Defendant Jonathan Bohannon is awaiting trial in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Janet C. Hall, Chief Judge) on charges of conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute 500 grams or more of cocaine and 280 grams or more of cocaine base, see 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A)(iii), 841(b)(l)(B)(ii), 846; possession with intent to distribute 280 grams or more of cocaine base, see id. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(l)(A)(iii); possession of firearms and ammunition by a convicted felon, see 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1), 924(a)(2); and possession of firearms in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, see id. § 924(c)(1)(A)®.
On this interlocutory appeal, see 18 U.S.C. § 3731, the United States challenges the district court’s December 15, 2014 order suppressing drugs and money seized incident to Bohannon’s arrest in the home of Shonsai Dickson. See United States v. Bohannon,
I. Background 1
At approximately 6:00 a.m. on December 5, 2013, law enforcement officers entered Shonsai Dickson’s apartment at 34 Morgan Avenue in Bridgeport, Connecticut (“34 Morgan Avenue” or “the premises”), to execute an arrest warrant for defendant Bohannon. Other officers were simultaneously executing arrest warrants for more than a dozen of Bohannon’s confederates in the Trumbull Gardens Organization (“TGO”), whose narcotics and firearms trafficking had been the focus of a two-year investigation.
A. Determination of Bohannon’s Whereabouts on December 5, 2013
On December 5, 2013, officers initially planned to arrest Bohannon at 103 Crest-view Drive, his Bridgeport residence. Sometime between 5:00 and 5:30 a.m., however, the investigation’s lead FBI agent, Michael Zuk, concluded that Bohan-non was not at his home; rather, Zuk believed that Bohannon was at Dickson’s 34 Morgan Avenue apartment, approximately two miles away. Zuk’s belief was based on information provided to him by fellow officers that morning, viewed in light of the totality of information gathered in the TGO investigation. See generally United States v. Garcia,
First, law enforcement officers physically surveilling 103 Crestview Drive on December 5 in anticipation of Bohannon’s arrest saw “no indication” that he was in his home. Nov. 13, 2014 Hr’g Tr. (“Tr.”) 15:14. In particular, they saw no rental car parked in the vicinity of 103 Crestview Drive although, from the TGO investigation, they knew that Bohannon regularly drove rental cars not registered in his name. ■
Second, at approximately 4:00 a.m. on December 5, cell-site information provided by Verizon Wireless pursuant to a warrant indicated that at 2:38 a.m. that same morning, Bohannon’s cell phone was used in a sector of Bridgeport that did not include his 103 Crestview Drive home.
Third, the Verizon data further showed that Bohannon’s cell phone — -which the TGO investigation indicated was used exclusively by Bohannon- — -had been in active use up until 2:38 a.m., whereupon it went silent, remaining so through the time of Bohannon’s arrest.
From these facts, Zuk inferred that Bo-hannon had retired for the night soon after 2:38 a.m. at the location where he had last used his phone, which was not his home. 2
Fourth, the Verizon data showed that within the cell phone sector where Bohan-non’s cell phone was last used at 2:38 a.m. on December 5, 2013, there was only one address to which Bohannon had been
(a) Bohannon’s own text messages (intercepted between September and December 2013 pursuant to court order) advising confederate Ronell Hanks that Bohannon was at or near Morgan Avenue;
(b) Bohannon’s statement to authorities during an October 16, 2013 traffic stop that he was coming “from Morgan Avenue,” Tr. 12:10-17;
(c) authorities’ observations of Bohan-non, after the aforementioned traffic stop, driving to the general area of 34 Morgan Avenue and walking to the entrance door of that address; and
(d) data'from Bohannon’s previous cell phone, which on several occasions in 2013 placed him within 10 meters of 34 Morgan Avenue. 4
Fifth, an October 2013 background property check of 34 Morgan Avenue revealed that the resident of that building’s second-floor apartment was Shonsai Dickson. Agents were familiar with Dickson’s name as that of the lessee of another apartment in Trumbull Gardens out of which TGO members were known to sell heroin.
Sixth, on November 26, 2013, surveillance officers had observed a Toyota Camry registered to Dickson parked in front of Bohannon’s 103 Crestview Drive residence.
Seventh, officers observed Dickson’s Toyota Camry parked outside 34 Morgan Avenue early on the morning of December 5.
