                                      IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
                                      FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA

STATE OF FLORIDA ,                    NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
                                      FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
      Appellant,                      DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED

v.                                    CASE NO. 1D15-335

RICKY ALPHONSO RAND,

      Appellee.

_____________________________/

Opinion filed April 4, 2016.

An appeal from the Circuit Court for Duval County.
Angela Cox, Judge.

Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Matthew Pavese, Assistant Attorney General,
for Appellant.

Janet E. Johnson and Andrew B. Greenlee of Andrew B. Greenlee, P.A., Tallahassee,
for Appellee.




KELSEY, J.

      The State appeals an order granting Appellee’s motion to suppress evidence

of a firearm that a Duval County School Police officer found Appellee carrying on

the grounds of a Jacksonville middle school at 2:00 a.m. The officer arrested

Appellee for trespass, and found the gun in Appellee’s jacket pocket upon searching
Appellee immediately following the arrest. Because we conclude that the officer had

probable cause to arrest Appellee for trespass on school grounds, we reverse and

remand for further proceedings.

      Florida’s School Safety Laws.

      Florida protects its school grounds by creating school safety zones “in, on, or

within 500 feet of any real property owned by or leased to any public or private

[school].” § 810.0975(1), Fla. Stat. (2014). Criminal trespass occurs when someone

is on school grounds without “legitimate business on the campus or any other

authorization, license, or invitation to enter or remain upon school property.”

§ 810.097(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (2014). Any law enforcement officer may “arrest either

on or off the premises and without warrant any person the officer has probable cause

for believing has committed the offense of trespass upon the grounds of a school

facility.” § 810.097(4), Fla. Stat. (2014).

      Every school principal is required to notify the appropriate law enforcement

agency to prohibit people from loitering in the school safety zone, except for those

with legitimate business, authorization, or license. See § 810.0975(2)(a), Fla. Stat.

(2014). If no law enforcement officer is on site, a school’s chief administrative

officer or designated employee having probable cause to believe that a person is

trespassing on school grounds is authorized to take into custody and detain such

person “in a reasonable manner for a reasonable length of time” while awaiting

                                              2
arrival of a law enforcement officer. § 810.097(3), Fla. Stat. (2014). It is a third-

degree felony for a person trespassing on school property to possess a weapon or

firearm on the property. § 810.095, Fla. Stat. (2014).

      Appellee’s Presence On School Grounds At 2:00 a.m.

      The principal of the middle school at issue here had previously advised the

Duval County School Police, and this officer specifically, that no people or vehicles

were permitted to be on school property after hours at any time. The school is

surrounded by a six-foot high chain link fence, and there are several “no trespassing”

signs around the property. There is also a sign stating “No Track Access 7 A.M. to

4 P.M.”

      The arresting officer was assigned the duty of patrolling public school grounds

at night. He testified that this school is in a high-crime area and that he has previously

made numerous arrests for trespassing and burglary on school grounds in the area.

The officer was on patrol at approximately 2:00 a.m. when he saw Appellee inside

the fence, on the middle school grounds. It was undisputed that Appellee was not on

the track when the officer first saw him. Appellee admitted that he was in an area of

the school grounds between the track and school buildings, and facing a building,

because it was necessary for him to cross that area to get to the track from the gate

he entered. The officer was alone, and his backup was at least eight minutes away.

He was concerned for his own safety. The night was cool but not cold, and Appellee

                                            3
was wearing a dark, heavy jacket and dark sweat pants. Appellee was not doing

anything exercise-related at that time. Given these facts and his understanding of the

law at the time, the officer believed Appellee was trespassing and thought he might

be on school property to commit burglary.

      The officer shone a light on Appellee and called out to him. Appellee

immediately started walking toward the officer. The officer testified that sometimes

suspects do approach him rather than run away, such as when they do not think he

is there to arrest them. The gate closest to the officer was locked, and he unlocked

it. The officer did not know at that time that another gate on a different side of school

grounds was open, nor was he aware of the sign prohibiting track access between

7:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. When Appellee got within earshot of the officer, he stated

that he was just there to walk the track. As Appellee got closer, the officer asked him

again what business he had for being on school property, and he repeated that he was

there to walk the track. Appellee admitted that as he walked, he reached toward the

front of his jacket—he said to keep it closed. The officer saw these movements and

thought Appellee might be reaching for a gun.

