Court Opinion

ID: 5175934
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-04 19:12:43.486155+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:26:17.419676
License: Public Domain

J-A27017-21

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

 COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA              :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                           :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                           :
              v.                           :
                                           :
                                           :
 CHRISTOPHER ANTON JOHNSON                 :
                                           :
                    Appellant              :   No. 1115 EDA 2021

        Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered May 3, 2021
   In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Criminal Division
                     at No(s): CP-46-CR-0001734-2019

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., DUBOW, J., and McCAFFERY, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McCAFFERY, J.:                        FILED JANUARY 4, 2022

      Christopher Anton Johnson appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered following his conviction for Persons Not to Possess, Use, Manufacture,

Control, Sell, or Transfer Firearms, 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 6105(a)(1).          Johnson

argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress based on

an illegal vehicle stop. We affirm.

      The trial court set forth the underlying facts as follows:

            On February 26, 2019, at approximately 1:00 pm, Officer
         Joshua Keenan[,] Officer Fritchman[,] and Officer Carl
         Robinson, Jr. [ ] of the Norristown Police Department were
         conducting a directed drug patrol near the intersection of
         Noble and West Lafayette Street in Norristown, Montgomery
         County, Pennsylvania.        The area of Noble and West
         Lafayette Street is regarded as a high crime and drug
         trafficking area, rife with frequent calls for overdoses, and
         where all three officers had each previously made drug
         arrests. On this particular occasion, [Officer] Robinson was
         conducting surveillance of a suspected drug location in the
         200 block of Noble Street.
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          During the third week of February 2019, [Officer]
       Robinson received information from a reliable confidential
       informant (“CI”) that a “subject, who the confidential
       informant knew only as ‘Q-Blizz,’ was riding around in a blue
       Chevy Cruze with tinted windows, selling narcotics in
       Norristown . . . heroin and crack cocaine - - and that he was
       armed with a firearm.” [Officer] Robinson, a member of the
       Norristown Police Department since 2004, and the
       Montgomery, County Drug Task Force since 2007, has
       extensive training in and experience with drug trafficking.
       [Officer] Robinson had worked with this CI for
       approximately two (2) years, during which time the CI had
       provided information to him which, as of the date of the
       suppression hearing, resulted in six (6) narcotics convictions
       and firearm violations with several more cases pending. . . .

          While conducting surveillance from his unmarked vehicle,
       [Officer] Robinson initially observed a blue Chevy Cruze,
       bearing PA registration KXE-4603, with heavily tinted
       windows, parked with its engine running on the east side of
       Noble Street in the 200 block. [Officer] Robinson further
       observed that, with the exception of the front windshield,
       the vehicle had dark tint on all of its windows, obscuring its
       interior from view, which [Officer] Robinson deemed from
       his training and experience to be a violation of the Motor
       Vehicle Code.

          While surveilling the vehicle, [Officer] Robinson saw a
       male exit the front driver’s seat of the vehicle, switch places
       with a female front passenger, at which point the vehicle
       now operated by the female drove north on Noble Street.
       Having determined that the vehicle’s color, make, model,
       heavily tinted windows, male occupant, and location were
       consistent with the information previously provided by the
       CI as a vehicle involved in drug trafficking in Norristown,
       [Officer] Robinson radioed [Officers] Keenan and Fritchman
       [ ] the vehicle’s location, its northbound travel on Noble
       Street and that it matched information received
       approximately one week earlier from the CI as the vehicle
       involved in heroin and crack cocaine sales and associated
       with a male armed with a gun.

