Based on a series of calls to 911 from an anonymous tipster, a Tulsa, Oklahoma police officer initiated an investigatory stop of a truck in which Defendant David Lerone Copening was a passenger. Thereafter, police detained Defendant via a “felony takedown.” A grand jury indicted Defendant with being a felon in posses
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sion of a firearm and ammunition, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Following the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress, Defendant entered a conditional guilty plea.
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2). On appeal, Defendant challenges the underlying stop and detention under the two-prong analysis set forth in
Terry v.
Ohio,
I.
We derive the following undisputed facts from Tulsa Police Department Dispatch (“911 dispatch”) transcripts, as well as the suppression hearing transcript. On April 8, 2006, 911 dispatch received a series of calls from phone number 378-2000. The first call came in at 9:30 p.m. An anonymous male caller reported that he “just saw” a bald, African-American man, later identified as Defendant: (1) exit a vehicle — “tag VKQ833” — at the QuikTrip at “31st and 129th” streets; (2) drop a pistol outside the convenience store; (3) pick up the pistol; (4) return to the vehicle; (5) “stash” the pistol in the vehicle’s seat; and (6) enter the QuikTrip. 1 The caller described the vehicle as a 1500 Chevy, extended-cab, short-bed truck, “probably a 95 model,” that was “silver/goldish” in color and had “silver chrome bars on top of the bed.” The caller declined to identify himself. After the dispatcher stated “someone” would “check it out,” the call ended.
Dispatch received a second call from 378-2000, again from an anonymous male caller, who stated he had just called regarding a truck — tag VKQ833 — at the “31st and 129th” QuikTrip. The caller provided additional information about the QuikTrip incident, stating: (1) the man exited the truck; (2) a “gun fell out of his pants” as he approached the convenience store’s entrance; (3) the man “picked up the gun [and] stuck it in his pants;” (4) he walked back to the vehicle and “stuck it underneath the seat;” and (5) the man then entered the QuikTrip. Again, the male caller declined to identify himself. The caller stated he was calling a second time to report that the “two black men” in the truck were leaving the QuikTrip. Before the connection dropped, the caller told dispatch he was following behind the vehicle, heading west on 31st Street.
Shortly thereafter, dispatch received a third call from 378-2000. The male caller referenced having “just called in twice” about a pickup with tag VKQ833. The caller again stated he: (1) was following the truck westbound on 31st Street; and (2) had just seen “a policeman go eastbound.” The caller continued to update dispatch on the caller’s location: (1) “we’re about 30 yards behind them,” headed westbound on 31st Street “toward 169;” (2) “they’re still headed” west on 31st, “towards Mingo;” (3) they “£j]ust went underneath 169;” (4) “[tjhey’re picking up their speed;” (5) “they’re almost to Mingo right now;” (6) “[they’re about] 3/4 mile from Memorial;” and (7) they turned north. The connection dropped and the call ended. When 911 dispatch called 378-2000, a voice-mail recording for “Ashley” played.
During the fourth call from 378-2000, the anonymous caller noted he was the person who had “reported a pickup,” with license plate VKQ833, “at 31st and 129th.” *1244 The caller updated the 911 dispatcher on the truck’s location: (1) “right now we’re [behind the truck] at 11th Street going northbound on Memorial;” (2) the truck turned right on 21st Street and was “going east .... from Memorial;” (3) we are “about 200 yards” behind the truck; and (4) we just passed “under 1-44” and are going “through 101st.” The caller told dispatch a police cruiser “turned around behind [the caller’s vehicle].” At the dispatcher’s request, the caller noted businesses and landmarks along the route. The connection dropped. The 911 dispatch called 378-2000 and, again, the same voice-mail recording for “Ashley” played.
The final communication transpired when 911 dispatch placed another call to 378-2000. A female voice answered. When the dispatcher asked “[a]re you the guy who’s following that truck,” a male voice could be heard saying “[t]he police got him.” The female voice then stated that “six police officers were running that way” and had “got[ten] a hold of him.” The call ended.