      Upon reaching Appellee, the officer handcuffed him, arrested him for

trespassing, and asked if he had a weapon. The officer’s search immediately revealed

a firearm in a front pocket of Appellee’s jacket. Appellee was charged with




                                           4
trespassing on school grounds while carrying a weapon, and possession of a firearm

by a convicted felon.

      The Motion to Suppress.

      Appellee moved to suppress the firearm recovered from the search, asserting

that the arrest and search were without probable cause. Appellee admitted that he

was a convicted felon, with “probably three” prior felony convictions. The trial court

concluded the officer was credible in his belief that Appellee was trespassing, and

the officer had a reasonable belief that Appellee may have been engaged in unlawful

conduct. The court found that the officer had a reasonable basis to detain Appellee,

and Appellee has not challenged this finding. The court nevertheless granted the

motion to suppress on grounds that the officer failed to conduct an investigation prior

to arresting Appellee and thus lacked probable cause.

      Probable Cause Analysis.

      Probable cause exists when an officer has reasonable grounds to believe that

the defendant committed a crime. State v. Cuomo, 43 So. 3d 838, 841 (Fla. 1st DCA

2010) (“The existence of probable cause is not based on a formulaic determination,

but rather on the probability of criminal activity.”). We evaluate whether “the totality

of the facts and circumstances within an officer’s knowledge would cause a

reasonable person to believe that an offense has been committed by the person being

arrested.” Hatcher v. State, 15 So. 3d 929, 931 (Fla. 1st DCA 2009); see also Dahl

                                           5
v. Holley, 312 F.3d 1228, 1234 (11th Cir. 2002) (holding that “arresting officers, in

deciding whether probable cause exists, are not required to sift through conflicting

evidence or resolve issues of credibility, so long as the totality of the circumstances

present a sufficient basis for believing that an offense has been committed.”). We

have held that an officer who observes a defendant committing the crime of trespass

has probable cause to arrest the defendant and search him pursuant to the arrest. State

v. Neely, 560 So. 2d 1230, 1231 (Fla. 1st DCA 1990).

      This Court reviews the lower court’s probable cause determination de novo,

while it reviews the lower court’s factual findings under the clearly erroneous

standard. Jenkins v. State, 978 So. 2d 116, 122 (Fla. 2008) (“[D]eterminations of

reasonable suspicion and probable cause should be reviewed de novo on

appeal.”); James v. State, 129 So. 3d 1206, 1208 (Fla. 1st DCA 2014). Two rules of

law are dispositive. First, probable cause is judged objectively—from the officer’s

perspective. State v. Hankerson, 65 So. 3d 502, 506 (Fla. 2011); State v. Wimberly,

988 So. 2d 116, 119-20 (Fla. 5th DCA 2008). Second, probable cause is reviewed at

the moment of arrest—the clock stops, time freezes, and nothing learned or

occurring afterwards matters. Griffin v. State, 150 So. 3d 288, 291, 294 (Fla. 1st

DCA 2014) (explaining that probable cause must be based solely on what is present

and known at that point; “we stop the clock and observe the facts known to the

officer”) (citing Baptiste v. State, 995 So. 2d 285, 294 (Fla. 2008) (“[T]he

                                          6
reasonableness of the officers' suspicion must be measured by the information that

the officers knew before conducting the stop-and-frisk.”)) (emphasis original).

      Here, when the frame is frozen at the point of arrest, the scene demonstrates

probable cause: an officer assigned to patrol a school, in a high-crime area,

previously instructed that no one was to be on the grounds after hours; the officer

having made prior arrests for trespassing and burglary under similar circumstances;

a track on school grounds, within a fence, the gates of which the officer believed to

be locked, bearing “No Trespassing” signs; and Appellee inside the fence at 2:00

a.m., facing a building some distance from the track, wearing dark, heavy clothing

inappropriate for the temperature, and reaching toward his pockets as he walked.

      Only those facts are relevant. Only those facts may be used to determine

whether there were sufficient facts “to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the

belief that an offense has been or is being committed.” Hankerson, 65 So. 3d at 506.

