MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Defendant Chunon Bailey was indicted on April 6, 2006 in three counts, all relating to the events of July 28, 2005. Count One charges that Bailey possessed with intent to distribute at least 5 grams of cocaine base, in violation of Title 21, United States Code, Section 841(a)(1) and (b)(l)(B)(iii). Count Two charges Bailey with being a felon in possession of one or more firearms, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 922(g)(1). Count Three charges Bailey with using and carrying firearms in relation to a drug trafficking crime, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 924(c)(1)(A)®.
Bailey has moved to suppress physical evidence and statements obtained on the
*376
day of his arrest, arguing that: (1) the police had no authority to detain him, pursuant to the execution of a search warrant at a residence, once they allowed him to leave the immediate area of the residence that was about to be searched; (2) any statements made during that detention were obtained in violation of his constitutional rights because the officers failed to advise him of his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
I. Facts
The two law enforcement officers who detained Bailey on the day of his arrest testified at the hearing. Bailey called no witnesses. After evaluating the credibility and demeanor of the witnesses, and the other evidence offered at the hearing, the Court makes the following findings of fact.
On July 28, 2005, the Suffolk County Police Department obtained a search warrant, issued by Judge Lotto of the First District Court in the Town of Islip, New York, authorizing the search for a .380 handgun at the rear basement apartment (hereinafter, the “apartment” or “residence”) in a house located at 103 Lake Drive, Wyandanch, New York. In connection with the search, the officers executing the search warrant had a general description from an informant regarding the individual who occupied that apartment — • namely, “a heavy set black male with short hair” and the name “Polo.” (Tr. 15-16, 49-50; Ex. 1.) 1
The search warrant was executed later that evening. At approximately 9:56 p.m., shortly before the execution of the search warrant, Suffolk County Police Detectives Richard Gorbecki and Richard Sneider were in an unmarked vehicle outside the residence conducting pre-search surveillance and observed two individuals (one later identified as defendant Chunon Bailey) leave the gated area that leads only to the basement apartment and enter a black Lexus in the driveway of the residence. Both individuals matched the general physical description provided by the confidential informant in connection with the search warrant. For safety reasons, including a desire to avoid having the defendant potentially alert others in the apartment to the presence of law enforcement, the detectives did not detain the two individuals in the driveway or in sight of the residence; rather they let them drive away and followed the black Lexus for approximately one mile (which took less than five minutes) and stopped the car in the vicinity of the Wyandanch Fire Department. In particular, the detectives were concerned that, if any people who remained inside the residence saw that individuals leaving the residence were being stopped, they could arm themselves or destroy evidence prior to the search. (Tr. 15-18, 51-54.)
The detectives explained that they waited about one mile to stop the car rather than detain them immediately to prevent people in the residence and people passing down the block going to the residence, from seeing them stop the car. In addition, once the Lexus was off the block and they were able to get directly behind the vehicle, they were located at a busy intersection and, rather than conduct the stop at that busy intersection, the detectives decided to wait until the Lexus turned off *377 that busy road and then conducted the stop at the firehouse. At no time while the detectives were following the Lexus was the Lexus out of the detectives’ sight. (Tr. 19-20, 37, 39, 54.)
After the car was stopped by the detectives, the two occupants were told to step out of the vehicle and to go to the back of the car. They were then patted down to determine if they possessed any weapons. The detectives were particularly concerned about weapons given that the focus of the search warrant was a handgun. As part of the pat-down, hard items were removed from their person including, as to Bailey, his keys on a key ring (including the key to the car) in his front left pocket and his wallet in his back right pocket. Those items were placed on the trunk lid. No weapons were found. (Tr. 21-24, 55-56, 59.)
At the back of the car, Detective Sneider conducted an identification inquiry as to Bailey, who was the driver of the car. Specifically, he asked Bailey who he was and Bailey stated his name. Sneider then asked where Bailey was coming from and he responded that he was coming from his house. When Sneider asked Bailey for the location of his house, Bailey stated that it was 103 Lake Drive. 2 Sneider then asked Bailey for identification and Bailey took his license out of his wallet and handed it to Sneider. Looking at the license, Sneider noticed that the address was not 103 Lake Drive in Wyandanch, but rather was a Bayshore address. The fact that the license showed Bayshore as his town of residence was significant to Sneider because the confidential informant, who had provided information to the detectives in connection with the search warrant, had stated that the person from whom he had bought narcotics had lived in Bayshore prior to living at 103 Lake Drive. (Tr. 25, 56-57.)
