Pubdate: Wed, 05 Apr 2006 Source: Daily Press (Newport News,VA) Copyright: 2006 The Daily Press Contact: http://www.dailypress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/585 Author: Keith Rushing Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?247 (Crime Policy - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?228 (Paraphernalia) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) APPEALS COURT OVERRULES JUDGE IN DRUG CASE DECISION The Local Lower Court Judge Said Police Overstepped Their Authority In the Way They Questioned a Woman During a Traffic Stop. JAMES CITY -- The Virginia Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday that a local circuit court judge erred last October when he decided to bar prosecutors from using seized drug paraphernalia as evidence in a case against a James City woman. Dorothy Vinetta Briggs, 49, was charged with possession of a controlled substance after James City police stopped her in May for driving the wrong way on a road near Magruder Avenue and Pocahontas Trial. If the court had upheld Williamsburg-James City Circuit Court Judge Samuel T. Powell's October decision, the drug charge against Briggs would have been dropped, her attorney Dwight Dansby said Tuesday. But the appeals court's decision sends the case back to circuit court to be prosecuted. On the day Briggs was stopped, three plainclothes police officers in an unmarked car asked Briggs for her driver's license and registration, according to a summary of facts recounted in the court's decision. Briggs told police her license was suspended. Police then asked Briggs who had been in her car. She also was asked if she had anything illegal on her and was told to turn over whatever might violate the law. Briggs denied having anything illegal on her person. According to the summary, the officers then asked Briggs "where her crack cocaine stem" was. Briggs nodded to a purse on her passenger seat, reached for it and began searching through it. An officer then grabbed the purse and began searching through the purse himself. The officer found a pipe stem with cocaine residue inside her purse. Dansby said Tuesday that he argued successfully in October that police violated Briggs' constitutional right against illegal search and seizure. He also argued that Briggs was detained for a custodial interrogation, although less than 15 minutes, which required police to advise her of her Miranda rights to remain silent and seek an attorneys' advice. Prosecutors argued that police didn't violate the law by detaining her for an unreasonable time, nor did they ask her unreasonable questions or keep her in custody. In October, Powell ruled that police lacked reasonable suspicion to conduct an investigative stop and question Briggs the way they did, the summary states. He granted Dansby's request to suppress the crack stem that was seized. The appeals court said that on the day Briggs was arrested she had attracted the attention of police when she gave a man a ride for one block in an area known for open-air drug dealing. Police saw the man leaning into the passenger window of her car before she gave him the ride and began driving in the wrong direction, the court said. Tuesday, Dansby argued that Briggs simply gave a ride to a neighbor and that shouldn't give police reason to have assumed the worst about her actions. He added that the case reflects a classic difference in opinion among prosecutors and defense attorneys about where police powers end and individual rights begin. "Prosecutors think it's fair for police to ask anything they want during a traffic stop," said Dansby. "Defense lawyers think if it's a mere traffic infraction, the person stopped should receive her summons or ticket and be let go. It shouldn't be open season to find other things wrong." Dansby said he'd consult Briggs' about the possibility of appealing the case further. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake