On June 10, 1999, Kenneth E. Gentry was convicted in the Marion Superior Court of Indiana on three counts of burglary and three counts of theft. During the trial, the Government introduced evidence that was obtained by police officers during an encounter with Gentry when the police officers searched Gentry’s person and a wheelbarrow he was pushing. At no time before or during the trial did Gentry’s counsel move to suppress or object to the introduction of the evidence. Gentry’s habeas petition asserts that by failing to move to suppress or object to the admission of the evidence obtained from the searches by the arresting officers, Gentry received ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court denied Gentry’s habeas petition. For the reasons stated below, we reverse the district court’s denial of the habeas petition.
I. Background
At approximately 2:30 a.m., on February 6, 1999, Kenneth E. Gentry was walking-through a residential neighborhood in Indianapolis, Indiana. Gentry was pushing a wheelbarrow containing miscellaneous items such as tools, a cell phone, compact discs, and beer. The items in the wheelbarrow were partially covered by a yellow raincoat.
While Gentry was walking with the wheelbarrow, some items fell out of the wheelbarrow. The noise woke up residents in the area, and upon waking, one resident observed Gentry from a window and called the police. Based on the call, dispatch at the Indianapolis Police Department notified officers over the radio about a “suspicious person” described as a black male wearing dark clothing, including camouflage pants, and pushing a wheelbarrow. (App. at 1, 3, 59, 147). Two Indianapolis police officers responded to the dispatch. Upon arriving in the area, one officer observed Gentry from the marked patrol car *843 “trotting” with the wheelbarrow. (App. at 60, 147). The officers pulled up in the patrol car without activating their emergency equipment. Gentry put down the wheelbarrow, waved to the officers and began walking towards the patrol car. One officer got out of the car and told Gentry to “keep [his] hands up” while the officer patted down Gentry. (App. at 63). While conducting the pat down, the officer felt something bulky in Gentry’s pocket and discovered it was a garage door opener. During this initial contact with Gentry, the officer asked Gentry what he was doing with the wheelbarrow and Gentry indicated that he was going home. The officer observed a hodgepodge of items in the wheelbarrow and the wheelbarrow had the word “Brandt” spray painted on its side. (App. at 4, 61). The officer testified that in plain view he saw some old beat-up stuff, and that he found newer, more valuable items only after he started poking around in the wheelbarrow. (App. at 84, 86-87, 91).
The officer who had been interrogating Gentry then left Gentry with another officer and drove partially down a nearby alley while activating the garage door opener that the officer had earlier obtained from Gentry’s pocket. The officer with the garage door opener discovered that the garage door opener opened the garage of a nearby residence owned by Jeff Gill. Meanwhile, the other officer who remained with Gentry continued the search of the wheelbarrow and discovered a toolbox at the bottom of the wheelbarrow. In the toolbox was a Jiffy Lube receipt that had Gill’s name and address on it. The officer with the garage door opener then arrived at the scene with Gill and Gill identified items in the wheelbarrow as his property. Subsequently, Bill Wherling from Brant Construction identified the wheelbarrow and items in the wheelbarrow as those that were stolen from Brandt Construction during a burglary a few days earlier. Bob Kennedy, Gill’s next-door neighbor also subsequently identified items in the wheelbarrow as items previously stolen from his garage.
Gentry was charged with burglary and theft, and his case proceeded to trial. Gentry’s trial counsel never moved to suppress any evidence or object to the admission of any evidence obtained from the search of Gentry’s person or the wheelbarrow. Gentry did file a pro se motion to suppress prior to his trial, (App. at 12-16), but the record does not reflect that the trial court ever ruled on the motion or that Gentry’s trial counsel ever addressed the pro se motion with the court. In June 1999, Gentry was convicted by a jury on three counts of burglary and three counts of theft. Gentry appealed his conviction to the Court of Appeals of Indiana, raising various claims including claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel due to his counsel’s failure to raise Gentry’s Fourth Amendment defenses. The Court of Appeals of Indiana found that although the officer who initially approached Gentry did not have reasonable suspicion to pat down Gentry for wеapons, the toolbox in the wheelbarrow was independently discovered and would have led the officers to Gill’s garage. The Court concluded that Gentry had not shown ineffective assistance of counsel since Gentry did not show that he was prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to object to the introduction of the evidence that was produced by the searches. The Court of Appeals of Indiana affirmed Gentry’s conviction on September 8, 2000. Gentry filed a petition for review with the Supreme Court of Indiana, raising the same ineffective assistance of counsel claims. The Supreme Court of Indiana denied review on October 23, 2000. Gentry subsequently filed a pro se petition for post-conviction relief in *844 Indiana state cоurt, which was denied on January 27, 2005. Thereafter, Gentry filed a pro se appeal with the Court of Appeals of Indiana, which affirmed the lower court on March 15, 2006. Gentry then filed a petition for review with the Supreme Court of Indiana, which was denied on April 13, 2006. On June 2, 2006, Gentry filed his habeas petition in this case, seeking a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
II. Discussion
We review de novo the district court’s denial of a habeas petition.
Lucas v. Montgomery,
A. Searches Incident to the Arrest
When the officers pulled up in their patrol car and one officer exited the car and told Gentry to “keep [his] hands up,” the officer executed a
Te'iry
stop. (App. at 63). An officer executes a Fourth Amendment seizure when “by means of physical force or show of authority [the officer] ... in some way restraints] the liberty of a citizen.”