After conducting the identification inquiry, Bailey and the other occupant of the vehicle were handcuffed for safety reasons to be transported back to 103 Lake Drive and detained during the execution of the search. After being handcuffed, Bailey asked why he was being arrested. In response to Bailey’s inquiry, Detective Gorbecki advised him that he was not under arrest, but that he was being detained in connection with a search warrant that was about to be executed at his residence. Bailey then stated that he was not cooperating, he does not live there, and anything found there was not his. (Tr. 26-27, 45, 58-59.)
The detectives contacted a patrol car to transport Bailey and the other occupant back to the site of the search at 103 Lake Drive. The wallet was returned to Bailey’s pants, but the keys (which contained five or six keys, including the key to the black Lexus) were used by Detective Gor-becki to transport the car back to the scene of the search. Uniformed officers drove Bailey and the other individual back to the scene of the search and, as the officers arrived back at the search, they were advised by the entry team that there was a gun and drugs in plain view in the apartment. 3 At that time, Bailey and the other individual were placed under arrest *378 and the keys on the key ring were not returned, but were seized incident to the arrest. At some point on the evening of the search of the apartment, a key on Bailey’s key ring (along with the car key) was tested and fit the door of the searched apartment and, at that time, the key and lock were seized for evidence. (Tr. 27-29, 59-60.)
II. DISCUSSION
Bailey argues that his detention during the search of the residence was a violation of the Fourth Amendment and, thus, the evidence recovered as a result of that detention, including the key to the residence where contraband was recovered and his statements to the police, must be suppressed. More specifically, Bailey argues that: (1) the police did not have a lawful basis to stop him once he left the area of the residence that was about to be searched; (2) even if they had a lawful basis to stop him, his statements to the police without Miranda warnings violated the Fifth Amendment; and (3) the seizure of his keys during the stop violated the Fourth Amendment. As set forth below, the Court finds these arguments to be without merit and denies the motion. The Court will address the issues in turn — the car stop and detention, the statements, and the seizure of the keys.
A. Stop of Bailey’s Car and Bailey’s Subsequent Detention
Although Bailey argues that the stop of his vehicle violated the Fourth Amendment, the Court finds that the stop and his subsequent detention were lawful as a detention during the execution of a search warrant, under
Michigan v. Summers,
1. Detention During Search of Residence Under Summers
It is well-settled that, regardless of individualized suspicion, “officers executing a search warrant for contraband have the authority ‘to detain the occupants of the premises while a proper search is conducted.’ ”
Muehler v. Mena,
In the instant case, because Bailey was observed leaving the basement apartment at 103 Lake Drive that was about to be searched pursuant to a warrant, the police had the legal authority under
Summers
to detain Bailey for a reasonable period dur
*379
ing the execution of the search. Bailey argues that
Summers
and its progeny are inapplicable to the instant case because Bailey was not detained at the residence, but rather was followed a few blocks by police from the residence before he was detained. The Court disagrees. Both the Supreme Court and the Second Circuit have found that the authority to detain an occupant during a search applies even when the occupant is found and detained outside the residence.
Summers,
Bailey argues that the key difference between the instant case and Fullwood is that, instead of detaining Bailey immediately outside the residence when they saw him enter his car (as in Fullwood), the police here followed Bailey a few blocks before detaining him and bringing him back to the search location. The Court does not view this factual distinction to have any constitutional significance under the facts of this case and concludes that the holding of Fullwood controls.
At least two of the law enforcement interests articulated in
Summers
applied here — namely, prevention of flight should incriminating evidence be found during the search and minimizing the risk of harm to the officers.
See Leveto v. Lapina,
There is no basis for drawing a “bright line” test under Summers at the residence’s curb and finding that the authority to detain under Summers always dissipates once the occupant of the residence drives away. If such a rule were adopted it would require police officers who want to detain an exiting occupant of a residence under Summers, to effectuate the detention in open view outside the residence that was about to be searched, thereby subjecting them to additional dangers during the execution of the search, and potentially frustrating the whole purpose of the search due to destruction of evidence in *380 the residence. Specifically, such an action could jeopardize the search or endanger the lives of the officers about to conduct the search by allowing any other occupants inside the residence, who might see or hear the detention of the individual outside the residence as he was leaving, to have some time to (1) destroy or hide incriminating evidence just before the police are about to enter for the search; (2) flee through a back door or window; or (3) arm themselves in preparation for a violent confrontation with the police when they entered to conduct the search. Neither the Constitution nor Supreme Court or Second Circuit precedent demands such a peculiar result.
