Lead Opinion
Opinion for the court by Associate Judge Fisher.
Appellant Nathan Jackson appeals his convictions for assaulting and robbing Cor-inthea Thompson. He primarily argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because the police seized him for a show-up based on an “anonymous” and “uncorroborated” tip provided by the victim’s mother. He also mounts a facial challenge to the 2013 version of D.C. Code § 22-4504 (a), contending it violated the Second Amendment by banning the carrying of pistols in public. We reject these arguments and affirm his convictions.
I. Background
Evidence at the suppression hearing showed that shortly after noon on July 9, 2013, appellant Nathan Jackson approached Corinthea Thompson as she was walking down the street and demanded, “[g]ive up your shit.”
Approximately forty-five minutes to an hour after the robbery, the victim’s mother, Shirley Thompson-Wright, called the police “for a second sighting as to where the suspect was in reference to her daughter’s robbery.”
Officer Chih asked the victim’s mother, Ms. Thompson-Wright, to calm down and to tell him “specifically what [wa]s going on,” because he had not yet learned the particulars of the robbery (such as the victim’s description of the robber). Ms.
After backup units arrived, Officer Chih left Ms. Thompson-Wright with other officers and turned his attention to locating the suspect. Accompanied by Officer Curt Bonney, he went up to the third floor of the apartment building with the photograph tucked in his uniform shirt and the understanding that “[tjhere was still a suspect outstanding with a firearm.”
When Joyce Lewis answered the officers’ knock, they explained that a crime of. violence “had occurred earlier in the da/’ and “that there was information that a potential suspect was in her apartment.” They asked whether any males were in the apartment, and Ms. Lewis said that only her son was there. Showing the photograph to Ms. Lewis, Officer Chih asked if that was her son. She replied that it was not, but did not indicate that she knew the person in the photograph or tell the officers that he was present.
Ms. Lewis invited the officers inside, and her son Craig Lewis came to the door. It was apparent to Officer Chih that Craig Lewis was not the person in the photograph. The officers requested Craig’s identification and asked whether anybody else was inside. Craig said his identification was back in the bedroom, and Ms. Lewis and Craig indicated “that there was ... nobody else inside the apartment.”
Following Craig to the bedroom, the officers were “surprised” to find “two other subjects” inside — the appellant and his brother, Rico Jackson. Appellant appeared “[v]ery nervous,” and was “[w]ide eyed, kind of breathing a little bit heavy, constantly staring at his brother, back and forth, making eye contact with his brother.” The brothers looked like each other and looked like the photo. Noting that appellant’s brother Rico had a facial tattoo that was not depicted in the photograph, however, Officer Chih focused on appellant as the primary suspect. His suspicion solidified before the show-up procedure, when Craig Lewis told him that Rico had spent thé night at the apartment, but appellant had just come in 15-20 minutes before the police arrived.
Officer Chih told appellant not to make any sudden moves and asked for identification. When appellant stated that his ID was in his wallet in his back pocket, the officer told him to stand up very slowly and remove it. Officer Chih also told appellant he was going to “pat him down for any type of weapons.” The pat-down revealed no weapons, but Officer Chih noticed a white, plastic bag directly underneath where appellant had been sitting. Picking up the bag, Officer Chih immediately could feel that it contained expended shell casings.
The atmosphere became “[v]ery tense,” and based on “the nature of the original crime,” “the demeanor of both Nathan and Rico Jackson being very intense,” and the fact that Ms. Thompson-Wright had predicted the officers would find the robber there (despite the Lewis’s denials), Officer Chih alerted the other officers that there was “potentially a gun in [the room.]”
Without investigating further, Officer Chih left the room “to coordinate [a] show-up identification process” because an eyewitness to the crime had been found. (It seems that Ms. Thompson-Wright may have told the police about the witness, Ms. Matthews, while Officer Chih was upstairs
Outside, Ms. Matthews “immediately” identified appellant as the “man who had the gun and was robbing the girl.” Officer Chih then arrested appellant; as he returned to the apartment, he heard “a radio transmission” revealing that Officer Miller had found the weapon. The officers then obtained written consent to search the apartment from both Joyce Lewis and Craig Lewis. That search revealed the expended cartridge casings, the firearm and ammunition, and clothing that matched the victim’s description of the robber’s attire. The police did not find Corinthea Thompson’s watch or necklace.
