Defendant-appellee-cross-appellant Dustin L. MeCargo (“defendant” or “MeCar-go”) was stopped by the Buffalo Police on July 28, 2008, blocks from a reported attempted burglary. The officers decided to take MeCargo back to the scene of the alleged crime to see if the victim could identify him. Because the officers planned to transport him in the back of their patrol car, they frisked him for weapons in accordanсe with a departmental policy. During the frisk, the officers discovered a handgun. MeCargo was arrested and later charged in federal court with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1), 924(a)(2).
MeCargo moved to suppress the gun. He argued that the frisk of his person, without a reasonable suspicion that he was armed, violated his Fourth Amendment rights. The district court agreed and suppressed the gun. It held that the initial stop and detention of MeCаrgo was constitutional but that the officers were not permitted to frisk him unless they had a reasonable suspicion that he was armed. The government appealed, and MeCargo, claiming error in the district court’s holding that the initial stop was constitutional, cross-appealed.
BACKGROUND
At 12:53 a.m. on July 28, 2003, the 911 operator for the Buffalo Police Department was told by a caller from 501 Berkshire Avenue that someone was attempting to break into his residencе. The only additional details the caller provided were that more than one person was trying to enter the house and that some of the perpetrators had gone around to the back of the house. Based on this 911 call, a Buffalo Police dispatcher transmitted a radio message to patrol cars in the area of 501 Berkshire Avenue.
Buffalo Police officers Sterlace and White were in a patrol car less than two blocks frоm 501 Berkshire when they received the radio transmission. They then proceeded eastbound on Berkshire. As they came to the intersection of Berkshire and Suffolk Street, the officers saw MeCargo crossing Berkshire and continuing to walk north on the east side of Suffolk. The residence at 501 Berkshire is located on the south side of Berkshire, approximately 200 feet to the east of the intersection. The officers testified that as MeCargo was walking north he was stаr
The officers turned left onto Suffolk, drew along side the defendant, and told him to stop and approach the car. Ster-lace testified that he wanted to detain McCargo to take him back to 501 Berkshire for possible identification by the victim. Both officers then left their ear, and Sterlace patted down the defendant. White testified that it was departmental policy to pat down all persons before placing them in the back of a police car to protect the officers’ safety.
While patting down McCargo, Sterlace felt a gun in McCargo’s waistband. McCargo jumped away from Sterlace, and the gun became lodged in McCargo’s sweatshirt and eventually fell to the ground. McCargo was placed under arrest and taken to police headquarters. A total of two minutes and thirty-eight seconds elapsed between the time the officers advised dispatch that they were proceeding to the scene and the time of the arrest. Because the officers responded to the dispatch call at most three minutes after the initial 911 call, less than six minutes elapsed between the time the 911 call was placed and the time of McCargо’s arrest.
A federal grand jury indicted McCargo for the possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1), 924(a)(2). After McCargo moved to suppress the gun as the product of an unconstitutional search, the motion was referred to a magistrate judge (H. Kenneth Schroeder, Jr., Magistrate Judge), who found that the police had reasonable suspicion to stop McCargo, based on his location near the scene of the crime in a high-crime area very soon аfter the 911 call. The magistrate judge determined, however, that the pat-down was unconstitutional because the officers had no suspicion that McCargo was armed and recommended that the gun be suppressed. The district court (John T. Elfvin, Judge) adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendations. The government appealed pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731, and McCargo filed a cross-appeal.
DISCUSSION
I. The Fourth Amendment Generally and Appellate Review
The Fourth Amendment protects persons against “unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. Evidence seized pursuant to an unreasonable search or seizure or evidence that is the “fruit” of an unreasonable search or seizure must be suppressed and cannot be used in the prosecution’s case in chief.
James v. Illinois,
This case requires us to deal with three Fourth Amendment questions: (1) whether the initial stop and brief detention of McCargo by the police was constitutional under
Terry;
(2) whether the police were entitled, as part of the
Terry
stop, to transport McCargo to the scene of the crime to see if an identification could be made by the victim; and (3) whether the police were entitled to pat down McCargo before transporting him to the crime scenе in a police car. We review de novo each of
II. The Initial Terry Stop
The district court held that the officers had reasonable suspicion to stop and briefly detain McCargo, short of patting him down, because of his close physical and temporal proximity to the crime scene in a high-crime area.
See Brown v. Texas,
We agree with the district court.
Terry
requires that a police officer have only “reasonable suspicion,”
United States v. Scopo,
Finally, the officers knew, based on the computer system in their car, that one of the suspects had gone to the rear of 501 Berkshire during the burglary attempt. If such a suspect had been heading north, going away from the scene of the crime, one route would have been north along Suffolk Street, the direction McCargo was walking. Thus, we believe McCargo’s location supports the officers’ claim of reasonable suspicion and does not detract from it, as McCargo argues.
Considering these facts in the aggregate and not in isolation,
see United States v. Cortez,
III. Transportation to the Scene of the Crime
Becausе the officers patted down McCargo only because they intended to transport him to the crime scene, the lawfulness of transporting a suspect to the crime scene as part of a
Terry
stop is placed in issue. Such a transportation is
We have little trouble concluding that, in some сircumstances, police may transport a suspect short distances in aid of a
Terry
stop. The Supreme Court has upheld such transportations,
see United States v. Place,
Because we have already held that the police may require a person temporarily detained under
Terry
to move to another place, the question is whether
this
transportation was reasonable. On the government’s side оf the scale is the strong interest in crime prevention and detection.
