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Command College Annual Legal Issues Update 2015! Presented Command College Annual Legal Issues Update 2015! Presented

Command College Annual Legal Issues Update 2015! Presented - PowerPoint Presentation

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Command College Annual Legal Issues Update 2015! Presented - PPT Presentation

Command College Annual Legal Issues Update 2015 Presented by J Dale Mann manndale53yahoocom Supreme Court holdings sculpt out at least theoretically three tiers of policecitizen encounters 1 communication between police and citizens involving no coercion or detention and theref ID: 761243

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Command College Annual Legal Issues Update 2015! Presented by:J. Dale Mannmanndale53@yahoo.com

Supreme Court holdings sculpt out, at least theoretically, three tiers of police‑citizen encounters: (1) communication between police and citizens involving no coercion or detention and therefore without the compass of the Fourth Amendment, (2) brief 'seizures' that must be supported by reasonable suspicion, and (3) full‑scale arrests that must be supported by probable cause. Under the first tier, a police officer may approach an individual and ask a few questions without triggering Fourth Amendment scrutiny. The second tier occurs when the officer actually conducts a brief investigative Terry stop of the citizen. 2

In this level, Tier 2, a police officer, even in the absence of probable cause, may stop persons and detain them briefly, when the officer has a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the persons are involved in criminal activity. The third tier is an actual or de facto arrest which requires probable cause and involves restraint of one's liberty. ..Lewis v. State, 233 Ga. App. 560, 560 (504 S.E.2d 732) (1998). 3

Policy, Procedure and RuleWritten Directives As a CEO, Command Staff member, or Supervisor, do you have policies, procedures and rules that:Educate and regulate the officers under your command on the issues of Tier 1, Tier 2 and Tier 3 level contacts?What training are officers given to know the legal issues that justify a Terry Stop and (maybe) Frisk?Is there a standard review of the officers’ cases with supervisors looking at the police/citizen contacts?

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013Following a jury trial, Jonathon Dryer was convicted of possession of more than one ounce of marijuana. Dryer now appeals the denial of his motion to suppress evidence, arguing that the trial court erred in ruling that his interaction with the police officer who ultimately arrested him began as a first-tier encounter that did not require reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity. For the reasons set forth infra , we agree. Accordingly, we reverse the denial of Dryer’s motion to suppress and his conviction . 5

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict,1 the record shows that around 11:00 p.m. on April 4, 2010, a Douglasville police officer was patrolling the parking lot of a local country club and golf course when he noticed a red Mercury Sable that was backed into a parking space near the lower part of the lot. And because the country club had been closed for at least two hours and there were no other vehicles in the parking lot except for a dump truck left by a construction crew, the officer drove toward the Sable in his patrol car to investigate. 6

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013As the officer approached, the Sable pulled out of the parking space and began driving toward the parking lot’s exit, which entailed driving past the officer. At that point, however, the officer activated his patrol car’s blue lights, and the Sable immediately stopped. The officer then exited his patrol car, approached the Sable, and asked the vehicle’s sole occupant, thereafter identified as Dryer, what he was doing in the country club parking lot. Dryer responded that he had played golf earlier and that he had just used the restroom located in a building near the pool at that end of the parking lot. But during this conversation, the officer smelled the odor of burnt marijuana and 7

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013noticed that Dryer appeared nervous. Consequently, the officer asked Dryer for consent to search his vehicle. And when Dryer refused, the officer requested that a K-9 unit be dispatched to the scene.While awaiting the arrival of the K-9 unit, Dryer admitted to the officer that he had smoked some marijuana and that he still had some marijuana in his vehicle. Approximately 20 minutes later, the K-9 unit arrived, and during a free-air search, the dog alerted to the presence of illegal drugs. Thereafter, the officers searched Dryer’s vehicle and found eight plastic bags containing small amounts of marijuana, 8

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013nine empty bags containing only marijuana residue, and 22 bags containing marijuana seeds and stems. Ultimately, the amount of marijuana recovered weighed nearly 2.5 ounces.Dryer was thereafter arrested and charged, via accusation, with one count of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.2 Prior to trial, he filed a motion to suppress the drug evidence found during the search of his vehicle. The trial court held a hearing, during which only the officer who initiated the encounter with Dryer testified . And at the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court denied Dryer’s motion, finding that the officer’s initial contact with Dryer was a first-tier encounter that lawfully escalated into a 9

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013second-tier encounter after the officer smelled the burnt marijuana. Subsequently, Dryer was tried, and the jury found him guilty of the lesser included charge of possession of more than one ounce of marijuana. At the outset, we note that in reviewing a trial court’s decision on a motion to suppress, “we construe the evidence most favorably to uphold the findings and judgment, and the trial court’s findings on disputed facts and credibility of the witnesses are adopted unless they are clearly erroneous .” Further , because the trial court is the trier of fact, its findings “will not be disturbed if any evidence supports them.” However, the trial court’s application of law to undisputed facts is reviewed de novo . With these guiding principles in mind, we turn now to Dryer’s sole enumeration of error. 10

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013The Supreme Court of the United States has set forth—most notably in Terry v. Ohio —three tiers of police-citizen encounters: “(1) communication between police and citizens involving no coercion or detention and therefore without the compass of the Fourth Amendment, ( 2) brief seizures that must be supported by reasonable suspicion , and ( 3) full-scale arrests that must be supported by probable cause .” And in order to “analyze a defendant’s claim that he was the victim of an illegal police detention , a court must first categorize the police-citizen encounter at issue .” 11

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013It is well established that in a first-tier encounter, police officers “may approach citizens, ask for identification, and freely question the citizen without any basis or belief that the citizen is involved in criminal activity, as long as the officers do not detain the citizen or create the impression that the citizen may not leave .” In fact , “[ t]here is no threshold requirement and indeed the individual may refuse to answer or ignore the request and go on his way if he chooses, for this does not amount to any type of restraint and is not encompassed by the Fourth Amendment .” Essentially, as long as a reasonable person would feel free to disregard the police and go on about his business, “the encounter is consensual and no reasonable suspicion is required.” 12

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013In the case sub judice, the State contends that the police officer’s initial interaction with Dryer was a consensual first-tier encounter, which required no reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity.We disagree. When the officer first observed Dryer’s vehicle it was parked, but a few moments later, as Dryer pulled out of the parking space and began driving toward the parking lot exit, the officer activated his patrol vehicle’s blue lights. Not surprisingly, Dryer immediately stopped . 13

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013And indeed, while testifying during the motion-to-suppress hearing, the officer characterized his own actions as initiating “a stop” when Dryer’s vehicle attempted to drive past him. Thus, not only did the officer create the impression that Dryer could not leave, he clearly was not going to allow Dryer to do so. Given these circumstances , the officer’s initial interaction with Dryer was not a first-tier encounter but , rather, immediately began as a second-tier encounter requiring reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity. 14

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013Nevertheless, the State, citing Collier v. State,14 argues that a police officer, whose patrol vehicle’s blue lights have been activated, may approach a defendant’s stopped vehicle, question the defendant, and that such conduct may still constitute a first-tier rather than a second-tier encounter. However, contrary to the State’s argument, the facts in Collier are distinguishable from those at issue here. In Collier , the arresting officer activated his vehicle’s blue lights while en route to investigate an alleged domestic violence incident. After he arrived on the scene and parked, the officer saw the defendant’s vehicle—which had no relation to the domestic violence call—back up in 15

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013the wrong lane of traffic, pull into a driveway nearly 50 yards down the street, and park. At that point, the officer approached the defendant’s vehicle and began the questioning that resulted in the discovery of illegal drugs. Based on these specific facts, we held that the officer did not “stop” the defendant but, rather, that the defendant “voluntarily stopped his vehicle in a driveway and that the police officer then approached his vehicle, with no indication that the officer prevented his departure other than by speaking to him .” Moreover , and importantly, we also held in Collier that the defendant’s act of backing up his car in the wrong lane of traffic was evidence of a traffic violation that provided the officer with reasonable, 16

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013articulable suspicion to justify a stop of the vehicle. Indeed, we noted that the officer even told the defendant that the improper backing prompted his questioning.In contrast, here, Dryer did not come upon a scene where an officer was already parked with his vehicle’s lights illuminated. Instead, after the officer first observed Dryer’s vehicle parked in the lot, he decided to approach and investigate. Dryer then attempted to leave but immediately stopped when the officer activated his patrol vehicle’s blue lights. 17

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013Given these facts, any argument that Dryer would have, nevertheless, felt free to ignore the police officer and continue driving away strains credulity. Thus, the trial court erred in ruling that the police officer’s initial contact with Dryer was a first-tier encounter not requiring reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity . Having concluded that this was a second-tier rather than a first-tier encounter , we must now determine whether the police officer had “a particularized and objective basis for suspecting [Dryer] of criminal activity .” We find that he did not . 18

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013There is no evidence in the record that Dryer committed any traffic violation warranting a stop. And while Dryer was parked in the country club parking lot after the club had closed, there was no evidence presented that this was a high-crime area or, more specifically, that any crimes had recently been committed at the club. Additionally, there is no evidence in the record indicating that the officer specifically believed that Dryer was trespassing, but only generally that he did not think there was any reason for Dryer to be there . However, an officer’s subjective feeling that a person is “acting in a suspicious way does not amount to a particularized and objective basis for suspecting him of criminal activity.” 19

A13A0875. DRYER v. THE STATE, ___ Ga.App.___, August 21, 2013Thus, the trial court erred in denying Dryer’s motion to suppress evidence. Accordingly, we reverse the denial of Dryer’s motion and his conviction.Judgment reversed. Andrews, P. J., and McMillian, J., concur. 20

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Decided: October 20, 2014This Court granted a writ of certiorari to the Court of Appeals in Walker v. State, 323 Ga. App. 558 (747 SE2d 51) (2013), to determine if that Court erred in reversing the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress evidence of cocaine found as a result of an encounter between a police officer and Ernest Walker, Sr. Finding that the Court of Appeals erred, we reverse that Court’s judgment. 5/29/2015 21

