COURT OF APPEALS
DECISION
DATED AND FILED
November 4, 2008
David R. Schanker
Clerk of Court of Appeals
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NOTICE
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This opinion is subject to
further editing. If published, the
official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official
Reports.
A party may file with the
Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of
Appeals. See Wis. Stat. § 808.10 and Rule 809.62.
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Appeal No.
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STATE OF WISCONSIN
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IN COURT OF
APPEALS
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DISTRICT III
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State of Wisconsin,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
Christopher Shannon Copeland,
Defendant-Appellant.
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APPEAL
from a judgment of the circuit court for Marinette County: david
g. miron, Judge. Affirmed.
Before Hoover,
P.J., Peterson and Brunner, JJ.
¶1 PER CURIAM. Christopher Copeland appeals a
judgment, entered upon his no contest plea, convicting him of possession with
intent to deliver between five and fifteen grams of cocaine, as party to a crime,
contrary to Wis. Stat. §§ 961.41(1m)(cm)2
and 939.05 (2005-06). Copeland argues
the circuit court erred by denying his suppression motion because the police
lacked: (1) reasonable suspicion to
stop the vehicle in which he was a passenger; and (2) probable cause to
arrest him. We reject Copeland’s
arguments. Because the circuit court
properly denied Copeland’s suppression motion, we affirm the judgment of
conviction.
Background
¶2 The State charged Copeland with delivering more than fifteen
but not more than forty grams of cocaine, as party to a crime. Copeland filed a motion to suppress evidence
on grounds that the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to stop the vehicle in
which Copeland was a passenger. At the
suppression motion hearing, Marinette
County sheriff’s
deputy Rick Berlin testified about information he received regarding cocaine
dealing in the Marinette area.
¶3 In October 2006, Berlin
received information about a black male named Dee or Davon selling cocaine out
of a home located at 1311
Marinette Avenue.
A few weeks later, a Crime Stoppers caller reported that a black male
and a female “came up from the Green
Bay area,” had a large amount of crack cocaine and
were selling the drugs from a trailer park near the Brothers Three Restaurant
on Marinette Avenue. The tip included a description of the vehicle
the female was driving and further indicated that the female was making
deliveries to a bar called Mark’s Place.
Police conducted surveillance in the area and saw a woman driving the
described vehicle between the trailer park, 1311 Marinette Avenue and Mark’s
Place. The woman was stopped and found
to be in possession of crack cocaine and between $2,500 and $2,700.
¶4 On December 7, 2006, police received a Crime Stoppers tip
indicating that a black male named Dee or
Davon and his son were selling cocaine out of Mark’s Place and in the parking
lots of Subway and Hometown Restaurant.
According to the tipster, Dee resided
in a bed and breakfast located next to 1311 Marinette Avenue and might be
driving a green Cadillac or a blue Blazer.
¶5 On December 13, 2006, another Crime Stoppers tip indicated
Dee or Davon was going to Green Bay
twice a day to pick up cocaine, and that he may be accompanied by another black
male named Tim, and an unidentified “Indian” male. The tipster claimed Dee
would bring “about twenty bags at a time” to Patti Bird, who was staying
at the Marinette Inn and selling drugs out of her room. Berlin
knew Bird from his previous investigation of a cocaine conspiracy.
¶6 On December 14, 2006, Berlin
conducted surveillance in the area of the Marinette Inn and saw a blue pickup
truck outside of what he believed was Bird’s room. The truck was registered to Anthony Smith,
another person whom Berlin
knew from prior cocaine conspiracy investigations. During continued surveillance of the area on
December 15, Berlin
saw a blue Blazer parked at 1311
Marinette Avenue.
¶7 On January 3, 2007, another officer described to Berlin his interview
with Brooke Ryan. During the interview
on an unrelated matter, Ryan told the officer that a man named Davon was
selling powder and crack cocaine out of a room at the Marinette Inn. Ryan indicated that Davon and another black
male identified as Dexter would go to Green
Bay to pick up cocaine, but because neither had a
driver’s license, others would drive them around. Ryan further indicated that Margie Hensley
was driving the men. Berlin knew Hensley from past investigations
of cocaine activity in the area.