On January 29, 2014, appellant’s trial commenced before the Honorable John McCabe, and on February 7, 2014, the jury found appellant guilty of armed robbery, assault with a dangerous weapon (“ADW”), and other charges related to the firearm and ammunition.
II. Fourth Amendment
Appellant argues that the trial court should have granted his motion to suppress the identification by the eyewitness and the physical evidence found in the apartment because the police did not have reasonable articulable suspicion to detain him. He asserts that the information Ms. Thompson-Wright gave to the police (1) “amounted to an anonymous tip” because it was “attributed” to “the neighborhood grapevine” and (2) was not sufficiently corroborated.
A. Standard of Review
When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we “must defer to the court’s findings of evidentiary fact and view those facts and. the reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to sustaining the ruling below.” Joseph v. United States,
B. Reliability of the Tip
“The touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness ... measured in objective terms by evaluating the totality of the circumstances.” Goines v. United States,
Reasonable suspicion is a less demanding standard than probable cause not only in the sense that reasonable suspicion can be established with information that is different in quantity or content than that required to establish probable cause, but also in the sense that reasonable suspicion can arise from information that is less reliable than that required to show probable cause.
Alabama v. White,
Here there was no doubt that a crime had occurred — very recently, and nearby. The issue is whether the police had a reasonable, particularized suspicion that appellant was the assailant.
“Prior to 1983, cases involving informant' tips were analyzed under a somewhat rigid and mechanical two-pronged analysis — the Aguilar-Spinelli test.” Goldston v. United States,
Courts must now focus on “the overall reliability of a tip.” Gates,
We recognize, for example, that “[a] person who ... voluntarily comes forward and identifies himself or herself, is more likely to be telling the truth.” Brown v. United States,
C. Validity of the Seizure
The police did not need reasonable, ar-ticulable suspicion to approach the apartment, or even to enter it. As the evidence showed, the residents consented to the entry. Therefore, the trial court properly found that “there was no fourth amendment violation by the[ police] walking into the apartment.” Judge McCabe also found that the police had reasonable articulable suspicion when they subsequently detained appellant because “[o]nce the door to the ... bedroom opened” to reveal appellant, “[the] tip has panned out.”
The court concluded that even though there “was fairly thin information as to the basis for the information that Officer Chih was given by the complainant’s mother,” the fact that appellant was where she had predicted he would be, the fact that he matched the photo, and “the fact that the police were told by Mr. and Ms. Lewis that there were no other males in the apartment” justified the officer’s brief detention of the defendant for a show-up.
To determine the permissibility of that detention, we turn first to the tip that led the officers to the apartment building. When evaluating Ms. Thompson-Wright’s “credibility and veracity,” In re S.B.,
“[I]nformation from an identified citizen is presumptively reliable[,]” and “rigorous scrutiny of the basis of [her] knowledge [was] unnecessary.” Id. at 1161 (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted). “[T]here was nothing in this case to suggest that [Ms. Thompson-Wright] had any bias or motive to falsify information.” Id. at 1164. To the contrary, she was the understandably angry mother of the hospitalized victim, and her clearly expressed interest was in finding and dealing with her daughter’s assailant. Even so, the fact that Officer Chih knew relatively little about the basis of Mrs. Thompson-Wright’s information before he detained appellant makes this a closer case. It is especially because the police had other “strong showing[s] of veracity [and] some other indicia of reliability” that we uphold the detention. Id. at 1165.
Although the police knew only that Ms. Thompson-Wright’s information came from “the neighborhood,” the photograph and address she provided indicate “a special familiarity with [appellant’s] affairs” that the general public would be unlikely to have. White,
We should not ignore the corroborative circumstances under which Ms. Thompson-Wright’s tip “panned out.” Ms. Lewis had. denied that anyone else was in the apartment, yet the police discovered appellant and his brother in the bedroom. Both were behaving nervously. Appellant tries to dismiss this behavior by asserting that nervousness “is an entirely natural reaction” to the presence of law enforcement and that Ms. Lewis might have “had any number of reasons” to give the police a “single inaccurate statement.”