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER According to the facts as found by the trial court after the hearing on Walker’s motion to suppress, Officer David Adriance, of the Warner Robbins [1] Police Department, was patrolling an area near an elementary school at 12:12 a.m. on February 23, 2011; he had been advised to be on the lookout for a black male in dark clothing who was a suspect in the attempted theft of a motorcycle. Officer Adriance saw Walker, who was wearing a hooded blue sweatshirt and light-colored pants, on foot on the grounds of the school. 5/29/2015 22

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER [Footnote 1]1 “On appellate review of a ruling on a motion to suppress, the trial court's findings on disputed facts will be upheld unless clearly erroneous, and its application of the law to undisputed facts is subject to de novo review.” Registe v. State, 292 Ga. 154, 155-156 (734 SE2d 19) (2012) (Citations and punctuation omitted.) 5/29/2015 23

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Officer Adriance approached Walker, telling him to remove his hands from his pockets; rather than complying, Walker became verbally combative, yelled that he was “just trying to get home,” and “took off running through back yards, tossing stuff as he ran.” Officer Adriance gave chase and caught Walker; the items Walker discarded included crack cocaine and a pipe for smoking crack cocaine, which he sought to suppress. After a jury trial, Walker was convicted of possession of cocaine [2] with intent to distribute and obstruction of a law enforcement officer; these convictions were reversed by the Court of Appeals. 5/29/2015 24

S13G1793 The State v. Walker[Footnote 2] 2 Walker petitioned for an interlocutory appeal from the denial of his pretrial motion to suppress under the procedures of OCGA § 5-6-34 (b), and the petition was denied by the Court of Appeals.5/29/2015 25

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Further facts may be found in the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Id.As the Court of Appeals characterized the case on appeal, Walker contends that he was subjected to an investigatory detention when an officer stopped him as he stepped off the premises of an elementary school and instructed him to remove his hands from his pockets. Walker contends that the officer lacked a particularized and objective basis for suspecting that he was involved in criminal activity, as required for such a stop, and that, in the absence of any reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity, he was entitled to refuse to comply with the officer's demands and to end the encounter by running away from the officer. 5/29/2015 26

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Because the officer lacked a reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity, Walker contends, the detention violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unlawful searches and seizures, and the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress a quantity of cocaine and other drug-related items that were obtained as a result of the illegal detention.Id. at 553 (1).5/29/2015 27

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER The Court of Appeals determined that Officer Adriance lacked articulable suspicion, and in doing so, set forth the following formulation:Fourth Amendment jurisprudence recognizes three tiers of police-citizen encounters: (1) communication between police and citizens involving no coercion or detention and therefore without the compass of the Fourth Amendment, (2) brief seizures that must be supported by reasonable suspicion, and (3) full-scale arrests that must be supported by probable cause. 5/29/2015 28

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Decided: October 20, 2014In this level, a police officer, even in the absence of probable cause, may stop persons and detain them briefly, when the officer has a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the persons are involved in criminal activity. . . . To make a second-tier stop, . . . a police officer must possess more than a subjective, unparticularized suspicion or hunch. The officer's action must be justified by specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant intrusion. 5/29/2015 29

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER The Court of Appeals then concluded that the facts of the encounter showed that[w]hat the officer may have intended as a first-tier encounter . . . almost immediately escalated into a second-tier stop when the officer commanded Walker to remove his hands from his pockets; as such, the detention had to be supported by articulable suspicion. [Cit.]Id. at 561.5/29/2015 30

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER In doing so, the Court of Appeals went astray; as it properly recognized in its citation to Terry, it is a seizure of a person that must be supported by articulable suspicion. And, it is clear from the facts of this case, that Walker was not seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment by Officer Adriance’s direction that he remove his hands from his pockets; a command from a law enforcement officer, alone, is not sufficient to constitute a seizure for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Rather, under the Fourth Amendment, a seizure occurs “[o]nly when the officer, by means of physical force or show of authority , has in some way restrained the liberty of a citizen.” Terry , supra at 19 (n. 16). 5/29/2015 31

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER And, it is unquestioned that Officer Adriance did not apply any physical force to restrain Walker’s liberty until after Walker discarded the items he sought to suppress; he did not touch Walker or display a weapon, nor were other officers there such as might constitute a “threatening presence.” See United States v. Mendenhall, 446 U.S. 544, 554 (100 SCt 1870, 64 LE2d 497) (1980). Accordingly, whether Walker was seized before he abandoned the items depends upon whether he had been seized through a show of authority on Officer Adriance’s part; 5/29/2015 32

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Walker contends that he was seized when Officer Adriance told him to remove his hands from his pockets, as this was an assertion of the officer’s authority. However, this ignores clear precedent from the United States Supreme Court that, absent physical force, for an encounter with a police officer to be considered a seizure under the Fourth Amendment, there must be “submission to the assertion of authority.” Id. at 626 (Emphasis in original.) 5/29/2015 33

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER And, instead of submitting to Officer Adriance’s direction and removing his hands from his pockets, Walker ran. 5/29/2015 34

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Although Walker describes the command to take his hands out of his pockets as a “second-tier” encounter, it was not; without his submission to the command, it was at most an attempted seizure, and “[a]ttempted seizures of a person are beyond the scope of the Fourth Amendment. [Cit.]” County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833, 845 (n. 7) (118 SCt 1708, 140 LE2d 1043) (1998).[3] 5/29/2015 35

S13G1793 The State v. Walker[Footnote 3]3 In this opinion, we address only the question of whether Walker’s rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution were violated; no question is posed regarding a violation under the corresponding provision of the Georgia Constitution. See Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XIII of the Ga. Const. of 1983. Although Walker cited the Georgia Constitution in his motion to suppress, “the [trial] court ruled only on the Fourth Amendment basis, and there is no state constitutional ruling for us to review. It is appellant’s obligation to pursue the grounds he raises and obtain a ruling on them in the trial court, if he wishes to obtain appellate review. [Cits.]” Thomas v. State, 203 Ga. App. 529, 530-531 (1) (417 SE2d 529) (1992). 5/29/2015 36

S13G1793 The State v. Walker[Footnote 3 Continued] Thus, properly, the Court of Appeals did not address any such claim, and, in any event, it has been noted that our Constitution protects against “unreasonable” searches and seizures just as the Fourth Amendment does. Salermon v. State, 280 Ga. 735, 738 (1) (632 SE2d 645) (2006). Further, when this Court granted the application for certiorari, the question posed referred only to the Fourth Amendment, and did not embrace any issue under the Georgia Constitution. See id.us, properly, the Court of Appeals did not address any such claim, and, in any event, it has been noted that our Constitution protects against “unreasonable” searches and seizures just as the Fourth Amendment v . State , 280 Ga. 735, 738 (1) (632 SE2d 645) (2006). Further, when this Court granted the application for certiorari, the question posed referred only to the Fourth Amendment, and did not embrace any issue under the Georgia Constitution. See id. 5/29/2015 37

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Citing Mendenhall, supra, Walker nonetheless argues that he was seized when Officer Adriance issued the command to remove his hands from his pockets, because “a person has been ‛seized’ within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment only if, in view of all the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave,” id. at 554, and a reasonable person would so regard Officer Adriance’s direction. However, as Hodari D., supra, made clear, the existence of such a reasonable belief would not end the matter. 5/29/2015 38

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Rather, Hodari D. specifically notes that Mendenhallsays that a person has been seized “only if,” not that he has been seized “whenever”; it states a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for seizure—or, more precisely, for seizure effected through a ‛show of authority.’ 5/29/2015 39

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Hodari D., supra at 628. And, as Hodari D. also made clear, without submission to that show of authority, there was not a seizure. Walker did not submit to Officer Adriance’s command, and thus he was not seized until Officer Adriance physically seized him. That Officer Adriance pursued Walker when he ran does not alter matters as “being chased is not tantamount to being ‛seized’ in violation of the Fourth Amendment. [ Cits .]” Smith v. State , 217 Ga. App. 680 (1) (458 SE2d 704) (1995) (Emphasis in original .) 5/29/2015 40

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER See also Sims v. State, 258 Ga. App. 662, 663 (574 SE2d 879) (2002) Sims threw away the bag containing the cocaine when Officer Jones was chasing him, the trial court was authorized to find that the cocaine was not seized as the result of a search but was instead abandoned before Sims submitted to the officer's request to stop.”) (Punctuation omitted.) Hodari D.’s holding that there must be submission to an officer’s show of authority in order for there to be a seizure thereby has certainly been recognized in the appellate decisions of this State. See, e.g., Gray v. State , 254 Ga. App. 487, 488 (1) (562 SE2d 712) (2002) (“Although Gray's vehicle was signaled to stop in a police show of authority, Gray immediately fled the car[; 5/29/2015 41

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER he] had not submitted to authority, nor was he in physical custody, when his car was stopped or when he discarded the paper bag containing the illegal drugs.”); Brown, supra; Walker v. State, 228 Ga. App. 509, 510 (1) (493 SE2d 193) (1997) (Suspect “was not ‛seized’ when he first got back in the car at [the officer’s] command. [Cit.] He was not ‛seized’ until he was finally [captured.]”); Hunt v. State, 205 Ga. App. 490 (423 SE2d 24) (1992) (Suspects attempted to drive away when officers activated blue lights, one throwing an object from the vehicle as they fled.) 5/29/2015 42

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Nonetheless, Walker notes several opinions of the appellate courts of this State that he contends demonstrate that a seizure occurs at the time of the officer’s assertion of authority, without regard to any issue of the suspect’s submission to that authority. However, his reliance on these opinions is misplaced. Although the Court of Appeals in Hernandez-Espino v. State, 324 Ga. App. 849, 850-852 (1) (752 SE2d 10) (2013), determined that a seizure occurred when the officer “told” the suspect to “just give me the drugs you just bought,” it did so without any examination of the effect of the 5/29/2015 43

