MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Timothy T. Hampton is an Illinois state prisoner who was found guilty by a jury of possession of a controlled substance, possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, armed violence, and official misconduct in January 1998. Hampton’s armed violence conviction was vacated and his official misconduct conviction was reversed by the Illinois Appellate Court in 1999, leaving his two possession convictions.
See People v. Hampton,
FACTS 1
The relevant events in this case occurred on March 8, 1998. At 10:40 p.m. that day Maywood, Illinois police officer James Robinson (“Officer Robinson”) was dispatched to investigate an attempted armed robbery, allegedly by a Hispanic man, that had recently occurred at an apartment building on Third Avenue in Maywood, Illinois (“the building”). When Officer Robinson arrived at the building, petitioner approached him, reported that someone had tried to rob his brother, Marian Price (“Price” or “petitioner’s brother”), and then described the alleged robber for Officer Robinson. Once petitioner was finished, Officer Robinson began speaking to petitioner’s brother.
While Officer Robinson talked to Price, petitioner walked to an entrance of the building and frisked some men there. This prompted Officer Robinson to ask petitioner what he was doing. Petitioner responded by informing Officer Robinson that petitioner was an off-duty officer in the Chicago Police Department, displaying his identification card attesting thereto, and adding that the men in the entrance to the building were loitering. Petitioner was wearing plain clothes.
At trial there was a conflict between the testimony of Officer Robinson and petitioner with respect to whether Price then pointed to a man whom he claimed looked like the culprit. Officer Robinson testified that Price did not identify anyone as the probable robber, but petitioner testified that his brother identified a man named Fernando Casas (“Casas”) as looking like the culprit. At any rate, there does not seem to be any dispute that Officer Robinson then expressed concern to petitioner that frisking five people by himself was dangerous., Thereafter, petitioner and Price left the vicinity of the building. Im *984 portantly, Officer Robinson never doubted that petitioner was a Chicago police officer.
Another Maywood officer, Officer Jesse Ingram (“Officer Ingram”), arrived thereafter. Along with Officer Robinson, Officer Ingram questioned the men petitioner had frisked earlier. Casas fit the initial description given to police but, apparently because he was known to the police officers, he was released. The remaining men, including a man named Stanley Polk (“Polk”), were unable to produce satisfactory identification and agreed to go to the police station.
Prior to leaving for the station, Polk produced a Chicago police badge (later determined to belong to petitioner) to Officer Ingram and informed him that petitioner had dropped it. Officer Ingram was then asked (apparently by another officer) to secure the front door of an apartment inside the building that he had left open. Officer Ingram complied, entering through the rear of the building.
At some point between petitioner leaving the vicinity of the building and Officer Ingram emerging from the building, another Maywood police officer named Aaron Wade (“Officer Wade”) arrived at the building and saw a brown Cadillac leaving the area. Then, while Officer Ingram was still in the building, a Cadillac, which possibly was brown, was seen by Officers Robinson and Wade parking on the street a little north of the building.
At this point, only a few minutes had passed since petitioner had left the scene. The Cadillac was not seen committing any traffic violations, but Officer Wade observed that the car’s headlights were turned off. Officer Robinson was unable to see the occupants of the ear when it first arrived.
Petitioner’s brother exited the car from the passenger’s side and walked toward the rear of the building. Despite recognizing petitioner’s brother as the victim of the alleged robbery, Officer Robinson radioed to Officer Ingram that someone was coming up the back and that someone else remained in the car. Officer Ingram emerged from the building, saw that the car’s windows were tinted, and, supposedly for the safety of the police officers, decided to draw his gun and order petitioner’s brother to lie down on the sidewalk. Price apparently complied.