¶8 On January 15, 2007, Berlin
received a phone call from Andy Holder, a man Berlin knew from past contacts on unrelated
criminal matters. Holder indicated a
black male named Davon was involved with cocaine trafficking and would bring
the cocaine to “Patti’s” room at either the Chalet Motel or the Marinette
Inn. Holder further indicated Patti was
the “pharmacist,” responsible for converting the cocaine into crack cocaine for
resale. Holder stated Davon was selling
cocaine out of Mark’s Place with two other black men, Dex and Tim. Holder also stated Davon would travel to Green Bay two or three
times daily to pick up cocaine.
¶9 On January 22, 2007, a Crime Stoppers caller reported Davon
and his cousin were selling cocaine out of Mark’s Place, as well as two
residences in Menominee that Berlin knew as drug houses that had been under
past police surveillance. The tipster
further reported that Hensley was driving Davon to pick up cocaine in Green Bay two or three
times daily. According to the tipster,
Davon would bring the cocaine to Bird at the Marinette Inn, the Chalet Motel or
the Super 8 Motel. Bird would then
convert the cocaine into crack cocaine for resale.
¶10 On January 24, 2007, Lieutenant Greg Nast from the Menominee
Police Department informed Berlin
that he had been conducting surveillance in an area of Menominee that a Crime
Stoppers tip had identified as a cocaine trafficking area. Nast reported seeing a black male make a
hand-to-hand exchange with a white male.
Nast also reported seeing a maroon Pontiac Grand Am with a temporary
Wisconsin license plate that Berlin
learned was registered to Hensley.
¶11 On January 25, 2007, Berlin
spoke with Marcella Elias, a woman who had contacted the police regarding her
daughter’s drug use. At the suppression
motion hearing, Elias relayed what she told Berlin—specifically,
that her daughter said she was getting cocaine from a man named Davon, who was
picking the drugs up from Green Bay
several times daily. Elias recounted
that Davon was black, that he had come to her home, and that she had seen him
in a maroon Pontiac with temporary license plates. Elias further indicated that a woman named
Patti frequently called her home, saying that Elias’s daughter owed her
money. According to Elias, the caller
identification indicated the call originated at the Marinette Inn.
¶12 On January 26, 2007, Berlin
conducted surveillance near the Marinette Inn and Mark’s Place. Berlin saw
the Pontiac
registered to Hensley leave the Marinette Inn with a white male driving, a
female passenger and a black male, later identified as Copeland, in the back
seat. The Pontiac traveled to the Super 8 Motel and
Mark’s Place, where it stayed for approximately one hour. The car, with an additional passenger in the
back seat, then left Mark’s Place and headed south on a route that would take
the car to Green Bay. When the car returned approximately four
hours later, law enforcement stopped the vehicle and, upon their approach, saw
three sandwich bags containing cocaine in plain view on the floor in front of
the back seat.
¶13 Based on the hearing testimony, the court denied the
suppression motion, concluding there was both reasonable suspicion to stop the
vehicle and probable cause to arrest Copeland.
Copeland ultimately pled no contest to a reduced charge of possession
with the intent to deliver between five and fifteen grams of cocaine, as party
to a crime. The court imposed a ten-year
sentence consisting of five years’ initial confinement and five years’ extended
supervision. This appeal follows.
Discussion
¶14 Copeland argues the police lacked reasonable suspicion to stop
the vehicle in which he was a passenger.
Officers may stop and detain an individual if they have reasonable
suspicion the individual committed a crime.
See Terry v. Ohio,
392 U.S. 1, 30 (1968); State
v. Guzy, 139 Wis.