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER suspect’s failure to comply with the direction, or the precedents of the United States Supreme Court regarding the matter.4We have repeatedly cautioned that our decisions stand only for the points raised by the parties and decided by the court. See, e.g., State v. Outen, 289 Ga. 579 (714 SE2d 581) (2011); Palmer v. State, 282 Ga. 466, 651 S.E.2d 86 (2007). “Questions which merely lurk in the record, neither brought to the attention of the court nor ruled upon, are not to be considered as having been so decided as to constitute precedents.” Id. at 468, 651 S.E.2d 86 (citation and punctuation omitted). Holton v. Physician Oncology Services, LP , 292 Ga , 864, 869-870 (2) (72 SE2d 702) (2013). 5/29/2015 44

S13G1793 The State v. Walker[Footnote 4]4 The opinion recites that the suspect “denied having any drugs. The officer then asked for consent to search, and [the suspect] agreed. The officer found crack cocaine in [the suspect’s] pocket.” 5/29/2015 45

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Further, examination of other opinions Walker cites for this proposition shows that he has a misunderstanding of the facts involved. For instance, in State v. Banks, 223 Ga. App. 838 (479 SE2d 168) (1996), although submission to the police officer’s direction is not specifically mentioned in the recitation of the facts, from what is reported, it appears that the suspect complied with the direction that he “take his hand out of his pocket,” id. at 839, and thus, the Court of Appeals correctly determined that a seizure had occurred at 5/29/2015 46

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER that point, even though the Court characterized the point of seizure as the officer’s act of “demanding that he remove his hand from his pocket.” Id. at 840. See also Durden v. State, 320 Ga. App. 218, 220 (739 SE2d 676) (2013) (The suspect removed his hands from his pockets when directed, and “even if the officer’s initial interaction with [the suspect] could be characterized as a first-tier encounter, it escalated into a second-tier stop when the officer ordered Durden to remove his hands from his pockets”); Brown v. State, 301 Ga. App. 82, 84 (686 SE2d 793) (2009) 5/29/2015 47

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER (“What began as a first-tier encounter escalated into a second-tier stop when the officer told him to remove his hands from his pockets,” and the suspect removed one hand.); Peters v. State, 242 Ga. App. 816, 818 (531 SE2d 386) (2000) (The suspect “obeyed [the officers’] command” to stop.) (Eldridge, J., concurring specially.)Walker also contends that Sams v. State, 265 Ga. 534 (459 SE2d 551) (1995), appears to be decided on the theory that a command from a law 5/29/2015 48

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER enforcement officer with which a suspect does not comply, by itself, constitutes a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. [5]The majority in Sams did not address the holding in Hodari D., supra, and certainly did not reach the conclusion Walker urges. See Holton , supra. Rather, the Sams opinion merely proceeds from the State’s position “that the officer had sufficient grounds to detain Sams for questioning and to arrest Sams and that the search of Sams following the arrest gave probable cause to believe the truck 5/29/2015 49

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER contained drugs,” Sams, supra at 535 (1), and rejects that contention, determining instead that “[t]he officer's decision to order Sams to stop was based only on Sams apparent race and the fact that Sams walked away upon seeing the officer.” Id. at 535 (1,2). However, to the extent that Sams, or any other decision of the appellate Courts of this State, can be read as standing for the proposition that an officer’s uncomplied -with command alone constitutes a seizure without regard to the holding of Hodari D. , those cases are hereby overruled. 5/29/2015 50

S13G1793 The State v. Walker[Footnote 5] 5 Although the majority opinion in Sams does not mention any constitutional provision, its reliance on Terry, supra, reveals that it was decided under the Fourth Amendment. 5/29/2015 51

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER Finally, Walker argues that, even if he did not comply with Officer Adriance’s command to remove his hands from his pockets, he nonetheless stopped walking, a show of submission to the officer’s authority. But, it must [6] be remembered, “there is no seizure without actual submission” to the show of authority, Brendlin, supra (emphasis supplied), and Walker certainly did not submit to the actual direction. Even assuming that Walker stopped in response to Officer Adriance’s command, “to comply with an order to stop—and thus to become 5/29/2015 52

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER seized—a suspect must do more than halt temporarily; he must submit to police authority . . . .” United States v. Baldwin, 496 F.3d 215, 218 (II) (2nd Cir., 2007). If Walker stopped in response to Officer Adriance’s command, it was only a temporary halting, and not an actual submission to the asserted authority. See United States v. Salazar, 609 F.3d 1059, 1066 (II) (C) (10 Cir., 2010) (“Mr. Salazar did not submit to [the show of] authority until he complied with Trooper Berner’s command to get out of the pickup.”) As Walker did not [7] 5/29/2015 53

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER submit to Officer Adriance’s show of authority before abandoning the items at issue, the Court of Appeals erred in reversing the trial court’s denial of Walker’s motion to suppress.Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except Benham, J., who dissents 5/29/2015 54

S13G1793 The State v. Walker[Footnote 6] 6 We note that the trial court’s order did not find that Walker stopped in response to Officer Adriance’s command to remove his hands from his pockets. See Registe v. State, supra. 5/29/2015 55

S13G1793 The State v. Walker[Footnote 7] 7 As we find that the Court of Appeals erred in determining that Walker had been seized when Officer Adriance commanded him to remove his hands from his pockets, we need not address its conclusion that Officer Adriance did not at that time have “an objective, articulable suspicion of criminal activity.” Walker, 323 Ga. App. at 563 (1) (Punctuation omitted.) 5/29/2015 56

S13G1793. THE STATE v. WALKER BENHAM, Justice, dissenting.I write because I respectfully dissent. I believe the Court of Appeals’s opinion was well-reasoned and reached the right result when it concluded that the trial court erred by failing to grant Walker’s motion to suppress. See Walker v. State, 323 Ga. App. 558 (747 SE2d 51) (2013). Accordingly, I cannot join in this Court’s majority opinion. 5/29/2015 57

BACALLAO v. THE STATE A10A1743-- January 06, 2011Construed in favor of the trial court's judgment, the record shows that Georgia State Patrol Post 32 conducted a roadblock in Oconee County for the purpose of checking driver's licenses, seat belts, driver impairment, and vehicle fitness.   Trooper Charles Parker testified that he was one of the screening officers working the roadblock;  that he observed Bacallao driving a white van;  and that the van turned right headed toward the checkpoint then made an immediate left into the second entrance of the gas station parking lot that was just south of the checkpoint.   58

BACALLAO v. THE STATE A10A1743-- January 06, 2011Parker testified that he approached Bacallao as she exited her vehicle to question her because he did not know if she was going to the gas station or attempting to avoid the roadblock.   Parker advised Bacallao that they were conducting a license check and asked to see Baccallao's license.   Bacallao gave Parker her license, and as they talked, he detected the odor of alcohol on her breath.   Parker asked Bacallao how much alcohol she had consumed that day, and she told him that she had three glasses of wine, the last of which she had drunk recently in her home.Parker asked Bacallao to take a horizontal gaze nystagmus test, during which she displayed six of six clues.   59

BACALLAO v. THE STATE A10A1743-- January 06, 2011Parker then asked her to perform a breath test, and the breath test results were positive for alcohol.   Because Bacallao had recently consumed a glass of wine, Parker waited 20 more minutes then administered the breath test again, and the second test also was positive for alcohol.   Parker then arrested Bacallao for driving under the influence.   Parker testified that he read Georgia's implied consent warning to Baccallao, then walked Bacallao to the alcohol testing trailer to administer another breath test, utilizing the Intoxilyzer 5000.   Bacallao gave two breath samples, and the lowest test result indicated a blood alcohol level of .106. 60

BACALLAO v. THE STATE A10A1743-- January 06, 2011Bacallao testified that she lived within half mile of the checkpoint and that she had gone to the gas station to buy some milk, not to avoid the roadblock.   Additionally, Bacallao testified that she answered Parker's questions because he was a police officer, and she thought that she was required to do so.   In its order denying the motion to suppress, the trial court concluded that Parker's initial interaction with Bacallao was a “first-tier” encounter that did not involve coercion or detention and that Parker had a reasonable and articulable suspicion that Bacallao had committed a crime after talking with her and was justified in detaining Bacallao further. 61

BACALLAO v. THE STATE A10A1743-- January 06, 2011In her single enumeration of error, Bacallao argues that the trial court erred when it denied her motion to suppress because Parker's detention of her was illegal.   Specifically, Bacallao maintains that there was neither probable cause nor articulable suspicion to support the stop.Baccallao's position that the stop required articulable suspicion or probable cause presumes that the initial interaction between she and Parker was a second- or third-tier encounter.   However, the evidence supports the trial court's determination that it was a first-tier encounter. 62

BACALLAO v. THE STATE A10A1743-- January 06, 2011In support of her argument, Bacallao relies on Jorgensen v. State.  In that case, we reversed a DUI conviction where the officer stopped the defendant, who was driving normally, based solely on his intuition that the defendant was avoiding a roadblock when he turned into an apartment complex before reaching the roadblock. The officer pursued the vehicle into the apartment complex, parked behind the defendant, and told him that he was not free to leave. Jorgensen is inapposite because there is no evidence in the instant case that Bacallao was initially detained or was told that she was not free to leave.   Rather, Parker approached and questioned Bacallao as she exited her parked car 63

BACALLAO v. THE STATE A10A1743-- January 06, 2011It is well established that an officer's approach to a stopped vehicle and inquiry into the situation is not a “stop” or “seizure” but rather clearly falls within the realm of the first type of police-citizen encounter․  Even when officers have no basis for suspecting a particular individual, they may generally ask questions of that individual;  ask to examine the individual's identification;  and request consent to search-as long as the police do not convey a message that compliance with their requests is required. 64

