J-S67043-18


NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

  COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                 :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                       Appellee                :
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
  BRIAN S. GLADWIN                             :
                                               :
                       Appellant               :   No. 1366 EDA 2017

             Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence April 11, 2017
              in the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County
             Criminal Division at No(s): CP-23-CR-0004924-2016

BEFORE:      OTT, J., NICHOLS, J. and STRASSBURGER, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY STRASSBURGER, J.:                       FILED JANUARY 14, 2019

       Brian S. Gladwin (Appellant) appeals from the judgment of sentence

imposed following his conviction for possession of a controlled substance and

possession of drug paraphernalia. Appellant challenges the trial court’s order

denying his motion to suppress. Upon review, we affirm.

       On May 18, 2016, shortly before noon, three Delaware County Adult

Probation and Parole Officers, including Lisa Coladonato and Frank Shannon,

arrived at the apartment shared by Appellant and his girlfriend, Lori Fetrow,

to perform a routine, unannounced home check and random urine test of

Fetrow, a probationer.       N.T., 12/21/2016, at 7-8.    Officer Coladonato was

Fetrow’s assigned probation officer, and the other officers were there to assist

and ensure safety. Id. at 8, 11. After officers knocked on the outer door,

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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
J-S67043-18



Fetrow answered and let them in. Id. at 9-10. While Officer Coladonato spoke

with Fetrow on the inside entry landing, Officer Shannon continued up five or

six steps to the apartment’s living area. Id. at 10, 27, 30. As he reached the

top, Officer Shannon observed Appellant “with his hands in the pockets of his

sweatshirt acting nervously and walking toward the bathroom.”           Order

(Findings of Fact), 2/28/2017, at 1 (unnumbered); see also N.T.,

12/21/2017, at 10, 13-14, 17.      The pullover sweatshirt had pouch-style

pockets in the front.    N.T., 12/21/2017, at 14.      Officer Shannon “was

concerned for [his] safety because [Appellant’s] hands were variously

concealed inside his sweatshirt.” Order (Findings of Fact), 2/28/2017, at 1

(unnumbered); see also N.T., 12/21/2017, at 10, 13-14, 17, 22. Fearing a

weapon may be concealed inside the sweatshirt, Officer Shannon told

Appellant to stop and remove his hands from the pockets for his and the other

officers’ safety. Order (Findings of Fact), 2/28/2017, at 1 (unnumbered); see

also N.T., 12/21/2016, at 17-18. Officer Shannon testified that he “didn’t

know what was in [Appellant’s] pocket[s] or if [Appellant] was going to

retrieve something from the bathroom.” N.T., 12/21/2017, at 17. Because

Appellant was acting nervously and concealing his hands in his sweatshirt,

Officer Shannon believed Appellant “was possibly going to try and kill [him],

have a knife, a gun.” Id. Officer Shannon has 18 years of experience as a

probation officer and has done hundreds, perhaps thousands, of home checks.

Id. at 6, 12. As he further explained,




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       I have no idea what he might have on him. You know, we go into
       these people’s houses and they don’t always want us there. So,
       you know, with his hands, like I said, in his pocket area, you know,
       I didn’t know what could be in there, you know, so that’s why I
       tell [sic] him to stop or, like I said, going into a whole separate
       room where I can’t see him if there’s something in there as well.
       I told him to stop, remove his hands.

Id. Appellant complied with Officer Shannon’s directive to stop and remove

his hands from the pockets. Id. at 18. He then told Appellant that, for safety

purposes, Officer Shannon was searching Appellant and he should remove the

contents of his pockets. Id. Appellant removed, inter alia, an unlabeled pill

bottle containing a rock-like substance, which Officer Shannon recognized to

be an illegal drug of “either crack or meth.”       Id.   Officer Shannon then

contacted the Ridley Park Police, who took Appellant into custody. Id. at 24.

       Based on the foregoing, Appellant was charged with the aforementioned

crimes.1 Prior to trial, Appellant filed an omnibus pretrial motion to suppress

evidence, contending that the frisk of Appellant’s person was unlawful. Officer

Shannon and Fetrow testified at the December 21, 2016 suppression hearing.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the court took the issue under advisement

and directed the parties to submit briefs.

       On February 28, 2017, the court denied the motion to suppress. A non-

jury trial was held on April 11, 2017, wherein Appellant was found guilty of

the aforementioned charges. Appellant was immediately sentenced to one

year of probation on each conviction, to be served concurrently. Appellant did
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1 Appellant was charged initially with manufacture of a controlled substance
and possession of drug paraphernalia, but the manufacture charge was
changed to possession of a controlled substance. See Information, 9/7/2017.

