             REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

          OF MARYLAND

               No. 1394

        September Term, 2014




             IRA CHASE

                  v.

      STATE OF MARYLAND




   Meredith,
   Berger,
   Kenney, James A., III
     (Retired, Specially Assigned),

                  JJ.


        Opinion by Kenney, J.


   Filed: August 31, 2015
      Appellant, Ira Chase, was indicted in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County,

Maryland, and charged with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and related

offenses. After his motion to suppress was denied, he entered a conditional guilty plea to

possession of cocaine with intent to distribute pursuant to Maryland Rule 4-242(d). He was

sentenced to one year, all suspended, and was placed on probation for one year. In his

timely appeal, he presents the following question for our review:

               Did the trial court err in denying the motion to suppress?

      For the following reasons, we shall affirm.

                   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

                                    Suppression Hearing

      Detective Andrew Melnyk, and his partner, Detective Young,1 assigned to the

Vice/Narcotics Section of the Baltimore County Police Department for the last six months

prior to the hearing, were on patrol on September 10, 2013, in the Security Boulevard

section of the county, close to Interstates 70 and 695. This area, according to Detective

Melnyk, was known for “illicit narcotic activity.”

      That evening, the detectives went to the Days Inn hotel, located on Whitehead Court

in Baltimore County, Maryland.2 Detective Melnyk knew this particular hotel from working




      1
          Detective Young’s first name is not in the record.
      2
          The transcript erroneously lists the address as “Lighthead Court.”
patrol in the area since 2008, and that the hotel was located in a “high area of drug

trafficking.” He also testified, with respect to the hotel, that he had “participated in

numerous search warrants and apprehensions resulting in the seizure of illicit drugs and U.S.

currency, as well as weapons.”

       They pulled into the Days Inn parking lot at around 6:45 p.m. and noticed a white

Jeep Cherokee backed into a parking spot on the lot. The occupant of the Jeep, later

identified as appellant, was talking on his cell phone. About two minutes later, a Lexus

backed adjacent to the Jeep, taking up two designated spots, despite the fact that the

remainder of the parking lot was virtually empty. The driver of the Lexus exited his vehicle

and got into the passenger side of the Jeep.

       Detective Melnyk testified, over a general objection, that based on a forty hour

narcotics investigator class, as well as a weeklong class at the Academy for drug

identification and characteristics of people involved in distribution of narcotics, that

individuals will use vehicles “to conceal the transactions from law enforcement,” and will

operate from a “hotel to conceal the identity of their home address.” Although not testifying

as an expert, Detective Melnyk, based on his experience in the Vice/Narcotics Unit, testified:

       So with the Defendant in his vehicle, as well as the Lexus pulling in and the
       driver of the Lexus getting out of his vehicle into the Defendant’s vehicle, as
       well as the area that they’re in, it’s a known high drug area, they did not utilize
       any services of the Days Inn, which is where they were parked. We believed
       that there was illegal drug activity taking place, or criminal activity at that

                                               2
       matter.

       Within five minutes after entering the Days Inn lot, at approximately 6:50 p.m., the

two detectives decided to approach the Jeep to investigate and “detained both occupants”

based on reasonable articulable suspicion that they were involved in illegal activity.

Detective Melnyk explained:

       We noticed, as we were approaching the vehicle, the driver specifically, as
       well as the passenger, they were moving, looks like they were moving things
       around there, reaching under the seat. The passenger immediately put his
       hands in his pocket. At that point, for the safety of myself and Detective
       Young, they were requested to exit the vehicle and we put them in handcuffs
       just to make sure they didn’t have any weapons and detaining them. They
       were not free to leave. The, the reason for the handcuffs were solely based on
       the safety of everyone involved, based on the furtive movements that we
       observed inside the vehicle as we were approaching the vehicle.

       Appellant and the driver of the Lexus, Michael DeLillo, III, were patted down and

read their rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). The pat down revealed no

weapons. DeLillo stated that he was at the hotel to meet some unidentified individual named

“Phil” to watch an Orioles game. Appellant indicated that he was going to meet his cousin

at the Maryland Live Casino. During this conversation, appellant was “very irate,” and

claimed “that he had done nothing wrong.” On cross-examination, Detective Melnyk

reaffirmed that both individuals were being detained and were not free to leave at this time.

       At this point, approximately 6:52 p.m., Detective Melnyk contacted police dispatch

to request that a K-9 unit respond to the scene. The K-9 arrived within minutes, and at 7:00

                                              3
p.m., the dog alerted on the passenger side door of the Jeep. Appellant was then placed

under arrest and was searched incident to the arrest. Police recovered some currency and

a Days Inn room key, but no drugs were found on his person or in his Jeep.

       DeLillo was also arrested and when he was searched, police recovered fourteen grams

of cocaine, valued at around $700 to $900. DeLillo later spoke to police and, in a written

statement, confirmed that he was in the parking lot for the sole purpose of obtaining 3.5

grams of cocaine. He brought $345 to make that purchase, but appellant gave him 14 grams

of cocaine instead.

       Both appellant’s and DeLillo’s cell phones were also seized incident to their arrest.

DeLillo’s phone contained text messages indicating that he was obtaining quantities of

“girl.” Detective Melnyk testified, based on his training, knowledge and experience, that

“girl,” referred to cocaine powder. Some of the text messages were with “Fat Boy,” which

police determined was appellant’s nickname. Once the police confirmed that the room key

found on appellant’s person was for a room at the Days Inn, they applied for, and obtained,

a search warrant for that room.

