Court Opinion

ID: 5139305
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-21 18:15:05.741592+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:16.573775
License: Public Domain

J-S23024-21

                                   2021 PA Super 254

    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA               :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                       Appellant               :
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
    JACOB SCOTT ROHRBACH                       :   No. 140 EDA 2021

                Appeal from the Order Entered January 6, 2021,
               in the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County,
             Criminal Division at No(s): CP-45-CR-0000728-2020.

BEFORE:      LAZARUS, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and COLINS, J.*

OPINION BY KUNSELMAN, J.:                           FILED DECEMBER 21, 2021

        The Commonwealth appeals as of right from the order suppressing its

evidence against Jacob Scott Rohrbach and granting him a Writ of Habeas

Corpus. The Commonwealth fails to persuade us that police had reasonable

suspicion for an investigative detention of Mr. Rohrbach. Thus, we affirm.

        In the early morning hours of October 10, 2019, Mr. Rohrbach left

Anytime Fitness and stopped at a Wawa’s in Brodheadsville, Pennsylvania to

grab a post-workout meal. He then drove to the empty parking lot of Freedom

Gymnastics, parked away from the closed building, and began eating.

        That parking lot was known “for high-drug activity, and the owner of

[Freedom Gymnastics] has called the police about vehicles parking in the lot.”

Trial Court Opinion, 1/6/21, at 2. Thus, the state police regularly patrolled it.

However, the owner made no report of crime on the date in question, and he

never described Mr. Rohrbach or his vehicle to the police.
____________________________________________

*   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
J-S23024-21

       Two state police officers, in a marked cruiser, drove into the parking lot

and saw Mr. Rohrbach’s taillights ahead of them. Mr. Rohrbach had parked in

“a not well-lit area.”     N.T., 9/24/20, at 11.    As recorded on the trooper’s

dashboard camera, the state police approached Mr. Rohrbach from his rear,

passenger side; Mr. Rohrbach’s car faced forward into the parking spot. See

Commonwealth’s Ex. 2. Given the gym owner’s reports, the troopers were

concerned “there may be someone overdosed or just maybe somebody that

needed help.” N.T., 9/24/20, at 11-12. Therefore, they were “approaching

the vehicle in order to mere-encounter the operator.” Id. at 12.

       When the troopers’ headlights illuminated the inside of Mr. Rohrbach’s

car, he looked in their direction. After a short pause, Mr. Rohrbach started to

back out of the parking sport and turned his car as if to leave the area. See

Commonwealth’s Ex. 2. The trooper “instinctively honked [his] horn.” N.T.,

9/24/20, at 12.

       Mr. Rohrbach instantly stopped his car, and the troopers alighted from

their cruiser. They walked to the other vehicle and smelled cannabis wafting

from an open window. After having Mr. Rohrbach exit his car, they searched

it and found a cannabis cigarette. Mr. Rohrbach made inculpating statements

and failed field sobriety tests.       The police arrested him, and a blood-draw

revealed THC in his system. The Commonwealth charged Mr. Rohrbach with

driving under the influence of cannabis (“DUI”) and related offenses.1
____________________________________________

1See 35 Pa.C.S.A. § 780-113(a)(16), (13)(i), and (a)(32) and 75 Pa.C.S.A.
§ 3802(d)(1)(i).

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      Mr. Rohrbach moved to suppress the seized evidence and petitioned for

Writ of Habeas Corpus. He contended that, if the court suppressed all of the

Commonwealth’s evidence, it would be unable to make a prima facie case.

After a hearing, the suppression court granted Mr. Rohrbach full relief. This

timely appeal followed.

      The Commonwealth asks whether the suppression court “erred by

concluding that [the police] lacked reasonable suspicion for an investigative

detention of [Mr. Rohrbach]?” Commonwealth’s Brief at 4.

      When reviewing an order granting suppression, our scope of review only

includes “the evidence of the defendant’s witnesses and so much of the

evidence for the prosecution as read in the context of the record as a whole

remains uncontradicted.” Commonwealth v. Lindblom, 854 A.2d 604, 606

(Pa. Super. 2004). Where, as here, police invaded the privacy of an individual

without a warrant, we review whether they possessed reasonable suspicion or

probable cause de novo. See Ornelas v. United State, 517 U.S. 690 (1996).