At this point, because Officer Ingram wanted to see who remained in the car, Officers Robinson, Wade and eventually Ingram went over to the ear. As Officer Robinson approached the car, he saw that the driver was petitioner. Officer Robinson positioned himself on the driver’s side of the Cadillac. Petitioner testified that at this point Officer Ingram walked up to the Cadillac and petitioner identified himself as a Chicago police officer. Officer Ingram, who was standing at the passenger’s side, then told petitioner to exit the car. 2 Petitioner complied. Petitioner said, “It’s me,” though there was conflicting evidence as to whether he said this before or after he exited the car.
According to Officers Wade and Ingram, petitioner did not immediately step out of the car. Officer Ingram testified that petitioner responded to the request (to step out of the car) by rolling down the window partially and saying, “It’s me,” to which *985 Officer Ingram responded by again asking petitioner to step out of the car. Officer Ingram testified further that after petitioner exited the car, Officer Robinson identified petitioner as the police officer that Officer Robinson had spoken about earlier.
At the state trial, there was conflicting evidence about exactly what happened next. It is clear that petitioner was asked whether he had a weapon, but there was conflicting evidence as to whether that question was asked before or after petitioner was asked to exit the car. At any rate, petitioner answered that he did have a weapon and that it was on the front seat. Officer Robinson testified that upon hearing that and after petitioner exited the car, Officer Wade, who was also standing next to the driver’s side, entered the Cadillac through the passenger’s side to retrieve the weapon. Officer Ingram testified that, after Officer Wade entered the car, he stood back up and said, “There’s drugs in here.”
Officer Wade testified that petitioner had left the car door open and that, as Officer Wade stood outside the driver’s door, he shined a flashlight into the car and was able to see a brown plastic bag containing four bags, each bag being a little larger than a sandwich bag. Petitioner testified that it was not until after Officer Wade had entered the car and had opened the bag that Officer Wade said that the contents looked like cocaine.
After the officers found the cocaine, petitioner was handcuffed, arrested, and charged with the crimes outlined above. Prior to trial petitioner filed a motion to suppress the cocaine from evidence. The trial court denied the motion, finding that the stop of petitioner was justified by the fact that the “police were investigating a violent crime, that [petitioner] was out of his jurisdiction, and that the police had a right to be concerned as they approached the car because of [petitioner’s] weapon,” as recounted by the Illinois Appellate Court. Hampton at 596. 3 With the cocaine in evidence, petitioner was convicted of all four counts.
Petitioner appealed the trial court’s ruling on his motion to suppress, and the Illinois Appellate Court affirmed, concluding that petitioner was indeed temporarily seized but finding that seizure justified under the circumstances. Id. at 597-600. The Hampton court explained:
An armed robbery had recently taken place apparently in the vicinity of the apartment building; that crime involved danger of serious injury. The Maywood police officers knew that [petitioner] had knowledge of the crime and could aid in the investigation of the crime. Although the Maywood police officers knew [petitioner’s] identity and could have attempted to reach him later by contacting *986 the Chicago police department, the exigency of the recent alleged crime did not require them to wait and delay further investigation.... We acknowledge that the police officers never commenced an interrogation of [petitioner] about the attempted robbery: because they immediately required [petitioner] to exit the car and because the cocaine was visible to the police, they discovered the cocaine upon [petitioner’s] exiting the car. We believe that ordering [petitioner] out of the car was not an unreasonable action; the car was already stopped, and having [petitioner] exit in order to speak with him would not have unduly lengthened a brief detention of a possible witness.
Id. at 599.
APPLICABLE HABEAS CORPUS STANDARDS
When a habeas corpus petitioner claims his Fourth Amendment
4
right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures has been violated, this court can take action only if the petitioner has not been given an “opportunity for full and fair litigation” of his claims.
Stone,
(1) he has clearly informed the state court of the factual basis for that claim and has argued that those facts constitute a violation of his fourth amendment rights and (2) the state court has carefully and thoroughly analyzed the facts and (3) applied the proper constitutional case law to the facts.
Weber v. Murphy,
Similarly, the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) (the “AEDPA”), bars habeas claims unless the previous state court proceedings: (1) “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States”; or (2) “resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” Under the former “unreasonable application” clause, a federal habeas court may grant the writ “if the state court identifies the correct governing legal principle from [the Supreme] Court’s decisions but unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the prisoner’s case.”
Williams v. Taylor,
DISCUSSION
Petitioner’s strongest argument is that the Illinois Appellate Court failed to apply the proper constitutional case law, and unreasonably applied principles set forth by the Supreme Court to the facts of the instant case.
See Stone,
The court begins where the
Hampton
court began: with the Supreme Court precedent applicable to the instant case. The
Hamptonocourt
cited
Terry v. Ohio,
The
Hampton
court also cited
Terry
for the proposition that, “Where the officer making a
Terry
stop reasonably believes, based on specific, articulable facts, that his safety or the safety of others is in danger, the officer may also conduct a limited search of an individual for weapons.” Also true, but the
Hampton
court did not find that the police officers actually feared for their safety or for the safety of others, much less that such fear was based on specific, articulable facts.
See
The
Hampton
court next explained that the Supreme Court has “permitted the investigative detention of suspects in a car” so long as the police had a “reasonable suspicion of illegal activity,” and the stop was “for the purpose of questioning the car’s occupants.”
Id.
(citing
United States v. Brignoni-Ponce,
Terry, Brignoni-Ponce,
and
Hensley
are the only United States Supreme Court cases cited by the court in
Hampton.
Interestingly, the
Hampton
court left
Brown v. Texas,
Indeed, the Court in
.Brown
found that the “flaw in the State’s case,” was that “none of the circumstances preceding the
*989
officers’ detention of [the] appellant justified a reasonable suspicion that he was involved in criminal conduct.”
Id.
at 51-52,
As was the case in
Brown,
the officers in the instant case did not have a reasonable suspicion, based on objective facts, that petitioner was about to be (or had already been, under
Hensley,
Perhaps mindful that the weight of Supreme Court precedent did not support its holding, the Hampton court next turned to an Illinois statute. The court in Hampton asserted that, “Under [an] Illinois statute, a police officer is authorized to temporarily question suspects, including a person who is suspected of an offense that has been completed.” Id. at 598. In reaching this conclusion, the Hampton court relied on 725 ILCS 5/107-14 (West 1994), which provides:
A peace officer ... may stop any person in a public place for a reasonable period of time when the officer reasonably infers from the circumstances that the person is committing, is about to commit or has committed an offense ... and may demand the name and address of the person and an explanation of his actions. Such detention and temporary questioning will be conducted in the vicinity of where the person was stopped.
Although the Hampton court is correct that this statute authorizes police officers to question individuals who are suspected of having participated in a past offense, this statute is no more helpful to its holding than the cases cited above. 725 ILCS 5/107-14 authorizes a seizure when “the officer reasonably infers from the circumstances that the person is committing, is about to commit or has committed an offense.” As explained above, the Illinois Appellate Court concluded that petitioner “was not a suspect in any crime but rather was a person who reported a crime committed against another.” Hampton at 598. Thus, the Illinois statute is inapplicable.
Next, the
Hampton
court relied on
People v. Long,
Apparently in reaction to the lack of Supreme Court or even Illinois law supporting its holding in the instant case, 8 the Hampton court next relied on a search and seizure treatise for the proposition that, “the power to stop should be extended to potential witnesses, although in more narrowly circumscribed circumstances than the stopping of suspects.” Id. at 598 (citing 4 W. LaFave, Search & Seizure § 9.2(b), at 24 (3d ed.1996)).
