Anthоny Gregg appeals from a judgment of conviction entered on April 11, 2003, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Preska, J.). Gregg was convicted of one count of unlawfully possessing a firearm after having been convicted of a felony, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) (the “felon-in-possession” charge). Gregg raises three arguments on apрeal: (1) the district court improperly precluded the “innocent possession” defense to the felon-in-possession charge; (2) the district court improperly admitted into evidence certain post-arrest statements taken in violation of Miranda; and (3) the district court erred when it ruled that he had waived any Fourth Amendment challenges in his federal firearms case by pleading guilty to a prior state charge of criminal impersonation that arose from the same set of events that led to the federal gun charges. We have resolved Gregg’s first two arguments by summary order, filed simultaneously with this opinion, and here address only the waiver issue.
Background
On March 20, 2001, at approximately 10:40 p.m., Grеgg walked through a turnstile at the 167th Street subway station in the Bronx using a reduced fare Metrocard normally issued only to the elderly or disabled. As Gregg passed through the turnstile, New York City Police Officer Scott Miller, standing in a utility room near the turnstile, saw a red light on the turnstile illuminate. The red light indicated that Gregg had used a reduced fare or “disability Metrocard.” Millеr and his partner approached Gregg on the platform and asked to see his Metrocard. After Gregg presented the officers with a disability fare Metrocard that contained the name and photograph of his mother, Roberta Gregg, he was arrested for illegal use of the Me-trocard (“theft of service,” according to the arresting officers’ terminology).
During the arrest process, Officer Miller patted down Gregg. As his hand passed over Gregg’s waistband area, Officer Miller felt a “bulge” on the left-hand side. The officers recovered a. 380 Tanfoglio semiautomatic pistol. After recovering the gun, but before reading Gregg his Miranda rights, the police asked him how to remove the firearm’s magazine. Gregg instructed them on where to find the release button.
Gregg was charged in state proceedings with criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree, but the grand jury refused to indict him on that charge. Having avoided that indictment, Gregg disposed of his state criminal charges by pleading guilty to a state chargе of criminal impersonation in the second degree and serving a fifteen-day sentence. A federal grand jury subsequently returned an indictment against Gregg on one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
Prior to trial Gregg moved to suppress both the gun and certain statements he made to the police at the time of his arrest. Relying on
Terry v. Ohio,
Discussion
This case requires us to determine if Gregg’s plea of guilty to the state charge of criminal impersonation effectively waived any Fourth Amendment challenges to the subsequent federal felon-in-possession charge stemming from the same stop and arrest. The district court relied primarily on
Tollett v. Henderson,
Thе district court held that “a defendant who enters a guilty plea in a criminal proceeding may not subsequently challenge the events that led up to that proceeding on Fourth Amendment grounds.” The district court then cited several of this Court’s precedents dealing with appealable waiver of constitutional challenges to prе-plea investigative misconduct by law enforcement, e.g., propriety of a search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment and existence of probable cause for an arrest. Gregg objected that “by failing to contest the constitutionality of his arrest in state court, [he did not] unequivocally waive[] all objections to that arrest in any context, including those that would be made in federal court on charges not extant at the time of the state proceeding.” The district court responded that “[t]he reasoning of Tollett and its progeny applies with equal force here, even though Gregg pleaded guilty in state court and also was charged in federal court.” Sрecifically, the court noted that “Gregg’s plea in state court cannot be disregarded merely on the basis of the venue in which it was entered.” In the district court’s view, Gregg’s situation was the result of litigation strategy, which always carries with it both risks and benefits. While Gregg benefitted by receiving a days-long sentence to a significantly lesser state chаrge of criminal impersonation, he also knowingly accepted the risk that subsequent more serious federal charges could result from the events of that night. Thus, the district court reasoned that his failure to raise Fourth Amendment objections to the gun seizure during state proceedings on the criminal impersonation charge barred him from rаising such objections on the gun possession charge in the federal forum.
The Supreme Court has instructed, however, that
Tollett
does “not rest on any principle of waiver.”