       After hearing argument, the court denied the motion to suppress, stating:

              Okay. It’s a very interesting case. I’m familiar with all the cases
       you’ve handed up, [Prosecutor]. The Carter case is of particular interest, it’s
       one of Judge Moylan’s shorter opinions. The man was stopped or he wasn’t
       stopped, he’s already parked under the policeman’s observation when the
       other car pulls in. They’re backed in next to each other, it’s a high crime area.

                                              4
       I’m familiar with the area. I don’t know how many cases I’ve had from that
       side of town involving drugs. They’re in the parking lot of the hotel, nobody
       gets out of the car, goes into a hotel, don’t do anything except meet each other
       at a car. The furtive acts give me some concern because of the officers[’]
       safety. They see this going on inside the vehicle as they’re approaching. The
       inconsistent stories, you know, one’s watching the ballgame, the other one is
       going to Maryland Live Casino. I think that’s what really triggered the call
       for the K-9 to come out and it was fairly quick after they were stopped. I
       believe the K-9 arrived within ten minutes of the police approaching the
       vehicle to begin with. I think it is a classic Terry case, (inaudible) to the high
       crime in the area, drugs, we know that guns are involved with drugs. So I can
       understand the concern for officers’ safety. The dog alerts on the side of the
       vehicle that Mr. DeLillo just got out of and he’s the one who later on states,
       you know, I came to buy an eight ball to get, got fourteen grams, got more
       than he came for. Certainly, got more than he came for when he got the cuffs
       on him. I believe I don’t have any choice but to deny your Motion, [Defense
       Counsel]. I think it’s a good stop, it’s a good search. I was concerned about
       the cuffs going on when they went on and the comments that were made by
       the two gentlemen were after they were read Miranda. They were Mirandized
       right away. I know you disagree with me, Mr. [Chase], you’ve been sitting
       there shaking your head sideways since you came in the door today. The
       Motion to Suppress is denied. . . .

                                   Conditional Guilty Plea

       With the consent of the court and the State, Chase entered a conditional guilty plea

to possession of cocaine with intent to distribute pursuant to Maryland Rule 4-242(d). The

prosecutor summarized the factual basis for the guilty plea as follows:

               Your Honor, the summary of the facts in support of the conditional
       guilty plea that I provided the court are as, are as follows: On September 10th
       of 2013, Baltimore County police were on undercover surveillance on
       Whitehead Court in Baltimore County. They know this to be a high crime,
       high drug area. When they saw what they believed to be a hand to hand drug
       transaction, they stopped the parties involved. One of those parties was

                                               5
       identified as this Defendant, Ira Chase, to my left and with counsel before you.
       There was a series of incidents and conversations that eventually led to a
       search warrant of a room that was associated with Mr. Chase. He was
       associated to that room by the staff of the Days Inn, as well as by a key that
       was found on his person. Search of that room yielded a large amount of
       cocaine, a schedule two, controlled dangerous substance, specifically one
       hundred and eight grams along with unused sandwich baggies, a digital scale
       and other indicia that to an expert in the sale of packaging, distribution of
       street level narcotics would indicate that the items found in a room associated
       to Mr. Chase and in his possession would be possessed with the intent to
       distribute.

       Based on the statement of facts, the court found Chase guilty of possession of cocaine

with intent to distribute.

                                       DISCUSSION

       Our standard of review is as follows:

               In reviewing a circuit court’s grant or denial of a motion to suppress
       evidence, we ordinarily consider only the evidence contained in the record of
       the suppression hearing. The factual findings of the suppression court and its
       conclusions regarding the credibility of testimony are accepted unless clearly
       erroneous. We review the evidence and the inferences that may be reasonably
       drawn in the light most favorable to the prevailing party. We undertake our
       own constitutional appraisal of the record by reviewing the law and applying
       it to the facts of the present case.

McFarlin v. State, 409 Md. 391, 403 (2009) (quoting Rush v. State, 403 Md. 68, 82 (2008)

(citations omitted)).

       Appellant contends that he was arrested prior to the positive alert by the dog, while

the State essentially maintains that appellant was simply subject to an investigative detention


                                               6
supported by reasonable articulable suspicion until the canine alert. Appellant argues that

he was not merely detained because he had been removed from the vehicle, handcuffed, read

his Miranda rights and questioned. And, because the arrest was not supported by probable

cause, it was unlawful and therefore, everything that was recovered afterwards is the fruit

of the poisonous tree. The State also argues, for the first time on appeal, that, even if the

arrest preceded the arrival of the drug dog, there was probable cause to support an arrest.3

       Here, there is little, if any, dispute that probable cause to arrest existed after the drug

dog alerted on the Jeep. See State v. Wallace, 372 Md. 137, 146 (2002) (“Further, the law

is settled that when a properly trained canine alerts to a vehicle indicating the likelihood of

contraband, sufficient probable cause exists to conduct a warrantless ‘Carroll’ search of the

vehicle”), cert. denied, 540 U.S. 1140 (2004); Wilkes v. State, 364 Md. 554, 586 (2001) (“We

have noted that once a drug dog has alerted a trooper to the presence of illegal drugs in a

vehicle, sufficient probable cause exist[s] to support a warrantless search of [a vehicle].”