But again the Hampton court misinterprets its source. In his treatise, LaFave advocates allowing police to stop witnesses under circumstances that, even if generally accepted, still would not apply to the instant case. LaFave discusses the “sensible position” taken by the Model Code of Pre-Arraignment Procedure (a proposed statute that was never adopted in Illinois), which “meets a genuine need because it provides a lawful basis whereby ‘an officer coming upon the scene of a recently committed crime can ‘freeze’ the situation and obtain identifications and an account of the circumstances from the persons present.’ ” 4 W. LaFave, Search & Seizure § 9.2(b), at 24 (3d ed.1996) (quoting the Model Code of Pre-Arraignment Procedure 9-10 (1975)). The provision of the Model Code proposes that officers be allowed to make a stop whenever:
(i) The officer has reasonable cause to believe that a misdemeanor or felony, involving danger of forcible injury to persons or of appropriation of or danger to property, has just been committed near the place where he finds such person, and
(ii) the officer has reasonable cause to believe that such person has knowledge of material aid in the investigation of such crime, and
(iii) such action is reasonably necessary to obtain or verify the identification of such person, or to obtain an account of such crime.
Model Code of Pre-Arraignment Procedure § 110.2(l)(b) (1975).
As explained in
Hampton,
the officers “initially could not have approached the car with the intention of speaking with [petitioner] further about the reported crime because they did not know [petitioner] was driving the car.”
Hampton,
Finally, the
Hampton
court cited three cases also cited by LaFave:
Baxter v. Arkansas,
This leads this court to another case which, like the Supreme Court’s decision in
Brown,
the
Hampton
court chose not to address. In this instance, however, the
Hampton
court’s failure is particularly curious because the case at issue, the
en banc
decision of the Ninth Circuit in
United States v. Ward,
The
Ward
court explained: “In conformity with
Terry,
we have repeatedly held that a founded suspicion that criminal activity is afoot is a minimum requirement for any lawful detentive stop.”
Id.
at 169. This court agrees with Ninth Circuit;
Terry
requires officers to have a founded suspicion that criminal activity is afoot before they can seize individuals and, in the instant case, no such suspicion existed in the minds of the officers.
See also Hicks v. Marsalek,
Based on all of the above, the deficiencies in the
Hampton
court’s decision are clear. In upholding the trial court’s ruling, the
Hampton
court failed to apply the proper constitutional case law, and unreasonably applied the principles set forth by the Supreme Court to the facts of the instant case.
See Stone,
When the Supreme Court decided Terry, it created an exception to the Fourth Amendment requirement that police officers procure a warrant, supported by probable cause, prior to conducting a search or seizure. The Hampton court’s decision expands that exception beyond the bounds set by the Supreme Court in Terry and its progeny. Hampton holds that police officers can lawfully seize a potential witness to a crime, even where the police have no intention of questioning the individual and where they do not suspect him of being involved in illegal activity. Hampton also holds that courts can uphold a search performed by a police officer as long as the court, rather than the individual conducting the search, can identify specific facts which may have caused the officer to fear for his or her own safety or for the safety of others. There is no Supreme Court precedent supporting these holdings. In fact, the Hampton court’s holdings are in direct contravention with Supreme Court precedent.
For these reasons, the court finds that petitioner was not given an “opportunity for full and fair litigation” of his claims under
Stone,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the court grants petitioner’s application for writ of habeas corpus and directs that petitioner be released from custody unless the State of Illinois retries petitioner, consistent with the constitutional standards discussed above, within 90 days of this decision.
Notes
. This recitation of the facts is drawn from the opinion of the Illinois Appellate Court,
Hampton,
. Although the
Hampton
court describes Officer Ingrain’s utterance as a request in its recitation of the facts, the court's later finding that petitioner was "temporarily seized,” along with its description of how the officers "immediately required [petitioner] to exit the car,” and its conclusion that "ordering [petitioner] out of the car was not an unreasonable action,” indicate that petitioner was instructed to exit the car.