Reasonable mistakes of law and fact are permitted. See Heien v. North Carolina, 135

S. Ct. 530, 534, 540 (2014) (holding reasonable suspicion can be based on

reasonable mistakes of law as well as reasonable mistakes of fact); Seago v. State,

768 So. 2d 498, 499-500 (Fla. 2d DCA 2000) (reversing trespass conviction because

State did not prove lack of authorization, license, or invitation; but affirming the

arrest for trespass, which only required probable cause). Probable cause is not a

conviction, based on reasonable doubt, nor is it even a prima facie showing; it is

                                         7
simply an “assessment of probabilities.” Hankerson, 65 So. 3d at 506. In light of the

relevant and undisputed facts, probable cause existed here.

      We have defined “legitimate business” under the school trespass laws as “any

purpose for being there which is connected with the operation of the school.” E.W.

v. State, 873 So. 2d 485, 487 (Fla. 1st DCA 2004). The officer could reasonably

conclude that entering school grounds at 2:00 a.m. did not constitute “legitimate

business,” particularly in light of the principal’s instructions to him that no one

should be on school grounds after hours. If the officer had turned out to be wrong

about such a conclusion, however, that would not defeat a finding that probable

cause existed. See Heien, 135 S. Ct. at 534, 540 (explaining officer’s reasonable

mistake of law will not defeat probable cause).

      Because the governing legal standards limit judicial review to the facts known

to the arresting officer at the time of arrest, we reject the dissent’s argument that the

sign prohibiting access between 7:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. by negative implication

authorized access at all other times, even in the middle of the night. The sign is not

reasonably interpreted to invite public access on school grounds at all hours of the

night, as a matter of common sense and in the context of Florida’s system of laws

protecting school properties. What the State’s lawyer may have said about the sign

at the suppression hearing long after the fact is neither binding nor even relevant to

the pertinent question of the officer’s knowledge and understanding at the time of

                                           8
the arrest. The officer here testified that he was not aware of the sign at the time of

this incident; and more to the point, the instructions of the school principal to this

officer were directly contrary to such an interpretation of the sign, thus supporting

our conclusion that the officer had probable cause to arrest Appellee under the

circumstances.

      Similarly, although the dissent reasons that anyone and everyone had

permission to be on school grounds at any time because the school left one gate open

and the signage only affirmatively prohibited public access during school hours, we

reject that proposition as inconsistent with the statutes governing safety on school

grounds. For purposes of probable cause analysis, it is dispositive that the record

reflects that this officer did not know the gate was open and was not aware of the

sign. In addition, the dissent’s attempt to impute to this officer knowledge of what

other school employees at another school had told Appellee (not this officer) is not

supported by the record and is not a factor appropriately considered in the probable

cause analysis. The pertinent legal test is what the officer knew about the facts and

the law at the point of deciding to arrest Appellee. This officer was not inattentive

to the only policy that mattered, which was that the principal of this particular school

had told him no one was to be allowed on school grounds at night. The trial court

found the officer credible, and there was no material dispute as to the officer’s

observations prior to arresting Appellee. Whether the officer might have allowed

                                           9
someone on the track during daylight or evening hours is simply not relevant to

whether he had probable cause to believe Appellee was trespassing on school

grounds under these circumstances at 2:00 in the morning.

      Appellee improperly equates the probable cause issue with the question of

whether a trier of fact might find reasonable doubt for a conviction. Appellee

maintains he had implied license to walk the track based on several factors such as

the fact that one gate was open; he had been told he could walk the track of another

school at night; and he was trying to lose weight by exercising at a time that worked

for his schedule, a claim he supported with copies of various Facebook posts. Such

after-the-arrest evidentiary arguments are inapplicable to the probable cause analysis

and may not be considered for probable cause purposes. Griffin, 150 So. 3d at 291,

294 (explaining probable cause must be based solely on what is known at the point

of arrest). The officer was under no obligation at that time to launch an investigation

into the claims Appellee would later make in court. The officer’s own safety would

not permit such an investigation, and probable cause analysis does not require it.

Nothing    more     is   required   than    reasonable    investigation   under    the

circumstances. See City of Clearwater v. Williamson, 938 So. 2d 985, 990 (Fla. 2d

DCA 2006) (“The officer does not have to take every conceivable step to eliminate

the possibility of convicting an innocent person”; the officer must only conduct a

“reasonable investigation”) (emphasis original); see also A.S.P. v. State, 964 So. 2d

                                           10
211 (Fla. 2d DCA 2007) (finding only that trespass investigation failed to provide

probable cause).

