A confidential informant (“Cl”) advised the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”) that defendant Ramon Reyes regularly sold narcotics and carried a firearm. Cooperating with the NYPD, the Cl arranged to purchase heroin from Reyes in a “buy-and-bust” operation.
As previously agreed, Reyes met the Cl and an undercover officer, posing as the “money guy,” at a bodega in the Bronx. The Cl saw that Reyes was carrying narcotics; but he could not tell whether Reyes was armed. Officers were then directed to arrest Reyes.
Before handcuffing Reyes or conducting a pat-down search, the arresting officer asked him whether he had anything on his person that could harm the officer. Reyes responded that he had a gun in his jacket. The officer retrieved the gun and again asked whether he had anything else on him that could hurt the officer. Reyes responded that there were drugs in his car.
Reyes sought to have both statements suppressed, arguing that he had not been given
Miranda
warnings prior to the questioning. The Government argued against suppression, claiming that the public safety exception to the
Miranda
rule, set forth in
New York v. Quarles,
The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Lynch, /.) granted Reyes’ motion, finding the public safety exception inapplicable. The Government now appeals pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731.
We conclude that the arresting officer asked Reyes “questions necessary to secure [his] own safety” and was not trying to elicit incriminating evidence.
Quarles,
BACKGROUND
Ramon Reyes was arrested and charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), distributing heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(b)(1)(C), and carrying or using a firearm in relation to a narcotics offense, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c).
Reyes’ arrest was based, in part, on the cooperation of a Cl. The Cl told the NYPD that Reyes regularly sold narcotics and — significantly'—that he carried a firearm. In consultation with the NYPD, the Cl arranged to buy 200 glassine envelopes of heroin from Reyes.
Reyes agreed to meet the Cl and an undercover officer, who posed as the “money guy,” at a bodega in the Bronx (across the street from a school). Upon Reyes’ arrival at the store, the Cl got into Reyes’ car and saw that Reyes was carrying narcotics; but he could not tell whether Reyes was armed. Officers were then directed to “move in” and arrest Reyes.
Before handcuffing Reyes or reading the Miranda warnings, the arresting officer asked Reyes “if he had anything on him that [could] hurt [the officer] or anyone on [the] field team.” Reyes responded that he had a gun in his pocket. The officer removed the loaded revolver from Reyes’ *151 pocket and handcuffed him. Before conducting a pat-down and search, the officer again asked whether Reyes “had anything inside [his] pocket that could hurt” the officer. This time, Reyes responded that he had drugs in his car. Almost 200 glas-sine envelopes containing heroin were recovered from Reyes’ car.
Before trial, Reyes moved to suppress: (1) the firearm removed from his pocket and the heroin seized from his car; (2) the statements made during his arrest regarding the gun and the narcotics; and (3) a statement made at the station house that the jacket in which the gun was found belonged to the undercover officer.
At a suppression hearing, three NYPD detectives testified that they knew Reyes was a narcotics trafficker who planned to engage in a substantial heroin transaction with the CI. One officer stated that he had been informed that Reyes usually carried a gun on his person and a shotgun in his car. The other officers were aware that Reyes usually carried a gun.
The district court orally denied Reyes’ motion to suppress the physical evidence and the station house statement. In a written opinion, the court granted Reyes’ motion to suppress the statements made during his arrest, concluding that they violated
Miranda
and that the public safety exception set forth in
New York v. Quarles,
In so ruling, the district court acknowledged that the Government had “plausibly” argued that the arresting officer’s questions were “necessary to secure [his] own safety.” Id. at 280 (internal quotation marks omitted). The court stated, however, that a “generalized fear of sharp objects” would not “render admissible statements made in response to a question as broad as whether ‘he had anything on him that can hurt me or anyone on my field team.’” Id. at 282. Additionally, the court found that Reyes was “not merely ‘in custody,’ ” but rather was “physically overpowered, forcibly bent over a car, and [was] urgently (and repeatedly) asked what harmful objects he ha[d] on him.” Id. at 283. Noting that Reyes had a limited command of the English language, the court concluded that he “quite naturally did not interpret the question as limited to sharp objects.” Id.