Even if these assertions were true, “[a] determination that reasonable suspicion exists ... need not rule out the possibility of innocent conduct.” United States v. Arvizu,
Assessing the totality of these circumstances, the trial court properly avoided the “sort of divide-and-conquer analysis” in which appellant engages. Arvizu,
III. Did the Statute Clearly and Obviously Violate the Second Amendment?
Appellant contends that we should vacate his conviction for carrying a pistol outside his home or place of business (“CP”) because former D.C. Code § 22-4504 (a) was facially unconstitutional. In other words, he asserts that no (valid) statute prohibited him from carrying the pistol.
As we explained in Conley v. United States, “[a] facial challenge imposes a ‘heavy burden’ on the claimant to establish that ‘the law is unconstitutional in all of its applications.’ ”
The operative portion of the CP statute applicable at the time of this armed robbery stated: “No person shall carry within the District of Columbia either openly or concealed on or about their person, a pistol, or any deadly or dangerous weapon capable of being so concealed.” D.C. Code § 22-4504 (a) (2013), (In that iteration, the statute did- not mention a license.) The relevant penalty section provided: “A person who violates this section by carrying a pistol, or any deadly or dangerous weapon, in a place other than the person’s dwelling place, place of business, or on other land possessed by the person, shall be fined ;.. or imprisoned .... ” D.C. Code § 22-4504 (a)(1) (2013).
As appellant did not challenge the statute before the trial court, we review for plain error. Lowery v. United States,
A separate division of the court recently considered and rejected the same attack upon the same statute. In re T.M.,
IY. Conclusion
We remand with instructions to vacate appellant’s conviction for ADW and the corresponding PFCV conviction. In all other respects, the judgment of the Superior Court is hereby affirmed.
Notes
. Citing Dockery v. United States, the government states that we may consider "both evidence offered at the suppression hearing and [evidence] admitted at trial.”
. At the time, the police did not know that, after speaking to her daughter at the crime scene, Shirley Thompson-Wright initiated her own investigation. The victim had told her mother that her assailant was the "boy from around the neighborhood that always drove the red car and that always hung out with ... Chucky.” Ms. Thompson-Wright then drove "around the neighborhood” and encountered Rogann Matthews, a neighbor who had (1) witnessed the assault and robbery, and (2) knew where Chucky lived. This information led Ms. Thompson-Wright to Chucky, who in turn gave her the address where appellant was staying: 3425 East Capitol Street. Chucky also pointed out a photo of appellant on his wall; Ms. Thompson-Wright grabbed the photo before leaving. Because the police did not know this information at the time they seized appellant, we do not rely on it when reviewing the denial of appellant’s motion. See note 1, above.
. The other charges decided by the jury included carrying a pistol, possessing an unregistered firearm, unlawful possession of ammunition, and two counts of possessing a firearm dufing a crime of violence or dangerous offense ("PFCV”). The trial court found appellant guilty of committing an offense while on release.
. See Spinelli v. United States,
. The court also found that Officer Chih’s “frisk” of the bag "was really permissible under all of the circumstances,” as he did not open the bag but just felt the outside of it. Finally, Officer Miller’s decision to pull back the bed sheet was just “a very minor intrusion” that did “not violate Mr. Jackson’s fourth amendment rights.”
. Appellant also argues that his conviction for ADW, and the corresponding PFCV conviction, should merge with his conviction for armed robbery and the PFCV conviction associated with die armed robbery count. The government agrees, and so do we. We therefore remand the case to the trial court with instructions to vacate those two convictions, noting that the ADW and PFCV sentences run concurrently with the sentence for armed robbery.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I dissent from the majority’s holding that the photograph of Nathan Jackson “from the neighborhood” and the tip that he was in a certain apartment — also “from the neighborhood” — were sufficiently corroborated by Mr. Jackson’s presence in the apartment, his nervousness when confronted and cornered by two police officers in a bedroom, and inaccurate statements by the apartment’s residents about Mr. Jackson’s presence to justify his seizure by the police. In my view, the tip and the photograph — although transmitted through a non-anoriymous intermediary, complainant Corinthea Thompson’s mother — came, for all intents and purposes, from an anonymous source (“the neighborhood”), “whose reputation [could not] be assessed and who [could not] be held responsible if [the] allegations turned out to be fabricated.” Florida v. J.L.,
I.