2d 663, 675, 407 N.W.2d 548 (1987). When
determining if the standard of reasonable suspicion was met, those facts known
to the officer must be considered together as a totality of the
circumstances. State v. Richardson, 156 Wis. 2d 128, 139-40, 456
N.W.2d 830 (1990). An informant’s tip
may provide a law enforcement officer reasonable suspicion to effectuate a Terry
stop. See State v. Rutzinski, 2001 WI 22, ¶17, 241 Wis. 2d 729, 623 N.W.2d 516. Because informants’ tips vary greatly in
reliability, the police must consider the tip’s reliability and content before
it can provide grounds for an investigative stop. Id.
Tips should exhibit reasonable indicia of
reliability. In assessing the
reliability of a tip, due weight must be given to: (1) the informant’s veracity; and (2) the
informant’s basis of knowledge. These
considerations should be viewed in light of the “totality of the
circumstances,” and not as discrete elements of a more rigid test: “[A] deficiency in one [consideration] may be
compensated for, in determining the overall reliability of a tip, by a strong
showing as to the other, or by some other indicia of reliability.” Although there is no per se rule of
reliability, these considerations outline a general spectrum of potential types
of tips that, under specific circumstances, can give rise to a reasonable
suspicion.
Id.,
¶18 (citing Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 233 (1983) (internal
citations omitted)).
¶15 When police receive a tip from an informant that they are
reasonably justified in believing to be truthful, police may rely solely on the
tip to provide reasonable suspicion for a stop.
Rutzinski, 241 Wis.
2d 729, ¶¶19-21. The reasonable
justification often arises where the police know the informant’s identity and
perhaps have received reliable tips in the past. Id. In turn, a citizen informant, who happens
upon a crime or suspicious activity and reports it to police, is subject to a
much less stringent standard of reliability.
State v. Kolk, 2006 WI App 261, ¶12, 298 Wis. 2d 99, 726 N.W.2d 337. The reliability of a citizen informant is
“evaluated from the nature of his report, his opportunity to hear and see the
matters reported, and the extent to which it can be verified by independent
police investigation.” Id. ¶13. Finally, when the tip is totally anonymous,
the police must corroborate the information in the tip through independent
investigation. Rutzinski, 241 Wis. 2d 729, ¶22. “[I]f a tip has a relatively low degree of
reliability, more information will be required to establish the requisite
quantum of suspicion than would be required if the tip were more
reliable.” Id.,
¶23 (quoting Alabama v. White, 496 U.S. 325, 330 (1990)). A tip from an unidentified informant may
nonetheless be “deemed reliable if it contains ‘inside information’ or a
similar verifiable explanation of how the informant came to know of the
information in the tip, which the police in turn independently corroborate.” Id.,
¶25. In other words, “if a tip contains
strong indicia of an informant’s basis of knowledge, there need not necessarily
be any indicia of the informant’s veracity.”
Id. Further, the corroborated details of the tip
need not be “inherently suspicious or criminal in and of themselves.” Richardson, 156 Wis. 2d at 142. Rather, “the corroboration by police of
innocent details of an anonymous tip may under the totality of the
circumstances give rise to reasonable suspicion to make a stop.” Id.
¶16 Here, Copeland claims the tips on which the police relied were
not sufficiently reliable to warrant the stop, largely because police did not
adequately corroborate the tips before stopping the vehicle. We are not persuaded.
¶17 Copeland argues the police failed to adequately corroborate the
information Elias provided.
Specifically, Copeland faults the police for not examining the suspected
drugs and paraphernalia Elias found in her house, and for not having Elias
identify Davon from a photo array.
Copeland likewise claims Berlin
failed to sufficiently corroborate details such as the identity of the black
male involved in the hand-to-hand exchange reported by Nast, as well as the
relevance of Crime Stopper references to a green Cadillac and blue Blazer. The issue is not, however, what the police
could have corroborated but, rather, what they did corroborate and whether the
corroborated information established reasonable suspicion for the stop. That the police did not corroborate certain aspects
of certain tips does not prevent them from conducting a stop based on the
information that was
corroborated.