Under the circumstances of this case, because the detectives certainly had the legal authority to immediately detain Bailey under Summers when he left the residence and entered a car, they possessed that same authority to detain him approximately five minutes later after following him a short distance away from the residence for safety reasons, and then to transport him back to the scene of the search. The Court credits the detectives’ testimony and finds that the detention pursuant to Summers took place at the earliest practicable location that was consistent with the safety and security of the officers and the public.
In addition to the Second Circuit’s holding in
Fullwood,
other circuit courts have reached similar conclusions on facts even more closely analogous to the facts of this case. For example, in
United States v. Cochran,
Defendant does not dispute the holding in Summers, but attempts to factually distinguish it from the instant case. In Summers, police stopped the individual as he was “descending the front steps.” In contrast here, police stopped defendant after he had driven a short distance from his home. We do not find this distinction significant, however. Summers does not impose upon police a duty based on geographic proximity (ie., defendant must be detained while still on premises); rather, the focus is upon police performance, that is, whether the police detained defendant as soon as practicable after departing from his residence. Of course, the performance-based duty will normally, but not necessarily, result in detention of an individual in close proximity to his residence.
Id.
at 339 (citations omitted);
see also United States v. Sears,
Moreover, “[ijnherent in
Summers’
authorization to detain an occupant of the place to be searched is the authority to use reasonable force to effectuate the detention.”
Muehler,
In short, the stop and detention of Bailey during the execution of the search was entirely proper under Summers. He was not detained as he left the search site for legitimate safety reasons, but instead was followed for approximately five minutes and then detained at the first location where the detectives determined they could safely detain him. There is absolutely no evidence that, in delaying the detention until he left the area, the detectives were manipulating the situation; rather, their conduct is completely consistent with concerns for officer safety. Moreover, in total, only approximately ten minutes elapsed from the time of the stop until the gun and drugs were found in the apartment and Bailey was placed under arrest. Under such circumstances, the stop and detention were lawful under Summers. 6
2. Investigative Detention Pursuant to Terry
Even if there was no authority for the detention under Summers, the Court finds that the stop of the defendant’s car and brief detention during the search were supported by reasonable suspicion and were lawful under Terry. As set forth below, the detectives had a sufficient factual basis — including the fact that Bailey exited the search location and matched the general description provided by the confidential informant — to stop the vehicle. *383 Moreover, that initial information, which was bolstered by Bailey’s statement during the stop that 103 Lake Drive was his residence, the other occupant’s statement confirming that, and the information on his driver’s license, provided more than a sufficient factual basis under Terry to transport Bailey a short distance back to his residence and briefly detain him during the search.
It is well-settled that, in determining whether an investigative stop is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, the court must analyze “ ‘whether the officer’s action was justified at its inception, and whether it was reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first place.’ ”
United States v. Alexander,
Here, based on the fact that Bailey left the basement apartment which was about to be searched and (along with the other occupant of the car) matched the general description (ie., build, hair type, and race) of the individual whom the confidential informant had identified as the drug trafficker, the detectives had specific and ar-ticulable facts that supported the investigative stop and brief detention during the execution of the search at the residence.
7
*384
See, e.g., United States v. Henderson,
Although Bailey argues that the informant’s general description and Bailey’s exiting the basement apartment area were insufficient justification for the stop, the Second Circuit has specifically held otherwise. In
Jaramillo,
the Second Circuit stated that “[cjircumstances giving rise to sufficiently ‘specific and articulable facts’ to warrant the stop and patdown of an individual” includes “an individual’s ownership or occupancy of private premises for which a search warrant has been obtained.”
Jaramillo,
In addition, given that the detectives were searching for a gun at the residence and Bailey came from that residence, they were justified under
Terry
in patting down Bailey during the stop and handcuffing him while he was being transported back to the residence and briefly detained during the execution of the search.