Although the majority fairly summarizes the sequence of events leading up to Mr. Jackson’s seizure, as revealed in the suppression-hearing testimony, it may be helpful to restate the facts from the perspective of Officer Stephen Chih. Officer Chih was the officer who seized Mr. Jackson, and only the facts that were known to him matter to the Fourth Amendment analysis.
Around forty-five minutes to an hour after Ms. Thompson was robbed, Officer Chih and Officer Curt Bonney arrived at the intersection of 35th and East Capitol Streets. Ms. Thompson’s mother, Shirley Thompson-Wright, had called the police to report that she had information about Ms. Thompson’s assailant. “[A]t th[e] time” he arrived, Officer Chih “didn’t really know too much ... other than the fact that there was a report of a robbery reported by ... Officer Smith.” Ms. Thompson-Wright told Officer Chih and Officer Bon-ney that her daughter had been robbed, and “that the suspect to her daughter’s robbery was staying up at 2345 East Capitol Street, apartment 301.” “[S]he was yelling and screaming and ... pointing to an apartment,” and she threatened that “[i]f [the police didn’t] go in there, [she was] going [to] go in there and handle whatever [she] got to do.”
Officer Chih “learned in [his] brief conversation” with Ms. Thompson-Wright “that she herself had not actually witnessed the robbery.” Ms. Thompson-Wright produced a photograph, however, which she claimed was a picture of the robber.
Arriving at the entrance to the bedroom, Officer Chih saw that there were in fact two males other than Mr. Lewis inside, which “p[iqu]ed [his] suspicions”: Mr. Jackson was seated on a bed, and his brother on a sofa. To Officer Chih, they seemed “[v]ery nervous” — they were “[w]ide eyed, kind of breathing a little bit heavy, constantly ... making eye contact with” each other. Officer Chih thought that the two brothers looked “very similar” and that both resembled the person in the photograph. Officer Chih instructed Mr. Jackson and his brother “not to move” and soon after told Mr. Jackson to “stand up.” The sequence of events that followed, described in the majority opinion, resulted in the officers finding ammunition and a weapon and in Mr. Jackson being identified in a show-up procedure.
II.
In telling Mr. Jackson “not to move” and to “stand up,” Officer Chih effected an investigatory stop, a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. See Terry v. Ohio,
A.
Although “information from an identified citizen is presumptively rehable,” Joseph v. United States,
“[A]nonymity takes on even greater significance where there has not even been a face-to-face confrontation between the person giving the information and the police.” Brown,
The information Ms. Thompson-Wright gave to Officer Chih was, if not technically an anonymous tip, functionally equivalent to one.
Not only were the sources of the tip identifying Mr. Jackson unknown to Officer Chih, thus making it unlikely that they could be identified and held accountable if the tip turned out to be false, but they also did not even communicate with the police, thus making it unlikely that, even if they were later identified, they could be held liable for a false statement.
B.
Because the information and photograph relayed by Ms. Thompson-Wright to the police amounted to what was essentially an anonymous tip, they, “standing alone, would not ‘warrant a [person] of reasonable caution in the belief that [the seizure of Mr. Jackson] was appropriate.’ ” White,
First, it is not true that “the photograph and address [Ms. Thompson-Wright] pro
Not only do the photograph and information about where Mr. Jackson could be found fail to indicate that Ms. Thompson-Wright had a special familiarity with his affairs, but they do not even indicate that Ms. Thompson-Wright’s source or sources had a special familiarity with Mr. Jackson’s affairs. It is hardly uncommon for a person’s family members and friends to have photographs of the person and to know where he or she stays, while knowing little of — or at least lacking “special familiarity” with — the person’s criminal activities. If there is any correlation between possession of a person’s photograph or knowledge of the person’s address and special knowledge of the person’s criminal activities, it is likely a weak one, insufficient to create reasonable suspicion. See White,
Second, the information that Officer Chih learned when he entered apartment 301 did little to corroborate the conclusory tip “from the neighborhood.” That Mr. Jackson was inside the apartment, consistent with the tip, does not demonstrate that the “tip [was] reliable in its assertion of illegality” but merely that it was reliable in “its tendency to identify a determinate person.” J.L.,
Mr. Jackson’s and his brother’s nervousness when two police officers confronted them in the bedroom adds little. A suspect’s nervousness is a relevant factor in the reasonable-suspicion analysis, but it is
III.