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not file any post-sentence motions. This appeal followed. Both Appellant and

the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

       Appellant presents the following issue for our consideration.

       1. Did the trial court err in failing to suppress the physical
          evidence in these matters, specifically the amber colored
          prescription bottle as well as the narcotics found therein?

              a. Did the trial court err in finding that the probation
                 officer had the lawful authority to stop a non-
                 parolee, in his home and conduct a stop and
                 seizure of [Appellant]?

              b. Did the trial court err in finding that the probation
                 officer had lawful authority to stop a non-parolee,
                 in his home and conduct a search of said non-
                 parolee with the predicate that [Appellant] was
                 thought to have a weapon wherein statements
                 were made outside the premises of an intent to
                 search [Appellant] for any reason?

Appellant’s Brief at 5.2

       The first issue of the probation officers’ authority “presents a purely legal

question, over which our standard of review is de novo and our scope of review

plenary.”    Commonwealth v. Mathis, 173 A.3d 699, 706 (Pa. 2017).

Appellant argues that probation officers do not have statutory authority to

conduct warrantless searches of non-probationers while performing a routine

home check of a probationer. See Appellant’s Brief at 20-24.

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2 Appellant has withdrawn the additional issue he raised in his Rule 1925(b)
statement. See Appellant’s Brief at 5.




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        We find our Supreme Court’s decision in Mathis instructive here. The

Court in Mathis held that state “parole agents have the authority to conduct

a protective Terry[3] frisk of non-parolees within the course of executing their

statutorily imposed duties, so long as reasonable suspicion supports the

agents’ conduct.”       173 A.3d at 711.         In so holding, our Supreme Court

examined the statutory authority delineated to state parole agents, 61 Pa.C.S.

§§ 6151-53, which the Court described as follows.

        [S]tate parole agents’ authority and duties with respect to
        parolees are prescribed by two sections of the Prisons and Parole
        Code[, 61 Pa.C.S. §§ 6151-53]. Section 6152 declares agents to
        be peace officers and provides them with police power to arrest
        without warrant any parolee under supervision for violating parole
        conditions. See 61 Pa.C.S. § 6152. Section 6153 deems parole
        agents to be in a “supervisory relationship with their offenders,”
        aimed at assisting parolees in rehabilitation and reassimilation and
        protecting the public. Id. § 6153(a). This section further outlines
        the procedures and requirements for agents to search the person
        and property of offenders, see id. § 6153(b)(1), (d), and provides
        that such searches must comport with the protections of the
        United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions, see id.
        § 6153(b)(2).      Another provision prevents the exclusion of
        evidence from parole or criminal proceedings based solely on a
        violation of the statute. See id. § 6153(c).

Mathis, 173 A.3d at 701-02. The Majority in Mathis acknowledged that “the

plain language of [s]ections 6152 and 6153 of the Parole Code generally

delineates the supervisory relationship that parole agents have with offenders,

but does not otherwise reveal a legislative intent to empower parole agents

to act as police officers with respect to non-offenders or private citizens.” Id.


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3   See Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).

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at 708 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Nonetheless, it found

“although ancillary aspects of a parole agents’ duty are not expressly

referenced in the legislation, they nonetheless derive directly from their

statutorily imposed functions.” Id. at 709. In agreeing with the safety-based

rationale advanced by this Court,4 the Supreme Court observed that

       in order to satisfy these statutory duties, parole agents, among
       other things, conduct routine, unannounced home visits, as in this
       case, thus risking exposure to a variety of potentially dangerous
       unknowns.      In this respect, [the Supreme Court] find[s]
       persuasive, as did the Superior Court, the perspective developed
       by other jurisdictions.

              Once we recognize the authority of parole officers to
              search parolees and their premises, ... we cannot
              ignore the hazards involved in this kind of public duty.
              A bullet’s message is deadly no matter who the sender
              is. A law-enforcement officer in a potentially perilous
              situation must have a basic right of self-protection
              notwithstanding the shape of his badge. As long as
              an officer is properly pursuing his lawful duty, the only
              issue “is whether a reasonably prudent man in the
              circumstances would be warranted in the belief that
              his safety ... was in danger.”

       People v. Thompson, [] 353 N.Y.S.2d 698, 702 (N.Y. Sup. Ct.
       1974) [] (citation omitted) (quoting Terry, 392 U.S. at 27 []).

