MO: “I need to talk to you” is a request not a command

Defendant was not seized by officer who, based on an anonymous tip that defendant was armed, stopped near defendant and walked toward him saying “I need to talk to you.” Defendant backpadeled and reached for his waistband. The officer drew his weapon and advanced on defendant and then frisked him, finding a gun. “I need to talk to you” without any other show of force was not a seizure. State v. Carr, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 997 (September 9, 2014):

Here, there was only a single police officer. The Officer did not display his weapon, and he did not touch Carr. In fact, the Officer was thirty to forty-five feet away from Carr when he called out to him. He did not say, “Hold it right there,” or “Freeze,” but only stated, “I need to talk to you.” There was no evidence that the Officer turned on the lights or sirens to his patrol car as he approached Carr. There was no evidence that the Officer was running towards Carr; instead, the evidence was that the Officer was walking. There was no evidence indicating that the Officer’s tone of voice demanded compliance. In addition, when asked at the hearing whether Carr would have been free to leave at that point, the Officer answered, “I had not—it was just a contact, so yes, I guess he would be.” ….

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