      Appellee is free to raise these arguments on remand on the merits of the

trespassing charge. We do not pass on the propriety or strength of such arguments,

however; that is a jury question. Applying the governing probable cause analysis to

the legally relevant facts—those known to the arresting officer prior to the arrest—

we find the trial court erred by concluding that probable cause did not exist and

suppressing evidence of the firearm Appellee was carrying.

      Conclusion.

      Only one point in time matters to an appropriate probable cause analysis: the

moment of arrest. Additional information gleaned afterwards is immaterial to the

existence of probable cause. Under the circumstances presented here, the officer had

probable cause, and the motion to suppress should have been denied.

      Accordingly, we REVERSE the trial court’s order granting Appellee’s motion

to suppress, and REMAND for entry of an order denying the motion to suppress,

and for further proceedings.

SWANSON, J., CONCURS; OSTERHAUS, J., DISSENTS WITH OPINION.




                                        11
OSTERHAUS, J., dissenting.

      I would affirm the order suppressing the gun because the school district officer

mistakenly arrested Mr. Rand for trespassing, and his mistake wasn’t objectively

reasonable as might have preserved probable cause and avoid application of the

exclusionary rule. The school conspicuously invited the public to use its track before

or after school hours, including at night. And other school district officers knew,

understood, and conveyed to Mr. Rand an open-track policy, which further

encouraged his nighttime track use. Under these circumstances, where the record

demonstrates that one officer’s mistake of law stemmed from his own disregardful

inattention to a posted and broadly-known policy, and caused him to arrest, search,

and seize the gun of a person with every right to be exercising at the track where the

officer found him, we shouldn’t reverse the trial court’s decision. We should instead

affirm the trial court’s decision, and deny the state a “Fourth Amendment advantage

through [its officer’s] sloppy study of the laws he is duty-bound to enforce.” Heien

v. North Carolina, 135 S. Ct. 530, 539-40 (2014).

                                          I.

      Arrests are the most intrusive of Fourth Amendment seizures and are

reasonable only if supported by probable cause, or where “the totality of the facts

known to the officer at the time would cause a reasonable person to believe that an

offense has been committed.” Van Teamer v. State, 108 So. 3d 664, 666 (Fla. 1st

                                         12
DCA 2013) (quotation omitted). The “exclusionary rule” dictates that trial courts

must suppress physical evidence seized without probable cause, as the fruit of an

unlawful arrest. This rule, according to the United States Supreme Court, is meant

to “safeguard against future violations of Fourth Amendment rights through the

rule’s general deterrent effect.” Arizona v. Evans, 514 U.S. 1, 10 (1995).

                                         A.

      In this case, a Duval County school district officer arrested Mr. Rand as he

prepared to exercise on the neighborhood middle school’s track a block from his

house. The officer immediately arrested him, without any investigation, because he

thought Mr. Rand was trespassing. But this was incorrect. The school had actually

invited persons to use its track after school hours posting a big sign next to an open

gate at the track. Nevertheless, the search incident to Mr. Rand’s arrest turned up a

gun in his jacket. And the State is now prepared to use the gun to prosecute Mr. Rand

on felony gun-related charges. 1

      The officer in this case had no reasonable belief to think that Mr. Rand was

trespassing at the school track when he arrested him (in his exercise clothes and with

earbuds). The school had invited Mr. Rand to use the track and the officer should

have known it. First, the officer—who testified that he’d patrolled the school for


1
 The State charged Mr. Rand with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon
based on a marijuana possession conviction in Texas in 2003, see § 790.23, Fla.
Stat., and for trespassing with a firearm, see § 810.095(1), Fla. Stat.
                                           13
years and was “very familiar with this property”—neglected the school’s

conspicuous public invitation to use the track after school hours. A sign posted

beside an open track gate declared in BIG, BOLD LETTERS: “NO TRACK

ACCESS 7 AM to 4 PM.” The officer conceded that the sign was “essentially an

invitation to the public to enter that track on hours that do not conflict with [school].”

But he claimed that he hadn’t observed the sign before (even though the record

indicated that the sign hung at more than one district school where he patrolled). The

state attorney similarly acknowledged that “the sign posted on the fence admittedly

would give someone license to use the track during those hours.”

      Second, the officer overlooked that the school regularly left the track gate by

the sign open after hours. It gave the public easy access to the track, even while it

locked other gates at the school. Adults from outside regularly exercised on the track

before and after school hours, as pictures in the record showed. But the officer

indicated that he wasn’t aware that the school left the gate open at the track after

school hours.