The Government now appeals solely the suppression of Reyes’ statements during his arrest regarding the gun and the narcotics.
DISCUSSION
In reviewing a district court’s ruling on a suppression motion, we review factual findings for clear error and questions of law
de novo. United States v. Yousef,
In this case, the Government does not challenge any of the district court’s factual findings, nor does it dispute that the officer’s questioning constituted interrogation within the meaning of Miranda. The Government’s sole contention is that the statements should have been admitted under the “public safety exception” to the Miranda rule.
*152 A. The Law
Under
Miranda v. Arizona,
1. “Public Safety” Exception
In
Quarles,
a woman informed the police that she had been raped at gunpoint.
Id.
at 651-52,
Reversing the state court’s suppression of both the statement and the firearm, the Supreme Court held that
Miranda
warnings need not precede “questions reasonably prompted by a concern for the public safety” or for the safety of the arresting officers.
Id.
at 656, 658-59,
Although the Court cautioned that the “public safety” exception was narrow,
id.
at 658,
The public safety exception permits questions “reasonably prompted by a concern” for safety and in each case “will be circumscribed by the exigency which justifies it.”
Id.
at 656, 658,
2. The Quarles Exception in the Circuits
We have had few opportunities to address the public safety exception.
See, e.g., United States v. Khalil,
Several other circuits, however, have applied the exception to facts similar to those presented here.
See, e.g., United States v. Williams,
In
United States v. Lackey,
The Tenth Circuit found that the officers’ “focused” questions “addressed a real and substantial risk to the safety of the officers” and were not designed “to acquire incriminating evidenced but] solely to protect the officers, as well as the arres-tee, from physical injury.” Id. at 1227-28. The court also observed that such questions would not typically be the sole source of the incriminating evidence because a search incident to an arrest would inevitably discover the evidence. Id. at 1228. Thus, “[t]he risk of incrimination is limited to non-responsive answers (such as in this case, when the suspect provides more information than requested) ....” Id.
The cases relied on by the district court in excluding Reyes’ statements are distinguishable.
Reyes,
B. The Merits
Here, Reyes was a known narcotics dealer. He was arrested in a public place *154 during a heroin transaction. The officers had specific information that he routinely carried a firearm while conducting business. The arrest took place at approximately 4:30 in the afternoon on a clear fall weekday in front of a bodega and across the street from a school. This is a graphic tableau of danger to both the officers and the public.
As in
Lackey,
the arresting officer here had an objectively reasonable belief that Reyes, who was a professional seller of heroin, had sharp objects or a firearm on his person. Indeed, we have often recognized that firearms and sharp objects, such as razor blades and hypodermic needles, are “tools of the [drug] trade” regularly found on narcotics traffickers.
See United States v. Wiener,
Additionally, each officer testified that, based on information provided by the Cl, he was aware that Reyes typically carried a gun. Although Reyes had been apprehended, he was not yet handcuffed and still could have reached for a concealed weapon. In addition, there was a risk that Reyes was carrying a loaded gun that could accidentally be discharged during a search. The officers had a solid basis for the belief that Reyes was armed and that the concealed weapon posed a danger to the police and to the public. See
Quarles,
We are likewise persuaded that the arresting officer’s questions were sufficiently limited in scope and were not posed to elicit incriminating evidence.
See Quarles,
It is not without significance that, after Reyes gave the incriminating response about having drugs in his car, the officer asked no further questions. The arresting officer’s disinclination to exploit the situation suggests that his question was a rea
*155
sonable attempt to “insure his personal safety in the midst of a search.”
Carrillo,
Concededly there is an inherent risk that the public safety exception might be distorted into “a
per se
rule as to questioning people in custody on narcotics charges.”
Reyes,
The arresting officer’s questions to Reyes were clearly limited to objects located on his person. The testimony revealed that the arresting officer was “reasonably prompted by a concern for” officer safety and that the questioning was not “designed solely to elicit testimonial evidence.” Therefore, we hold that the Quarles public safety exception applies to the facts presented here.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, we REVERSE the district court’s grant of Reyes’ motion to suppress.