(Internal quotation and citations omitted)); Stokeling v. State, 189 Md. App. 653, 664 (2009)


       3
         The State also asserts, without further authority or argument, that “[e]ven if probable
cause was lacking, in searching Chase’s hotel room, police relied in good faith on the
warrant.” A similar argument was not made during the motions hearing. Although we may
consider the “good faith” exception even when it was not raised below, see McDonald v.
State, 347 Md. 452, 470 n. 10 (1997), we need not consider the issue in this case and we
would be reluctant to do so. See Diallo v. State, 413 Md. 678, 692-93 (2010) (“arguments
not presented in a brief or not presented with particularity will not be considered on appeal”
(citation omitted)).

                                                7
(stating that dog “alert to the Chrysler gave the police probable cause to search it for illegal

drugs”), cert. denied, 414 Md. 332 (2010); State v. Ofori, 170 Md. App. 211, 221, cert.

denied, 396 Md. 13 (2006) (“[O]nce the K-9 ‘alerted’ to the probable presence of contraband

drugs in the [vehicle], all Fourth Amendment uncertainty came to an end.”).

       For Fourth Amendment purposes, there are three levels of interaction between the

police and citizens:

       The most intrusive encounter is an arrest, which requires probable cause to
       believe that a person has committed or is committing a crime. The second
       category is the investigatory stop or detention, known commonly as a Terry
       stop, an encounter considered less intrusive than a formal custodial arrest and
       one which must be supported by reasonable suspicion that a person has
       committed or is about to commit a crime and permits an officer to stop and
       briefly detain an individual. The third contact is considered the least intrusive
       police-citizen contact, and one which involves no restraint of liberty and
       elicits an individual’s voluntary cooperation with non-coercive police contact.
       A consensual encounter, or a mere accosting, need not be supported by any
       suspicion and because an individual is free to leave at any time during such
       an encounter, the Fourth Amendment is not implicated; thus, an individual is
       not considered to have been “seized” within the meaning of the Fourth
       Amendment.

Wilson v. State, 409 Md. 415, 440 (2009) (citation omitted).

       There is no suggestion that this case involves a consensual encounter. The issue is

whether it was an arrest or an investigatory Terry stop. With respect to an arrest, the Court

of Appeals has explained:

             A show of force is objective conduct demonstrating the officer's intent
       to make an arrest. “[G]enerally, a display of force by a police officer, such as

                                               8
      putting a person in handcuffs, is considered an arrest." [Longshore v. State,
      399 Md. 486, 502 (2007)]. In California v. Hodari D., [499 U.S. 621, 626
      (1991)], the Supreme Court of the United States held that “[a]n arrest requires
      . . . physical force” by “laying on of hands or application of physical force to
      restrain movement.” Although the display of force often involves placing the
      individual who is seized in handcuffs, application of handcuffs is not a
      necessary element of an arrest. See Grier v. State, 351 Md. 241, 252 (1998)
      (“Once Petitioner was on the ground and in custody and control of the
      officers, he was certainly under arrest. Although [the officer] may have had
      the right to simply detain and question Petitioner before placing him in
      custody, he did not do so.” (Citations omitted)); Morton v. State, 284 Md. 526,
      530 (1979) (holding, where an officer removed the individual from a
      recreation center and placed him under guard in a patrol car, that “an arrest is
      the taking . . . by any act that indicates an intention to take him into custody
      and that subjects him to the actual control and will of the person making the
      arrest. . . . [The officer’s] manual seizure of the appellant and the subsequent
      restraint of his liberty plainly constituted an arrest.”); Dixon v. State, 133 Md.
      App. 654, 673 (2000) (officers exceeded the permissible scope of an
      investigative Terry stop and “arrested appellant at the time they blocked his
      car, removed him from his vehicle, and handcuffed him”).

Bailey v. State, 412 Md. 349, 371-372 (2010) (parallel citations omitted).

      On the other hand, as stated by the Bailey Court:

              Conversely, even if the officers’ physical actions are equivalent to an
      arrest, the show of force is not considered to be an arrest if the actions were
      justified by officer safety or permissible to prevent the flight of a suspect. In
      re David S., 367 Md. 523, 539-40 (2002) (holding that a “hard take down” in
      which officers forced the individual to the ground and handcuffed him was a
      limited Terry stop, not an arrest, when the “conduct was not unreasonable
      because the officers reasonably could have suspected that the respondent
      posed a threat to their safety”); Trott v. State, 138 Md. App. 89, 118 (2001)
      (holding that “the handcuffing of appellant was justifiable as a protective and
      flight preventive measure pursuant to a lawful stop and did not necessarily
      transform that stop into an arrest”). The use of handcuffs in a seizure is not
      a dispositive factor in determining whether the seizure was a Terry stop or an

                                              9
       arrest.

Bailey, 412 Md. at 372 n. 8 (parallel citations omitted).

       This Court, in Johnson v. State, 154 Md. App. 286 (2003), cert. denied, 380 Md. 618

(2004), reiterated the factors to consider in determining whether a suspect is under arrest:

       A Terry stop is distinguishable from an arrest in three important respects: the
       length of the detention, the investigative activities that occur during the
       detention, and the question of whether the suspect is removed from the place
       of the stop to another location. Farrow v. State, 68 Md. App. 519, 526 (1986)
       (citing Florida v. Royer, 460 U.S. 491 (1983)). “In determining whether an
       investigatory stop is in actuality an arrest requiring probable cause, courts
       consider the ‘totality of the circumstances.’” In re David S., 367 Md. [at 535]
       (quoting United States v. Patterson, 648 F.2d 625, 632 (9th Cir.1981)). Under
       the totality of circumstances, no one factor is dispositive. See Ferris v. State,
       355 Md. 356, 376 (1999).

Id. at 297 (parallel citations omitted); see also Harrod v. State, 192 Md. App. 85, 103 (2010)

(“[T]here is no bright line marking the point at which a Terry stop and frisk rises to the level

of an arrest”), rev’d on other grounds, 423 Md. 24 (2011).

       In a totality of the circumstances analysis, the nature of the area is important in our

consideration. See, e.g., Illinois v. Wardlow, 528 U.S. 119, 124 (2000) (investigatory stop

in area known for heavy narcotics trafficking; “that the stop occurred in a ‘high crime area’

among the relevant contextual considerations in a Terry analysis” (citing Adams v. Williams,

407 U.S. 143, 144 (1972))); U.S. v. Brignoni-Ponce, 422 U.S. 873, 884 (1975) (law

enforcement officers may consider an area’s characteristics in deciding whether to make an



                                              10
investigatory stop); accord Holt v. State, 435 Md. 443, 466 (2013). Detective Melnyk

testified the Days Inn was in a “high area of drug trafficking . . .” And here, the motions

judge recognized the area as one associated with narcotics in making his findings of fact.

       In addition, Detective Melnyk testified, based on his training and experience, that the

appellant’s and DeLillo’s behavior was suspicious. More specifically, he found it suspicious

that they parked side by side in an otherwise empty hotel parking lot, and did not go into a

hotel room but instead, met in appellant’s vehicle, which suggested to him that they were

attempting to conceal their activities. A police officer’s experience and training are highly

relevant in assessing either probable cause or reasonable suspicion. See U.S. v. Arvizu, 534

U.S. 266, 273 (2002) (a reviewing court must permit police officers “to draw on their own

experience and specialized training to make inferences from and deductions about the

cumulative information available to them that might well elude an untrained person” (internal

quotation and citation omitted)); see also Holt, 435 Md. at 461 (“We therefore assess the

evidence through the prism of an experienced law enforcement officer, and give due

deference to the training and experience of the . . . officer who engaged the stop at issue[.]”

(Internal quotation and citations omitted)); Crosby v. State, 408 Md. 490, 508 (2009) (“In

making its assessment, the court should give due deference to the training and experience of

the law enforcement officer who engaged in the stop at issue”) (citing Ransome v. State, 373

Md. 99, 104-05 (2003)).


                                              11
       As the two officers approached the vehicle, they noticed that both occupants were

“moving, looks like they were moving things around there, reaching under the seat” and that

“[t]he passenger immediately put his hands in his pocket.” The detective characterized these

movements as “furtive.” The Supreme Court has noted that such nervous and evasive

behavior can be a pertinent factor in determining reasonable suspicion. Wardlow, 528 U.S.

at 124 . And, as recognized by our Court of Appeals, “[c]onduct, including nervousness, that

may be innocent if viewed separately can, when considered in conjunction with other conduct

or circumstances, warrant further investigation.” McDowell v. State, 407 Md. 327, 337

(2009).

       According to Detective Melnyk, the detectives asked appellant and DeLillo to exit

the vehicle, where they were handcuffed, and given their Miranda rights based on a concern

for “the safety of everyone involved,” and “to make sure they didn’t have any weapons.”

The fact that the two handcuffed individuals were also read their Miranda rights is not

dispositive in an “arrest” calculus. The Court of Appeals has stated that “courts have made

clear that a cautious or gratuitous recitation of Miranda warnings is irrelevant to whether

there has been an arrest, or even a custodial interrogation.” Cotton v. State, 386 Md. 249,

266, cert. denied, 546 U.S. 885 (2005).

       Nor is an investigative stop transformed into an arrest because appellant was

handcuffed. As the Court of Appeals has recognized:

                                            12
               This Court has recognized that society has become more violent, that
       attacks against law enforcement officers have become more prevalent, that
       there is a greater need for police to take protective measures to ensure their
       safety and that of the community that might have been unacceptable in earlier
       times, and that Terry has been expanded to accommodate those concerns. In
       In re David S., 367 Md. [at 534], we quoted with approval this passage from
       United States v. Tilmon, 19 F.3d 1221, 1224–25 (7th Cir.1994):

              “The last decade has witnessed a multifaceted expansion of
              Terry, including the trend granting officers greater latitude in
              using force in order to neutralize potentially dangerous suspects
              during an investigatory detention. For better or worse, the trend
              has led to the permitting of the use of handcuffs, for the placing
              of suspects in police cruisers, the drawing of weapons and other
              measures of force more traditionally associated with arrest than
              with investigatory detention.”

             Our approval of “hard takedowns” in David S. and in Lee v. State, 311
       Md. 642 (1988), as permissible Terry detentions rather than as arrests,
       confirms our acceptance of that observation. See also Dashiell v. State, 374
       Md. 85 (2003).

Cotton, 386 Md. at 265 (parallel citations omitted).

       Furthermore, “[w]e have often recognized the inherent dangers of drug enforcement,

and an investigatory stop based upon a reasonable suspicion that a suspect is engaged in drug

dealing, can justify a frisk for weapons.” Hicks v. State, 189 Md. App. 112, 124 (2009); see

also Marks v. Criminal Comp., 196 Md. App. 37, 70 (2010) (“There can be no serious

dispute that there is an intimate relationship between violence and drugs”); Dashiell v. State,

143 Md. App. 134, 153 (2002) (“Persons associated with the drug business are prone to

carrying weapons”), aff’d, 374 Md. 85 (2003).


                                              13
       Appellant asserts that there was insufficient evidence that he was armed and

dangerous so as to justify a frisk of his person. However, “Terry does not require a police

officer to be certain that a suspect is armed in order to conduct a frisk for weapons. All that

is required is a reasonable suspicion that the person is armed and dangerous.” In Re: David

S., 367 Md. at 541 .