¶18 Copeland also challenges the information provided by Holder and
Ryan on grounds that they had no history of providing reliable information to
the police and did not reveal their basis of knowledge. While an informant may be considered more
reliable if he or she has provided a reliable tip in the past and reveals the
basis of his or her knowledge, a tip is not necessarily unreliable due to the
absence of these factors. There are “no
specific prerequisites to a finding of confidential informant
reliability.” State v. Jones, 2002 WI
App 196, ¶13, 257 Wis.
2d 319, 651 N.W.2d 305. Here, Ryan and
Holder provided information about the trips to purchase cocaine in Green Bay, and the drug
activity at the Marinette Inn—information corroborated through police
surveillance and other sources. We
discern no error.
¶19 Copeland also challenges Berlin’s
failure to identify Hensley or Davon at any of the places Hensley’s car was
seen or any of the places drugs were alleged to have been sold. Copeland likewise contends Berlin should have been able to identify
Hensley on the day of the stop, as he knew her from previous police
contact. Even in the absence of a
positive identification of either Hensley or Davon, the police had reasonable
suspicion to stop the vehicle.
¶20 At the time of the stop, law enforcement had received
information about cocaine dealing in the area from at least five sources: Ryan, Holder, Nast, Elias and the tipster or
tipsters who called Crime Stoppers. With
the exception of Nast, all of the informants reported that a man named Dee or Davon was dealing cocaine near 1311 Marinette Avenue or out of the
Marinette Inn. Again, with the exception
of Nast, all the informants indicated Davon was obtaining the cocaine during
several daily trips to Green Bay. Both Ryan and a Crime Stoppers tipster indicated
Hensley was driving Davon to Green Bay, and Nast related seeing Hensley’s car
parked at a Menominee residence, in an area suspected of cocaine
trafficking. Hensley’s maroon Pontiac
with temporary license plates matched the description of a vehicle in which
Elias had seen Davon at her home. Police
were familiar with Hensley and Bird, as both had histories of involvement with
cocaine. Police observed Hensley’s
vehicle at several places suspected of drug trafficking and further observed
the vehicle leave town and return in a manner consistent with the multiple tips
received. That neither Davon nor Hensley
were positively identified on the day of the stop did not preclude the police
from reasonably believing that criminal activity was occurring in Hensley’s
vehicle when they stopped it. Given the
interlocking and overlapping tips the police received, and the extent to which
the information was corroborated, we conclude the officers had reasonable
suspicion to stop the vehicle.
¶21 Alternatively, Copeland argues the police lacked probable cause
to arrest him. Whether the facts of a
given case constitute probable cause to arrest is a question of law that we
decide independently. See State v. Kasian, 207 Wis. 2d 611, 621, 558 N.W.2d 687 (Ct. App.
1996). “Probable cause exists where the
totality of the circumstances within the arresting officer’s knowledge at the
time of the arrest would lead a reasonable police officer to believe that the
defendant probably committed a crime.” State
v. Riddle, 192 Wis.
2d 470, 476, 531 N.W.2d 408 (Ct. App. 1995).
¶22 Copeland appears to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence
to support the court’s conclusion that probable cause existed for his
arrest. Specifically, Copeland claims
the State failed to establish how the cocaine could have been in plain view
after 6 p.m. in January. Copeland,
however, failed to raise this argument in the circuit court. Copeland cannot challenge what he claims is a
lack of evidence on the State’s part when he failed to raise the argument
below. See Terpstra v. Soiltest, Inc., 63 Wis. 2d 585, 593, 218 N.W.2d 129 (1974). In the absence of any cross-examination to the
contrary, the court had a right to believe Berlin’s testimony that the cocaine was
found in plain view. The record
therefore supports the conclusion that there was probable cause to arrest
Copeland.
By the Court.—Judgment affirmed.
This
opinion will not be published. See Wis. Stat. Rule 809.23(1)(b)5
(2005-06).