PEOPLE OF MI V MICHAEL JAMES PERREAULT
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STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
FOR PUBLICATION
January 19, 2010
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v
No. 288540
Grand Traverse Circuit Court
LC No. 08-010586-FH
MICHAEL JAMES PERREAULT,
Defendant-Appellant.
Advance Sheets Version
Before: TALBOT, P.J., and O’CONNELL and DAVIS, JJ.
O’CONNELL, J. (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent.
I would affirm the decision of the learned trial court. The sole issue in this case is
whether the assistant principal at Traverse City Central High School had reasonable suspicion
that contraband would be found in defendant’s truck. It is a well-accepted principle of law that
school officials may search a student’s person or property on the school premises pursuant to the
lesser standard of “reasonable suspicion.” See New Jersey v TLO, 469 US 325, 341-343; 105 S
Ct 733; 83 L Ed 2d 720 (1985). In People v Champion, 452 Mich 92, 98; 549 NW2d 849
(1996), our Supreme Court, citing United States v Sokolow, 490 US 1; 109 S Ct 1581; 104 L Ed
2d 1 (1989), noted, “Reasonable suspicion entails something more than an inchoate or
unparticularized suspicion or ‘hunch,’ but less than the level of suspicion required for probable
cause.”
An anonymous tip can provide reasonable suspicion if it is considered along with a
“totality of the circumstances” that show the tip to be reliable. People v Faucett, 442 Mich 153,
169; 499 NW2d 764 (1993). Further, the tip must carry with it sufficient indicia of reliability to
support a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. Id. However, a sufficiently detailed tip may
provide reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, especially (but not necessarily) when there is
independent corroboration of some of the facts. Id. at 170-172. However, the police may only
search a motor vehicle without a warrant if they have probable cause to believe that evidence of
a crime may be found therein. People v Kazmierczak, 461 Mich 411, 418-419; 605 NW2d 667
(2000). Taken together, this caselaw leads to one obvious conclusion: although probable cause
is necessary to permit a police search of a motor vehicle, a school official only needs to have
“reasonable suspicion” to search a student’s motor vehicle when it is located on the school
premises.
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In this case, Rick VanderMolen, the assistant principal at Traverse City Central High
School, had been provided with a detailed anonymous tip from the “Silent Observer” program
that implicated defendant in drug trafficking. In this case, the only issue is whether the
anonymous tip, considered in light of the totality of the circumstances, provided VanderMolen
reasonable suspicion that defendant was trafficking in drugs on school property and,
consequently, justified his search of defendant’s vehicle.1 The trial court found that, on the basis
of the totality of the circumstances, the tip provided sufficient indicia of reliability to support
VanderMolen’s reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. I agree.
The trial court explained why the totality of the circumstances created a reasonable
suspicion of criminal activity:
[W]ith respect to Mr. Perreault, [the report] indicates that he traffics in
marijuana. That the anonymous witness said that they had seen him actually sell
it and that he sells from school, his truck and in East Bay Park in Traverse City.
Well, the truck—actually, I guess it was an S-10, was the testimony—was
parked in the parking lot of the Traverse City Central [High] School. So, I guess,
is that enough to create a reasonable suspicion that—that Mr. Perreault may be
involved in drug dealing and that there might be evidence in his truck when this
anonymous report, which is quite detailed, specifically says he sells from his
truck. That would seem to me to create a reasonable suspicion.
The trial court then distinguished the standard applied to school officials from the probable cause
requirement for a search warrant, stating:
Now, if we’re talking about validating an affidavit for a search warrant, it
might require some corroboration in order to make it sufficient to reach the level
appropriate to support a search warrant. . . . [R]easonable suspicion is a lesser
standard.
A trial court’s factual findings in a ruling on a motion to suppress evidence are reviewed
for clear error, and the trial court’s interpretation of the law or application of a constitutional
standard is reviewed de novo. People v Attebury, 463 Mich 662, 668; 624 NW2d 912 (2001). In
this case, I cannot find any violation of the constitutional standard, nor can I conclude that the
trial court committed clear error.2
1
Defendant does not challenge on appeal the application of the “reasonable suspicion” standard
as the proper standard that must be met to permit a school official to search a student’s vehicle
located on school grounds.