       Appellant contends that, even assuming there was reasonable suspicion for a brief

detention and that the appellant and DeLillo were armed and dangerous, there was no basis

for that concern after the police frisked him and DeLillo and found no weapons on their

persons. Thus, at that point, the continuation of the detention and the questioning indicate

an arrest. Under the totality of the circumstances, however, we are persuaded that the

encounter remained an ongoing investigation under Terry and the failure of the officers to

immediately remove the handcuffs after a brief pat down did not convert this detention into

an arrest. See Farrow v. State, 68 Md. App. 519, 526 (1986) (“The distinction between a

Terry ‘stop’ and an arrest, then, is not in the method of detention, but rather has to do with

the length of the detention, the investigative activities during the detention, and whether the

suspect is removed to a detention or interrogation area”), cert. denied, 308 Md. 382 (1987).

       In support of his argument, appellant looks to Payne v. State, 65 Md. App. 566

(1985), cert. denied, 305 Md. 621 (1986), a thirty-year-old case that precedes many of the

more drug-specific cases of recent vintage. There, an officer on routine patrol in a high

                                              14
crime area of Baltimore City observed a vehicle double parked and impeding traffic. Id. at

568. When the officer pulled up behind the vehicle to effect a stop, Payne, the driver, bent

over as if picking something up from the floorboard or putting something down on the

floorboard. Id. As the officer approached the vehicle, Payne quickly jammed a black leather

bag down to the floorboard thus concealing it from view. Id. The officer asked for Payne’s

license and the vehicle’s registration. Id. During this time, the passenger became

“increasingly nervous.” Id. In contrast, Payne appeared to be nervous only when he was

placing the black leather bag on the floorboard, and remained calm after that. Id.

       When another patrol unit arrived on the scene, the officer had Payne exit the vehicle.

Id. The officer reached into the vehicle, retrieved the black leather bag, patted the bag’s

exterior, and felt the outline of a handgun. Id. at 569. Upon opening the bag, the officer

found a Ruger .357 Magnum handgun, eight cartridges, and a marijuana cigarette. Id.

       Prior to trial, Payne moved to suppress the items recovered from the leather bag. Id.

at 567. The trial court denied his motion, and he was subsequently convicted of a handgun

violation and possession of a controlled dangerous substance. Id.

       On appeal, he alleged that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress. We

agreed:

               The record before us discloses absolutely no “specific and articulable
       facts” from which a reasonable inference can be drawn that Payne was armed
       and dangerous. All [the officer] saw was a car double parked, a motion by

                                             15
       Payne during which Payne either placed something on or took something from
       the floor, a jamming of a “black bag . . . to the floorboard,” and “furtive”
       glances by a person who was a passenger in Payne’s car. How anyone can
       reasonably deduce from those facts that Payne had a gun totally eludes us,
       unless [the officer] was clairvoyant. [The officer] might just as easily have
       concluded that Payne had placed on the floor of the car narcotics, or
       pornographic matter, or receipts of a “numbers” pickup, or money or jewelry.
       The list is innumerable.

Payne, 65 Md. App. at 574.

       In our view, Payne is distinguishable. Appellant was parked in an area known for

narcotics activity. And, in relating observations regarding the hotel parking lot and the

“furtive movements” as they approached the vehicle, Detective Melnyk specifically testified

to his concern for officer safety based on the possibility that weapons were involved, stating

“[a]t that point, for the safety of myself and Detective Young, they were requested to exit

the vehicle and we put them in handcuffs just to make sure they didn’t have any weapons

and detaining them.” The officer clearly articulated his concern that appellant was armed

and dangerous, thus justifying a pat-down for weapons during the detention.4


       4
         In his reply brief, appellant cites several cases concerning “no-knock warrants” for
the proposition that even “probable cause to believe that a person is selling drugs does not,
by itself, constitute reasonable suspicion that the individual is armed and dangerous.” The
Supreme Court explained:

              In order to justify a “no-knock” entry, the police must have a
       reasonable suspicion that knocking and announcing their presence, under the
       particular circumstances, would be dangerous or futile, or that it would inhibit
       the effective investigation of the crime by, for example, allowing the

                                             16
       The justification for a further Terry detention arose when appellant and DeLillo gave,

what the suppression court found were conflicting stories for why they were parked side by

side in the Days Inn parking lot and DeLillo got into appellant’s vehicle. DeLillo stated that

he was at the hotel to meet some unidentified individual named “Phil,” and watch an Orioles

game. In contrast, appellant advised that he was going to meet his cousin at the Maryland

Live Casino. There was no explanation as to why they were together.

       We are persuaded that Carter v. State, 143 Md. App. 670, cert. denied, 369 Md. 571

(2002), addresses the conflicting accounts, and, in fact, informs our analysis of appellant’s

other arguments. In Carter, the Howard County Police Department received a call on a

Sunday evening when Deep Run Elementary School was not in session that a suspicious van

was parked in the parking lot at the school. 143 Md. App. at 678-79. The call advised that



       destruction of evidence. This standard-as opposed to a probable-cause
       requirement-strikes the appropriate balance between the legitimate law
       enforcement concerns at issue in the execution of search warrants and the
       individual privacy interests affected by no-knock entries.

Richards v. Wisconsin, 520 U.S. 385, 394 (1997) (emphasis added).