B. The Challenged Arrest and Ensuing Search
Based on the totality of this information, Agent Zuk re-directed the Bohannon arrest team from 103 Crestview Drive to 34 Morgan Avenue. At the time, agents possessed an arrest warrant for Bohannon, but no arrest warrant for Dickson or search warrant authorizing - entry into her apartment. Nevertheless, agents proceeded to enter Dickson’s apartment through an unlocked back door and, upon finding Bohannon in Dickson’s bedroom, placed him under arrest.
Simultaneously, members of the arrest team conducted a security sweep of the bedroom. Under the bed adjacent to where Bohannon was being arrested, authorities observed bags containing a white rock-like substance that they believed to be crack cocaine, which they did not immediately seize. Authorities also searched Bohan-non’s pants and in one pocket found a large quantity of cash, which they removed before giving the pants to Bohannon so that he could get dressed.
After Bohannon and Dickson were removed from the bedroom, FBI Agent Ryan James informed Dickson that drugs had been observed during the sweep and
C. District Court Proceedings
On December 18, 2013, a federal grand jury in the District of Connecticut returned an indictment charging Bohannon and thirteen confederates with various narcotics and firearms offenses.
Bohannon filed a pre-trial motion to suppress the evidence seized from Dickson’s apartment and car as the fruit of an illegal entry and an invalid consent. In arguing illegal entry, he advanced two arguments. First, while acknowledging that an arrest warrant carries with it the authority to enter the home of the warrant subject, Bohannon maintained that execution of such a warrant in a third party’s home required the further entry authorization of a search warrant, which was plainly lacking here. See Steagald v. United States,
The district court rejected Bohannon’s search-warrant challenge, concluding that Steagald protections applied to a third-party resident not named in an arrest warrant, not to a non-resident guest who was the subject of the arrest warrant. It agreed, however, that the entry was not supported by reason to believe that Bohan-non was then present in the premises and, on that Payton ground, suppressed any drugs and money seized incident to Bohan-non’s arrest. The district court also suppressed all evidence subsequently seized from the premises, finding that Dickson’s consent to search her apartment was not voluntary. Although the same consent defect pertained to the search of Dickson’s car, the district court did not grant Bohan-non’s motion to suppress evidence seized therefrom, concluding that Bohannon had no reasonable expectation of privacy in that vehicle.
Invoking 18 U.S.C. § 3731, the government timely appealed, challenging only the suppression of the crack cocaine found under Dickson’s bed and the cash found in Bohannon’s pants pocket incident to his arrest. 6
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
On appeal from a challenged suppression order, we review a district
We conclude that where, as here, the subject of an arrest warrant is apprehended in a third party’s residence where he is a guest, the subject’s Fourth Amendment privacy rights with respect to entry of that residence are no greater than the privacy rights he would have had if apprehended in his, own home and, thus, are delineated by Payton, not Steagald. We further conclude that the totality of circumstances here satisfied Payton’s requirement that, at the time of entry, law enforcement officers have reason to believe that the subject of the arrest warrant is within the entered premises. 8
The Fourth Amendment recognizes “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. Where, as here, authorities have a valid warrant for a person’s arrest,
9
the Supreme Court has deemed it “constitutionally reasonable” to require the warrant subject “to open his doors to the officers of the law.” Payton v. New York,
Within a year of Payton, the Supreme Court clarified that the same rule does not apply to an individual who is prosecuted based on evidence seized from his home during execution of an arrest warrant for another person thought to be in the premises. See Steagald v. United States,
C. Payton, Not Steagald, Delineates the Fourth Amendment Rights of an Arrest-Warrant Subject Apprehended in a Third-Party Residence Where He Is a Visitor
The government does not — and cannot— dispute that entry into Shonsai Dickson’s home without a search warrant was unlawful as to her in light of Steagald. But it is not the third-party resident, Dickson, who is before us in this case. Rather, it is Bohannon, the subject of the arrest warrant executed in Dickson’s home, who invokes Steagald to argue that his Fourth Amendment rights were violated because Dickson’s home was entered without a search warrant. Steagald does not afford him such a claim. The Supreme Court there made clear that it was recognizing only the third-party resident’s right to a
After Payton — but prior to Steagald— this court held that “police may enter a dwelling to execute an arrest warrant for a person other than its owner or tenant where there exists reasonable belief that the party sought will be found therein.” United States v. Manley,
In now answering that question, we begin by noting that eight of our sister circuits have concluded that the subject of an arrest warrant, apprehended in a third party’s residence, may not invoke Steagald to claim that his Fourth Amendment rights were violated because entry into the residence was not authorized by a search warrant. See United States v. Hollis,
The rationale for this conclusion, as we recognized in Snype, is that “(a) Fourth Amendment rights are personal and cannot be asserted vicariously, and (b) requiring police who already hold an arrest warrant for a suspect to obtain a search warrant before they can pursue that suspect in a third party’s home would grant the suspect broader rights in the third party’s home than he would have in his own home under Payton.”
