Opinion
157
Decided December 12, 2002.
Appeal, by permission of an Associate Judge of the Court of Appeals, from an order of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the First Judicial Department, entered July 26, 2001, which (1) reversed, on the law, a judgment of the Supreme Court (Edward McLaughlin, J., at suppression hearing; Laura Drager, J., at plea and sentence) rendered in New York County, convicting defendant, upon his plea of guilty, of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the second degree, (2) vacated the judgment, and (3) dismissed the indictment.
Nicole Beder, for appellant.
Noah A. Kinigstein, for respondent.
The Legal Aid Society, amicus curiae.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Smith, Ciparick, Wesley, Rosenblatt and Graffeo concur.
This case presents our third occasion in as many years to determine the validity under the Fourth Amendment of a suspicionless police stop of a motor vehicle (see People v. Abad, 98 N.Y.2d 12; Matter of Muhammad F., 94 N.Y.2d 136, cert denied 531 U.S. 1044).
On November 16, 1996, at about 8:15 p.m., members of the Street Crime Unit of the New York City Police Department set up a roadblock at 133rd Street and 12th Avenue in Manhattan, and at 9:30 stopped the vehicle in which defendant and another person were passengers. While a sergeant spoke to the driver, another officer directed his flashlight into the car and saw a clear plastic bag containing a hard white substance, which he recognized as cocaine. The officer also spotted a brown paper bag on the floor near the other passenger's feet. The officer signaled to the sergeant that he had seen something, and all three individuals were removed from the car. The officer picked up the bags he had seen and, after confirming his identification of the substance in the first bag, arrested defendant and both other occupants.
Defendant was indicted for criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first and third degrees, and moved to suppress the evidence seized from the vehicle. Two officers participating in the roadblock testified at the suppression hearing, offering numerous reasons why that checkpoint procedure was instituted that evening. The arresting officer — Officer Arthur Schroeder — testified that the roadblock was established within the precinct in response to a recent increase in crime, including carjackings and robberies of taxi and livery cabs. He also reaffirmed his testimony before the Grand Jury that there were additional safety objectives, including substantiating currently valid safety inspections, licenses and registrations.
The senior officer responsible for initiating the roadblock, Sergeant James Gildea, explained that he decided to set it up after receiving daily criminal reports from headquarters detailing "particular crimes such as shootings, homicides, cab robberies, assault on cab drivers and carjackings and based on this information, that particular area of Manhattan North was [being] subjected to a large amount of violent crime." He added that the exact location was selected because it "[wa]s the main thoroughfare for cars leaving that region." Sergeant Gildea also testified that the roadblock was put in place to "educate cab drivers" concerning the increase in robberies and shootings, "to suppress crime" and to interdict "[d]rugs and guns." Significantly, both Officer Shroeder and Sergeant Gildea testified that the procedure was in operation for only about an hour and a half, and was dismantled approximately five minutes after defendant's arrest for drug offenses.
Supreme Court concluded that the vehicle stop was valid and denied defendant's motion to suppress. Defendant then pleaded guilty to criminal possession of a controlled substance in the second degree. The court sentenced defendant, as a second felony offender, to a term of six years to life. On defendant's appeal, the Appellate Division reversed, vacated the judgment and dismissed the indictment (see 285 A.D.2d 416). A Judge of this Court granted leave to appeal.
Discussion
In Matter of Muhammad F. ( 94 N.Y.2d 136), we reviewed a New York City Police Department program which involved random suspicionless stops of taxi and livery vehicles in targeted neighborhoods. The practice was established to combat taxi and livery cab robberies following a dramatic increase of those particular crimes in the geographical area. The program permitted officers, who were in plainclothes and using unmarked police cars on a roving patrol, to make such stops at their own discretion. Evidence indicated that such officers directed passengers to step out of the vehicle in order to search it. Noting that even a brief, suspicionless stop of an automobile nonetheless qualifies as a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, we followed Supreme Court jurisprudence in determining whether such a seizure is reasonable and, thus, constitutional by "a weighing of `(1) the gravity of the public concerns served by the seizure, (2) the degree to which the seizure advances the public interest, and (3) the severity of the interference with individual liberty'" (id. at 142 [quoting Brown v. Texas, 443 U.S. 47, 51 (1979)]). We did not question the gravity of the concern served by the program, but concluded that the other elements of the test were not met. We found the program fatally flawed by the absence of a plan embodying explicit neutral limitations on the discretion of individual officers involved in the stops.