8
This conduct by the detectives did not transform the situation into a
de facto
arrest. As the Second Circuit has emphasized, “where an officer has a reasonable basis to think that the person stopped poses a present physical threat to the officer or others, the Fourth Amendment permits the officer to take ‘necessary measures ... to neutralize the threat’ without converting a reasonable stop into a
de facto
arrest.”
United States v. Newton,
Moreover, under the particular circumstances of this case, the fact that Bailey was escorted a short distance back to his home in a patrol car pending the outcome of the search does not convert this investigative detention into an arrest that requires probable cause.
See United States v. Gori,
As the Supreme Court has recognized, “there are undoubtedly reasons of safety and security that could justify moving a suspect from one location to another during an investigatory detention.”
Florida v. Royer,
Accordingly, even assuming the detention was not authorized under Summers, the Court concludes that these facts were sufficient under Terry to provide a specific and articulable suspicion justifying Bailey’s stop and brief detention for approximately ten minutes during the search of the residence and Bailey’s seizure did not equate to a de facto arrest under the Fourth Amendment.
B. Bailey’s Statements During Detention
Bailey argues that, even if the stop was lawful, statements that he made during the stop must be suppressed because they were obtained without providing him with
Miranda
warnings. Although the Government argues that, because the detectives were authorized under
Summers
*386
to detain him, they were also authorized to ask Bailey questions regarding his identity and address. However, the Second Circuit has made clear that the issue about whether an investigatory stop is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment is separate from whether the seized suspect is “in custody” for purposes of
Miranda.
More specifically, in
United States v. Ali,
Thus, in the instant case, the lawfulness of Bailey’s initial stop and detention during the search does not end the inquiry. The Court must also analyze whether the statements made by Bailey during the stop without Miranda warnings were proper. There are two sets of statements at issue: (1) Bailey identifying himself and stating he had come from his house at 103 Lake Drive (which was the site of the search); and (2) after asking why he was being arrested and being told that he was not under arrest but that a search was taking place at 103 Lake Drive, Bailey stated that he was not cooperating, he did not reside at that address, and that anything found there was not his. In particular, as set forth below, the threshold question is whether Bailey was “in custody” for purposes of Miranda at the time any of these statements were made.
It is well-settled that
Miranda
warnings only apply to “custodial interrogation.”
Miranda,
We take this opportunity to clarify how the free-to-leave test referenced in Tankleff and the coercive-pressures test articulated in Morales both serve to identify circumstances requiring Miranda warnings. The free-to-leave inquiry constitutes a necessary, but not *387 determinative, first step in establishing Miranda custody. The “ultimate inquiry” for determining Miranda custody, however, is that articulated by the Supreme Court in California v. Beheler: “whether there is a formal arrest or restraint on freedom of movement of the degree associated with a formal arrest.” [internal quotations and citations omitted] .... In such cases — i.e., where a person formerly at liberty is subjected to formal arrest or arrest-like restraints — specific coercive pressures need not be proved to establish Miranda custody; rather, coercive pressures are presumed from the fact of such custody.
(1) Bailey’s Initial Statement Regarding His Name and 103 Lake Drive
The Court will first examine the statement Bailey made, prior to being handcuffed, regarding his name and the location he had just left. 9 As to the initial *388 inquiry under the “in custody” test, the Court finds that, when Bailey was pulled over by the police and asked to exit his vehicle, a reasonable person in his position would believe under such circumstances that they were not free to leave at that point. However, that does not end the “in custody” test for Miranda purposes. See Cruz v. Miller, 255 F.3d 77, 84 (2d Cir.2001) (noting that the Supreme Court has “acknowledged that the motorist did not feel free to leave, yet could be questioned without Miranda warnings”) (citation omitted). The Court must consider whether a reasonable person would have understood himself to be subjected to restraints comparable to those associated with a formal arrest.
After carefully considering all of the facts, the Court finds that a reasonable person in Bailey’s situation, at the time he made the statement about 103 Lake Drive being his house, would not have had the belief that he or she was being subjected to the restraints associated with formal arrest. More specifically, at the time he made the statement, Bailey was not handcuffed and no guns were drawn. Moreover, he was not even told at that juncture that he was going to be detained during the pendency of the search. The fact that he was asked to exit the vehicle and patted down does not transform what would appear to a reasonable person in defendant’s situation to be a routine investigative stop into a custodial situation for
Miranda
purposes.