We here adopt this reasoning as our own and join our sister circuits in concluding that the subject of a valid arrest warrant cannot complain that his Fourth Amendment right to be free from an unreasonable seizure was violated by apprehension in a third party’s home, entry to which was not authorized by a search warrant. The arrest-warrant subject has no greater privacy rights in such circumstances than he would have had if the arrest had been made in his own home. Thus, if, at the time of entry, law enforcement officers possessed a valid warrant for the subject’s arrest and reason to believe that he was then in the premises entered, the subject of the arrest warrant will not be heard to complain that entry was not authorized by a search warrant. See United States v. Payton,
In urging otherwise, Bohannon points to the following statement in United States v. Lovelock,
Defendant Lovelock was the resident of an apartment entered without a search warrant by officers executing an arrest warrant for another person believed to be the resident. This court concluded that when Lovelock was then prosecuted for contraband seized from his apartment, he was not entitled to have that evidence suppressed based on Steagald because, although the entry of his residence was not supported by a search warrant, the officers reasonably believed that the arrest-warrant subject resided in the apartment. In thus holding that “Steagald did not ... prohibit entry into a residence reasonably believed to belong to the person named in the arrest warrant,” id. Lovelock effectively narrowed Steagald’s application, even as to third-party residents. It did not extend Steagald — as Bohannon here urges — to afford arrest-warrant subjects greater rights with respect to their apprehensions in third-party residences than Payton recognizes them to have in their own homes. In sum, when the Lovelock language cited by Bohannon is considered in context, it is properly understood to identify reasonable entry expectations as follows: (1) Payton delineates the reasonable expectations of a resident who is the subject of an arrest warrant; (2) Steagald delineates the reasonable expectations of a third-party resident whose home is entered to execute an arrest warrant for a non-resident; but (3) even as to such a third-party resident, Steagald does not prohibit entry into the third party’s home without a search warrant where authorities executing an arrest warrant “reasonably believe[ the residence] to belong to the person named in the arrest warrant.” United States v. Lovelock,
Insofar as Bohannon highlights the Supreme Court’s failure in .Steagald to make plain that only Payton protections apply when the subject of an arrest warrant is apprehended in a third party’s home, such inaction supports no inference favorable to Bohannon. As we have already observed, Steagald explicitly addressed only the nar
Like our sister circuits, then, we conclude that the subject of an arrest warrant has no greater right to privacy in another person’s home than he has in his own and, therefore, that Bohannon’s seizure pursuant to a valid arrest warrant, and any search incident thereto, was reasonable if officers had reason to believe that he was present in Dickson’s home at the time of entry. See Payton v. New York,
D. The Officers Had Reason To Believe that Bohannon Was Within Dickson’s Apartment on the Morning of December 5, 2013
Having determined that Payton, not Steagald, provides the proper standard for analyzing Bohannon’s Fourth Amendment challenge here, we consider de novo whether the record demonstrates the requisite reason to believe that Bohannon was in Dickson’s apartment when officers entered those premises on December 5, 2013. We conclude that it does.