By contrast, in People v. Abad ( 98 N.Y.2d 12), we concluded that the modified New York City program to address crimes against taxi and livery cab drivers — referred to as the Taxi/Livery Robbery Inspection Program (TRIP) — passed constitutional muster. Notably, cab owners electing to participate in TRIP displayed a decal stating "THIS VEHICLE MAY BE STOPPED AND VISUALLY INSPECTED BY THE POLICE AT ANY TIME TO ENSURE DRIVER'S SAFETY" (id. at 15). Under TRIP guidelines, spelled out in a written Police Department Operations Order, police were permitted to briefly stop and visually inspect a vehicle bearing TRIP decals. In Abad we credited the gravity of the public interest in preventing crimes against livery cab drivers — the first prong served by the program — and turned to the remaining two prongs of the Brown v. Texas analysis. We concluded that the seizure advanced the public interest (the "effectiveness" factor) and that the structure of the program reduced the intrusiveness of the stops, both objectively and subjectively. Moreover, the officers' discretion in the field was "significantly constrained by the limitation of the program to participating vehicles" (id. at 18). Thus, we held that the TRIP program was constitutional under the Fourth Amendment.
While defendant's initial appeal was pending, the Supreme Court of the United States decided City of Indianapolis v. Edmond ( 531 U.S. 32). City of Indianapolis involved a program in which the police operated checkpoints on roadways for the express purpose of interdicting illegal drug traffic into the City. A six-Justice majority of the Supreme Court held that the suspicionless stops at the checkpoints violated the Fourth Amendment because their primary purpose was essentially to serve the governmental interest in general crime control.
In its decision in the present case, the Appellate Division assumed without deciding that the roadblock was not barred by City of Indianapolis, but concluded that suppression was required because the People failed to demonstrate with specificity the gravity of the public concern that would be served by the roadblock, the first prong of theBrown v. Texas/Matter of Muhammad F. inquiry (see 285 A.D.2d 417). We agree that the stop in this case was constitutionally invalid, but on the ground that it violated the holding in City of Indianapolis.
In City of Indianapolis, the City argued that all three prongs of theBrown v. Texas test were met: that the influx of drugs and the resultant increased incidence of drug-related crimes were matters of grave public concern, that the stops appropriately advanced that public interest and that the interference with personal liberty was minimized. Moreover, the program was implemented under a plan limiting the discretion of the officers in the field.
The Supreme Court majority in City of Indianapolis accepted all of the factual premises of the City's position. In reviewing the Court's suspicionless vehicle stop precedents, however, it noted that a suspicionless roadblock stop to uncover ordinary criminal wrongdoing had never been upheld. "Rather our checkpoint cases have recognized only limited exceptions to the general rule that a seizure must be accompanied by individualized suspicion" (id. at 41 [emphasis supplied]). It was manifest to the City of Indianapolis majority that if the public interest/grave concern prong of the Brown v. Texas test could be satisfied by reference to general crime control, the exceptions would inevitably swallow up the general rule that vehicle stops require "some measure of individualized suspicion" ( 531 U.S. at 42). Otherwise, "there would be little check on the ability of the authorities to construct roadblocks for almost any conceivable law enforcement purpose" (id.). Thus, the majority reasoned that
"the gravity of the threat alone cannot be dispositive of questions concerning what means law enforcement officers may employ to pursue a given purpose. Rather in determining whether individualized suspicion is required, we must consider the nature of the interests threatened and their connection to the particular law enforcement practices at issue. We are particularly reluctant to recognize exceptions to the general rule of individualized suspicion where governmental authorities primarily pursue their general crime control ends."
(id. at 42-43). Accordingly, the Court held that, no matter how well a checkpoint program employed safeguards to prevent abusive police practices, the ends of general crime control ordinarily cannot justify vehicle stops on less than individualized suspicion.