      Third, the evidence showed that the officer’s inattentiveness to the school’s

open-track policy contrasted sharply with his fellow officers’ knowledge and

enforcement of an open-track policy at schools with the inviting signs. Other officers

confirmed to Mr. Rand that he could use the track after school hours: “They told me

that as long as . . . the gate is unlocked then the public can have access to it.” Mr.

                                           14
Rand took their advice and had openly exercised for more than a year on school

tracks. He regularly documented his workouts with pictures and Facebook postings

that updated his miles, times, and other details of his workouts. In one Facebook

posting entered into the record, made months before his arrest, he noted that his

school track workout had to finish by 7 a.m., before school began. Another posting

showed Mr. Rand shirtless and trumpeting that he’d lost 10 pounds. He exercised at

night because of his odd schedule as a taxi driver, and because his fiancée managed

the local Whataburger until 4 a.m. He had started exercising on his doctor’s orders,

because of blood pressure and weight issues, and a family history of heart disease.

      Under these facts, with the officer conceding his ignorance of the school’s

posted open-track policy, his inattention to the school’s practice of leaving the track

gate open, and his unexplained disconnect with fellow officers’ clear understanding

that school tracks with the signs were open for use, I cannot conclude that the officer

had a reasonable belief that Mr. Rand had committed a crime, necessary to support

his arrest and the search and seizure of his gun. At best, the officer’s disregard of the

open-track policy could be considered a mistake of law attributable to his own

sloppiness.

      Of course, a reasonable mistake can still justify probable cause and permit the

State to use evidence from a post-arrest search in a subsequent prosecution. The

United States Supreme Court recently said as much in a Fourth Amendment case

                                           15
involving a mistake of law made by a North Carolina police officer. Heien, 135 S.

Ct. 530. In Heien, an officer pulled over the driver of a car and issued him a ticket

for having one non-working brake light. Unbeknownst to the officer at the time, it

did not violate North Carolina law to have just one non-functioning brake light.

During the stop, occupants of the car acted suspiciously and the officer sought and

received permission to search the car, which turned up cocaine. He proceeded to

arrest Mr. Heien for attempted trafficking. Mr. Heien then argued that the drug

evidence must be suppressed because the officer lacked a valid reason for stopping

his car in the first place. The U.S. Supreme Court analyzed the mistake of law by

focusing on whether the officer’s initial mistake in stopping the car for a non-

working brake light was a reasonable one. It considered an “objectively reasonable”

mistake of law by an officer to justify a suspicion of illegal conduct and to avoid

application of the exclusionary rule. Id. at 539-40. And, in that case, because the text

of the North Carolina statute sent mixed messages about whether all vehicle brake

lights must be functional, the Court found “little difficulty” finding reasonable

suspicion in spite of the officer’s mistake. Id. at 540. “[B]ecause the mistake of law

was reasonable, there was reasonable suspicion justifying the stop.” Id.

      But Heien doesn’t excuse the type of mistake that the officer made here.

Whereas Heien involved an ambiguous code provision that wasn’t clear on whether

one non-working break light triggered a violation, the officer’s “mistake” in this case

                                          16
stemmed from his own inattentiveness to a posted policy that was patently familiar

to his fellow officers. And so, the school district officer’s mistake here wasn’t

objectively reasonable and does not support probable cause.

      The State’s primary justification of the officer’s ignorance of the open-track

policy, in support of finding probable cause, was the officer’s own testimony that

the school principal once told him that “she wants nobody on campus after hours

and nobody should be on campus after hours.” No school administrator confirmed

such a policy, particularly as relates to the school’s sign and open track. And the

record shows that no one, not even the officer himself, enforced the policy that he

attributed to the principal. Rather, the officer testified that he followed a district

policy that, consistent with state law, didn’t ban after-hours visitors, but allowed for

invitees on campus who had a legitimate purpose for being there. The principal’s

supposed statement is also not very clear in what was meant by “nobody on campus

after hours.” I have to think that hardworking teachers and staff remain on campus

after 4 p.m., or arrive before 7 a.m., on lots of days each school year. And students

participating in athletics, clubs, and other school events, probably do too. It’s

inconceivable that the officer understood his duties as being to arrest anyone on

campus after hours, and his testimony reflected as much. 2


2
 The statement also doesn’t describe what the principal meant by “campus,” insofar
as the school locked down the area around its buildings, but not access to its track
(where it hung an inviting sign on an open track gate). These two areas were on
                                       17
      Furthermore, Mr. Rand’s actions comported with the policy that the officer

claimed to enforce. Mr. Rand entered the track area to walk in his exercise clothes,

only upon being invited by the school’s sign and open gate, and after other law

enforcement officers had confirmed the open-track policy to him. He had both an

invitation and legitimate purpose for being there, as the State conceded below: “the

sign posted on the fence admittedly would give someone license to use the track

during those hours.”