Compare
. The instant opinion is focused on the Illinois Appellate Court's decision in Hampton, which upheld the trial court’s ruling on petitioner's motion to suppress. Even so, the court notes that the trial court's ruling is not based on constitutional precedent and relies on facts which are irrelevant to the constitutional inquiry at hand. In determining whether the seizure of petitioner was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment it does not matter that petitioner, an off-duty police officer, was out of his jurisdiction; off-duty police officers are free to travel outside their jurisdictions and no inference of wrongdoing can be drawn from the fact that petitioner did so. The court also notes that, based on the findings of fact by the Hampton court, the trial court's conclusion that the police had a right to be concerned about petitioner's gun as they approached the car in which he was sitting, is doubtful; The Hampton court found that the officers "initially could not have approached the car with the intention of speaking with [petitioner] further about the reported crime because they did not know [petitioner] was driving the car.” Hampton at 596.
. The Fourth Amendment provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, and against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
U.S. CONST, amend. IV.
. The
Hampton
court’s own recognition of this is seen in its conclusion that the
Terry
Court “expressly declined to decide whether an investigative seizure upon less than probable cause would be proper.”
Hampton
at 598 (citing
Terry,
. If the officers had testified to fearing for their safety for these reasons, the
Hampton
court would have had to determine whether a "reasonably prudent man in the circumstances” would fall prey to such fear.
Terry,
The facts in the instant case indicate that the officers knew petitioner was a police officer and that, after petitioner had reported a crime at the building and frisked some men there, a detained individual produced petitioner’s badge and explained that petitioner had dropped it. The facts further indicate that petitioner drove a car back to the building where he had misplaced his badge and that his brother exited the vehicle and walked toward the building. It is difficult to imagine that any court could find, based on these facts, that a reasonably prudent man would fear for his safety or the safety of others under these circumstances.
. The reasoning in
Hensley
directly contradicts the
Hampton
court's reasoning. The
Hampton
court found that, "Although the Maywood police officers knew [petitioner's] identity and could have attempted to reach • him later by contacting the Chicago police department, the exigency of the recent alleged crime did not require them to wait and delay further investigation.”
Id.
at 599. In
Hensley
the Supreme Court noted that the interest of crime prevention is not promoted as much, the exigent circumstances are not as pressing, public safety is less threatened, and the officers making stops "have a wider range of opportunity to choose the time and circumstances of the stop,” when it comes to investigating past (versus future) crimes.
. The Hampton court’s misapplication of Supreme Court constitutional precedent, discussed above, alone requires granting of the writ pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). The following discussion, addressing the Hampton court’s other reasons for affirming petitioner’s conviction, is included only for purposes of completeness.
. The Hampton court’s notation that the car petitioner was sitting in was "a Cadillac, which possibly was brown,” and its earlier mention that Officer Wade saw a "brown Cadillac leaving the area” when he arrived, cannot overcome this deficiency. Id. at 595. It was Officer Ingram, not Officer Wade, who wanted to see who remained in the car, and there is no indication that Officer Wade told Officer Ingram that he had seen a similar car leaving the area when he arrived. See id.
. The Hampton court’s findings of fact support this conclusion. The "police officers knew [petitioner's] identity and could have attempted to reach him later by contacting the Chicago police department,” and anyway the officers had already spoken to petitioner about the alleged crime. Hampton at 599.
. The Shaffer court reasoned that the stop was proper because, "It was proper police procedure to question former employees under the circumstances. The police had a right to do so.... The vehicle was lawfully stopped and the officer viewing the gun had a right to be where he was.” Id. The Shaffer court supported its final conclusion that "admission of the gun is held to be proper” by citing to three Kansas Supreme Court cases, none of which address the "precise question” the Shaffer court addressed, but all of which are supposedly "consistent” with that opinion. See id. Not one United States Supreme Court case is cited by Shaffer in reaching its decision on this issue.
.The Hampton court could not miss La-Fave’s discussion of Ward; the Baxter, Williamson, and Shaffer cases discussed above are cited in footnotes within LaFave's discussion of Ward. See 4 W. LaFave, Search & Seizure § 9.2(b), at 25 n. 28 and n. 30 (3d ed. 1996).