2
If the anonymous tip in question were a bomb threat or a claim that a weapon was located in the
defendant’s vehicle, I suspect that school officials, most parents, and the majority in this case
would conclude that because of the imminent threat, exigent circumstances, and the threat of
harm to all students in the school, the tip alone would be enough to confer “reasonable
suspicion” and justify a search of a student’s vehicle. I would also agree, but I see the
(continued…)
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The tip named four students who were selling drugs on school property. The tipster said
that he was aware that these four students were the “big sellers” at Traverse City Central High
School because the tipster had previously been involved in drug activity and one of the “big
sellers,” a friend of the tipster, had begun selling marijuana to the tipster’s friends and exgirlfriend. The tipster said that he had seen all four “big sellers” selling drugs. The tipster
warned that drugs were being sold on school property and gave details of how the drugs were
being sold. The tipster indicated that defendant “Sells from school, his truck and East Bade [sic,
Bay] Park in Traverse City,” and indicated that he had seen defendant sell marijuana.3 The
tipster also noted that the drug trafficking that he was reporting was the largest threat to the
school.
Admittedly, the tipster provided more detailed information about one of the other “big
sellers,” including information that this “big seller” was suspected of selling drugs to a freshman
student and kept “a machete in the glove compartment of his blue Ford Explorer.” However, the
tipster also provided identifying information concerning the other “big sellers,” including their
names, their grades at school, and where they sold drugs. In particular, the tipster specified that
defendant drove a truck and that another “big seller” drove a GMC Yukon. I believe that the tip,
considered in its entirety, is sufficiently detailed to provide indicia of reliability. I do not think
(…continued)
aforementioned hypothetical as presenting a distinction without a difference. In my opinion, the
presence of drugs on school property presents a similarly serious risk of harm to students that
parents, school officials, and this Court should not accept. More importantly, the standard that a
school official would be permitted to apply in order to justify a search, “reasonable suspicion,” is
the same in both situations. The standard does not change simply because the contraband in
question is viewed by some as “less threatening.”
On a separate note, some school districts have an official school policy that grants school
officials “implied consent” to search a student’s property while that student or that student’s
belongings are located on school property. The lower court record is devoid of any evidence
whether Traverse City Area Public Schools has such a contractual relationship with parents or
students.
3
The Silent Observer screener who took the tipster’s call filled out a tip sheet listing information
that she had solicited from the tipster. When asking about defendant’s involvement in drug
activity and receiving the tipster’s responses, she recorded the following information:
DRUGS
Regarding: Trafficking
Type: Marijuana
Witnessed: Seen
This information indicates that when asked whether he had witnessed the criminal activity, the
tipster said that he had seen defendant trafficking in marijuana. If the tipster was reporting this
information secondhand, I would reasonably assume that a trained call screener would note that
the information was secondhand on the tip sheet, and not assume that recording the word “Seen”
would imply that this information was secondhand. In addition, I note that when the call
screener recorded information about the “big seller” who was a friend of the tipster and about
whom the tipster had significant firsthand information, she indicated that the tipster had “Seen”
him trafficking in marijuana and ecstasy. I believe that this provides an additional indication that
the call screener’s use of the word “Seen” to fill in the category “Witnessed” indicates that the
tipster had admitted seeing these “big sellers” engage in illegal activity firsthand.
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that the majority’s conclusion that “corroborating circumstances” outside the tip must be present
for an anonymous tip to be considered reliable, no matter how detailed and internally consistent
the tip itself might be, is necessarily supported by the prevailing caselaw.
Regardless, there was information corroborating this tip, aiding in a determination that a
reasonable suspicion existed to search defendant’s vehicle. When Officer Evan Warsecke, who
served as a police liaison officer for the school, initially received the “Silent Observer” report, he
verified that defendant and the seller with the GMC Yukon drove the vehicles described and
noted this on the report. He also verified that another “big seller” who was reported as not
having a vehicle did not, in fact, have a vehicle registered with the school. VanderMolen also
independently knew that defendant drove a truck, as was stated in the report, because defendant
had driven a truck recklessly in the parking lot earlier in the school year, and VanderMolen had
discussed this behavior with defendant and his mother. Further, defendant’s name appeared to
be associated with some drug-related problems that were occurring at a local junior high school.
Finally, just before VanderMolen began his search of the vehicle, he noted that he could see a
plastic bag, later found to contain defendant’s marijuana and related drug-trafficking supplies,
through the truck window, although he could not determine from outside the truck what was
inside that bag.
I believe that this information, taken together, was sufficient to provide VanderMolen a
“reasonable suspicion” that defendant was engaged in illegal activity on school grounds and to
authorize his search of defendant’s truck. Not only was the tip quite detailed and internally
consistent, indicating its trustworthiness,4 but information in the tip was also corroborated.5
VanderMolen did not search defendant’s truck because he had a “hunch” that contraband might
be found therein. Instead, the tip and corroborating information provided VanderMolen with a
particularized suspicion that defendant was engaging in criminal activity in his truck on school
grounds, and that contraband was present in the truck. Accordingly, the tip carried with it
sufficient indicia of reliability to support a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, and
VanderMolen’s search did not constitute a violation of defendant’s rights.
