Court Opinion

ID: 9557045
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-21 16:08:51.66718+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:04:23.037185
License: Public Domain

J-A14030-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

  COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                 :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
  JAIME NATER                                  :
                                               :
                       Appellant               :   No. 1573 EDA 2022

        Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered April 27, 2022
  In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Criminal Division at
                      No(s): CP-51-CR-0001198-2021

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

MEMORANDUM BY DUBOW, J.:                              FILED AUGUST 21, 2023

       Appellant, Jamie Nater, appeals from the April 27, 2022 Judgment of

Sentence of four to eight years of incarceration entered in the Philadelphia

County Court of Common Pleas following his conviction of one count each of

Possession of a Firearm without a License, Possession of a Firearm by a

Prohibited Person, and Unlawfully Carrying a Firearm in Public.1        Appellant

challenges the denial of his motion to suppress.         After careful review, we

affirm.

       The relevant facts and procedural history are as follows.       Just after

midnight on August 16, 2020, Philadelphia Police Officers Mark Wildsmith and

Anthony Agudo were on patrol car near 3100 “A” Street in the Kensington

neighborhood of Philadelphia. The officers were familiar with that area as the

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1 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 6106, 6105, and 6108, respectively.
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police district’s “crime hub.”2, 3 As the officers were driving on Clearfield Street

approaching “A” Street, Officer Wildsmith observed Appellant cross the street

on an angle, clutching a very large, heavy object on the right hip of his sweat

shorts. Based on his more than five years of experience, Officer Wildsmith

believed that the object was a gun.

       Officer Redmond,4 who was driving the vehicle, reversed back up

Clearfield Street and Officer Wildsmith briefly lost sight of Appellant. Officer

Redmond then stopped the vehicle and all the officers exited to investigate.

Moments later when Officer Wildsmith again caught sight of Appellant,

Appellant was no longer walking “with the same demeanor.”5 Believing that

Appellant had just discarded a weapon, Officer Wildsmith proceeded to

conduct a stop of Appellant to further investigate.

       Meanwhile, upon his exit from the police car, Officer Agudo heard a

metal object hit the ground. At that point, he took out his flashlight and began

looking around in the area, ultimately locating a discarded firearm in the

vacant lot adjacent to where Officer Wildsmith had initially seen Appellant.
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2 N.T. Hr’g and Trial, 11/3/21, at 10. Officer Wildsmith explained that “[i]t is
a very high crime area. That’s one of the areas we have the most shooting
incidents, homicides. There’s also a lot of illegal drug sales within the area.”
Id.

3 In fact, a shooting took place in the area while the police officers were
arresting Appellant.

4 Officer Redmond’s first name does not appear in the record.

5 Id. at 19.

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      As a result of this encounter, police arrested Appellant and charged him

with the above offenses.

      On November 3, 2021, Appellant’s counsel litigated a motion to

suppress the firearm that Appellant discarded when the police officers

approached him to investigate. Officers Wildsmith and Agudo testified to the

above facts. Officer Wildsmith also testified that he probably said something

to Appellant from his vehicle, but he did not recall what it was. After hearing

the testimony and counsels’ arguments, the trial court concluded that

Appellant had not been seized when he abandoned the firearm and, in the

alternative, that the officers would have had reasonable suspicion for an

investigative stop of Appellant. The court, thus, denied Appellant’s motion to

suppress. Appellant immediately waived his right to a jury trial and proceeded

to a bench trial following which the trial court convicted him of the charged

offenses.

      On April 27, 2022, the trial court sentenced Appellant to an aggregate

term of four to eight years of incarceration. Appellant filed a post-sentence

motion, which the court denied.

      This appeal followed. Both Appellant and the trial court complied with

Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

      Appellant raises the following issue on appeal:

      Did the lower court err in denying [Appellant’s] motion to suppress
      where he was seized by police without reasonable suspicion or
      probable cause and thereafter forced to abandon a firearm?

Appellant’s Brief at 3.

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                                      A.

     Our standard of review for the denial of a suppression motion is well

established:

     [The] standard of review in addressing a challenge to a trial court’s
     denial of a suppression motion is whether the factual findings are
     supported by the record and whether the legal conclusions drawn
     from those facts are correct. When reviewing such a ruling by the
     suppression court, we must consider only the evidence of the
     prosecution and so much of the evidence of the defense as
     remains uncontradicted when read in the context of the record ...
     Where the record supports the findings of the suppression court,
     we are bound by those facts and may reverse only if legal
     conclusions drawn therefrom are in error.

Commonwealth v. Bush, 166 A.3d 1278, 1282 (Pa. Super. 2017).                 Our

scope of review in suppression matters is limited to the suppression hearing

record and excludes any evidence elicited at trial. In re L.J., 79 A.3d 1073,

1085 (Pa. 2013).

     The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article 1,

Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution protect citizens from unreasonable

searches and seizures. In re D.M., 781 A.2d 1161, 1163 (Pa. 2001). “To

secure the right of citizens to be free from [unreasonable searches and

seizures], courts in Pennsylvania require law enforcement officers to

demonstrate ascending levels of suspicion to justify their interactions with

citizens as those interactions become more intrusive.” Commonwealth v.

Beasley, 761 A.2d 621, 624 (Pa. Super. 2000).         There are three defined

categories of interaction between citizens and police officers: (1) mere

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encounter, (2) investigative detention, and (3) custodial detention.          See

Commonwealth v. Collins, 950 A.2d 1041, 1046 (Pa. Super. 2008).