BACALLAO v. THE STATE A10A1743-- January 06, 2011Accordingly, Parker was authorized to approach Bacallao and ask to examine her driver's license.   Thus, the trial court's conclusion that Parker and Bacallao's interaction was a first-tier encounter that did not require articulable suspicion was supported by the evidence. Furthermore, once Parker smelled alcohol on Bacallao's breath, he had the required articulable suspicion to investigate further. Therefore, we affirm the trial court's denial of Bacallao's motion to suppress. 65

Other police – citizen encounters? When a driver brings his vehicle to a stop as a result of a request or show of authority by a law enforcement officer, the officer effectively seizes the vehicle and “‘everyone in the vehicle,’ the driver and all passengers.” Arizona v. Johnson, 555 U.S. 323, 327 (129 SCt 781, 172 LE2d 694) (2009). Such a seizure ordinarily is unreasonable, and hence unconstitutional, absent individualized suspicion. Then, there are those times when the police and citizens have contact that falls outside the realm of Tier 1, 2 or 3. 66

Other police – citizen encounters? The United States Supreme Court has recognized, however, a narrow exception to the individualized suspicion requirement for vehicle stops made pursuant to a “plan embodying explicit, neutral limitations on the conduct of individual officers.” Brown v. Texas, 443 U.S. 47, 51 (99 SCt 2637, 61 LE2d 357) (1979) 67

Other police – citizen encounters? Under this checkpoint exception, the reasonableness of the initial stop depends not on individualized suspicion that the driver has committed a traffic violation or other wrongdoing, but instead on the balance between the public interest served by the checkpoint program and the right of individuals to personal security free from arbitrary and oppressive interference by government Officials…Applying this balancing test, the Supreme Court approved checkpoint programs designed to intercept illegal immigrants near the border,… to keep unlicensed drivers and unsafe vehicles off [the road]. Typically the standard is probable cause to believe that the individual seized has committed a crime, but more limited seizures may be based on a lesser showing of articulable suspicion, based on specific, objective facts, that a person has been, is, or is about to be engaged in criminal activity. 68

Other police – citizen encounters? …and to remove drunk drivers from behind the wheel…In each case, the Court distinguished the checkpoint program at issue from a regime of suspicionless stops by roving patrols in the pursuit of the same violations. The Court emphasized two basic threats to liberty that could result if all law enforcement officers were given the authority to make suspicionless vehicle stops as they moved around on patrol in the field…. 69

Other police – citizen encounters? First, the Court focused on the risk of arbitrary stops of citizens as they travel, noting the “grave danger that such unreviewable discretion would be abused by some officers in the field.”Second, the Court recognized the risk of oppressive interference with the rights of law-abiding citizens, examining both the objective intrusion on their privacy and right to free passage and the subjective intrusion on motorists’ sense of personal security. 70

Indianapolis v. Edmond - 531 U.S. 32 (2000) In Michigan Dept. of State Police v. Sitz, 496 U. S. 444 (1990), and United States v. Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U. S. 543 (1976), we held that brief, suspicionless seizures at highway checkpoints for the purposes of combating drunk driving and intercepting illegal immigrants were constitutional. We now consider the constitutionality of a highway checkpoint program whose primary purpose is the discovery and interdiction of illegal narcotics . …In none of these cases, however, did we indicate approval of a checkpoint program whose primary purpose was to detect evidence of ordinary criminal wrongdoing . 71

Indianapolis v. Edmond - 531 U.S. 32 (2000) Finally, we caution that the purpose inquiry in this context is to be conducted only at the programmatic level and is not an invitation to probe the minds of individual officers acting at the scene. Cf. Whren, supra.Because the primary purpose of the Indianapolis checkpoint program is ultimately indistinguishable from the general interest in crime control, the checkpoints violate the Fourth Amendment. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is , accordingly, affirmed. It is so ordered. 72

LaFontaine v. State, 269 Ga. 251, 253 (497 SE2d 367) (1998) A roadblock is satisfactory where:[1] the decision to implement the roadblock was made by supervisory personnel rather than the officers in the field; [2] all vehicles are stopped as opposed to random vehicle stops;[3] the delay to motorists is minimal; [ 4] the roadblock operation is well identified as a police checkpoint; and [5] the “screening” officer’s training and experience is sufficient to qualify him to make an initial determination as to which motorists should be given field tests for intoxication .

Policy, Procedure and RuleWritten Directives As a CEO, Command Staff member, or Supervisor, do you have policies, procedures and rules that:Educate and regulate the officers under your command on the issues Road Checks (Blocks)?Addresses training that officers are given to know the legal issues necessary for conducting a valid Road Check?Articulates the requirements of Edmond and LaFountaine?

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Appellant Douglas Wayne Brown was charged with driving under the influence and other crimes after he was stopped and later arrested at a traffic safety checkpoint, or roadblock, in Cobb County. The trial court granted Appellant’s motion to suppress his statements and other evidence resulting from the stop, ruling that the checkpoint violated the Fourth Amendment. The Court of Appeals reversed that ruling in a 4-3 decision.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013We granted Appellant’s petition for certiorari, posing the question: “Did the Court of Appeals employ the correct legal analysis in assessing whether the decision to implement the roadblock was made by supervisory personnel rather than field officers, for a legitimate primary purpose?”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013As explained below, we reject Appellant’s initial argument that the checkpoint at which he was stopped was unconstitutional because the police sergeant who authorized it was not a “programmatic-level executive.” Appellant draws this argument from Court of Appeals cases that have improperly conflated the “supervisory personnel” requirement for implementing a specific checkpoint,

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013and the distinct requirement that a law enforcement agency’s checkpoint program have an appropriate primary purpose other than the general interest in crime control, which requires review at the “programmatic level” and may involve evidence relating to agency policy and practice and policy-makers other than the supervisor who decided to implement the particular checkpoint at issue…

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013There is no dispute in this case that the Cobb County Police Department’s traffic safety checkpoint policy satisfies the Edmond requirement, and we adhere to LaFontaine’s holding that the decision to implement a particular checkpoint may be made by any authorized supervisor.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013A roadblock is satisfactory where [1] the decision to implement the roadblock was made by supervisory personnel rather than the officers in the field; [2] all vehicles are stopped as opposed to random vehicle stops;[3] the delay to motorists is minimal; [4] the roadblock operation is well identified as a police checkpoint; and [5] the “screening” officer’s training and experience is sufficient to qualify him to make an initial determination as to which motorists should be given field tests for intoxication. LaFontaine v. State , 269 Ga. 251, 253 (497 SE2d 367) (1998).

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013However, Appellant’s fallback argument – that LaFontaine’s “supervisory personnel” requirement was not satisfied in this case, rendering the checkpoint at which he was stopped unconstitutional – has merit. As the dissent below correctly recognized, the dispositive issue in this case is whether the police sergeant decided to implement the roadblock as a supervisor in advance or as an officer in the field.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013And as the dissent correctly concluded, the trial court’s factual determination that the sergeant made the decision while acting as a field officer rather than in advance as a supervisor was supported by some evidence and therefore was not clearly erroneous, and the trial court’s suppression order should have been affirmed on this basis... Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals’ judgment.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013In July 2008, the Cobb County Police Department adopted Policy 5.19 on Traffic Safety Checkpoints. The policy’s stated purpose… is to protect the citizens of Cobb County and to monitor and check driver’s licenses, driver condition, vehicle registrations, vehicle equipment, and various other requirements of the Georgia State Motor Vehicle and Traffic Code.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Regarding LaFontaine’s “supervisory personnel” requirement…Policy 5.19 says that “[a]ny supervisor has the authority to implement a checkpoint.” The policy specifies, however, that a checkpoint must be “approved by a supervisor prior to implementation” and explains that “[t]he decision to implement the checkpoint [must be] made by supervisory personnel rather than by officers in the field. This includes the time and location of the checkpoint .”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Citing Edmond, the policy adds that checkpoints must be implemented “for a ‘legitimate primary purpose’. . . . [and] cannot be for the purpose of a pretext for ‘general crime detection.’” Detailed instructions on the proper staffing of checkpoints are also included.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013On or about April 6, 2010, precinct commander Captain Charles Cox emailed the officers in the precinct and instructed them to conduct directed traffic enforcement on Groover Road in the vicinity of Allgood Road, in response to a citizen complaint about speeding, racing, and littering. Groover Road is an old, narrow, curvy road with no shoulder that runs along the edge of Blackjack Mountain. The next day, April 7, a shift supervisor, Sergeant Andrew Marchetta , sent a corporal to survey Groover Road. The officer reported to Sergeant Marchetta that the road was not conducive to traffic enforcement using speed detection devices, due to limited sight distances.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013According to the trial court, Sergeant Marchetta decided on April 9 to set up a traffic safety checkpoint on Groover Road. His plan was to stop every vehicle approaching the checkpoint from either direction to check the driver’s license, vehicle registration, and proof of insurance. A nearby sandpit entrance was to be used for follow-up investigations of drivers for whom screening officers developed articulable suspicion or probable cause of a motor vehicle or other offense.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Sergeant Marchetta directed Officer David Smith to assist him with the checkpoint. The checkpoint began on April 9 at approximately 6:45 p.m., while it was still daylight. The checkpoint was marked by two traffic cones, by Sergeant Marchetta’s and Officer Smith’s patrol cars, which were parked with their blue lights on, and by the officers themselves, who were wearing bright yellow vests. The two officers both acted as screeners. Traffic was light, and in the first 20 minutes, only seven vehicles were stopped, resulting in one citation for an invalid tag.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013At about 7:05 p.m., Appellant approached the checkpoint in a Nissan Maxima with a pizza delivery sign on it. He initially attempted to drive around the checkpoint, but when Officer Smith yelled at him to stop, he did so.Sergeant Marchetta was screening a vehicle in the other lane, and as he finished, Officer Smith told the sergeant that he smelled marijuana in Appellant’s car. Officer Smith then instructed Appellant to pull over to the sandpit entrance.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013As Sergeant Marchetta approached Appellant’s parked car, he saw Appellant make a furtive movement with his hands toward the center of the car and ordered Officer Smith to remove Appellant from the car. As Officer Smith did so, Sergeant Marchetta saw a black object in Appellant’s right hand and a large folding knife clipped to his shorts. As Appellant emerged from the car, he reached towards his waist, dropped the object in his hand (which turned out to be a marijuana pipe), and stomped on it. As Officer Smith tried to control him, Appellant began to fight.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013He continued to struggle even after being handcuffed, at one point reaching for Officer Smith’s service pistol. Officer Smith broke away from Appellant, and Sergeant Marchetta radioed for backup. After considerable effort by both officers, they were able to subdue and arrest Appellant.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013In August 2010, Appellant was indicted for driving under the influence of drugs, violation of the Georgia Controlled Substances Act, two counts of obstruction of a law enforcement officer, and attempted removal of a weapon from a peace officer. Appellant filed a motion to suppress on the ground that the checkpoint violated the Fourth Amendment. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court granted the motion.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The trial court acknowledged that as a supervisor, Sergeant Marchetta had the general authority to implement traffic safety checkpoints pursuant to Policy 5.19. However, the court found, “from the evidence presented,” that Sergeant Marchetta decided to implement the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped “while acting as an officer in the field and that no evidence was presented that it was planned in advance to occur at a specific time.” The court also found that the checkpoint was not adequately staffed as required by law “to safely and efficiently conduct the checkpoint.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Pursuant to OCGA § 5-7-1 (a) (4), the State appealed the suppression order to the Court of Appeals, which reversed in a 4-3 decision… The majority characterized the evidence as uncontroverted and presenting no question regarding witness credibility, and it therefore applied de novo review to the suppression ruling.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The majority then rejected the trial court’s finding that “no evidence was presented that [the checkpoint] was planned in advance to occur at a specific time,” asserting that “[t]he record reveals without dispute that Sergeant Marchetta decided to implement the roadblock two days before and even sent another officer to survey the road before implementing it.” Id. at 158. The majority added that “officers are not precluded as a matter of law from acting simultaneously as a supervisor and a field officer” and held that understaffing alone was insufficient to make a checkpoint unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment. Id. at 159.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013“The Fourth Amendment imposes limits on search-and-seizure powers in order to prevent arbitrary and oppressive interference by enforcement officials with the privacy and personal security of individuals.” United States v. Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U.S. 543, 544 (96 SCt 3074, 49 LE2d 1116) (1976). The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV.6 As its text indicates , the “ultimate touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is ‘reasonableness.’”…