Although the dissenters in City of Indianapolis portrayed the majority holding as the creation of a new "primary purpose" test for the validity of suspicionless vehicle stops, we read the decision essentially as a refinement of the grave public interest/concern prong of the Brown v. Texas balancing process. The City of Indianapolis decision instructs us on the focus of the necessary inquiry: "[w]e must consider the nature of the interests threatened and their connection to the particular law enforcement practices at issue. * * * [W]e must look more closely at the nature of the public interests that such a regime is designed principally to serve" ( 531 U.S. at 42-43 [emphasis supplied]).
The relationship of the City of Indianapolis holding to the first Brown v. Texas factor is also evident in the majority's view that it flowed from the Court's precedents identifying the governmental interest of protecting the integrity of national borders and highway safety as legitimate objectives for roadblock procedures (see id. at 37-38 [citingUnited States v. Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U.S. 43 (1976), and Michigan Dept of State Police v. Sitz, 496 U.S. 444 (1990)]). Those cases involved nothing beyond applications of the Brown v. Texas criteria to review suspicionless vehicle stops. Additionally, the City of Indianapolis ruling relied heavily (see 531 U.S. at 41-42) on a footnote in Delaware v. Prouse ( 440 U.S. 648, 659 n. 18 [1979]), in which "controlling auto thefts" was rejected as a legitimate first-prong governmental concern forBrown v. Texas analysis because that interest "is not distinguishable from the general interest in crime control" (emphasis supplied).
Further support for this reading of City of Indianapolis is that, relying on the three-prong analysis of the roadblock stop precedents, the defense here clearly anticipated the City of Indianapolis ruling. In arguing that the stop violated the Fourth Amendment, the defense attacked the wide assortment of objectives the police ostensibly sought to achieve from the roadblock and explicitly objected that a concern based only upon a "generalized problem with increase of crime in a general area" was constitutionally insufficient to justify the roadblock procedure employed here. Thus, the City of Indianapolis holding is squarely before us under a preserved objection and is controlling authority.
Under the holding in City of Indianapolis, the People have the burden of establishing that the primary programmatic objective (not the subjective intent of the participating officers) for initiating a suspicionless vehicle stop procedure was not merely to further general crime control (see 531 U.S. at 47-48). The Court did not undertake comprehensively to delineate the kinds of particularized governmental interests for which suspicionless stops could be utilized. The Court noted that they could encompass "a smaller class of offenses * * * [where] society [is] confronted with [a] type of immediate, vehicle-bound threat to life and limb" (id. at 43). Furthermore, the Court in City of Indianapolis held that a qualifying secondary purpose of the police in setting up a roadblock would not serve to validate suspicionless stops primarily motivated by general crime control ends (see id. at 47).
The Court, however, recognized that in emergency situations, even a general crime control purpose might suffice, such as a "roadblock set up to thwart an imminent terrorist attack or to catch a dangerous criminal who is likely to flee by way of a particular route" (id. at 44).
We conclude that the roadblock stop of defendant's vehicle contravened the Fourth Amendment under the teaching of City of Indianapolis v. Edmond. The suppression hearing testimony of the officers who set up and manned the roadblock where defendant's vehicle was stopped pointed to a series of unprioritized purposes — among others, to reduce crime, educate cab drivers, prevent taxicab robberies and carjackings, and interdict drugs and guns. It is self-evident that many of these objectives were related only to general crime control. Never did the officers unequivocally point to a primary programmatic objective that would qualify under City of Indianapolis, such as addressing some "type of immediate, vehicle-bound threat to life and limb" (City of Indianapolis, at 43). Indeed, the suppression court in its decision could characterize the purpose of the roadblock only as that of "providing access to a large number of automobiles, even a large number of automobiles involving one or more form[s] of criminal activity" (emphasis supplied). Thus, the suspicionless stop here was invalid under City of Indianapolis v. Edmond, and the evidence seized as a result thereof was properly suppressed.
The People only retrospectively suggested that the prevention of taxi and livery cab robberies and carjackings was the primary objective of the police. As previously described, however, this was neither the purport of the express testimony of the police nor of the finding of the suppression court. Thus, this is not the occasion to decide whether, had that been the primary objective, it would meet the requirements of City of Indianapolis.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Order affirmed.