See Berkemer v. McCarty,
At oral argument, Bailey argued that a belief he was under arrest was reasonable because he was not being stopped due to a traffic violation or some other violation of the law. The Court finds that argument to be without merit. The mere fact that an individual is pulled over even though such person did not commit a traffic infraction
*389
does not mean he or she would be reasonable to assume that he or she was under arrest or subject to restraints similar to arrest. Indeed, the Supreme Court has analogized
Terry
stops with traffic stops for purposes of conducting the “in custody” analysis under
Miranda. See Berkemer,
In sum, the Court concludes that this stop under Summers pursuant to a lawful search of the residence (or as an investigatory stop under Terry), did not rise to the level of Miranda custody at the time of Bailey’s statement about his name and the location from which he had come from and, thus, the motion to suppress those statements is denied.
(2) Bailey’s Statement After Being Handcuffed
The Court will now turn to Bailey’s statement after being handcuffed. The Court finds that, once the officer placed the handcuffs on Bailey, he was “in custody” for
Miranda
purposes, even though he was not under formal arrest. As the Second Circuit has noted, “[hjandcuffs are generally recognized as a hallmark of a formal arrest.”
Newton,
The Court recognizes that, although handcuffing Bailey, the detectives specifically advised Bailey that he was not being placed under arrest. However, under the circumstances of this case, that caution by the officers does not change the analysis. In fact, this is precisely what occurred in Newton where the Second Circuit found that, even when the individual being detained during the search warrant execution was told that he was not under arrest and was being handcuffed only for his own safety and the safety of the officers, the person was “in custody” for Miranda purposes:
Having considered all the circumstances presented here, we conclude that a reasonable person would have understood that his interrogation was being conducted pursuant to arrest-like restraints. Although a reasonable person told, as Newton was, that he was not under arrest would likely have understood that he was not about to be removed from his home to the police station — a significant factor in assessing the degree to which one is at the mercy of authorities, ...— a reasonable person would also have understood that as long as the handcuffs remained in place, his freedom of movement, even within his home, would be restricted to a degree comparable to that of an individual placed under formal arrest. The record does not indicate whether Newton was told that the specific reason for a safety concern in his case was that the officers were searching for a gun. Thus, we cannot assume that a reasonable person in his situation would' have understood that the handcuffing would likely last only until the *390 officers had completed their search. Neither can we assume an understanding that removal or maintenance of the handcuffs depended on the outcome of the search rather than on the suspect’s responding to questions posed.
Newton,
It is well-settled that “interrogation” for
Miranda
purposes consists not only of “express questioning” but also its “functional equivalent” including “any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from a subject.”
Rhode Island v. Innis,
Under such circumstances, in simply answering Bailey’s question about why he was being arrested, the detectives did nothing that was reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response and the exchange was one normally attendant to custody — namely, explaining the basis for the custody.
See, e.g., United States v. Henderson,
C. Seizure of the Keys
The Court next examines whether the seizure of the keys during the car stop was proper. Detective Sneider testified that he removed Bailey’s keys, including the key to his car and the residence, from Bailey’s front left pocket during the pat-down search at the back of the car. (Tr. 56.) After the decision was made to transport Bailey and the other occupant of the car back to 103 Lake Drive in a patrol car, Detective Gorbecki took those keys to use them to transport Bailey’s car to the search location. (Tr. 59.) Upon arriving back at the residence, the detectives learned of the discovery of the gun during the search, and placed Bailey under arrest. (Tr. 61.) Shortly thereafter, Detective Sneider tested one of the keys on the key ring in the door to the basement apartment at 103 Lake Drive and determined that it matched the lock. (Tr. 60.)
Bailey now argues that the seizure of the keys during the car stop violated the Fourth Amendment. The Government argues that the keys were properly removed during the pat-down search and that the subsequent seizure of the keys to transport Bailey’s car was proper under the police’s community care function. For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that the seizure of the keys was lawful.
As a threshold matter, the Court concludes that the removal of the keys during the pat-down was proper.
12
As noted
supra,
the use of the pat-down during the stop was lawful to ensure officer safety and, after feeling a hard object in the pocket, the removal of the keys from the pocket was permissible to ascertain if there was a weapon in the pocket.