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013When a driver brings his vehicle to a stop as a result of a request or show of authority by a law enforcement officer, the officer effectively seizes the vehicle and “‘everyone in the vehicle,’ the driver and all passengers.” Arizona v. Johnson, 555 U.S. 323, 327 (129 SCt 781, 172 LE2d 694) (2009) (citation omitted). Such a seizure ordinarily is unreasonable, and hence unconstitutional, absent individualized suspicion.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The United States Supreme Court has recognized, however, a narrow exception to the individualized suspicion requirement for vehicle stops made pursuant to a “plan embodying explicit, neutral limitations on the conduct of individual officers.”... Under this checkpoint exception, the reasonableness of the initial stop depends not on individualized suspicion that the driver has committed a traffic violation or other wrongdoing, but instead on the balance between the public interest served by the checkpoint program and the right of individuals to personal security free from arbitrary and oppressive interference by government officials…

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Applying this balancing test, the Supreme Court approved checkpoint programs designed to intercept illegal immigrants near the border,… to keep unlicensed drivers and unsafe vehicles off the road…and to remove drunk drivers from behind the wheel…In each case, the Court distinguished the checkpoint program at issue from a regime of suspicionless stops by roving patrols in the pursuit of the same violations .

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Court emphasized two basic threats to liberty that could result if all law enforcement officers were given the authority to make suspicionless vehicle stops as they moved around on patrol in the field…First, the Court focused on the risk of arbitrary stops of citizens as they travel, noting the “grave danger that such unreviewable discretion would be abused by some officers in the field.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013As the Court explained in Prouse, “standardless and unconstrained discretion is the evil the Court has discerned when in previous cases it has insisted that the discretion of the official in the field be circumscribed, at least to some extent.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Second, the Court recognized the risk of oppressive interference with the rights of law-abiding citizens, examining both the objective intrusion on their privacy and right to free passage and the subjective intrusion on motorists’ sense of personal security. The checkpoints approved by the Supreme Court involved brief stops, only a few questions, and a visual inspection from the outside of the vehicle.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Court described the objective intrusion of such seizures as “minimal” in light of their short duration, the low intensity of the investigation, and the Court’s longstanding view that “[o]ne’s expectation of privacy in an automobile and of freedom in its operation are significantly different from the traditional expectation of privacy and freedom in one’s residence.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Court also found the subjective intrusion on personal security – the potential “fear and surprise engendered in law-abiding motorists by the nature of the stop” – to be considerably less for stops at a clearly identified police checkpoint than for stops by a roving patrol. “Roving patrols often operate at night on seldom-traveled roads, and their approach may frighten motorists. At traffic checkpoints the motorist can see that other vehicles are being stopped, he can see visible signs of the officers’ authority, and he is much less likely to be frightened or annoyed by the intrusion.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Addressing the danger that “unreviewable discretion would be abused by some officers in the field,” Martinez-Fuerte, 428 U.S. at 559, LaFontaine’s first, second, and fifth requirements ensure that officers cannot implement checkpoints on the fly while out on patrol, stopping vehicles arbitrarily or targeting (potentially for discriminatory or other improper reasons) individual drivers whom the officers wish to stop and question but lack any articulable reason to do so.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Instead, a supervisor in advance, rather than an officer while in the field, must make the decision to conduct the checkpoint; all vehicles must be stopped; and competent screeners must be used. Addressing the burden on free travel and the potential for surprise or fear that being stopped by the police might otherwise generate in innocent drivers, LaFontaine’s third and fourth

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013requirements ensure that law-abiding motorists are only briefly delayed and can readily recognize that the stop is due to a police roadblock rather than any specific focus on them. Two years after we decided LaFontaine, the U.S. Supreme Court added another layer to the constitutional analysis of vehicle checkpoints.In City of Indianapolis v. Edmond … the Court reviewed the constitutionality of an extensive highway checkpoint program that the city government conceded had the “ primary purpose ,” or “proximate goal,” of catching drug offenders and interdicting illegal narcotics.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Court held that to comply with the Fourth Amendment, a checkpoint program must have, in addition to safeguards on the implementation and operation of the checkpoints, a primary purpose other than “the general interest in crime control.”The Court described Martinez-Fuerte, Prouse, and Sitz as approving “ only limited exceptions to the general rule that a seizure must be accompanied by some measure of individualized suspicion” and noted that “each of the checkpoint programs that we have approved was designed primarily to serve purposes closely related to the problems of policing the border or the necessity of ensuring roadway safety.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Court acknowledged the magnitude of the social harms created by illegal narcotics trafficking but said,“We decline to suspend the usual requirement of individualized suspicion where the police seek to employ a checkpoint primarily for the ordinary enterprise of investigating crimes. We cannot sanction stops justified only by the generalized and ever-present possibility that interrogation and inspection may reveal that any given motorist has committed some crime .”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE ___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Court distinguished situations where “the primary purpose would otherwise, but for some emergency, relate to ordinary crime control,” such as “an appropriately tailored 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. The Court also reserved for another day “whether the State may establish a checkpoint program with the primary purpose of checking licenses or driver sobriety and a secondary purpose of interdicting narcotics,” and “whether police may expand the scope of a license or sobriety checkpoint seizure in order to detect the presence of drugs in a stopped car.” … Lidster … ( holding that Edmond did not govern “ information seeking” vehicle stops at a highway checkpoint set up to ask drivers for information as potential witnesses to a recent hit-and-run accident on the same road). This case does not require us to address these issues . [Footnote 8]

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Examining the Indianapolis narcotics checkpoint program at this “programmatic level,” the Court found that its “primary purpose . . . is ultimately indistinguishable from the general interest in crime control” and therefore held that “the checkpoints violate the Fourth Amendment.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013LaFontaine’s requirement that the decision to implement a particular roadblock be made by “supervisory personnel” is distinct from Edmond’s requirement that the roadblock program have a primary purpose other than the general interest in crime control. They involve different factual inquiries, and they serve different objectives in the Fourth Amendment scheme.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The first LaFontaine requirement ensures that a police checkpoint cannot be set up at the “standardless and unconstrained discretion . . . of the official in the field,” Prouse, 440 U.S. at 661; the decision as to where and when to conduct a checkpoint must instead be made in advance by a supervisor, removing such discretion from every officer patrolling out in the field.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013In LaFontaine, this Court upheld the constitutionality of a roadblock on Old Atlanta Road in Forsyth County where “[t]he decision to implement the roadblock was made by a State Patrol supervisor” but “the determination as to the location of the roadblock was made by the field officers’ …It is not clear from the opinion whether the field officers’ discretion regarding “location” was limited to choosing the particular spot on Old Atlanta Road to set up the roadblock or instead extended to establishing a roadblock anywhere in the field officers’s territory. Later cases, however, have construed LaFontaine’s reference to location narrowly, which we agree is necessary to ensure that field officers are not vested with overbroad discretion regarding this important aspect of roadblocks.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Put another way, the focus of the Edmond requirement is not on when, where, how, and by whom the specific checkpoint was implemented and operated – the focus of the LaFontaine requirements – but rather on why the agency uses checkpoints. Thus, if the primary purpose of the checkpoint program is crime-fighting in general, then the checkpoints implemented under that program are unconstitutional, even if the decision to implement them was made well in advance by the official with the most policymaking authority in the agency – as was true of the Indianapolis narcotics checkpoint program at issue in Edmond .