          [Officer] Keenan observed the vehicle’s heavily tinted
       windows, which despite broad daylight prevented him from
       identifying either the driver or the passenger, or seeing the

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         vehicle’s interior clearly, and he likewise concluded the tint
         to be illegal. In addition to directing them to the vehicle’s
         location, [Officer] Keenan testified that [Officer] Robinson
         specifically alerted [Officers] Keenan and Fritchman that the
         vehicle matched the description [Officer] Robinson had
         “received[, that] an individual by the nickname of Q-Blizz
         was traveling in that vehicle doing narcotics sales in
         Norristown and carrying a firearm.” Based on [Officer]
         Keenan’s observation of the illegal tint, [Officers] Keenan
         and Fritchman initiated a traffic stop of the vehicle at West
         Main and Pearl Streets. As the vehicle pulled over, [Officer]
         Keenan, who also had extensive narcotics investigative
         training, observed the outline of the vehicle’s front
         passenger, later identified as [Johnson], bending forward
         and reaching around the interior of the vehicle. . . .

Trial Ct. Op., 8/3/21, at 1-3 (footnotes omitted).

      Officers found “142 pre-packaged blue wax paper bags filled with an off

white powder consistent with heroin[,] approximately 57 clear wax paper bags

filled with a rock like substance consistent with crack cocaine[,] one yellow

packet filled with white powdered cocaine[,]” and a “.40 caliber handgun”

inside of the car. Affidavit of Probable Cause, 2/26/19, at 7. The traffic stop

resulted in officers arresting Johnson and the Commonwealth charging him

with several crimes including persons not to possess firearms. Johnson filed

a Pre-Trial Motion to Suppress, claiming that the stop was unreasonable. The

trial court denied the motion to suppress, concluding that the stop was

reasonable based on the officers’ “observation of the vehicle’s heavily tinted

windows, which they reasonably believed to be in violation of the Motor Vehicle

Code[.]” Order Sur: Suppression, 1/22/20, at 8. The court also opined that

the CI’s information gave officers reasonable suspicion to stop the vehicle.

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Id. Johnson proceeded by way of a stipulated trial and the court found him

guilty of the firearms charge. The trial court sentenced Johnson to 6 to 12

years’ incarceration and this timely appeal followed.

       Johnson raises one issue before this Court: “Whether the trial court

erred in denying [Johnson’s] Motion to Suppress Evidence which challenged

the lawfulness of a vehicle stop in which [Johnson] was a passenger? [1]”

Johnson’s Brief at 4.

       When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we must determine

whether the trial court’s factual findings are supported by the record.

Commonwealth v. Wright, 224 A.3d 1104, 1108 (Pa. Super. 2019), appeal

denied, 237 A.3d 393 (Pa. 2020) (citation omitted). We are bound by the

factual findings of the court that are supported by the record but our scope of

review of its legal conclusions is plenary. Id. (citation omitted). “Because

the Commonwealth prevailed before the suppression court, we may consider

only the evidence of the Commonwealth and so much of the evidence for the

defense as remains uncontradicted when read in the context of the record as

a whole.” Id. (citation omitted). We limit our review of the record to that of

the suppression hearing. In re L.J., 79 A.3d 1073, 1085 (Pa. 2013) (it is

“inappropriate” to consider evidence outside of the suppression record on

suppression issues).
____________________________________________

1 We note Officer Robinson witnessed Johnson “exit the front drivers[’] seat
of the vehicle and get into the front passenger seat” before the vehicle left
the area of Noble and West Lafayette Streets. Affidavit of Probable Cause at
6.

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      Johnson argues the factual findings of the court, that the officers’ stop

was supported by probable cause and reasonable suspicion, are not supported

by the record. See Johnson’s Brief at 9. Specifically, he challenges the court’s

factual finding that officers were not able to see into his vehicle. Id. Johnson

maintains that the testimony of Officer Keenan showed that he could “see the

general outline of someone in the passenger seat ‘moving forward[ ]’” despite

the vehicle’s tint. Id. Johnson maintains that because officers could see into

the vehicle, they did not have probable cause to stop the vehicle. See id.