The central problem with the majority’s analysis is that it fails to recognize just how weak the anonymous tip in this case was. The tip was completely lacking in detail, it came “from the neighborhood,” and there was no indication that it was based on eyewitness knowledge or inside information — or indeed, that it was based on anything other than rumor. The majority fails to articulate — and I am unable to understand — how Ms. Thompson-Wright’s possession of a photograph of Mr. Jackson shows that her source or sources had “inside information” or “special familiarity” with the crime. Moreover, the only part of the tip that “panned out,” ante at 1267, was that part that identified where Mr. Jackson could be found, and given the conclusory nature of the tip, this was probably the only part of the tip that could have been expected to pan out — barring the possibility that Mr. Jackson would be found with the fruits of the robbery or would immediately confess in the officers’ presence. Given these serious deficiencies, I am unwilling to say that the Lewises’ possible dishonesty and Mr. Jackson’s and his brother’s nervousness — factors whose significance this court and other courts have rightly minimized — were sufficient to justify the intrusions in this ease.
. The majority does not rely on the "collective knowledge doctrine," which under certain circumstances allows the government to demonstrate probable cause or reasonable suspicion by "aggregat[ing] the knowledge” of multiple police officers. McFerguson v. United States,
. The photograph had disappeared by the time of suppression hearing, and the trial court was thus unable to review it. Officer Chih described the photograph for the trial court.
. See D.C. Code § 5-117.05 (2012 Repl.) ("[Wlhoever shall ... communicate or cause to be communicated to [the] Metropolitan Police force, or any officer or member thereof, any false information concerning the commission of any criminal offense ..., knowing such information to be false, shall be punished by a fine ... or by imprisonment .... ”).
. The majority contends that because Ms. Thompson-Wright was not an anonymous informant, "rigorous scrutiny of the basis of [her] knowledge [was] unnecessary.” Ante at 1266 (quoting Joseph,
. D.C. Code § 5-117.Ó5 makes it a crime for a person to “cause to be communicated” to the police a knowingly false statement. Thus, if the anonymous source "from the neighborhood” knew or intended that Ms. Thompson-Wright would convey false information to the police, he or she could be prosecuted, Under those circumstances, however, it would likely be a challenge for the government to secure a conviction. It is beside the point, moreover, that Ms. Thompson-Wright "could be held ‘accountable’ for the information [s]he gave,” Ante at 1266 (quoting Joseph,
. Recently, in Jenkins v. United States,
First, the court explained that "to support a finding of reasonable suspicion based on information passed from one police officer to another, the government must apprise the judge 'of sufficient facts to enable him to evaluate the nature and reliability of that information.' " Jenkins,
Second, in Jenkins, there was "no record evidence that would support the conclusion that the video ... watched [by the officers] had something to do with the attempted robbery — meaning that even if appellant resembled someone in the video, this would not implicate him in the attempted robbery.”
. A conclusion that the Lewises deliberately lied is in some tension with Officer Chih's testimony that the Lewises voluntarily allowed him and Officer Bonney to enter the apartment and follow Mr. Lewis back to his bedroom, making discovery of Mr. Jackson and his brother (and thus the purported lies) inevitable.
. It is worth noting that although the volun-tariness of the Lewises’ consent to the officers’ entry into their apartment is not at issue te this appeal, the officers in this case relied on Ms. Thompson-Wright’s barebones and un-sourced tip to gain entry.