At the outset, we note a circuit split as to the showing necessary to satisfy Pay-ton’s “reason to believe” standard, with some courts equating reason to believe to probable cause and others holding that reason to believe is a lesser standard. In United States v. Lauter,
The D.C. and Tenth Circuits agree. See United States v. Thomas,
This panel is, of course, bound by Lau-ter and, thus, our reason-to-believe review here does not demand probable cause. See United States v. Jass,
At the outset, we observe that it is no more possible to articulate a precise meaning for “reason to believe” as a standard for determining the likelihood of presence at a particular site, than it is to afford precise meanings to standards such as “reasonable suspicion” or “probable cause.” See Ornelas v. United States,
Precisely because reasonable suspicion is a concept so closely associated with investigative stops, we do not here assume that it equates exactly to Payton’s reason-to-believe standard for determining the likelihood of presence. Nevertheless, we borrow from reasonable-suspicion precedent to conclude that “reason to believe” that the subject of an arrest warrant is within particular premises requires more than a hunch as to presence, but less than a probability. As with reasonable suspicion, reason to believe is not a particularly high standard, but it does require specific and articulable facts that, taken together with rational inferences drawn therefrom, provide a particularized and objective basis for thinking that the arrest-warrant subject may be present within specific premises. See United States v. Spencer,
Verizon information from December 5, 2013, showed Bohannon’s cell phone in frequent use up until 2:38 a.m., after which the phone was inactive through Bohan-non’s arrest. These two facts, by themselves, provided an articulable, objective basis to suspect that Bohannon had retired for the night soon after — and likely near — his last cell phone use. See Ornelas v. United States,
Verizon data further showed that, when last used at 2:38 a.m., Bohannon’s phone
Verizon data showed that the cell sector where Bohannon had last used his phone included Dickson’s 34 Morgan Avenue apartment. As the district court observed, the Verizon data did not — could not — identify Bohannon’s precise location within the sector, which included many residences in addition to that at 34 Morgan Avenue. See United States v. Bohannon,
Not only had Bohannon referenced Morgan Avenue generally in various text messages to a TGO confederate, but also, data from another cell phone that Bohannon had used into November 2013 placed him within 10 meters of 34 Morgan Avenue on several occasions, while physical surveillance following a traffic stop observed Bo-hannon at the very doorstep of that building. The district court dismissed the first fact for lack of specific reference to 34
Further, only two weeks earlier, on November 26, 2013, surveillance officers observed a Toyota Camry registered to Dickson parked outside Bohannon’s 103 Crestview Drive home. They saw that same car parked in front of 34 Morgan Avenue on the morning of December 5. While no one ever saw Bohannon himself drive Dickson’s car, the November 26 sighting was pertinent in any event insofar as it further linked Bohannon and Dickson, making it likely that it was her apartment that he had visited at 34 Morgan Avenue, and not some other residence within that building. Meanwhile, the December 5 sighting indicated that someone was then within the 34 Morgan Avenue apartment, by contrast to the surveillance observations at 103 Crestview Drive, which indicated that Bohannon was not at home.
In sum, while no individual fact might be sufficient to provide officers with reason to believe that Bohannon might be found in Dickson’s apartment on December 5, we conclude that the totality of these facts easily elevated such a suspicion well above the level of a hunch. Viewed in their totality and in a commonsense manner, the record facts provided an articulable, objective reason to believe that Bohannon might then be present in Dickson’s apartment. As already observed, visual surveillance of 103 Crestview Drive together with the pattern of Bohannon’s cell phone activity and the cell-sector location of the phone at its last 2:38 a.m. use provided reason to believe that Bohannon was not at home. Further, facts linking Dickson to the TGO and Bohannon to Dickson, and, specifically, to her 34 Morgan Avenue apartment, the only location within the relevant cell sector to have figured in the TGO investigation, provided articulable, objective reason to believe that where Bohannon was within the relevant cell sector was in Dickson’s apartment.
Accordingly, because the law enforcement officers who entered Dickson’s apartment on December 5, 2013, possessed both a valid warrant for Bohannon’s arrest and reason to believe that he was then in those premises, Bohannon fails to demonstrate that his arrest violated the Fourth Amend
III. Conclusion
To summarize, we conclude as follows:
1. Whether the subject of an arrest warrant is apprehended in his own home or a third-party residence where he is a guest, his Fourth Amendment privacy rights with respect to entry of either premises are those stated in Payton v. New York,
2. The totality of circumstances known to law enforcement authorities at the time they entered third party Dickson’s residence to execute a valid warrant for Bo-hannon’s arrest supported reason to believe that Bohannon was then in those premises.
Accordingly, the district court’s suppression order is hereby VACATED to the extent it concluded that the entry of Dickson’s apartment violated Bohannon’s Fourth Amendment rights, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The facts reported herein were developed at a suppression hearing before the district court.