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Conversely, if the agency has established a checkpoint policy with an approved primary purpose other than general crime control, how that program is implemented at a particular time and place is a question of the LaFontaine requirements, not Edmond.In sum, the five LaFontaine requirements and the Edmond’s appropriate primary purpose requirement address different issues in the Fourth Amendment analysis and should be addressed separately by courts reviewing disputed checkpoint stops – as this Court has done after Edmond .

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013It should also be noted that compliance with the Edmond and LaFontaine requirements does not necessarily end the Fourth Amendment analysis of a checkpoint case. The ultimate question remains whether, under the totality of the circumstances, the challenged stop was reasonable... Thus, even if the checkpoint program and the particular checkpoint at which the driver was stopped satisfy the formal requirements, the reviewing court may consider evidence that the checkpoint basis for the stop was pretextual or that the checkpoint was used to harass… or was otherwise arbitrary or oppressive .

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013As discussed previously, in accord with the U.S. Supreme Court’s pre-Edmond checkpoint cases, LaFontaine’s first requirement works to control the potential for arbitrary stops that would exist if every officer in the field could implement a checkpoint by moving the implementation decision up and away from the field to a supervisor. If that supervisor is low ranking, he may have the authority to implement a particular vehicle checkpoint under LaFontaine and his agency’s checkpoint program, and the primary purpose of that particular checkpoint may be appropriate.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013But a low-level supervisor may not always be aware of or able to testify to the primary purpose of the agency’s overall checkpoint program, which may have been established and may be overseen by officials at higher levels of the agency. Under Edmond, it is at that “programmatic level,”… that the “primary purpose” inquiry must focus, with the goal of ensuring that the agency has not authorized vehicle checkpoints primarily for general crime control but rather for an appropriately limited purpose like traffic safety.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013When not conflated, the first LaFontaine requirement and Edmond’s appropriate primary purpose requirement can be more easily understood and applied. Two distinct questions are presented:(1) Was the police checkpoint at issue implemented pursuant to a checkpoint program that had, when viewed at that programmatic level, an appropriate primary purpose other than general crime control? (2) If so, was the decision to implement that specific checkpoint made by a supervisor in advance rather than by an officer in the field?

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013To summarize, where a defendant challenges his initial stop at a police checkpoint by way of a motion to suppress, the State bears the burden of proving that the seizure was constitutional... This requires the State to prove that the stop was reasonable under the totality of the circumstances... At a minimum, the State must show that the law enforcement agency’s checkpoint program had an appropriate primary purpose other than ordinary crime control – a purpose examined at that programmatic level, rather than by trying to determine the motives of the supervisor who implemented and the officers who conducted the particular checkpoint at issue.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The State must also prove that the particular checkpoint at which the defendant was stopped was properly implemented and operated – that the five requirements enumerated in LaFontaine were met.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013We now apply these legal principles to the facts of Appellant’s case.(a) This case involves no Edmond issue. Appellant does not dispute that the Cobb County Police Department’s checkpoint policy, viewed at the programmatic level, has a primary purpose other than the general interest in crime control, namely, “to monitor and check driver’s licenses, driver condition, vehicle registrations, vehicle equipment, and various other requirements of the Georgia State Motor Vehicle and Traffic Code.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Appellant also does not challenge the State’s evidence that the Groover Road checkpoint at which he was stopped complied with the final four LaFontaine requirements, that is, that all vehicles were stopped, the delay to motorists was minimal, the operation was well identified as a police checkpoint, and the screening officers’ training and experience qualified them to decide whether motorists should be given field tests for intoxication .

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Finally, Appellant does not argue that his stop was unreasonable under the totality of the circumstances.(b) Thus, if Appellant is to prevail, he must do so based on his contention that the State failed to prove that the first LaFontaine requirement was satisfied – that “the decision to implement the roadblock was made by supervisory personnel rather than the officers in the field.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Appellant advances two arguments on this point. First, he maintains that Sergeant Marchetta did not qualify as “supervisory personnel” under LaFontaine because the State failed to prove that the sergeant was a “programmatic-level executive.”Second, Appellant claims that the State failed to prove that Sergeant Marchetta made the decision to implement the checkpoint in advance while acting in a supervisory role, instead of while acting as an officer in the field. The first argument is meritless, but the second is correct.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Appellant does not deny that Sergeant Marchetta was a shift supervisor in the Cobb County Police Department and that Policy 5.19 gave him the authority to implement a traffic safety checkpoint. Instead, Appellant asserts that to satisfy LaFontaine’s requirement that the decision to implement a checkpoint be made by “supervisory personnel,” the State also was required to prove that Sergeant Marchetta was a “programmatic-level” executive or supervisor.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013However, “supervisory personnel” simply means “supervisors.” See, e.g., LaFontaine, 269 Ga. at 252-253 (holding that the “supervisory personnel” requirement was satisfied because the decision to implement the roadblock was made by a “State Patrol supervisor”)

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013As explained in Division 2 (b) above, the purpose of the first LaFontaine requirement is not to require approval of a particular roadblock at some high level of agency management, but simply to ensure that the implementation decision is made above and away from “field officers” on roving patrol, whose unfettered exercise of discretion is feared. Requiring such decisions to be made two (or more) levels away from the field, rather than one, would not make a significant difference in this respect.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Moreover, as explained above…, the term “programmatic level” relates to the Edmond requirement that a checkpoint program have a primary purpose other than ordinary crime control, a requirement distinct from the LaFontaine requirements. Appellant has cited no decision from the U.S. Supreme Court or this Court that holds that an “executive” or “programmatic level” law enforcement official must make the decision to implement a particular checkpoint in order for that checkpoint to be constitutional, as opposed simply to a supervisory official who has the authority to implement checkpoints and does so in his capacity as a supervisor rather than as an officer out in the field.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Edmond did not use the term “executive” or “programmatic level” in this context. The only reference to “‘executive-level officers’” in LaFontaine was in the partial dissent, see 269 Ga. at 257 (Sears, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (citing what is now 5 LaFave § 10.8 (d)), and the author of that partial dissent soon thereafter agreed that supervisory approval of a checkpoint is sufficient, see Brent , 270 Ga. at 163 (Sears, J., concurring). See also 5 LaFave § 10.8 (d) (using the terms “executive-level officers” and “supervisory officials” interchangeably).

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013And while the dissent below, after a discussion that conflated the Edmond and LaFontaine requirements as in previous Court of Appeals cases, employed the phrase “‘executive level programmatic’ official,” even it immediately made clear that the phrase was being used as to the first LaFontaine requirement simply to describe any “ nonfield officer .” Brown , 315 Ga. App. at 161-163 ( Mikell , P.J., dissenting). In short , precedent does not support the imposition of the requirement that Appellant advocates .

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Indeed, it is unclear how courts would apply such a requirement. If “executive” or “programmatic-level” means something other than “supervisor” or “non-field officer,” Appellant does not explain how to accurately identify such officials, suggesting only that it would require a complicated, multi-factor analysis of the official’s rank, duties, management responsibilities, and decisionmaking authority in terms of hiring, firing, pay rates, and work scheduling. Nor does he explain how such a requirement would be applied consistently to the multitude of law enforcement agencies throughout Georgia.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Who qualifies as an “executive”-level official in a large metropolitan police department with hundreds of sworn officers and multiple layers of management might be quite different from who qualifies as an “executive”-level official in a small municipal agency with only a handful of officers, and even agencies of the same size may be organized in many different ways. Courts are not in the business of micromanaging how law enforcement agencies should organize themselves and delegate authority.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013To be sure, thorough oversight of the implementation of specific checkpoints by higher-level officials in law enforcement agencies is a commendable practice and one that may well identify and deter problems in checkpoint programs – including, potentially, implementation issues that could lead a court reviewing the checkpoint program to question whether it really has an appropriate primary purpose. But we see no basis to depart from precedent and impose such an ill-defined requirement as a purported constitutional obligation.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Accordingly, we reject Appellant’s argument that an officer cannot be classified as “supervisory personnel” under the first LaFontaine requirement unless he exercises “programmatic-level” authority within his agency or is identified as an “executive.”

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013After asking us to revise the first LaFontaine requirement, Appellant asks us simply to enforce it, arguing that the State failed to prove that Sergeant Marchetta made the decision to implement the checkpoint on Groover Road as a supervisor in advance rather than as an officer in the field. Supported by the dissent below, Appellant contends that the trial court’s factual finding that Sergeant Marchetta decided to implement the checkpoint “ while acting as an officer in the field” was supported by some evidence at the suppression hearing and therefore should have been affirmed . We agree.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Court of Appeals majority asserted that de novo review of the trial court’s order was appropriate because “[t]he record reveals without dispute that Marchetta decided to implement the roadblock two days before” it occurred... That is incorrect. It is true that on April 7, 2010, two days before the checkpoint was set up, a corporal reported to Sergeant Marchetta that Groover Road was not conducive to speed detection devices, so his attention may have turned at that time to using a roadblock at some point for the directed traffic enforcement that Captain Cox had requested.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013But when the decision was made to actually implement a roadblock on Groover Road at 6:45 p.m. on April 9 was not undisputed. At the suppression hearing, Sergeant Marchetta testified that he informed Captain Cox on either April 8 or 9 about his plan to set up a checkpoint on Groover Road, although he did not claim to have specified when the checkpoint would be set up, and when Captain Cox testified, he squarely denied that he had any advance notice from Sergeant Marchetta of the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013In addition, the other officer who participated in the checkpoint, Office Smith, testified at the hearing, and one reasonable interpretation of his testimony is that Sergeant Marchetta did not inform him of the planned checkpoint until Officer Smith arrived at the scene. Furthermore, Sergeant Marchetta testified that he did not order the checkpoint in writing, and the State presented no documents at the hearing showing that Sergeant Marchetta (or any other supervisor) decided on the time that the checkpoint would be established prior to its implementation in the field.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Law enforcement agencies that fail to require and maintain documentation as to when, where, and by whom the decision to implement a checkpoint is made may find it harder to prove those facts if disputed in court many months later. See Brown, 315 Ga. App. at 162 n.16 (Mikell, P.J., dissenting) (“Evidence that the key questions of time, place, and duration were settled back at headquarters in the supervisor’s office would be quite persuasive.”).