Haring v. Prosise,
Our decisions in Tollett and the cases that followed simply recognized that when a defendant is convicted pursuant to his guilty plea rather than a trial, the validity of that conviction cannot be affected by an alleged Fourth Amendment violation because the conviction dоes not rest in any way on evidence that may have been improperly seized.... Therefore, the conclusion that a FourthAmendment claim ordinarily may not be raised in a habeas proceeding following a plea of guilty does not rest on any notion of waiver, but rests on the simple fact that the claim is irrelevant to the cоnstitutional validity of the conviction.
Id.
As the Court has explained, a guilty plea does not “waive” constitutional challenges so much as it conclusively resolves the question of factual guilt supporting the conviction, thereby rendering any antecedent constitutional violation bearing on factual guilt a non-issue:
Neither Tollett ... nor our earlier сases on which it relied ... stand for the proposition that counseled guilty pleas inevitably “waive” all antecedent constitutional violations.... [I]n Tollett we emphasized that waiver was not the basic ingredient of this line of cases. The point of these cases is that a counseled plea of guilty is an admission of factual guilt so reliable that, where voluntary and intelligent, it quite validly removes the issue of factual guilt from the case. In most cases, factual guilt is a sufficient basis for the State’s imposition of punishment. A guilty plea, therefore, simply renders irrelevant those constitutional violations not logically inconsistent with the valid establishment of factual guilt and which do not stand in the way of сonviction if factual guilt is validly established.
Menna v. New York,
Prosise pleaded guilty in state court to one count of manufacturing a controlled substance and was sentenced to 25 years’ imprisonment. While in state prison, Pro-sise filed a civil action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the various law enforcement officers who had participated in thе search of his apartment. He alleged in the complaint that the officers unlawfully searched the premises without a warrant and after securing the warrant conducted a search beyond the scope of the warrant.
Id.
at 309,
The Court held that Prosise was not collaterally estopped from challenging the legality of the search because: (1) Pro-sise’s guilty plea did not involve any litigation over the legality of the search of his apartment; (2) the criminal proceedings did not actually decide against Prosise any issue upon which he must prevail in his § 1983 claim; and (3) it was not established that any of thе issues in his § 1983 action could have been “necessarily” determined in the criminal proceeding, i.e., the
Relevant to the present appeal, in
Prosise
the state also argued that “by pleading guilty Prosise should be deemed to have either admitted the legality of the search or
waived any Fourth Amendment claim,
thereby precluding him from assеrting that claim in any subsequent suit.”
Id.
at 318,
A defendant who pleads guilty may seek to set aside a conviction based on prior constitutional claims which challenge the very power of the state to bring the defendant into court to answer the charge against him ... a double jeopardy claim may be raised in federal habeas proceedings following a state-court conviction based on a plea of guilty ... [and] Tollett does not apply to preclude litigation of a Fourth Amendment claim subsequent to a guilty plea when the State itself permits the claim to be raised on appeal.
Id.
at 320,
Applying the above principles, we cannot agree with the district court’s ruling that by pleading guilty to the state charge of criminal impersonation Gregg waived his Fourth Amendment challenges to the federal felon-in-possession charge. Just as the Court determined in
Prosise
that the defendant’s guilty plea did not preclude him from seeking § 1983 damages for an alleged Fourth Amendment violation that was never considered in the state criminal proceedings, we find that Gregg should not have been barred — under either waiver or collateral estoppel principles
1
— from challenging the seizure
Our conclusion is consistent with
Tollett
and
Prosise.
Were Gregg challenging law enforcement’s conduct leading up to his surrender of his mother’s Metrocard, i.e., the discovery of the evidence supporting the criminal impersonation charge to which he pled guilty, then under the
Tol-lett
line of cases Gregg’s Fоurth Amendment claims would be foreclosed. This is because the plea conclusively establishes his factual guilt on the impersonation charge; how the supporting evidence was recovered is irrelevant.
See Merma,
Although we find that Gregg did not waive his right to challenge the seizure of the gun, and that the district court should havе addressed on the merits Gregg’s motion to suppress, we nevertheless affirm its denial of the motion.
See United States v. Yousef,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court. We REMAND pursuant to
United States v. Crosby,
Notes
. Under New York's law of collateral estop-pel, only two requirements must be satisfied: (1) it must be proved that "the identical issue was necessarily decided in the prior action and is decisive in the present action”; and (2) “the party to be precluded from relitigating an issue must have had a full and fair opportunity to contest the prior determination.”
D’Arata v. N.Y. Cent. Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
76
