OPINION
Defendant Sean Paul Bolivar appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence obtained during a probation search. Following our holding in
United States v. Davis,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Defendant resided in a one-bedroom apartment with Philine Black. At the relevant time, Black was a probationer. As a condition of probation, she had consented to a search of her property by probation officers and police officers.
On March 18, 2010, police officers arrived at the apartment with a probation-violation warrant for Black’s arrest. Black let the officers into the apartment. Defendant was not present.
The police officers arrested Black and conducted a search of the apartment. Along the bedroom wall were two closet doors, about three or four feet apart. The doors led to a single closet. The district court found that “[t]he interior closet space was not divided, but there was a distinct break or space between clothing hanging on the right side and clothing hanging on the left side.” “[U]pon opening the right closet door, [a police officer] encountered only men’s clothes.” The officers retrieved a purple backpack that was “hanging from a hanger in the middle of the closet.” “The backpack was zippered shut with no protrusions.” The officers opened the backpack and discovered a “.12 gauge sawed-off shotgun with a ten-inch barrel.” They questioned Black, who said that the backpack belonged to Defendant.
The government indicted Defendant on several counts, including one count of unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Defendant moved to suppress the evidence of the firearm on the ground that the police officers had violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches.
The government argued that the warrantless search of the backpack was justi
After a hearing, the district court denied the motion to suppress the firearm. The court held that the applicable legal standard was “reasonable suspicion,” not the higher level of “probable cause.” The court then held that “[t]he totality of the circumstances show that [the police officer] had a reasonable suspicion that the backpack was controlled by Black or jointly controlled by Black and [Defendant],” primarily because “the backpack was found in the middle of the interior of the undivided closet, indicating that it could have been placed there by Black, and also indicating it might be jointly controlled by Black and [Defendant].”
Defendant then entered into a conditional plea agreement, which the district court accepted. Defendant pleaded guilty to unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon and waived most of his constitutional rights. But he retained the right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress.
DISCUSSION 1
Defendant does not challenge the search of
the apartment.
Under applicable law and the terms of Black’s probation, the police permissibly searched the apartment and Black’s possessions.
See generally United States v. Knights,
On appeal, Defendant argues only that the district court applied the wrong legal standard. He does not challenge the district court’s determination — with which we agree — that, viewing the totality of the circumstances, the officers had a reasonable suspicion that Black exercised control over the backpack.
We previously have held that the applicable legal standard is “reasonable suspicion.”
Davis,
Because
Davis
is directly on point, it is controlling unless it has been overruled or is clearly irreconcilable with intervening case law.
Miller,
In Motley, police officers conducted warrantless, suspicionless searches of certain parolees’ residences, 2 as part of an effort to “clean up” the neighborhood. Id. at 1076. Motley, a non-parolee whose residence was searched, brought a § 1983 suit against the police officers (and others) for their actions during the search of Motley’s residence. Id. at 1075-77. Motley asserted, among other claims, an “illegal search claim.” Id. at 1078. She argued (1) that the officers lacked sufficient evidence that the parolee lived with her and (2) that it was clearly established that the officers needed some level of suspicion (which they allegedly lacked) to search the residence.
Concerning the first issue, we held that the officers needed “probable cause,” and not some lesser degree of certainty, that the parolee resided at the address in question. Id. at 1078. After discussing many of our previous eases, we concluded:
These cases make clear that a search conducted without consent or a search warrant is permissible only when the officers have some heightened knowledge that they are at the address where either the parolee or the subject of an arrest warrant resides. The underlying analysis fits equally well here. A reasonable parole search conducted by law enforcement officers without a warrant does not run afoul of the Fourth Amendment. See Griffin v. Wisconsin,483 U.S. 868 , 872-75,107 S.Ct. 3164 ,97 L.Ed.2d 709 (1987). Generally, a condition of parole that permits warrantless searches provides officers with the limited authority to enter and search a house where the parolee resides, even if others also reside there. But they have to be reasonably sure that they are at the right house. Nothing in the law justifies the entry into and search of a third person’s house to search for the parolee. “The Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonable searches in a person’s home is not diminished by the mere presence of a guest in the home.” Perez [v. Simmons ], 884 F.2d [1136,] 1141 [(9th Cir.1989)]. In other words, the parole condition indicates only the parolee’s acquiescence to a warrantless search of his own residence. Absent this provision and the existence of exigent circumstances, officers must obtain consent or a warrant to enter a house.