       Even comparing “no-knock” warrants and entries to a Terry stop and frisk, the
standard remains whether the officer had a reasonable articulable suspicion, under the
particular circumstances, that a person is armed and dangerous. See In Re: David S., 367
Md. at 541; see also Bailey, 412 Md. at 367 (“The officer has reason to believe that an
individual is armed and dangerous if a reasonably prudent person, under the circumstances,
would have felt that he was in danger, based on reasonable inferences from particularized
facts in light of the officer’s experience”).

                                             17
individuals may be selling drugs from the vehicle and that there were juveniles “approaching

the van and leaving the van.” Id. at 679-80. When police arrived six minutes after the call,

a van was the only vehicle parked in the school parking lot, and two persons were seen

walking away from the van. When those individuals saw the police, they began running.

Id. at 680-81. The van also began to pull away, but was stopped by the police. Id. at 681.

       The driver of the van could not produce an operator’s license. Id. at 682. The driver

explained that they were parked in the school parking lot “picking someone up,” but he

could not identify that person. Id. The front seat passenger, who was independently

questioned about why the van was in the school parking lot, explained that they were simply

“hanging out.” Carter, 143 Md. App. at 682.

       This Court upheld the motion court’s ruling that an investigative detention was

warranted under such circumstances, observing:

              For purposes of analysis, a Terry-stop is not frozen in time at the split
       second of its inception. It is a continuing investigative activity, and as it
       unfolds, reasonable suspicion may mount. As suspicion mounts, moreover,
       it may justify a longer detention than would initially have been justified.

Id.

       Further:

              The fundamental purpose of a Terry-stop, based as it is on reasonable
       suspicion, is to confirm or to dispel that suspicion by asking for an
       explanation of the suspicious behavior. A major factor in then determining
       whether to terminate or to prolong the Terry-stop, therefore, is necessarily the

                                             18
       nature of the response or responses given to the police.

Id. at 683-84.

       We rejected appellant’s argument that he was under arrest because he “was not free

to leave,” stating, “Of course, he wasn’t. That’s why this was a Terry-stop requiring the

Terry level of Fourth Amendment justification. Had he been free to leave, this would have

been a mere accosting and the Fourth Amendment would not even have been implicated.”

Id. at 677. We also discounted any attempt to suggest that the circumstances could be

explained as innocent behavior:

             There might, of course, have been an innocent explanation for what the
       van was doing on the school parking lot on a Sunday evening. There might
       have been an innocent explanation for why it started to leave as the police
       approached. There might have been an innocent explanation for why the two
       persons on foot suddenly began to run at the approach of the police. There
       might have been an innocent explanation for the inherently strange and
       inconsistent purposes for being there stated by the driver and the front seat
       passenger. As United States v. Sokolow, 490 U.S. 1, 9-10 (1989), explained,
       however:

                 Terry itself involved “a series of acts, each of them perhaps
                 innocent” if viewed separately, but which taken together
                 warranted further investigation.” We noted in [Illinois v.] Gates,
                 [462 U.S. 213 (1983)] that “innocent behavior will frequently
                 provide the basis for a showing of probable cause,” and that
                 “[i]n making a determination of probable cause the relevant
                 inquiry is not whether particular conduct is ‘innocent’ or
                 ‘guilty,’ but the degree of suspicion that attaches to particular
                 types of noncriminal acts.” That principle applies equally well
                 to the reasonable suspicion inquiry.


                                                19
Carter, 143 Md. App. at 685 (emphasis and parallel citations omitted); see also Ofori, 170

Md. App. at 248 (“Reasonable articulable suspicion is assessed not by examining individual

clues in a vacuum but by getting a ‘sense’ of what may be afoot from the confluence of

various circumstances. Suspicion, particularly to a trained law enforcement officer, may be

greater than the sum of its parts.”).

       After concluding that a continued detention was reasonable, we considered the scope

of that detention. We emphasized that this was a Terry-stop based on reasonable articulable

suspicion that criminal activity was afoot, and not, as appellant would have it, a mere traffic

stop or a pretext stop under Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806 (1996). Carter, 143 Md.

App. at 689. Pointing out that it is “very clear that the permitted temporal scope of a

Terry-stop is not something that may be measured by the ticking of the clock alone,” id. at

689-90, we explained:

              When, by contrast, the energizing articulable suspicion is that a
       violation of the drug laws may be afoot, the time constrictions on the Terry
       -stop are very different. The bringing of a drug-sniffing canine to the scene
       is in the direct service of that investigative purpose and the measure of
       reasonableness is simply the diligence of the police in calling for and
       procuring the arrival of the canine at the scene. This use of a trained dog, as
       will be discussed, is an investigative practice that is looked upon with favor.
       In the present case, of course, the reasonable suspicion was that the van and
       its occupants were involved in the distribution of controlled substances. The
       permitted scope of the stop depended, therefore, on how long it would
       reasonably take to get a drug-sniffing canine to the school parking lot.

Id. at 693.

                                              20
       In Carter, after the van was stopped, ten minutes went by while the police asked for

the driver’s operator’s card and engaged in a conversation resulting in inconsistent stories

between the driver and passenger. Consent for a search was requested and refused. At that

point, a drug dog was requested and arrived less than twenty-five minutes later. Id. at 696.

The dog alerted on the vehicle and a subsequent search resulted in the recovery of marijuana

from the van. Id. at 698. We concluded that there was no lack of diligence in having the

drug dog respond to the scene of the Terry-stop and we affirmed the motion court’s ruling

denying the motion to suppress that marijuana. Id.