13
See, e.g., United States v. Strahan,
The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that police may impound vehicles “[i]n the interests of public safety and as part of what the [Supreme] Court has called ‘community caretaking functions.’ ”
South Dakota v. Opperman,
It is well-established that, when a person is taken into custody after being stopped in his vehicle, it is reasonable for police officers to impound the vehicle under the community car functions where, among other things, the vehicle would otherwise potentially impede traffic, threaten public safety, or be subject to vandalism.
See United States v. Jensen,
Although Bailey was not being placed under arrest, the “community care” function applies with equal force to the instant situation where his car was transported one mile back to the site of the search, where Bailey was going to be temporarily detained. Here, the detectives were confronted with a situation where they had stopped the vehicle in the Fire Department parking lot and were going to transport Bailey and the other occupant of the vehicle back to 103 Lake Drive during the execution of the search. Rather than leave the ear in the Fire Department parking lot, the detectives decided to bring Bailey’s car back to the residence at 103 Lake Drive for safekeeping. (Tr. 59.) As a result, Detective Gorbecki used Bailey’s keys to drive the car back to 103 Lake Drive while a uniformed patrol car transported Bailey and the other occupant back to the residence. (Tr. 28, 81.) Detective Gorbecki testified that, in addition to taking the car back for safekeeping, they also did not want to leave the car in that parking lot where it was blocking the bay doors to the firehouse. (Tr. 41.) The Court also notes that, although Bailey was only being temporarily detained during the execution of the search, the detectives knew that such detention might potentially be transformed into an arrest, and more lengthy detention, depending on what was found during the search. Such variables further support the reasonableness of the detectives’ decision. Moreover, in addition to having a solid, noninvestigatory rationale for the seizure of the keys and transport of the vehicle, the Court also concludes that there is absolutely no suggestion that the detectives’ conduct was pretext for some investigatory purpose. In fact, the car was not searched in connection with the transport of the vehicle or at any time prior to Bailey’s arrest after returning to the search location. (Tr. 62-63.) Similarly, Detective Sneider did not seize Bailey’s wallet after the pat-down search, but rather returned it to his pocket. (Tr. 59.)
*393 To the extent that Bailey suggested, during questioning of the detectives at the hearing, that the car did not need to be moved at all because it was in a well-lit, safe firehouse parking lot, the Court rejects that argument. As noted above, in addition to safekeeping the car, the detectives also were concerned about not creating a public hazard by allowing the car to remain in the firehouse parking lot where it was blocking the firehouse doors. There is no indication whether there was another safe area in the immediate vicinity of the firehouse to which the car could be moved. However, even if there was another safe area, the decision to alleviate this problem by transporting the ear back to the residence, which was only one mile away and was the same location to which Bailey was being transported, was certainly reasonable under the circumstances. As the First Circuit has recognized:
[T]he existence of alternative means of dealing with the automobile, even less intrusive means, does not illegitimate the constables’ decision to impound it. When a motor vehicle is left without a licensed driver in the course of a lawful highway stop, the Constitution only requires the police to act reasonably with regard to disposition of the vehicle. There is no requirement that the officers must select the least intrusive way of fulfilling their community caretaking responsibilities.
Rodriguez-Morales,
In sum, the detectives’ decision to transport the car back to 103 Lake Drive was reasonable under their community caretaking functions and, thus, the seizure of Bailey’s keys to effectuate the transport was proper. Of course, once Bailey was transported back to the residence and then placed under arrest when the firearm was found in the residence, the keys (including the key to the residence) could be kept incident to Bailey’s arrest.
See United States v. Perea,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, defendant’s motion to suppress is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. "Tr.” refers to citations to the transcript of the August 2, 2006 suppression hearing and "Ex.” refers to exhibits admitted during that hearing.
. The other occupant of the car was also patted down and asked his name, as well as where he was coming from, by Detective Gor-becki. After providing his name, this individual stated that he was coming from the house of his friend, Chunon Bailey, and was on his way to his home at South 18th Street in Wyandanch. He also stated that he was on parole, had a 10:00 p.m. curfew, and Bailey was driving him home for that curfew. (Tr. 23-24.)
. A total of less than ten minutes elapsed from the time Bailey was pulled over until he was returned to the search site. (Tr. 28.)
. Some circuit courts, however, have declined to extend
Summers
to such detentions once the occupant of the residence has left the search scene.
