Court Opinion

ID: 9895862
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-08 20:10:39.855798+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:12:21.906099
License: Public Domain

J-S21043-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

  COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                 :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                       Appellant               :
                                               :
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
  SAQUANA TAWANE LAYER                         :   No. 1489 MDA 2022

              Appeal from the Order Entered October 13, 2022
  In the Court of Common Pleas of York County Criminal Division at No(s):
                         CP-67-CR-0005925-2021

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

DISSENTING MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                 FILED NOVEMBER 08, 2023

       Both of my esteemed colleagues agree that Layer’s suppression motion

was correctly granted because the officers’ discovery of the contraband

occurred outside the bounds of a legitimate protective sweep. In the lead

memorandum, Judge Pellegrini, standing alone, further opines that the police

had no valid reason to conduct a protective sweep of the upper floor of the

house in the first place. I respectfully disagree with both positions. I would

hold that neither basis warranted suppression because the contraband was

properly observed in plain view during a justified protective sweep. Therefore,

I dissent.

       I begin by reiterating our standard of review.       If supported by the

certified record, we are bound by a suppression court’s findings of fact. See,

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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e.g., Commonwealth v. Ross, 297 A.3d 787, 791 (Pa.Super. 2023) (citation

omitted).   “The suppression court’s conclusions of law, however, are not

binding on an appellate court, whose duty is to determine if the suppression

court properly applied the law to the facts.” Id. (citation omitted).

      The facts found by the trial court relevant to the decision to conduct a

protective sweep are supported by the certified record and are as follows. See

Trial Court Opinion, 12/22/22, at 2-3, 6. When arriving to execute the arrest

warrant for Hightower, the police were unsure of the number of people in the

house because they had been unable to surveil the rear of the property.

Suppression Hearing, 4/8/22, at 28. Initially, when the police knocked and

announced their presence, they observed movement in an upstairs window.

Id. at 7, 40. The officers encountered physical resistance at the front door

while taking Hightower into custody and pushback from the other side of the

door after Hightower was outside and handcuffed. Id. at 8-9, 40-41.

      Even with Hightower secured, however, the police had an another ten

to fifteen minutes of tasks to perform before finalizing the arrest and leaving

with him.   Id. at 10.    Specifically, the arrestee had to be prepared for

transportation, which involved addressing “shoes, shirts, phone numbers,

medications, things of that nature.” Id. In addition, the officers there were

required to prepare a receipt inventory considering there was a warrant

executed, which alone would take several minutes. Id. Accordingly, with any

unknown occupants posing a potential safety threat to the officers while they

remained on site, Officer Adam Nothstein and other officers entered the

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residence to begin performing a protective sweep “immediately” after

Hightower was cuffed. Id. at 43.

      The lead memorandum, by maintaining that the sweep was not

warranted on the ground that officers had secured the suspected occupants

in the building, appears to oversimplify the arrest procedure and disregard the

trial court’s factual findings. Since the sustainable findings of the court amply

demonstrate that the officers articulated “specific facts to justify a reasonable

fear for the safety of [the] police officers,” the subsequent sweep was legally

justified.   Commonwealth Hall, 199 A.3d 954, 95 (Pa.Super. 2018).

Accordingly, I would not disturb the trial court’s determination in this regard.

      Likewise, I cannot agree with the combined Majority’s alternative

holding that even if the protective sweep of the second-floor bedroom was

proper, Officer Fouad nonetheless exceeded the scope of the sweep at the

time he observed the marijuana and packaging materials on the dresser. I

believe that this rationale, which essentially adopts the trial court’s basis for

granting suppression, misapplies the law to the facts surrounding the

execution of the sweep.      I would find that suppression was not warranted

because the marijuana and other contraband discovered on the dresser were

properly observed by Officer Fouad in plain view.

      It is well-settled that, since “[t]here can be no reasonable expectation

of privacy in an object that is in plain view,” there is no constitutional violation

for “the warrantless seizure of an object when: (1) an officer views the object

from a lawful vantage point; (2) it is immediately apparent to him that the

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object is incriminating; and (3) the officer has a lawful right of access to the

object.”   Commonwealth v. Heidelberg, 267 A.3d 492, 504 (Pa.Super.

2022) (en banc) (cleaned up). “To judge whether the incriminating nature of

an object was immediately apparent to the police officer, reviewing courts

must consider the totality of the circumstances. In viewing the totality of the

circumstances, the officer’s training and experience should be considered.”

Id. (cleaned up).