      The Commonwealth argues the suppression court erroneously ignored

“criminal activity that [was] occurring or [had] occurred, [i.e.,] the suspicious

vehicles reported by the business owner of the Freedom Gymnasium that

appeared to be [engaged] in some type of drug activity.” Id. at 13. The

Commonwealth believes that the owner’s prior reports, coupled with the fact

that Mr. Rohrbach was parked in a dark section of the gym’s parking lot at

1:15 a.m., and that the vehicle began to back up when the police cruiser

approached, gave rise to reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was afoot.

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It additionally states, “there was an odor of [cannabis] in the area of the

vehicle that [the trooper] could only observe once he exited his patrol vehicle.”

Id. at 14.

       The suppression court found that, when the troopers honked their horn

at Mr. Rohrbach, they seized him for an investigative detention, commonly

known as a Terry stop.2 Under the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of

the United States, police may initiate a Terry stop based upon reasonable

suspicion that the seized individual is involved in criminal activity. See Terry

v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 30 (1968).                “Pennsylvania courts have consistently

followed Terry in stop-and-frisk cases, including those in which the appellants

allege protections pursuant to Article I, § 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution.”

In re D.M., 781 A.2d 1161, 1163 (Pa. 2001); see also Commonwealth v.

Jefferson, 853 A.2d 404 (Pa. Super. 2004) (accord). Thus, Article I, § 8

provides citizens no greater protections from Terry stops than the Fourth

Amendment.

       “In order to determine whether the police had a reasonable suspicion

[when they executed a Terry stop], the totality of the circumstances — the

whole picture — must be considered.” D.M., supra, citing United States v.

Cortez, 449 U.S. 411, 417 (1981).               “Based upon that whole picture, the

detaining officers must have a particularized and objective basis for
____________________________________________

2 The Commonwealth agreed with Mr. Rohrbach and the suppression court
that the police initiated a Terry stop when they honked their horn and thereby
stopped him from driving away. See Commonwealth’s Memorandum of Law,
10/15/20, at 2.

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suspecting the particular person stopped of criminal activity.” Id. at 417–

18 (emphasis added). “[I]n determining whether the officer acted reasonably

. . . due weight must be given, not to his inchoate and unparticularized

suspicion or ‘hunch,’ but to the specific reasonable inferences which he is

entitled to draw from the facts in light of his experience.” Terry, 392 U.S. at

27.

      Here, there was nothing particularized about the reports upon which the

state police relied when they initiated their Terry stop of Mr. Rohrbach’s car.

The troopers only knew that the owner of Freedom Gymnastics had made

generalized reports of cars in the parking lot and that he believed the people

in those cars were engaged in some sort of drug activity.

      These vague reports of random criminal conduct do not describe the

people supposedly using or selling drugs or anything to identify their vehicles.

Thus, the owner’s reports extend to any car in the parking lot, including the

state police’s patrol car. The troopers’ vehicle was in the darkened section of

the empty parking lot, in the wee hours of the morning, when the gymnasium

was closed. Thus, there is as much likelihood that their car (or anyone else’s)

fit the owner’s reports. On these facts, no one had reasonable grounds to

stop the troopers’ cruiser for an investigative detention, any more than the

troopers had reasonable grounds to stop Mr. Rohrbach for one.

      Nebulous reports, like those at bar, lack the particularity required to link

anyone to a criminal act. See Cortez, supra. They may well support the

troopers’ factual assertion that this case occurred in a high-crime area.

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However, they do not give police a general warrant to stop every car in the

parking lot after business hours, without additional observations regarding a

particular vehicle that would reasonably indicate that crime was afoot. See,

e.g., Commonwealth v. Adams, 205 A.3d 1195, 1206-07 (Pa. 2019), cert.

denied sub nom. Pennsylvania v. Adams, ___ U.S. ___, 140 S. Ct. 2703

(2020) (holding that, when a car is parked in the lot of a closed business in

the middle of the night, those facts “alone do not give rise to a finding of

reasonable suspicion of criminal activity where the officer provided no specific

or articulable facts to suggest that criminal activity is occurring or has

occurred.”)

      Similarly, in Commonwealth v. Tither, 671 A.2d 1156 (Pa. Super.

1996), police were patrolling a high-crime area, notorious for drug trafficking

and prostitution, at night, when someone yelled, “5-0! 5-0!” — i.e., “street

jargon warning that police were in the area.” Id. at 1157. There was car in

front of the officer’s cruiser, and a pedestrian was reaching into it. Hearing

the warning cry, the pedestrian quickly departed on foot, and the car began

to drive away.