      A mere encounter between a police officer and a citizen does not need

to be supported by any level of suspicion and “carries no official compulsion

on the part of the citizen to stop or to respond.” Commonwealth v. Fuller,

940 A.2d 476, 479 (Pa. Super. 2007). There is no constitutional provision

that prohibits police officers from approaching a citizen in public to make

inquiries of them. See Beasley, supra at 624; see also Commonwealth

v. Lyles, 97 A.3d 298, 303-04 (Pa. 2014) (finding a mere encounter where

two uniformed police officers arrived in an unmarked police car, approached

the defendant, and asked for identification).

      Police pursuit for the purposes of an investigatory detention can be

justified if officers have an objectively reasonable suspicion that crime is afoot.

Commonwealth v. Holmes, 14 A.3d 89, 96 (Pa. 2011).                   “Reasonable

suspicion must be based on specific and articulable facts, and it must be

assessed based upon the totality of the circumstances viewed through the

eyes of a trained police officer.” Commonwealth v. Williams, 980 A.2d 667,

671 (Pa. Super. 2009).

      A defendant has no standing to contest the search and seizure of items

that he has voluntarily abandoned or relinquished because he has no privacy

expectation in the property. Commonwealth v. Byrd, 987 A.2d 786, 790

(Pa. Super. 2009). If the abandonment is coerced by unlawful police action,

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then the state-based constitutional principle of forced abandonment forbids

using the property for evidentiary purposes. Id. at 791.

                                     B.

      Appellant claims that the trial court erred in finding that that he

voluntarily abandoned his firearm before police officers seized him.

Appellant’s Brief at 15-20.    He asserts that the trial court should have

suppressed the firearm because its “abandonment was preceded by coercive

police action.”   Id. at 15.   Distinguishing this case from Byrd, supra,

Appellant argues that the facts, including that the officers reversed up

Clearfield Street immediately after driving past Appellant who was merely

walking alone along a residential sidewalk in the middle of the night, Officer

Wildsmith said something out the patrol vehicle’s window to Appellant as the

vehicle reversed, and “four fully armed and uniformed officers jumped out of

the police car and moved toward” him, demonstrate that the officers

conducted themselves with a show of force or authority that indicate a seizure

occurred. Id. at 17-18.

      In Byrd, the trial court granted the defendant’s motion to suppress,

finding that he abandoned a gun after observing three to five police cars

travelling the wrong way down a one-way street without their lights and sirens

activated.   Byrd, 987 A.2d at 792.       The trial court concluded that the

defendant’s abandonment of the contraband was due to an “unlawful show of

force.” Id. This Court reversed, concluding that “appellee was not deprived

of his freedom in any significant way nor could he reasonably believe that his

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freedom of action was being restricted by police conduct prior to abandoning

the handgun.” Id. at 793.

      In explaining its decision to deny Appellant’s suppression motion, the

suppression court noted that neither Officer Agudo nor Officer Wildsmith

testified that any officers used a show of force. Trial Ct. Op. at 3 (citing N.T.

at 38.). The court further stated:

      Appellant in the present case voluntarily abandoned the handgun
      and relinquished control over the object when he threw it into an
      adjacent lot. Prior to his abandonment, the police did not coerce
      or force [Appellant] to act by any show of force. Reversing and
      exiting their unmarked police vehicles did not amount to a
      meaningful show of force. As was the case in [Commonwealth
      v.] Byrd, they did not speed or activate their lights or sirens.
      Appellant was compelled by his own desire to remain undetected
      rather than an act of law enforcement outside their authority.
      Once discarded, officers were free to use the firearm for
      evidentiary purposes[.]

Id. at 7-8. Because the court concluded that the officers did not engage in

any unlawfully coercive conduct prior to Appellant’s abandonment of the

firearm, it denied Appellant’s suppression motion.          Id. at 3-5 (citing

Commonwealth v. Pizzaro, 723 A.2d 675, 679 (Pa. Super. 1998) (emphasis

in original) (citation omitted) (abandoned property is admissible where “[n]o

improper or unlawful act [is] committed by the officer prior to the evidence

being abandoned.”).

      Following our review, we find that the record supports the trial court’s

findings of fact. In addition, we agree with the court’s legal conclusion that

Appellant’s abandonment of the firearm was not caused by any unlawful or

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coercive action. The record reflects that, prior to Appellant abandoning his

firearm, the officers were conducting a routine patrol of a high-crime area in

an unmarked car. They observed Appellant holding onto a very large object

in the hip of his sweat shorts. The officers did not activate any lights or sirens,

order Appellant to stop, or exhibit any show of force. Rather, Officer Redmond

merely backed the patrol car up Clearfield Street for the officers to investigate

further.   After Officer Redmond stopped the patrol vehicle, Officer Agudo

exited and heard a metallic object hit the ground. Only then did the officers

stop Appellant. Critically, the officers’ testimony indicates that Appellant had

abandoned the firearm prior to being stopped.         As was the case in Byrd,

Appellant’s desire to remain undetected, rather than any coercive act by the

officers, compelled his abandonment of the firearm.         Accordingly, the trial

court properly concluded that the Commonwealth was free to use the firearm

for evidentiary purposes. Appellant is, thus, not entitled to relief on his claim.6

       Judgment of Sentence affirmed.

____________________________________________

6 In light of our disposition, we need not address Appellant’s challenge to the

trial court alternative justification for denying his motion to suppress, i.e., that
the officers had reasonable suspicion for an investigative stop.

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Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 8/21/2023

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