The Pennsylvania Superior Court has decided the case of Commonwealth v. Coles, reversing the trial court’s grant of a motion to suppress a gun. The Court found that the trial court should have found that police properly searched the defendant’s bag after the defendant fled from a lawful police stop, ran into someone else’s house without permission, and abandoned the bag containing the illegal gun.
The Facts of Coles
Two Philadelphia police officers were on patrol in September 2020. They observed the defendant and other individuals smoking what appeared to be marijuana on a street corner. The officers approached the defendant to investigate. The defendant immediately fled into a nearby house. When police saw her, she was carrying a black North Face backpack .
The police followed her into the house. Once they got in the house, they found the backpack abandoned in the kitchen. The officers searched it and found a gun in the bag. They arrested the defendant and confirmed that she did not have a license to carry the firearm in the bag.
The Motion to Suppress
Prosecutors charged the defendant with carrying a concealed firearm without a license in violation of 18 Pa.C.S. § 6106 as well as carrying a firearm on the streets of Philadelphia in violation of 18 Pa.C.S. § 6108. She filed a motion to suppress the gun, arguing that the police did not have reasonable suspicion or probable cause to search the backpack. The trial court agreed and granted the motion to suppress. The Commonwealth appealed.
The Superior Court Appeal
The Commonwealth appealed the trial court’s decision granting the motion to suppress to the Pennsylvania Superior Court, and the Superior Court reversed.
The Court found that the defendant had voluntarily abandoned the backpack when she fled into a property she had no permission to enter. According to Pennsylvania law, an individual who abandons property cannot later contest its search and seizure. The court noted that abandonment is a matter of intent, inferred from actions and circumstances. Here, the defendant’s act of leaving the backpack behind while fleeing from police indicated her intent to abandon it, thereby forfeiting any reasonable expectation of privacy. The Court emphasized that the police did not need reasonable suspicion or probable cause to search an abandoned item.
Notably, this was not a situation involving “forced abandonment.” If someone flees from the police or abandons property as a direct result of illegal police conduct, then it may still be possible to successfully move to suppress the abandoned property. For example, if the police attempt to stop someone without reasonable suspicion or probable cause and the person runs and tosses a gun, it may still be possible to suppress the gun in state court because the gun was only abandoned as a result of the illegal stop. But here, there was no issue of forced abandonment because both the trial court and the Superior Court believed that the police had reasonable suspicion to approach the defendant to investigate the illegal marijuana use. The police officers’s suspicions regarding the marijuana and the defendant’s immediate flight and abandonment of the backpack provided them with the necessary level of suspicion to conduct the search. It is also important to note that although the doctrine of forced abandonment applies in Pennsylvania state court, it generally does not apply in federal court. As a general rule, running away and discarding contraband will not help your case, but in some cases in Pennsylvania, it may still be possible to argue that the initial unlawful police conduct requires suppression of the evidence. Unfortunately, this case does not appear to be one of them.
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