       A similar conclusion is warranted in this case, especially when we consider the

brevity of the overall detention prior to the alert by the drug dog. At around 6:50 p.m.,

within five minutes of parking in the Days Inn lot, and after DeLillo arrived and got into

appellant’s vehicle, the two detectives decided to approach appellant’s Jeep.              At

approximately 6:52 p.m., Detective Melnyk decided to contact police dispatch to request that

a K-9 unit respond to the scene. The K-9 arrived shortly thereafter, and at 7:00 p.m., alerted

on the passenger side door of the Jeep. The entire encounter, from the moment the officers

decided to approach appellant’s Jeep, to the alert by the drug dog, lasted approximately ten

minutes. This was hardly unreasonable. See, e.g. Carter, 143 Md. App. at 696 (twenty-five

minute delay while police awaited arrival of a drug sniffing dog permissible); see also Ofori,

170 Md. App. at 252-53 (concluding that a seventeen minute delay between when a drug

                                             21
dog was requested as part of a Terry-stop and when the dog alerted, was not “remotely

unreasonable”).

       Finally, we are persuaded that appellant’s reliance on Longshore v. State, 399 Md.

486, Bailey v. State, 412 Md. 349, and Dixon v. State, 133 Md. App. 654, is misplaced as

those cases are distinguishable on their facts. In Longshore, the Charles County Sheriff’s

Department received a videotape from a confidential informant showing Longshore and John

Carlson getting into a car parked in a mall parking lot, during the middle of the day, where

they remained for a short time while a third person stood by the driver’s door. 399 Md. at

494-95, 514. Apparently after the two men left his vehicle, Longshore drove away from the

mall for a short period of time. Id. at 495. The police set up surveillance of the mall and

observed Longshore return to the mall and then walk inside, where he met with, and spoke

to, the two people who were earlier recorded on the videotape near Longshore’s vehicle. Id.

Subsequently, after Carlson drove away from the mall, the police stopped his vehicle and

Carlson consented to a search. Id. In that search, police recovered trace amounts of

marijuana and cocaine from Carlson’s vehicle. Id.

       Around the same time, a drug sniffing dog scanned Longshore’s parked vehicle while

Longshore was inside the mall, but did not alert to the presence of drugs. Id. When

Longshore returned to his car and left the mall, he was stopped by a police officer.

Longshore, 399 Md. at 495. He did not consent to a search of his vehicle. The officer,


                                            22
knowing that the drug dog did not alert on Longshore’s parked vehicle, nevertheless called

for the drug dog to return to conduct a scan. While awaiting the arrival of the dog,

Longshore was placed in handcuffs. Id. at 495-96.

       When the dog arrived about two minutes later, with the window to Longshore’s

vehicle now open, the dog alerted to the presence of drugs in the rear “wheel well underneath

the vehicle.” Id. at 496. An initial search uncovered no drugs in the rear area of the vehicle

or underneath it. Id. At that time, the drug dog was allowed inside the vehicle, and the scan

and subsequent search of the car revealed crack cocaine in the center console area of the

ceiling. Id.

       In determining what standard to apply, the Court of Appeals held that when

Longshore was handcuffed, the stop escalated from a detention to an arrest. The Court

reasoned:

       [T]here was no suspicion that a violent crime had occurred, nor any reason to
       believe that Longshore was armed or dangerous. The arresting officer
       acknowledged that, despite Longshore’s nervousness, he was cooperative and
       did not exhibit any threatening behavior. The officers did not indicate that
       they were, in any way, concerned for their safety. Moreover, there was no
       reason to believe that Longshore was a flight risk. There was no indication by
       the police that they believed, nor any objective basis for concluding, that
       Longshore would run.

Id. at 514.

       Further, the Court held there was no probable cause to arrest Longshore:



                                             23
              What we are left with is a videotape that, although coming from a
       previously reliable source, reflects no drug activity, only innocuous or at worst
       ambiguous, behavior, occurring primarily in a public setting, trace amounts of
       drugs with no immediate or clear connection to Longshore, a prior criminal
       record, nervous behavior, and inconsistent results - she twice failed to alert to
       the presence of drugs - from a drug dog. While these facts may have provided
       an officer reasonable suspicion to conduct further investigation, they do not
       provide a substantial basis for a determination of probable cause, the standard
       by which we are bound to evaluate the validity of the petitioner’s arrest.

Longshore, 399 Md. at 535.

       In contrast to the evidence in the case now before us, there was no evidence that the

officers were concerned about their safety, or that Longshore was armed and dangerous. In

addition, the encounter occurred in a public mall parking lot, in the middle of the day and

there was no indication or suggestion that this area was known as a high crime area. In

addition, the drug dog failed to alert twice on the vehicle.

       In Bailey, an officer observed the defendant, in an area known for drug activity,

standing alone alongside a house, with an odor of ether emanating from his person. 412 Md.

at 359-60. According to the officer, the odor of ether is “associated with phencyclidine, more

commonly known as PCP” but possession of ether is not illegal. Id. When the officer asked

the defendant, who had glassy eyes, if he lived at the home next to where he was standing,

the defendant ignored the officer’s inquiry. Id. at 360. The officer “reached over and

grabbed both of [his] hands . . . and had him place them over his head.” Id. The officer then

conducted a search of Bailey and uncovered a glass vial containing liquid, later determined


                                              24
to be PCP, in Bailey’s front pocket. Id.