See, e.g., United States v. Edwards,
. Although Bailey relies on
Ybarra v. Illinois,
. At the suppression hearing, Bailey's counsel also argued that, because the officers did not physically see Bailey leave the basement apartment door at the bottom of a staircase on the side of the house, but rather observed Bailey emerge from the gated area containing a staircase leading to the door to the basement apartment, the detectives could not say they saw Bailey leave the apartment door and, thus, Summers does not apply. The Court finds this argument to be without merit because this factual distinction is of no consequence given the layout of the residence at 103 Lake Drive. More specifically, the Government unequivocally established at the hearing, through photographs and testimony, that the staircase leading to the basement apartment was fully enclosed by a small gated area at the top of the steps (measuring about four feet by six feet) such that, once inside the gate, the only place one could access was the basement apartment. In other words, the gated area was completely separate from the backyard and there was nothing in that small gated area other than a staircase leading to the basement apartment. (Tr. 5-13; Exs. 3-11.) Thus, when the detectives observed Bailey emerge from the gated area, the only place that he could have come from was the basement apartment. Under such circumstances, there was a sufficient factual basis to trigger a lawful detention of Bailey under Summers during the execution of the search.
. Moreover, although there was sufficient basis for the detention during the execution of the search at the residence under
Terry
even prior to the stop, the detectives learned more during the stop that provided additional basis for the temporary detention during the execution of the search. In particular, after stopping Bailey, the detectives learned from Bailey (and the other occupant) that 103 Lake Drive was Bailey’s residence and Detective Sneider saw that Bailey's driver’s license indicated an address in Bayshore (not Wyan-danch), which is the town in which the informant said that the trafficker he dealt with had resided at some earlier point in time. Thus, this questioning during the stop provided additional specific and articulable facts that supported a brief detention (including transport back to the search site) under
Terry
during the execution of the search. Whether the detectives had already decided to detain the occupants of the car under
Summers
even prior to the questioning regardless of Bailey’s answers is irrelevant to this determination because it is well-settled that the officer's subjective intent is not relevant on such an issue.
See
*384
Berkemer v. McCarty,
. The cases which allow such restraints under Summers apply with equal force even when conducting the analysis under Terry. In other words, even assuming the detectives needed reasonable suspicion under Teny to stop Bailey in his car and detain him during the search, the same restraints that have been allowed under Summers would also be permitted under Teny once there are sufficient specific and articulable facts present to justify the Teny investigative detention.
. As to names and addresses, the Court recognizes that, independent of the "custody” issue, routine questions "reasonably related to the police's administrative concerns” do not constitute interrogation for
Miranda
purposes and, thus, do not require
Miranda
warnings.
Pennsylvania
v.
Muniz,
However, in the instant case, the Court finds that the detectives’ questioning of Bailey went beyond any administrative concerns and, the detectives' questions, including asking where Bailey had just left from, would implicate
Miranda
if Bailey is found to be "in custody” for
Miranda
purposes.
See Hiibel,
. These facts distinguish the situation from the parolee in Newton who, prior to questioning, was detained and handcuffed pursuant to a search of his mother’s apartment.
. The Court does not find any voluntariness issue as to Bailey's statements. There is no indication that his statements were anything other than the product of a "rational intellect and free will.”
Blackburn v. Alabama,
. Bailey’s counsel argued at the suppression hearing that the Court should not credit Detective Sneider’s testimony that the car key was found in Bailey’s pocket among other keys on a key ring. Rather, counsel argued that the Court should conclude that the car key was a single key in the ignition. Counsel, in support of that argument, points to alleged inconsistencies in Detective Sneider’s testimony and the vouchers for the keys. (Tr. 93-94.) The Court rejects this argument in its entirety and credits Detective Sneider's testimony that he found the keys (including the car key and the key to the residence) on a key ring in Bailey's pocket during the pat-down.
.Even if the keys were not properly removed as part of the pat-down search, the Court finds that Bailey's motion still fails because, as discussed below, the seizure of the keys was justified under the Fourth Amendment to transport his car back to the search location.
. Even if the car was improperly transported and the keys improperly seized, suppression would still not be warranted under the inevitable discovery doctrine. More specifically, if the detectives had detained Bailey at the side of the road during the search of the residence and not searched him or transported him, he would have been placed under arrest after the results of the search were complete and the key to the residence would have inevitably been discovered and been properly seized incident to that arrest.
See Perea,