      To support his argument, Johnson compares this incident to a vehicle

stop in Commonwealth v. Brubaker, 5 A.3d 261 (Pa. Super. 2010).               In

Brubaker, the officer initiated a traffic stop for a violation of 75 Pa.C.S. §

4524(e), relating to illegal tint on vehicle windows. The officer in Brubaker

testified the defendant’s car did not have “the darkest [tint] that [he had] ever

tested,” that it was a “mid-range window tint,” that he could “see figures in

the vehicle[,]” and he “could see there was a driver.” Brubaker, 5 A.3d at

263. The officer further admitted that during “daylight conditions[,]” he could

“see and view [the] inside of the vehicle through the windshield, side windows,

and side wings[.]”    Id.   The officer’s concern was that “during nighttime

conditions[,] seeing inside of the vehicle may not have been as advantageous

as it was during[ ] the afternoon” when he observed the vehicle. Id.

      Section 4524(e) of the Motor Vehicle Code addresses illegal tint and

reads in part: “No person shall drive any motor vehicle with any sun screening

device or other material which does not permit a person to see or view the

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inside of the vehicle through the windshield, side wing or side window of the

vehicle.” 75 Pa.C.S.A. § 4524(e)(1). “Pennsylvania law makes clear that a

police officer has probable cause to stop a motor vehicle if the officer observes

a traffic code violation, even if it is a minor offense.” Commonwealth v.

Harris, 176 A.3d 1009, 1019 (Pa. Super. 2017) (citation omitted). An officer

has probable cause to initiate a traffic stop of a vehicle under Section 4524(e)

where there is testimony of an inability to see inside the vehicle due to the

tint on the windows of the vehicle. See Commonwealth v. Randolph, 151

A.3d 170, 176 (Pa.Super. 2016) (appellant could not challenge a traffic stop

due to his tinted windows violating the traffic code).

      Here, Johnson mischaracterizes the testimony of Officer Keenan. Unlike

the officer in Brubaker, Officer Keenan testified that he “could not clearly see

inside the vehicle.” N.T., Hearing on Motion to Suppress, 11/26/19, at 24.

He “could not clearly see specific hands; [but] could just see outlines or

shapes[.]” Id. He was not able to determine whether the occupants of the

vehicle were male or female. Id. Thus, while he did testify that he “saw

movement in the vehicle,” he maintained that he could not clearly see into the

vehicle.   Id. at 28.   Furthermore, Officer Robinson testified that when he

initially observed the vehicle, he could not see inside the car. Id. at 13-14.

Both officers averred that they observed the vehicle in “broad daylight” and,

again unlike the officer in Brubaker, still could not see inside the vehicle due

to its “heavy tint.” Id. at 12, 20, 25. Moreover, the officer in Brubaker

testified that he could see into the vehicle “through the windshield, side

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windows, and side wings” whereas here, neither officer could clearly see into

Johnson’s vehicle.   Brubaker, 5 A.3d at 263.      Therefore, the trial court’s

factual finding, that there was probable cause to conduct the stop, is

supported by the record.

      Johnson also raises the argument that the trial court erred in concluding

that officers had reasonable suspicion to stop the vehicle based on the

information provided by the CI. See Johnson’s Brief at 11. He alleges that

“the absence of any articulable facts from which police could conclude that

[Johnson] was engaged in criminal activity at the time of the stop, is fatal to

the Commonwealth’s case.” Id. at 13 (emphasis omitted). Thus, he argues

that the information provided by the CI “did not give officers any reason[ ] to

believe that drugs were in the vehicle at the time the information was

provided, let alone [10] days thereafter.” Id. Johnson likens this case to

Commonwealth v. Wilson, 622 A.2d 293 (Pa. Super. 1993). In Wilson,

this Court concluded reasonable suspicion was lacking due to “the failure of

the [CI] to provide the police with any ‘time-frame’ within which these

activities allegedly were committed by the defendant.” Wilson, 622 A.2d at

296 (emphasis omitted).

      Because we conclude the trial court’s probable cause determination is

supported by the record, we need not address Johnson’s argument regarding

reasonable suspicion.   The heavy tint on Johnson’s vehicle that prevented

officers from being able to see inside gave officers probable cause to initiate

the traffic stop.

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     Judgment of sentence affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 1/4/2022

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