PA: Furtive movement and nervousness justifies frisk of car for weapon

Defendant was stopped at night, and he made a furtive movement below his seat. He was nervous when talked to. The officer got him out and frisked him finding nothing. The officer then searched the area defendant was sitting in, and a gun was found. Furtive movements alone are not reasonable suspicion. Add nervousness, and it is. The trial court’s order suppressing the gun was reversed. Commonwealth v. Buchert, 2013 PA Super 81, 68 A.3d 911 (2013).

Officers properly conducted a protective sweep when responding to a shooting call. A later search warrant for the premises was not based on stale information about the gun just because a picture had been seen with defendant holding the gun from two years earlier. “Again, appellant’s argument is patently meritless. The July 18, 2008 affidavit was more than sufficient for a search warrant to issue regardless of the allegation concerning the October 2006 photograph. Police did not recover the murder weapon and they had new information that it may be stashed under the floor boards in the attic. The trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion to suppress physical evidence.” Commonwealth v. Harrell, 2013 PA Super 82, 2013 Pa. Super. LEXIS 222 (April 12, 2013).*

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