Mathis, 173 A.3d at 708-09 (footnote and some citations omitted). Moreover,

our Supreme Court examined the inherent interactions with non-offenders in

parole enforcement activities, and the parole agents’ designation as peace

officers, to conclude that “a parole agent’s authority to conduct a weapons


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4See Commonwealth v. Mathis, 125 A.3d 780, 785 (Pa. Super. 2015), aff’d
173 A.3d 699 (Pa. 2017).

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frisk of non-parolees … attends the agents’ statutory duty to effectively

supervise parolees and is grounded in the powers concomitant to their peace

officer designation.” Id. at 710.

      Turning to the statutory authority of county probation officers, we note

that the language of the statutory sections at issue for state parole agents in

Mathis is materially identical to the language of the statutory sections relating

to county probation officers. Compare 61 Pa.C.S. §§ 6151-53 (state parole

agents) with 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9911-13 (county probation officers).         As with

parole agents, county probation officers “are in a supervisory relationship with

their offenders” and the “purpose of this supervision is to assist the offenders

in their rehabilitation and reassimilation into the community and to protect the

public.”   42 Pa.C.S. § 9912.    Similarly, county probation officers are also

declared to be peace officers and they have police power to arrest without

warrant any probationer under supervision for violating probation conditions.

42 Pa.C.S. § 9913.     Accordingly, we find Mathis persuasive, and for the

reasons outlined therein, conclude that county probation officers likewise

“have the authority to conduct a protective Terry frisk of [non-probationers]

within the course of executing their statutorily imposed duties, so long as

reasonable suspicion supports the [officers’] conduct.” See Mathis, 173 A.3d

at 711.

      We now turn to Appellant’s contention that, even assuming Officer

Shannon had authority to frisk a non-probationer, he lacked reasonable


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suspicion to justify the frisk under the circumstances here. See Appellant’s

Brief at 14-15, 32-33. We consider this issue mindful of the following.

      [W]hen a defendant challenges an adverse ruling of a suppression
      court, as is the case here, a reviewing court is bound by the
      suppression court’s factual findings that are supported by the
      record, considering only the evidence of the prosecution and so
      much of the defense’s evidence that remains uncontradicted.

Mathis, 173 A.3d at 702 n.2. “As to whether reasonable suspicion existed,

we defer to the suppression court’s findings of fact as supported by the

suppression hearing record, which we assess in the light most favorable to the

Commonwealth as the prevailing party.         However, we review any legal

conclusions de novo.” Id. at 706 (citations omitted). “In order to establish

reasonable suspicion, the [] officer must articulate specific facts from which

he could reasonably infer that the individual was armed and dangerous.”

Commonwealth v. Wilson, 927 A.2d 279, 284 (Pa. Super. 2007).

      We agree with the trial court that, when viewed in the light most

favorable to the Commonwealth, the facts establish reasonable suspicion that

Appellant posed a danger to officers. Appellant claims Fetrow’s testimony that

she overheard a statement made by one of the officers to “check” Appellant

before they even saw Appellant’s hands in his pockets shows the officers’

“actions were in fact a false ruse to conceal their true intentions” and that the

officers “did not possess a legitimate fear for officer safety.” See Appellant’s

Brief at 14, 21, 23. However, Fetrow’s testimony was contradicted by Officer

Shannon’s account, and the court specifically credited Officer Shannon’s



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testimony that he had concerns for his and the other officers’ safety when he

observed Appellant’s nervous demeanor, hands concealed in his sweatshirt

pockets, and movement toward the bathroom.           Order (Findings of Fact),

2/28/2017, at 1-2 (unnumbered); Rule 1925(a) Opinion, 8/1/2018, at 9-10.

When evaluated collectively, Officer Shannon articulated specific facts from

which “a reasonably prudent officer in these circumstances would be

warranted in the belief that his safety or that of others was in danger,

warranting a Terry search for his protection.”      Mathis, 125 A.3d at 791.

Appellant’s behavior gave rise to Officer Shannon’s reasonable suspicion that

Appellant may be armed and Officer Shannon reasonably feared for his

safety.5

       Accordingly, we conclude that the suppression court did not err when it

denied Appellant’s omnibus pretrial motion to suppress.

       Judgment of sentence affirmed.




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5 To the extent Appellant argues his mere presence at the apartment is an
insufficient basis for a protective frisk, see Appellant’s Brief at 30-33 (citing
Ybarra v. Illinois, 444 U.S. 85 (1979) and Commonwealth v. Grahame, 7
A.3d 810 (Pa. 2010), we note that Appellant was not asked to empty his
pockets merely because he was present, but rather, because of his behavior.
See Mathis, 125 A.3d at 790 n.11.

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Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 1/14/19




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