      In their discussion, my colleagues properly disregard the fact that the

officer observed wads of cash in the top dresser drawer because the trial court

determined that, as a matter of fact, the dresser was closed at the time of the

sweep. See Lead Memorandum at 13-14; Concurring Memorandum at 2-3.

However, they then proceed to state as follows:

            Officer Fouad also acknowledged that no one could hide
      behind the dresser because it was positioned against a wall, nor
      could anyone fit within the dresser drawers.         Under these
      circumstances, we would conclude that a limited protective sweep
      of the second floor for hidden persons would not have led to police
      observation of tiny specks of suspected marijuana on top of a
      dresser.

Lead Memorandum at 14. By making this determination, I believe that the

Majority either applies an improper and overly restrictive interpretation of the

plain-view doctrine or disregards it entirely.

      This Court has defined a protective sweep as “a quick and limited search

of premises, incident to an arrest and conducted to protect the safety of police

officers or others.” Commonwealth v. Potts, 73 A.3d 1275, 1282 (Pa.Super.

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2013). Consistent with that purpose, we have stated that a search for persons

“cannot be lengthy or unduly disruptive.” Commonwealth v. Crouse, 729

A.2d 588, 598 (Pa.Super. 1999).       Nonetheless, an officer conducting this

search is not required to avert his gaze from contraband visible from his lawful

vantage point.     See Commonwealth v. Potts, 73 A.3d 1275, 1282

(Pa.Super. 2013) (concluding that “officers were not required to ignore the

marijuana they saw in [the a]ppellant’s bedroom while conducting [a

protective] sweep”).

      Here, the door to the master bedroom could not be fully opened to be

flush with the wall, as the dresser in question was behind it. See Defendant’s

Exhibit 6. Therefore, to ascertain whether someone was hiding in the corner

of the room behind the door, Officer Fouad was required to partially close the

door and look behind it. As he did so, the top of the dresser was immediately

present before him, in plain view and close proximity. See N.T. Suppression

Hearing, 4/8/22, at 81 (Officer Fouad testifying that the top of the dresser

was about the same height as his shoulders). From his vantage point, without

manipulation of any items, he was able to see loose marijuana, a box of

sandwich bags, and a stack of resealable packets containing cartoon

depictions of colorful anthropomorphic fruit with bloodshot eyes smoking

marijuana cigarettes. The bundle of resealable packets sat on the corner of

the dresser that was next to the hinge of the bedroom door, closest in point

to where any reasonable officer would look to see if someone was hiding

behind the door. See Defendant’s Exhibit 4. The bits of marijuana leaf, while

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not particularly large, appeared vibrant in color and were close to the other

contraband in the center of the dresser. See Defendant’s Exhibit 5.

      From these uncontroverted facts, I cannot agree with my learned

colleagues that Officer Fouad exceeded the scope of the sweep at the moment

he observed these items. The evidence does not suggest that he engaged in

any lengthy or disruptive search while preforming the sweep, nor is there any

support for a contention that Officer Fouad’s observations entailed closely

looking at the dresser in a way that exceeded the scope of the protective

sweep.   Concerning the loose marijuana, while certain photographs of the

dresser from a distance made it difficult to discern the specks, Officer Fouad

was clear in his testimony that his point of view at the time of the sweep was

not as far away as the perspective in most of the photos.             See N.T.

Suppression Hearing, 4/8/22, at 66. Additionally, while the Majority cursorily

notes the small size of the marijuana leaves, it seemingly overlooks the readily

apparent box of marijuana paraphernalia on top of the dresser inches away.

The officer testified that based on his training experience, these other items

found are used as “packaging for weed, for marijuana.” Id. at 65.

      To the extent the Majority’s holding relies upon a finding that the officer

was only permitted to scan the limited area behind the door without physically

observing any items on top of the dresser, this is not the law. See Potts,

supra at 1282. In my view, that interpretation of the plain-view doctrine

would unreasonably require a police officer who sees drug-packing items in

plain view on a bedroom dresser to close his eyes and disregard other

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incriminating items nearby simply because it is smaller in size.      I cannot

condone such a restrictive interpretation.

      Accordingly, I would hold that the Officer Fouad’s observations of the

contraband and marijuana on the dresser were proper under the plain-view

doctrine and, consequently, the evidence obtained from execution of the

search warrant was not excludable as fruit of the poisonous tree. Therefore,

I believe the trial court erred in suppressing the items ultimately seized from

the residence.

      For all of the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.

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