Shell v. United States,
A law enforcement officer can execute “an investigatory stop when the officer has reasonable suspicion that a crime may be afoot.”
United States v. Hampton,
The officer who initially approached Gentry lacked any articulable facts at that point to justify a
Terry
stop. The officer was acting solely upon a general report of a “suspicious person,” (App. at 1, 59), which did not provide any articulable facts that would suggest the person was committing a crime or was armed. In
United States v. Packer,
The undisputed record also makes clear that Gentry himself did not give the officers a reason to suspect that he had been engaged in any wrongdoing. The United States Supreme Court has recognized, for example, that “unprovoked flight” by a suspect can suggest wrongdoing.
See, e.g., Wardlow,
We recognize that working in law enforcement is a demanding profession, often requiring officers to make split-second decisions, which affect the safety of the public and the officers.
See Packer,
The officer testified that a pat down was “routinely” done “to make sure there’s no weapons in [a suspect’s] clothing.” (App. at 63). While we recognize that officer safety is important, under the law, officers are not free to pat down citizens at will. A law enforcement officer can conduct a “protective pat-down search” during a
Terry
stop only if the officer has “at a minimum some articulable suspicion that the subject is concealing a weapon or poses a danger to the [officer] or others.... ”
United States v. Pedroza,
Even if the officer who searched Gentry had a basis to conduct a
Terry
stop and a pat down, the officer engaged in an unconstitutional seizure when he retrieved the garage door opener from Gentry’s pocket and did not immediately return the garage door opener to Gentry. The officer testified that he felt a bulge in Gentry’s clothing that “could have been a stun gun....” (App. at 63). However, once the officer discovered that the item in Gentry’s pocket was a garage door opener and not a weapon, he had no basis to seize or retain it, much less to drive off with it to investigate whether Gentry hаd committed crimes.
United States v. Place,
In аddition to the search of Gentry, the officers proceeded to search through the contents of the wheelbarrow. The officer who initially approached Gentry testified that at one point during the initial contact with Gentry, the officer poked through the contents of the wheelbarrow. While one officer drove off to test the garage door opener, another officer engaged in a further search of the wheelbarrow and discovered items such as the toolbox and receipt. In determining whether a search is the type of search that is contemplated under the Fourth Amendment, the court should consider “whether the individual, by his conduct, has exhibited an аctual expectation of privacy,” and “whether the individual’s expectation of privacy is one that society is prepared to recognize as reasonable.”
Bond v. United States,
Although the officers searched through the contents of the wheelbarrow, the officers did not have reasonable suspicion to believe Gentry had committed a crime until after the search when one of the officers had located Gill, using the garage door opener, and Gill identified items in the wheelbarrow as stolen items. The mere fact that the wheelbarrow did not have a closed lid does not mean that its contents could not be protected by the Fourth Amendment. The record indicates that the yellow raincoat placed on top of the wheelbarrow only partially covered its contents. However, the record also indicates that the visible items were not such that they provided the officers with a reasonable basis to conclude that Gentry had engaged in wrongdoing. Under the “plain-view” doctrine, “if police are lawfully in a positiоn from which they view an object, if its incriminating character is immediately apparent, and if the officers have a lawful right of access to the object, they may seize it without a warrant.”
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
The Indiana Appellate Court on dmeet appeal concluded that the pat down by one of the officers was a violation of Gentry’s Fourth Amendment rights. However, the Court further concluded that absent the pat down, the officers would still have discovered the identity of Gill through the discovery of the toolbox in the wheelbarrow. (App. at 156-57). Under the exclusionary rule, evidence seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment must be suppressed.
United States v. Carter,
The exclusionary rule is not limited to the “primary evidence obtained as a direct result of an illegal search or seizure, but also [applies to] evidence later discovered and found to be derivative of an illegality or fruit of the poisonous tree.”
United States v. Budd,
B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Gentry’s trial counsel in state court did not seek to suppress the evidence gained from the unconstitutional searches executed by the officers. Under the Sixth Amendment, a criminal defendant is provided with a right to effective assistance of counsel.
Bobby v. Van Hook,
— U.S. -,
As explained above, the record reflects that the searches performed by the officers at the scene of Gentry’s arrest were unconstitutional and there is thus no indication that a motion to suppress evidence resulting from such searches would have been futile.
See A.M. v. Butler,
At oral argument, Respondent also made a cursory argument that Gentry forfeited his claim concerning ineffective assistance of counsel as to the search of the wheelbarrow because Gentry never properly raised it before. The record, however, reflects that while Gentry’s state trial and appellate counsel did not raise the claim relating to suppression, Gentry himself raised this claim,
pro se,
during state court proceedings. In addition, Gentry raised the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel as to the search of the wheelbarrow in his opening brief in this Court, and Respondent did not include the fоrfeiture argument in its appellee brief. The Respondent’s forfeiture argument is thus waived.
See, e.g., Awe v. Ashcroft,
III. Conclusion
For the above stated reasons, we conclude that the Court of Appeals of Indiana unreasonably applied federal law when the Court determined that the evidence concerning the search of the wheelbarrow was admissible and held that Gentry’s counsel’s performance did not fall below an objective standard of reasonableness. We Reverse the decision of the district court and Remand with instructions to Grant the petitioner’s request for a writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. If the State elects not to retry Gentry within 120 days, he shall be released from confinement.