Defendant also indicates in his brief on appeal that the tipster likely did not report on
defendant’s wrongdoing because he had a vendetta against defendant. Instead, defendant claims
that the tipster primarily wished to turn in his friend, and his revelation that defendant was also
involved in drug dealing was “merely an afterthought that the tipster had no intention of
revealing until making the call.” This description of the tipster’s statements regarding defendant
as being a “mere afterthought” undermines the notion that the tipster might have wished to
falsely accuse defendant of wrongdoing and, serendipitously, provides an additional indication,
4
It is well established that often inconsistencies in an individual’s statement can indicate that the
statement is false. There is no such indication of inconsistencies in this anonymous tip.
5
VanderMolen also appropriately chose to search defendant’s truck, as opposed to defendant’s
person or locker, because as indicated in the tip, the truck was the locus of the criminal activity
and, hence, the source of danger to the school.
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based on the totality of the circumstances, that the tipster’s information concerning defendant
was valid and that VanderMolen had a reasonable suspicion to search defendant’s vehicle.6
In some ways, I find this case to be analogous to People v Goforth, 222 Mich App 306;
564 NW2d 526 (1997), and the doctrine of in loco parentis. In Goforth, the defendant claimed
that his parents did not have the legal right to allow the police to search his bedroom in his
parents’ house, where evidence of marijuana trafficking activity was found, because he had “a
legitimate expectation of privacy” in his bedroom. Id. at 308. This Court concluded that there is
no absolute rule precluding parents from validly waiving their child’s privilege against an
unreasonable search of the child’s bedroom in the parents’ home, and concluded that the facts of
the case indicated that an officer could reasonably believe that the defendant’s mother had
common authority over the defendant’s bedroom and could consent to the search. Id. at 315-316.
In a separate concurrence, I noted, “excepting the most unusual of situations, a parent always has
the right to consent to the search of the bedroom of a child residing with that parent.” Id. at 317
(O’CONNELL, J., concurring). The parent, not the child, is in charge of the household; the child
is not in charge of the parent.
A similar relationship exists with schools. School administrators act in loco parentis7
with students, and “[s]chools . . . are provided a tremendous measure of authority because of
their responsibilities in loco parentis . . . .” Baker v Couchman, 271 Mich App 174, 203; 721
NW2d 251 (2006) (O’CONNELL, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part), rev’d 477 Mich
1097 (2007) (adopting O’CONNELL, J., partial dissent).
Admittedly, the doctrine of in loco parentis does not obviate all of a student’s Fourth
Amendment protections in a public school setting. TLO, supra at 336-337. Yet the doctrine
helps illustrate the tension placed on school administrators, who must balance their limitations as
public employees with their responsibilities to protect students from the myriad of increasingly
dire threats facing young people today.8 Although it is a delicate balance between preserving
order in the school and safeguarding a student’s individual rights, this case does not present a
close question. Students know that drugs, weapons, and contraband are not permitted on school
6
It appears, instead, that the tipster provided all the information he could on these other “big
sellers” and lacked a motivation to lie when doing so. Of course, the presence of marijuana and
related trafficking supplies in defendant’s truck proves the tipster’s statement correct.
7
In loco parentis is Latin for “’in the place of a parent’” and is defined as “Of, relating to, or
acting as a temporary guardian or caretaker of a child, taking on all or some of the
responsibilities of a parent.” Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed). “The [United States] Supreme
Court has recognized that during the school day, a teacher or administrator may act in loco
parentis. See Vernonia Sch. Dist. v. Acton, 515 U.S. 646, 115 S.Ct. 2386 (1995).” Id. A
“person in loco parentis” is defined as “A person who acts in place of a parent, either
temporarily (as a schoolteacher does) or indefinitely (as a stepparent does); a person who has
assumed the obligations of a parent without formally adopting the child.” Id.
8
Perhaps it is not coincidental that the traditional in loco parentis standard applied in public
schools was weakened just as drugs and violence began their ascendancy as major threats within
our schools. See TLO, supra.
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grounds. Bringing these items onto school property is simply an unacceptable practice in our
society and at our schools.9 School officials have a responsibility to police the school and create
a safe environment for all students, and in this case, VanderMolen performed his duty admirably.
He had a reasonable suspicion that defendant was undermining the health and safety of the
student body by trafficking marijuana on school grounds. VanderMolen, acting within the
confines of the law, did what was necessary to protect the students of Traverse City Central High
School from a drug dealer. His actions and diligence should be applauded.
/s/ Peter D. O’Connell
9
Many schools even post signs in their student parking lots to this effect.
-6-
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