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Thus, the relevant evidence was not undisputed, and the principles set forth in Miller apply. Under those principles, the record supports the trial court’s express factual findings that Sergeant Marchetta made the decision to implement the checkpoint while acting as an officer in the field and that the State failed to prove that the checkpoint was planned in advance to occur at a specific time. Indeed, even putting aside the testimony that conflicted with Sergeant Marchetta’s account, the trial court had the opportunity to observe his testimony firsthand and was entitled to disbelieve his claim that he decided to implement the checkpoint in advance.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Based on its adequately supported finding that the State had not proved compliance with the first LaFontaine requirement, the trial court correctly concluded that the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped violated the Fourth Amendment. Consequently, the Court of Appeals erred in reversing the trial court’s suppression ruling.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Violations of police policies like Policy 5.19 do not, ipso facto, violate the Constitution; law enforcement agencies can (and often commendably do) establish policies intended to avoid coming close to the constitutional line.And LaFontaine does not require that a specific number of officers participate in a checkpoint.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Contrary to the Court of Appeals dissent’s view, however, insufficient staffing of a checkpoint is not “irrelevant” to the constitutional analysis, …and indeed it may be relevant in evaluating all of the LaFontaine requirements. If staffing is so limited, as it was here, that the officer who decides to implement the checkpoint must also play an integral role in its operation, that fact may raise questions about when and in what capacity the officer made the implementation decision.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Understaffing may also make it impossible to stop all vehicles while keeping the delay to law-abiding motorists minimal. The presence of only a few police officers and vehicles may make the operation less readily identifiable as a police checkpoint. And without a sufficient number of officers, those with the training and experience in detecting impaired drivers necessary to act as screeners may not be available at all times to screen drivers, due to the necessity of assisting other officers if a potentially dangerous situation develops, as it did in this case.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013We are not suggesting that it is improper for supervisory personnel to be present at a police checkpoint. To the contrary, having an experienced supervisor present may help ensure that proper procedures (including constitutional requirements) are followed by the officers conducting the roadblock. Nor is a checkpoint rendered unconstitutional solely because the supervisor who authorized the checkpoint later participates to some extent in the checkpoint’s operation….This should be done with caution, however, as it can raise questions about whether the decision to implement the checkpoint was really made by the supervisor in advance rather than as an officer out in the field – particularly where, as here, the supervisor did not document when the decision to implement the checkpoint was made . [Footnote 15]

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013We also note in this respect that the majority below was wrong in saying that “officers are not precluded as a matter of law from acting simultaneously as a supervisor and a field officer,” to the extent that the majority was speaking to the decision to implement a checkpoint... As explained in Division 2 (b) above, the implementation decision must be made in advance by a supervisor acting in that supervisory capacity, not by an officer out in the field who happens also to have supervisory rank. [Footnote 15]

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Thus, the two-officer staffing of the checkpoint in this case was not in itself a constitutional violation, but it certainly did not enhance the State’s ability to show that the checkpoint was implemented and operated lawfully. In addition, the questionable application or violation of the staffing requirements set out in the police department’s checkpoint policy could be considered by the trial court in evaluating the credibility of Sergeant Marchetta’s testimony that he decided to implement the checkpoint two days in advance.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Traffic safety checkpoints can be a valid and important means of law enforcement. However, police checkpoint programs must have an appropriate primary purpose other than general crime control, and each checkpoint must also be implemented and operated so as to control the risks of unconstrained discretion that “would be abused by some officers in the field,”… and of “oppressive interference by enforcement officials with the privacy and personal security of individuals,” …

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013While we reject Appellant’s request that we amend the well-established safeguards that the U.S. Supreme Court and this Court have required to ensure that checkpoints comply with the Fourth Amendment, we reiterate those requirements, under which Appellant’s stop at the checkpoint on Groover Road was unconstitutional. Our holding follows from the factual findings of the trial court , which are supported by the record. Indeed, we rely on the trial courts of Georgia to evaluate the evidence presented in each case to determine if the requirements for a constitutionally valid checkpoint have been satisfied.

S12G1287. BROWN v. THE STATE___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Judgment reversed. Thompson, C.J., Hines, P.J., Benham, Hunstein, and Melton, JJ., and Judge Jerry W. Baxter concur. Blackwell, J., disqualified.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Appellant James Kemp Williams was charged with driving under the influence and violation of the open alcohol container law after he was stopped and arrested by Bibb County Sheriff’s officers at a vehicle checkpoint. Appellant filed a motion to suppress evidence obtained as a result of his stop on the ground that the roadblock violated the Fourth Amendment.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The trial court denied the motion, and on interlocutory appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed. See Williams v. State, 317 Ga. App. 658 (732 SE2d 531) (2012). We granted Appellant’s petition for certiorari, posing the question: “Did the Court of Appeals employ the correct legal analysis in assessing whether the decision to implement the roadblock was made by supervisory personnel rather than field officers, for a legitimate primary purpose?”

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Applying [our opinion from Brown, Cobb County] analysis here, we defer to the trial court’s factual finding that the sergeant who authorized the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped properly made the decision to implement that roadblock in advance as a supervisor and not while acting as an officer in the field . However, the trial court erred in denying Appellant’s motion to suppress, because the State failed to prove that the Bibb County Sheriff’s Office roadblock program had an appropriate primary purpose other than advancing “the general interest in crime control,” as required by City of Indianapolis v. Edmond …

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013At the suppression hearing on July 11, 2011, Appellant introduced into evidence a two-page excerpt from the Law Enforcement Operations Manual of the Bibb County Sheriff’s Office (“BCSO”) that contains the following provision:Vehicle roadblocks – Vehicles may also be stopped at general roadblocks which serve legitimate law enforcement purposes. If evidence of a crime is observed, an officer has the right to take reasonable investigative steps.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Captain Harry Colbert, the BCSO’s commander of specialized operations, testified without contradiction that this provision of the operations manual was the BCSO’s “official policy” regarding checkpoints and that the BCSO had no other written policy, procedure, memorandum, or order concerning checkpoints. In addition to Captain Colbert, the State presented the testimony of two of the three officers who participated in the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped, Sergeant Bruce Jordan and Deputy Robert Scarborough.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The trial court also reviewed a recording of Sergeant Jordan’s interaction with Appellant at the checkpoint that was made by audio-visual recording equipment in Sergeant Jordan’s police car. Appellant cross-examined the State’s witnesses but did not present any witnesses of his own.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Captain Colbert testified that in September 2009, Jordan was promoted to the rank of sergeant and put in charge of the state-subsidized Highway Enforcement of Aggressive Traffic (“HEAT”) Unit, which consisted of three officers, including Sergeant Jordan. At that time Captain Colbert verbally delegated to Sergeant Jordan the authority to implement checkpoints. The captain said that he instructed Sergeant Jordan not to implement checkpoints on the interstate or during rush-hour traffic but otherwise placed no limitations on Sergeant Jordan’s authority to implement roadblocks anywhere in Bibb County anytime during his shift.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Captain Colbert also said that Sergeant Jordan was not required to seek prior authorization for particular checkpoints or to document after the fact the checkpoints that he implemented, and Sergeant Jordan confirmed that he did not do so. Captain Colbert described Sergeant Jordan, whose usual shift was 7:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m., as a “field supervisor” who was “on patrol,” drove a marked car, wrote traffic citations, and spent most of his working hours in the field.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Captain Colbert also testified, as did Sergeant Jordan, that the BCSO has a form for roadblocks that lists the purpose, time, location, and officers present, but the form normally was used only for large-scale operations or joint operations with other law enforcement agencies, and it was up to Sergeant Jordan to decide whether to use the form for a checkpoint conducted solely by the HEAT Unit. Captain Colbert and Sergeant Jordan said that decisions regarding the date, time, location, duration, staffing, and number of checkpoints were left to Sergeant Jordan alone.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013According to Sergeant Jordan and Deputy Scarborough, for at least a year, the sergeant and his HEAT Unit conducted multiple checkpoints in Bibb County each week, sometimes several in a single night.Regarding the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped, Sergeant Jordan testified that on the evening of November 26, 2010, which was a Friday, he decided at the beginning of his shift or right as he was coming on shift to have his unit conduct a sobriety and license checkpoint in downtown Macon on Washington Avenue at Orange Street.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013According to both Sergeant Jordan and Deputy Scarborough, at least an hour before the checkpoint began, Jordan contacted Scarborough and the other deputy in the unit by cellphone and instructed them to meet him at that location. Sergeant Jordan said that he did not consult with the deputies before making the decision about where and when to conduct the checkpoint, which started at around 12:30 a.m. on Saturday, November 27, and ended at around 3:00 a.m. when Sergeant Jordan left the scene .

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Sergeant Jordan and Deputy Scarborough testified that the checkpoint was identified with a sign for drivers coming from the direction of the bars in downtown Macon as well as three parked patrol cars with their blue roof lights illuminated but not flashing. According to Deputy Scarborough, Sergeant Jordan and the two deputies wore bright yellow police jackets with reflective tape on them. Sergeant Jordan and Deputy Scarborough testified that Jordan acted as the on-scene supervisor and that the deputies acted as screeners, asking drivers for their license and proof of insurance. Sergeant Jordan said that every vehicle that passed through the checkpoint was stopped briefly, while Deputy Scarborough clarified that every vehicle was stopped unless traffic backed up, in which case Sergeant Jordan would temporarily shut down the checkpoint and allow the traffic to clear before restarting the checkpoint.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013According to Deputy Scarborough, around 2:00 a.m., Appellant approached the checkpoint in his pickup truck and rolled down his window. Deputy Scarborough greeted him and asked to see his driver’s license and proof of insurance, which Appellant produced. Deputy Scarborough smelled the odor of alcohol coming from inside the truck and asked Appellant to blow on a portable breath tester, but he declined. Deputy Scarborough then instructed Appellant to pull over to the shoulder of the road and exit the vehicle so that he could determine whether the odor of alcohol was coming from Appellant’s person or from the passenger compartment of the truck, and Appellant complied.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Other vehicles were waiting to be screened, so when Appellant told Deputy Scarborough that “he had had a couple of beers,” the deputy walked Appellant over to Sergeant Jordan to perform field sobriety tests to determine if Appellant was safe enough to drive; Deputy Scarborough then went back to screening. Sergeant Jordan testified that he initiated field sobriety tests, which Appellant eventually refused to continue, at which point Sergeant Jordan placed him under arrest. According to Sergeant Jordan, Appellant’s arrest was the only one made at the checkpoint.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013On November 3, 2011, the trial court entered an order denying Appellant’s motion to suppress. The court found that the State met its burden to show that the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped complied with this Court’s decision in LaFontaine v. State, 269 Ga. 251 (497 SE2d 367) (1998), which identified five minimum requirements that a particular checkpoint must satisfy to be upheld as constitutional. See id. at 253. The court also found that the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped was carried out for “a legitimate law enforcement purpose, that is, a sobriety checkpoint,” and that the checkpoint was “reasonable under the Fourth Amendment” in view of “the totality of the circumstances.”

LaFontaine v. State , 269 Ga. 251, 253 (497 SE2d 367) (1998).A roadblock is satisfactory where [1] the decision to implement the roadblock was made by supervisory personnel rather than the officers in the field; [2] all vehicles are stopped as opposed to random vehicle stops;[3] the delay to motorists is minimal; [ 4] the roadblock operation is well identified as a police checkpoint; and [5] the “screening” officer’s training and experience is sufficient to qualify him to make an initial determination as to which motorists should be given field tests for intoxication .

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Moreover, compliance with the Edmond and LaFontaine requirements does not necessarily end the Fourth Amendment analysis of a checkpoint case....The ultimate question remains whether, under the totality of the circumstances, the challenged stop was reasonable. Thus, even if the checkpoint program and the particular checkpoint at which the driver was stopped satisfy the formal requirements, the reviewing court may consider evidence that the checkpoint basis for the stop was pretextual or that the checkpoint was used to harass or was otherwise arbitrary or oppressive.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Appellant does not challenge the final four LaFontaine requirements, but he argues that the State did not satisfy the first LaFontaine requirement and Edmond.As the Court of Appeals has done at times, Appellant conflates these two requirements, arguing that the State failed to show that he was stopped “at a checkpoint implemented by a field officer rather than by a supervisor acting at the programmatic level.”

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Correctly analyzed, the decision to implement the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped was properly made by a supervisor in advance, but the State failed to prove that the BCSO’s checkpoint program had an appropriate primary purpose other than general crime control.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Supervisory Implementation. In Brown, the trial court found that the State failed to prove that a supervisor made the decision to implement the roadblock at issue there in advance rather than as an officer in the field, and we hold that the Court of Appeals erred in failing to defer to that factual finding when it reversed the trial court’s suppression order. In this case, the trial court made the opposite finding, concluding that Sergeant Jordan “decided the time and place for the roadblock and authorized its implementation as a supervisor, and not a field officer.” We must defer to that finding if there is any evidence in the record to support it, …and there was.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013It is undisputed that Sergeant Jordan was the supervisor of the BCSO HEAT Unit and its two other officers, that the BCSO gave Sergeant Jordan the authority to implement vehicle checkpoints under its roadblock policy, and that Sergeant Jordan was the BCSO official who decided to implement the specific checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped. But Sergeant Jordan also regularly patrols in the field and participates in checkpoint operations.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Thus, the issue is when Sergeant Jordan made the implementation decision – as a supervisor in advance, or as an officer in the field, which creates the risk that the checkpoint was set up spontaneously to target or oppress drivers whom the officer saw on patrol and wanted to stop and question but had no articulable reason to do so.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The checkpoint started at 12:30 a.m. on November 27, 2010. Sergeant Jordan testified that he made the decision “[a]t the beginning of the shift or right as [he] was coming on shift,” and Captain Colbert testified that Sergeant Jordan’s usual shift started at 7:00 p.m..

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Deputy Scarborough testified that the sergeant informed him of the checkpoint location several hours in advance, and Sergeant Jordan recalled that he told Deputy Scarborough and the other HEAT Unit deputy of the location probably about an hour before the operation began.This testimony supports the trial court’s finding that Sergeant Jordan “decided the time and place for the roadblock and authorized its implementation as a supervisor, and not a field officer.”

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Accordingly, the Court of Appeals correctly rejected Appellant’s challenge to the trial court’s order on this ground.The Court of Appeals was also correct in saying that the assistance Sergeant Jordan provided to his two subordinate officers when traffic backed up at the roadblock, in order to minimize the delay to the public, did not “deprive Jordan of supervisory status” for purposes of the first LaFontaine requirement.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013As we explain in Brown, an otherwise valid checkpoint is not “rendered unconstitutional solely because the supervisor who authorized the checkpoint later participates to some extent in the checkpoint’s operation.” Brown, slip op. at 38 n.15.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013We note, however, that the Court of Appeals’ assertion, adopted from that court’s opinion in Brown, that “‘officers are not precluded as a matter of law from acting simultaneously as a supervisor and a field officer,’” …, is incorrect insofar as it pertains to the decision to implement a checkpoint. As we emphasize in Brown, “the implementation decision must be made in advance by a supervisor acting in that supervisory capacity , not by an officer out in the field who happens also to have supervisory rank .” Brown , slip op. at 38 n.15.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013…LaFontaine simply means supervisors, even those at the first level, rejecting the argument “that an officer cannot be classified as ‘supervisory personnel’ under the first LaFontaine requirement unless he exercises ‘programmatic-level’ authority within his agency or is identified as an ‘executive.’”…

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Primary Purpose at the Programmatic Level. The trial court also found that the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped …“was authorized and carried out for a legitimate law enforcement purpose, that is, a sobriety checkpoint.” The Court of Appeals deferred to this finding, saying that the evidence supports the trial court’s finding that [Sergeant] Jordan . . . authorized the roadblock for the legitimate primary purpose decreed by [Captain] Colbert and the stated mission of the HEAT unit to establish a sobriety checkpoint.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013Edmond requires an examination of the policy purpose of the checkpoints, viewed “at the programmatic level,” to ensure that an agency’s checkpoints are established primarily for a lawful and focused purpose like traffic safety rather than to detect evidence of ordinary criminal wrongdoing. In this case, the State failed to prove that the BCSO’s checkpoint program was properly limited.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Cobb County Police Department policy at issue in Brown expressly limited vehicle checkpoints to purposes approved by U.S. Supreme Court case law, and expressly prohibited the use of checkpoints for “general crime detection”; there was no dispute that the checkpoint program there complied with Edmond.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013By contrast, the Bibb County Sheriff’s Office’s two-sentence vehicle roadblock policy authorizes “general roadblocks which serve legitimate law enforcement purposes,” without limitation. “[L]egitimate law enforcement purposes” include such objectives as vehicle safety and driver sobriety – but also include drug interdiction and other measures to detect “evidence of ordinary criminal wrongdoing” and advance “the general interest in crime control,” which Edmond held cannot justify a regime of suspicionless vehicle stops.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013(“[I]f the primary purpose of the checkpoint program is crime-fighting in general, then the checkpoints implemented under that program are unconstitutional . . . .”). Thus, the BCSO’s written checkpoint policy, viewed properly at the programmatic level – what checkpoints are authorized by the policy, rather than what the purpose was for any specific checkpoint – is not limited as the Constitution requires.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The Constitution, however, does not mandate that a law enforcement agency delineate its checkpoint program in writing (although a written policy certainly provides clearer guidance to the agency’s officers and stronger proof for reviewing courts). We therefore must also consider whether the State offered any other evidence that the primary purpose of the BCSO’s vehicle roadblock program was properly limited, such as testimony about restrictions being imposed through verbal orders or training or records showing that checkpoints have been done only for an appropriate purpose.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013But despite testimony describing the form that the BCSO has for reporting on checkpoints, no such forms were offered into evidence, and indeed the testimony indicated that the “normal routine” was not to make any formal record of checkpoints like the multiple roadblocks that Sergeant Jordan had implemented each week for at least a year. And while testimony indicated that the BCSO checkpoint program included sobriety checks, which are an appropriate purpose for vehicle roadblocks … there was no testimony or other there was no testimony or other evidence that the BCSO program excluded checkpoints for purposes of general crime control.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013The trial court’s finding that Captain Colbert delegated to Sergeant Jordan the authority to implement checkpoints “for legitimate and proper law enforcement purposes, such as sobriety checks” (emphasis added), does not establish that the BCSO’s checkpoint program had a primary purpose other than ordinary crime-fighting.

S13G0178. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE. ___ Ga ___, October 21, 2013“At a minimum, the State must show that the law enforcement agency’s checkpoint program had an appropriate primary purpose other than ordinary crime control” when viewed at the programmatic level…The State failed to make that showing in this case, and we therefore must conclude that the checkpoint at which Appellant was stopped violated the Fourth Amendment. Accordingly, the trial court erred in denying Appellant’s motion to suppress, and the Court of Appeals erred in upholding the trial court’s ruling . Judgment reversed. Thompson, C.J., Hines, P.J., Benham , Hunstein , and Melton , JJ., and Judge Jerry W. Baxter concur. Blackwell, J., not participating.

Command College Annual Legal Issues Update 2015! Presented by:J. Dale Mannmanndale53@yahoo.com