       The Court determined that Bailey was “seized” for Fourth Amendment purposes. Id.

at 365. The Court held that, placing Bailey’s hands over his head was a seizure that was

“presumptively invalid” unless it could be justified by “a reasonable, articulable suspicion

of a threat to officer safety or by an exception to the warrant requirement.” Bailey, 412 Md.

at 366. The Court rejected the circuit court’s determination that the officer had engaged in

a valid investigatory stop and frisk pursuant to Terry. Id. at 367. Because the officer had no

reasonable suspicion to believe that criminal activity was afoot, the Court held there was no

basis to conduct a Terry stop, but even “assuming arguendo that [the officer] had reasonable,

articulable suspicion to believe that criminal activity was afoot . . . he still lacked the basis

for a protective Terry frisk[,]” because he had no reasonable, articulable suspicion that Bailey

was armed and dangerous. Id. at 368. And, even if a frisk were proper, it went beyond the

valid “pat down” for weapons when the officer reached into Bailey’s pocket and retrieved

a vial, when “the incriminating nature of the object in the defendant's pocket was not

immediately apparent upon his initial touch of the object in the pat-down.” Id. at 370.

       The Court concluded that the officer’s conduct amounted to a de facto arrest, which

was not supported by probable cause.

       In the present case, the officer took complete control of the situation in
       conducting a general exploratory search of the petitioner, removing the vial
       from his pocket and taking him into custody. As discussed infra, the officer


                                               25
       had no objective reason to suspect that the petitioner was armed and
       dangerous, nor did the officer’s testimony furnish a basis for a suspicion that
       the petitioner was armed. Further, the search itself exceeded the scope of a
       valid Terry frisk. The search undertaken in the present case was only valid if
       it was undertaken within the context of an arrest, which must be supported by
       probable cause.

Id. at 374.

       Again, in contrast to this case, there was no articulated concern for officer safety or

reason to believe that the defendant in Bailey was armed and dangerous. And, it was clearly

apparent that the search exceeded the permissible scope of a Terry frisk when the officer

searched Bailey and removed evidence from his pocket.

       In Dixon, a Montgomery County police officer received a phone call from a

confidential informant with whom he had worked on prior occasions. 133 Md. App. at 658.

The informant told him that Dixon would be transporting approximately ten pounds of

marijuana to the second level of a parking garage adjacent to a mall inside a dark-colored

Acura at around 8:15 p.m.       The police officer was familiar with Dixon from prior

surveillance. Id. at 659.

       At approximately 7:00 p.m. when the police arrived at the parking lot to set up

surveillance, they noticed that Dixon’s Acura was already parked on the second level. Id. at

660. At 8:15 p.m., Dixon emerged from a stairwell, walked to his car, looked around, and

then returned to the stairwell. Id.



                                             26
       At short time later when Dixon returned and entered his car, the police blocked in

Dixon’s vehicle. Id.    The officer who had received the tip looked in the passenger

compartment of the vehicle but did not see any contraband. He then opened the trunk of the

vehicle, and found a rubber bag that held nine gallon-sized bags, each containing suspected

marijuana, inside a larger red rubber bag. Id.

       On appeal, we concluded that Dixon was arrested when the police blocked in his car,

stating:

              As we see it, the events in the garage exceeded an investigatory stop
       under Terry and its progeny. Accordingly, we do not agree with either the
       State or the trial court that appellant was merely detained prior to the car
       search. Instead, we conclude that the officers arrested appellant at the time
       they blocked his car, removed him from his vehicle, and handcuffed him.

Dixon, 133 Md. App. at 673.

       In Dixon, the police did not “testify to any significant corroboration of the tip,” which

was “sorely lacking in meaningful detail.” Id. at 696. Here, the investigation was based on

the personal observations of an experienced detective, trained in narcotics investigations.

When the detectives approached the vehicles, there was no effort to block in either of the

vehicles in this case, and the record supports a conclusion that their purpose in doing so was

to conduct further investigation.

       In sum, we conclude that appellant was detained based on reasonable articulable

suspicion that criminal activity was afoot until such time as the canine unit alerted. Because

                                              27
that detention did not amount to an arrest, we need not consider the State’s alternative

argument that a prior arrest was supported by probable cause.

       When the alert occurred, appellant could be lawfully arrested and searched incident

to arrest. See Belote v. State, 411 Md. 104, 113 (2009) (“[T]he fact of a custodial arrest alone

is sufficient to permit the police to search the arrestee”); see also Scribner v. State, 219 Md.

App. 91, 99, cert. denied, 441 Md. 63 (2014) (“Among the exceptions to the warrant

requirement is a search incident to a lawful arrest. The exception derives from interests in

officer safety and evidence preservation that are typically implicated in arrest situations.”

(Citation omitted)).

       After the ensuing recovery of a hotel room key, cell phone text messages, the narcotics

recovered from DeLillo, and DeLillo’s implication of appellant in narcotics distribution,

there was a substantial basis for finding probable cause to issue a warrant for the search of

appellant’s hotel room. See Greenstreet v. State, 392 Md. 652, 667 (2006) (in assessing the

issuance of a search warrant, “[w]e determine first whether the issuing judge had a

substantial basis to conclude that the warrant was supported by probable cause”); see also

State v. Faulkner, 190 Md. App. 37, 47 (2010) (“The substantial basis standard involves

something less than finding the existence of probable cause, and is less demanding than even

the familiar ‘clearly erroneous’ standard by which appellate courts review judicial fact

finding in a trial setting.” (Citation omitted)).

                                               28
       Accordingly, we conclude the motions court properly denied the motion to suppress

in this case.



                                                      JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
                                                      COSTS TO BE PAID BY
                                                      APPELLANT.




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