapped in plastic and
     determined it was crack cocaine only after conducting further
     search — squeezing and manipulating the object — and its seizure
     was not justified by the plain feel doctrine); compare Zhahir,
     supra, at 1163 (defendant had 91 pieces of crack cocaine inside
     two bags, which obviously would have a unique feel that a single
     piece does not); Commonwealth v. Bryant, 866 A.2d 1143,
     1145 (Pa. Super. 2005) (same, where an officer felt 40 heat-
     sealed baggies of suspected crack).

     There are many legitimate small and hard items that a person may
     have inside a plastic “container” in a pocket. Such things in plastic
     are not contraband per se, and the identity of the substance could
     only be determined by further searching or analysis after
     removing the object from the pocket. In other words, the record
     does not contain evidence to conclude that a piece of crack cocaine
     in plastic has a peculiar “mass or contour” that immediately

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       distinguishes it from legitimate, small, hard objects in a baggie.
       See Stevenson, supra, at 1265.

Trial Court Opinion, 7/2/2021, at 5-7 (emphases added).

       After correctly stating the law governing the constitutionality of

warrantless pat-down searches and the plain feel doctrine, the trial court

accurately cited the record evidence, concluding that the arresting officer

lacked probable cause at the time of Breeland’s pat-down to believe that he

was in possession of contraband. In doing so, the trial court analogized the

circumstances of the present case to the facts of several controlling opinions

in which the officer’s observations did not pass constitutional muster. See id.

at 7-9.6

       In all of those cases, the courts applied a probable cause analysis to

determine that the search was unlawful because the criminal nature of the

item in question was not immediately apparent from its mass and contour.

Taken in context, the trial court’s reference to the preponderance standard

concerned the       Commonwealth’s         burden of proof in   establishing   the

admissibility of evidence after a motion to suppress was filed.                See

Pa.R.Crim.P. 581(H). This, too, was an accurate statement of law. See id.

____________________________________________

6The trial court likened the facts of the present case with those in Minnesota
v. Dickerson, 508 U.S. 366, 373 (1993); Commonwealth v. Stevenson,
744 A.2d 1261, 1265 (Pa. 2000); Commonwealth v. Stackfield, 651 A.2d
558, 562 (Pa. Super. 1994); Commonwealth v. Guillespie, 745 A.2d 654,
659 (Pa. Super. 2000); and Commonwealth v. Spears, 743 A.2d 512, 515
(Pa. Super. 1999). The Commonwealth has not attempted to distinguish any
of these cases in its appellate brief.

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      Second, we consider the Commonwealth’s claim that the trial court

ignored the totality of the evidence and assigned too much weight to the

arresting officer’s uncertainty as to what the plastic bag in Breeland’s pocket

contained. The Commonwealth argues that the trial court erred in granting

suppression because the officer had probable cause to believe that the plastic

bag contained contraband based on his training in recognizing controlled

substances and Breeland’s location and demeanor during the encounter.

      We find this argument unpersuasive because all of the circumstances

cited by the Commonwealth were only relevant insofar as they would enable

the officer to identify the item in Breeland’s pocket from touch alone.        As

discussed above, a critical component of the plain feel doctrine is that an

object’s criminal nature must be immediately apparent from its mass or

contour. See Stevenson, 744 A.2d at 1265 (“If, after feeling the object, the

officer lacks probable cause to believe that the object is contraband without

conducting some further search, the immediately-apparent requirement has

not been met, and the plain feel doctrine cannot justify the seizure of the

object.”).

      Here, despite all of the officer’s experience, training and observations,

the criminal character of the plastic bag in Breeland’s pocket was not

immediately apparent to the officer prior to its removal. Upon feeling a “rock-

like substance” inside a plastic bag, the officer speculated vaguely that it could

have been “a number of different types of narcotics.” Suppression hearing

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Transcript, at 2/1/2021, at p. 16. Since the officer did not know whether the

substance was contraband or what kind of narcotic the substance could be,

the officer asked Breeland to identify it:

      Defense Counsel: [B]ecause you weren’t clear which of those
      things it was you asked Mr. Breeland, what’s this? And you
      assumed, as you said a moment ago, that he’d answer, right?

      Officer: That is correct.

      Defense Counsel: Okay. He gives you a response, I don’t know
      what it is in my pocket, right? And so you go in, you remove it
      yourself to determine, officially, what it is?

      Officer: That is correct.

Id. at pp. 61-62.

      The trial court did not err in relying on these facts to conclude that the

plain feel doctrine was inapplicable, as the officer essentially conceded that

further investigation was needed for him to identify the criminal nature of the

substance. See e.g., Spears, 743 A.2d 512 (finding no probable cause to

satisfy plain feel doctrine where officer felt a “plastic and hard substance”

during a pat-down and further investigation was needed to identify it as crack

cocaine). Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we find that the trial court

did not abuse its discretion in granting Breeland’s motion to suppress the

evidence.

      Order affirmed.

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Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 5/13/2022

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