Motley,
Recently, we attempted to reconcile our previous holdings. Following analysis of federal precedent, we concluded that when it came to whether a person lives at a particular residence, the “reason to believe” or “reasonable belief’ standard “should be read to entail the same protection and reasonableness inherent in probable cause.” United States v. Gorman,314 F.3d 1105 , 1111—15 (9th Cir.2002). We see no reason to depart from that conclusion here....
Requiring officers to have probable cause to believe that a parolee resides at a particular address prior to conducting a parole search protects the interest ofthird parties. Law enforcement officers are allowed to search a parolee’s residence, but they must have probable cause to believe that they are at the parolee’s residence. In sum, we hold that before conducting a warrantless search pursuant to a parolee’s parole condition, law enforcement officers must have probable cause to believe that the parolee is a resident of the house to be searched.
Motley,
Notably, we did not mention our earlier decision in
Davis.
The reason seems clear:
Motley’s
first issue concerned the level of certainty required for officers to decide that they are entering the right
home,
whereas
Davis
concerned the separate, downstream issue of the level of certainty that the parolee owns, possesses, or controls a particular
item
within the home. Our discussion of the first issue in
Motley
is therefore perfectly consistent with our holding in
Davis:
Officers must have “probable cause” that they are at the correct residence but, once validly inside, they need only “reasonable suspicion” that an item is owned, possessed, or controlled by the parolee or probationer. The higher level of certainty concerning the home itself is consistent with longstanding and recent Supreme Court precedent.
See, e.g., Kyllo v. United States,
But our discussion in
Motley
did not end there. We went on to consider a second issue: whether it was clearly established that the officers needed some level of suspicion to conduct the warrantless search.
3
Motley,
Motley cites two other cases to support her argument that we have “long required officers to have reasonable suspicion linking the parolee to some wrongdoing,” but neither comes close to meeting the “clearly established” threshold. In United States v. Davis,932 F.2d 752 , 758 (9th Cir.1991), we noted that “[t]he permissible bounds of a probation search are governed by a reasonable suspicion standard.” The question before us, though, was whether a safe inside the probationer’s residence was a reasonable extension of the search condition in his probation agreement. Weultimately held that the “police must have reasonable suspicion, that an item to be searched is owned, controlled, or possessed by probationer, in order for the item to fall within the permissible bounds of a probation search.” Id. Thus, viewed in its proper context, the Davis holding has little to do with our requiring a particularized suspicion of wrong-doing. It merely reflects our requirement — set forth earlier in this opinion — -that officers have probable cause to believe that what they intend to search actually belongs, or is connected, to the parolee.
Motley,
Defendant seizes on the final sentence of our discussion and asserts that, because of its peculiar phrasing, we necessarily overruled Davis’ holding that “reasonable suspicion” is the proper legal standard and replaced it with the “probable cause” standard. We disagree. Motley’s discussion of Davis was in the context of an altogether different legal question— whether it was clearly established that the police need suspicion of wrongdoing. We discussed Davis only to point out that Davis was not relevant to that legal issue. Motley simply did not decide the issue here: the level of certainty that officers must have before searching a closed object inside a residence, once officers lawfully have entered the residence to conduct a search. Motley discussed Davis for the sole purpose of casting it aside as irrelevant. Accordingly, Motley did not overrule Davis, explicitly or implicitly. Its principle remains sound: Once police officers properly enter a residence pursuant to a probation search, they need only a “reasonable suspicion” to conclude that the probationer owns, controls, or possesses a particular item within the probationer’s residence in order to search that item.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We review de novo the district court's denial of a motion to suppress.
United States v. Maddox,
. Although the distinction between parolees and probationers may have relevance in other, related contexts,
United States v. Baker,
. At the time we decided
Motley,
it generally was not permissible for a court to skip to the "clearly established” prong and avoid the constitutional question.
See Saucier v. Katz,