. Agent Zuk testified that the team was continuously monitoring Bohannon's cell phone activity on the morning of his arrest and, "[h]ad another call been placed to or from this phone, [Zuk] would have been given another cell site location to utilize.” Tr. 26:20-22.
. The government contends that the district court erroneously relied on a map offered by Bohannon at the suppression hearing, which purportedly showed that 34 Morgan Avenue is outside the coverage area for the relevant cell tower, when the map was admitted only for the limited purpose of establishing the location of 34 Morgan Avenue and the relevant cell tower. The district court’s opinion, however, acknowledges that the purpose of the map was so limited and, further, makes clear its factual finding that, around 2:30 a.m., Bo-hannon’s cell phone was in an area that included 34 Morgan Avenue but not 103 Crest-view Drive. See United States v. Bohannon,
. Bohannon used his previous cell phone— which had a global positioning system (“GPS”) that allowed for more precise tracking capabilities than the cell phone he was using at the time of his arrest — until approximately November 2013.
. The district court denied Bohannon’s motion to suppress these statements in a separate opinion, concluding that (1) Bohannon had previously been advised of and waived his rights under Miranda v. Arizona,
. The government does not challenge the suppression of other evidence found in the subsequent search that the district court ruled was not supported by voluntary consent.
. Although the government invokes our jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731, which makes no provision for a cross-appeal by a defendant, Bohannon may nonetheless assert independent grounds for affirming the suppression order. See United States v. Swarovski,
. Payton's reason-to-believe requirement applies only if the subject of the arrest warrant has standing to object to the entry of the third-party residence, i.e,, has a legitimate expectation of privacy in that residence. See Rakas v. Illinois,
. The validity of the warrant for Bohannon's arrest is undisputed and, thus, we need not detail the facts establishing probable cause.
. Citing Payton, this court recently held that physical entry of a home to effect its resident's arrest without an arrest warrant is presumptively unreasonable. See United States v. Allen,
. In United States v. Vasquez-Algarin,
In United States v. Glover,
. The narrow scope of Steagald also defeats Bohannon’s contention that the Supreme Court there “held that in lieu of obtaining a search warrant, the police could arrest the subject of an arrest warrant either before or after he enters the third party’s home.” Appel-lee’s Br. 29. Insofar as the Court — in rejecting the government’s concern that requiring a search warrant to protect a third party's privacy interests would impede law enforcement efforts — observed that there are alternative locations at which law enforcement officers can execute an arrest warrant, see Steagald v. United States,
. A Tenth Circuit panel has questioned whether Valdez should be reconsidered, but declined to pursue that matter because, even assuming Payton's reasonable-belief standard equates to probable cause, the officers there had probable cause to believe the arrestee was home at the time of entry.. See United States v. Denson,
. Insofar as Bohannon dismisses reliance on the noted cell-site data because (1) FBI Agent Zuk was not an expert in the technology, and (2) cell-site data are not a reliable way to identify a phone’s location because cell phones do not always connect to the closest cell tower, his arguments merit little discussion. The government acknowledged, and the district court recognized, that Zuk was not a technology expert. Further, Zuk admitted that cell phone data sometimes misidentified locations. See Tr. 28:20-23. Nevertheless, Zuk also testified that in his 16 years as an FBI agent, he had frequently received cell phone data; understood that "typically a cell phone will reach out to the tower closest to it,” id.; and found the information "generally helpful to find ... where a person is,” id. at 30:9-13. Zuk further testified to law enforcement's specific use of cell-site data reliably to locate individuals in the course of the TGO investigation. See id. at 15:16-23 (explaining that, in course of investigation, TGO task force "had become pretty comfortable” relying on cell-site data in locating Bohannon and his confederates). "[W]hile a reviewing court cannot merely defer to police officers' judgment in assessing reasonable suspicion, the court must view the totality of the circumstances through the eyes of a reasonable and cautious police officer on the scene.” United States v. Bailey,
. The government further argues that because Bohannon's arrest was lawful, the contemporaneous search of his pants pockets and seizure of money therefrom, as well as the contemporaneous search under Dickson's bed and later seizure of drugs seen thereunder, were also lawful. See Maryland v. Buie,