Cf. Place,
It is true that alternative means of confirming or dispelling the suspicion surrounding McCargo might have existed. Assuming there was a witness who could identify the perpetrators, the police might have walked McCargo to the crime scene or even brought the witness to McCargo. However, we do not think the officers’ plan to take McCargo to the crime scene in their patrol car was unreasonable. The officers could not know whether the victim was free to move either because of a physi
Our view that transportation to or from the crime scene under circumstances like these would have been reasonable is consistent with the views of three of our sister courts of appeals and sеveral state supreme courts in holding that the police may transport a suspect for identification purposes as part of a
Terry
stop.
See United States v. McCarthy,
Therefore, where the police have a reasonable suspicion that a person was involved in a crime, they do not viоlate the Fourth Amendment rights of a suspect if they stop the suspect and transport him a short distance to the scene of the crime in furtherance of a legitimate law-enforcement purpose. We also believe that the police may reasonably choose to transport the suspect in a police car where, as here, that decision would shorten the length of the Fourth Amendment intrusion.
IV. The Frisk
The officers patted down McCargo preparatory to placing him in the police car to transport him to the crime scene and, in so doing, found the handgun that formed the basis for the charges against him and that McCargo wants suppressed.
Terry
itself specifically authorized a pat-down where, following a stop, the officers believed that the person detained was armed,
Terry,
A interest in officer safety has been the justification for
Terry
stops from their inception. Our examination of
Terry’s
progeny reaffirms this conclusion.
See, e.g., Michigan v. Long,
In the typical
Terry
stop, we have no doubt that the powers the police possess over the suspect, including the power to order the suspect to move to a more convenient or safer location, see
Place,
The transportation of the suspect in the back of a police car as рart of the Terry stop is markedly different. The officers are less able to protect themselves from the possibility of violence. The officers cannot depart or remove themselves temporarily from the situation and call in additional officers as backup. The suspect and the officers are in close proximity to each other for the duration of the transportation; the suspect sits behind them, a few feet away in the rear of thе car, frequently separated by only a wire grate. And the suspect is not subject to the officers’ immediate physical control or restraint: if the suspect turns out to be armed, the police are at his mercy.
In sum, we think the dangers posed to police officers in situations where a sus-
Permitting a limited frisk for weapons before placing a suspect in a police car, pursuant to an established policy, reflects an appropriate balancing of the interests at stake. Because the suspect is placed in the rear of the car — a location where, were he armed, he would expose the officers to peril — we think the most reasonable, and least intrusive, solution is to permit a pat-down for weapons. The possibility of danger to the officers can bе eliminated simply by ensuring that the suspect does not have a weapon that can be used against them.
The justification for the pat-down is not that the suspect is reasonably suspected of being armed; it is rather a matter of sound police administration: police officers should be certain before transporting members of the public, whom they do not know, that none of them is armed. The administrative nature of the search is evidenced by the existеnce of the Buffalo Police’s department-wide policy that requires the pat-down whenever a person is transported in a police car. The fact that the policy is administrative and universally applied to all who are transported eliminates any selective-use concern.
See Brown,
Courts have long upheld suspicionless searches conducted under an official policy as not violative of the Fourth Amendment. Although the reasоnableness balance differs following an arrest, permitting greater intrusion, post-arrest administrative searches are justified, not by probable cause or suspicion, but by the same safety rationale applicable in this case.
See Colorado v. Bertine,
Arrested persons have also been known to injure themselves — or others — with belts, knives, drugs or other dangerous items on their person while being detained. Dangerous instrumentalities— such as razor blades, bombs, or weapons — can bе concealed in innocent-looking articles taken from the arrestee’s possession. The bare recital of these mundane realities justifies reasonable measures by police to limit these risks....
Illinois v. Lafayette,
Our holding in this case is a narrow one. We are not holding that the police are entitled to pat down a person, absent reasonable suspicion that he is armed, simply because they have stopped that person pursuant to a lawful Terry stop. However, in cases where the police may lawfully transport a suspect to the scenе of the crime in the rear of a police car, the police may carry out a departmental policy, imposed for reasons of officer safety, by patting down that person. Because the police must have a legitimate law-enforcement reason to transport a suspect, we see little danger that policies such as these might be used as a pretext for a suspicionless frisk.
Applying these rules to this case is nоw straightforward. We have already said that McCargo was lawfully stopped and that the police were entitled to transport McCargo to the scene of the crime. The officers testified, and the district court found, that the officers frisked McCargo pursuant to a generally applicable police policy that required all persons placed in patrol cars to be frisked. There are no allegations, much less proof, of bаd faith or pretext on the part of the police. Therefore, the frisk of McCargo was constitutional, and the judgment of the district court should be reversed.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the district court is Reversed, and the case is Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In an amicus brief filed by the other United States Attorneys in this circuit, the government argues that the officers had a reasonable suspicion that McCargo was armed. Because we resolve this case on other grounds, we decline to address this argument.