      The officer believed he had just witnessed a drug deal, so he followed

the car, which eventually parked on its own. “The officer stopped behind the

[car] and approached on foot.     As he arrived at the rear of the vehicle, it

started to pull away, so he knocked on the side windows of the vehicle. The

defendant stopped the vehicle again.” Id. The officer eventually arrested the

driver for DUI.

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      This Court held that the totality of the circumstances did not amount to

reasonable suspicion. “The fact that [Tither] was observed in a high crime

area known for drug-related activity is not sufficient to justify a Terry stop.

Similarly, that [Tither] drove away soon after someone yelled ‘5–0! 5–0!’ is

likewise deficient to constitute reasonable suspicion.” Id. at 1158 (citations

omitted). Also, a pedestrian leaning into Tither’s car was not criminal conduct,

even though this aroused the officer’s curiosity that it may have been a drug

deal. The Tither Court reversed the order denying suppression.

      Like the officer in Tither, the state police observed Mr. Rohrbach’s car

pull away from them in a high-crime area. At the time of this observation,

the police possessed no particularized basis for inferring that a crime was in

progress or had occurred. Even so, they honked their horn and initiated a

Terry stop. Therefore, we agree with the suppression court: the police lacked

reasonable suspicion to detain Mr. Rohrbach when they chose to do so.

      Perhaps anticipating our conclusion, the Commonwealth asks this Court,

“At what point is [the state trooper] supposed to ignore his observations?”

Commonwealth’s Brief at 13.

      This rhetorical question is unfair. Neither the Fourth Amendment nor

Terry, supra, compel police to ignore their observations. They mandate that

police keep observing until they (a) see conduct by a particular individual

leading to a reasonable suspicion that he or she may be involved in a crime,

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(b) have probable cause, or (c) obtain a warrant.3 Seizing an individual before

one of these occurs is a constitutional violation.

       In this instance, once the troopers had a hunch that Mr. Rohrbach was

DUI or had overdosed, they could have followed him as he drove from the

parking lot and through the streets of the town. Had signs of intoxication

manifested, there would have been reasonable suspicion for a Terry stop. But

the troopers elected not to do this.           Instead, they prematurely seized Mr.

Rohrbach and, therefore, intruded on his privacy without a reasonable basis.

This violated the Fourth Amendment.

       Accordingly, everything that occurred after the troopers honked their

horn (smelling cannabis near Mr. Rohrbach’s vehicle, uncovering cannabis in

it, administering field sobriety tests, obtaining self-incriminating statements,

and drawing Mr. Rohrbach’s blood) is the product of the unconstitutional traffic

stop. All of the Commonwealth’s evidence is fruit of the poisonous tree and

must be suppressed under the exclusionary rule. See Wong Sun v. United

____________________________________________

3 If in doubt, “get a warrant.” Riley v. California, 573 U.S. 373, 403 (2014).
Had the officers obtained a search warrant, we would not have had to second
guess their actions with such scrutiny. Instead, we would have deferred to a
magisterial district judge’s finding of probable cause. See Illinois v. Gates,
462 U.S. 213 (1983). Thus, the benefits of a warrant cannot be overstated.
In fact, our jurisprudence rewards police (both at suppression hearings and
on appeal) for getting one. “The Fourth Amendment demonstrates a ‘strong
preference for searches conducted pursuant to a warrant,’ Gates, supra, at
236, and the police are more likely to use the warrant process if the scrutiny
applied to a magistrate’s probable-cause determination to issue a warrant is
less than that for warrantless searches. Were we to eliminate this distinction,
we would eliminate the incentive.” Ornelas v. United States, 517 U.S. 690,
699, (1996).

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J-S23024-21

States, 371 U.S. 471 (1963).           Hence, the trial court properly granted Mr.

Rohrbach’s Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus.4

       Order affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 12/21/2021

____________________________________________

4 We note the Commonwealth raised three other issues challenging various
findings of additional constitutional violations subsequent to the stop of Mr.
Rohrbach’s car and the habeas corpus relief. See Commonwealth’s Brief at
4. The unconstitutionality of the initial stop and the resultant suppression of
the evidence renders those remaining issues moot.

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