Jack L. Losee, Jr., an Iowa prisoner, appeals from the District Court’s 1 dismissal of his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982) complaint on the basis that appellees, police officers, were entitled to qualified immunity. We affirm.
Losee was convicted as a felon in possession of a firearm after police officers Dear-inger and Trimble stopped the car in which he was a passenger, found shotgun shells in his pocket during a pat-down search, and discovered shotguns in the car. Prior to trial, Losee lost a motion to suppress this evidence. He also objected to the introduction of the evidence at the bench trial, over which a different judge presided, but was overruled. The Iowa Court of Appeals reversed Losee’s conviction, however, after finding that appellees did not have a reasonably articulable suspicion on which to base the investigatory stop of the car.
State v. Losee,
We agree with the District Court that under the facts of this case, appellees were entitled to qualified immunity. Appellees are liable for damages only if the contours of the Fourth Amendment were sufficiently clear, in the light of pre-existing law, that appellees should have known their actions were unlawful.
Anderson v. Creighton,
Police are permitted to make investigatory stops and to conduct limited searches for weapons when, in light of their experience, they reasonably believe that criminal activity may be afoot, and that the suspects involved may be armed and dangerous.
Terry v. Ohio,
Appellees testified they regarded the occupants of the car as robbery suspects because there had been robberies in the area in the past; they had been illegally parked near an alley which had been used in past robberies; and they left the area and came back, parking behind a business which was closed. The officers believed the occupants of the car saw their patrol vehicle before moving on. We believe the car’s movement in and out of the area after becoming aware of the presence of police, combined with parking illegally near the alley and behind a closed business, with no apparent justification for being in either place, reasonably led appellees to believe that Losee and his companion may have been planning to commit a robbery.
When the suspected crime is robbery, it is reasonable to infer that the suspects may be armed and dangerous. In addition, the record shows that once the car was stopped, the butt of a shotgun protruding from under the car seat was in plain view. In these circumstances, a reasonable officer would consider it permissible to conduct a pat-down search and to seize the shotgun shells and weapons from the car.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Donald E. O’Brien, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa.