      The majority opinion makes a point of the fact that Mr. Rand may not have

yet reached the track when the officer first spotted him, as though walking toward

the track, but not on it, triggered probable cause to arrest him. Mr. Rand admitted

that he had just entered the open gate to the track area when the officer passed by in

his car. But it makes no difference whether the officer spotted him walking toward

the track, or exercising on the track because, as the trial court put it, “How do you

get to the track . . . if you don’t walk across a piece of land to get there?” The sign

by the open gate granted track “ACCESS.” Mr. Rand didn’t need to be airlifted in

order to accept the school’s invitation to use the track after school hours. Relatedly,

Mr. Rand wasn’t near any of the buildings on the other side of the “very large

campus.” Nor did the state offer any evidence that the school posted “no trespassing”



opposite sides of “a very large campus” and “not at all” close to each other,
according to the officer.
                                     18
signs. The officer investigated none of this; he simply arrested Mr. Rand upon seeing

him at the track.3

                                          II.

      “The Fourth Amendment tolerates only reasonable mistakes.” Heien, 135 S.

Ct. at 539. And here, the officer lacked a reasonable belief that Mr. Rand was

committing a crime. Because I do not consider the officer’s inattentiveness to the

school’s open-track policy—disregarding the sign, the open gate, and his colleagues’

correct understanding of the policy—as being objectively reasonable, I would affirm

the trial court’s decision to suppress the gun evidence. We should not give the state

a Fourth Amendment advantage based on its officer’s “sloppy study of the [school

trespassing] laws he is duty-bound to enforce.” Heien, 135 S. Ct. at 539-40.

                             *            *             *

      Finally, I realize respectfully that part of my problem with the majority

opinion stems from its treatment of the facts. Although the State lost below, I read

the majority opinion as casting the facts in a light supporting reversal, instead of in

favor of the trial court’s order. This is important because appeals courts are charged

with making reasonable inferences and deductions from mixed evidence “in a


3
 Defense counsel: “You, upon making contact with [Mr. Rand], take him into
custody for trespassing without incident, correct?”
Officer: “Yes, ma’am.”
Defense counsel: “With no investigation, correct?”
Officer: “Correct.”
                                         19
manner most favorable to sustaining [a trial court’s] ruling.” Van Teamer, 108 So.

3d at 666 (quoting State v. Gandy, 766 So. 2d 1234, 1235–36 (Fla. 1st DCA 2000))

(emphasis added).

      I struggle, for instance, with how the majority describes Mr. Rand’s encounter

with the officer; the supposed “No Trespassing” signs on campus fences; Mr. Rand’s

supposedly “inappropriate” clothing; the principal’s statement to the officer; the

officer’s history of policing the campus; and Mr. Rand’s location when the officer

spotted him. One place where the record offers conflicting accounts, for instance, is

in the description of Mr. Rand’s mistaken arrest and the officer’s rationale. The

officer testified in one place that he “arrested [Mr. Rand] outright as soon as

approaching him” because he was off the track, facing the school. In another place

the officer testified that he’d have arrested Mr. Rand regardless of where he found

him. In another place the officer said that he would “certainly not” have arrested Mr.

Rand if he were walking on the track. And in another place the State claimed “[t]he

State is not disputing the fact that Mr. Rand in actuality and in retrospect, he was

walking on the track.” The officer’s testimony wasn’t consistent and the trial court

obviously couldn’t reconcile all of it with Mr. Rand’s simple story that he walked

from his home to the track in exercise clothes, passed through the open gate, and

turned left towards the track to begin his walk.

      If the trial court had made the opposite ruling below, no doubt my inferences

                                         20
and deductions from the evidence would have more closely aligned with the

majority’s view.




                                   21