At the suppression hearing, Tulsa Police Officer Daniel Bean testified he was on patrol in the vicinity of 31st and 129th when he heard dispatch relay the anonymous caller’s 9:30 p.m. tip. Accordingly, the officer was aware the caller had reported that one of the two men: (1) dropped a gun on the ground outside the 31st and 129th QuikTrip; (2) picked up the gun; and (3) stuck the gun under a seat in the vehicle. Further, the officer was aware the suspects were driving a silver Chevy extended-cab truck with a specified tag number. After receiving this information, Officer Bean proceeded to the 31st and 129th QuikTrip. When he arrived at that location, however, no vehicle matched the caller’s description. Dispatch, in turn, informed Officer Bean that the caller was: (1) still speaking to dispatch; and (2) following the truck, west on 31st Street. The officer turned west on 31st street. Dispatch relayed that — according to the caller — the truck had: (1) traveled “west on 31st through Mingo;” (2) “turned northbound on Memorial from 31st;” and, later (3) turned “east on 21st Street from Memorial Road.” Officer Bean testified he first encountered the truck at 21st and 104th streets (ie., where other officers had stopped the truck). Officer Bean testified this location was consistent with the truck’s direction of travel as reported by the anonymous caller.
Meanwhile, Tulsa Police Officer Josh Dupler had also heard the 9:30 p.m. dispatch call. At that time, Officer Dupler was on patrol, headed south near the 10100 block of 21 st Street. The officer testified he was aware, via dispatch, that the caller: (1) reported the individual in question “had the gun in their possession;” (2) “was following the vehicle” and “kept giving updates [to dispatch regarding] where the vehicle was;” and (3) had described the vehicle in question as a “silver Chevy ... Extended Cab pickup truck” and provided its tag number. Officer Dupler testified that dispatch did not inform him, and he was not otherwise aware, that the call was anonymous.
When dispatch updated the truck’s location as being “eastbound on 21st Street [in the] 9500 block area,” Officer Dupler realized he was quite close to that location. Officer Dupler testified he believed dispatch was relaying information received from the caller. When the officer reached the 9700 block of 21 st Street he “saw a vehicle that matched [the] description [relayed by dispatch].” He updated dispatch accordingly. Dispatch replied that the caller had “just passed an officer.” Officer Dupler, due to his location, assumed the caller had seen his cruiser. The officer turned around, heading east on 21 st *1245 street, and approached the vehicle ahead of him.
Officer Dupler testified that, after following the truck for approximately three blocks, he confirmed the vehicle’s description and tag number matched the tag number relayed by dispatch. At that point, the officer decided to stop the vehicle. Once two other officers arrived, Officer Dupler activated his cruiser’s safety lights. The truck responded by turning into a parking lot. The three police cruisers turned into the parking lot, near 10400 21st Street, and stopped their vehicles approximately thirty-five to forty feet behind the truck, parallel to one another.
The officers proceeded to detain the truck’s two occupants via a “felony take-down.” Officer Dupler explained that he employed this standard procedure because, at the time he stopped the vehicle, he believed the occupants had a loaded gun. Officer Dupler described the felony take-down procedure as follows: the officers (1) exit them cruisers, staying behind their driver’s-side door, with their guns drawn; (2) obtain a view of the occupants’ hands; (3) direct the driver to throw the vehicle’s keys on the ground, using only their left hand; (4) order the occupants to exit the vehicle, one at a time, with their hands above their head; (5) tell the suspects to back up, i.e., facing away from the officers, toward the police cruisers; and (6) handcuff the suspects, either standing, kneeling, or in a prone position, from behind. Throughout the takedown officers keep guns fixed on both the vehicle and the suspects.
In this case, at least six officers participated in the felony takedown. Police handcuffed Defendant and the driver standing. The officers recovered a loaded gun from the truck’s back seat and the underlying prosecution ensued. The district court made factual findings consistent with this summary of events.
II.
Defendant challenges the district court’s denial of his suppression motion, arguing the officers’ stop of the truck and subsequent detention of his person violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Specifically, Defendant contends: (1) the police impermissibly stopped the truck based on an anonymous tip; and (2) officers used excessive force in detaining him.
2
Both arguments present questions of law that we review de novo.
United States v. Samuels,
A.
We first address Defendant’s claim, under
Terry’s
first prong, that the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to initiate the investigatory stop. Defendant argues that, however elaborate, the 911 calls — the only basis for the stop — constituted nothing more than an uncorroborated anonymous tip. Defendant contends the caller’s efforts are wholly consistent with those of a nefarious informant, bent on bolstering the effectiveness of his fabricated claims. As such, Defendant contends the 911 calls are analogous to those found unreliable in
Florida v. J.L.,
Under
Terry’s
strictures, the police may initiate a traffic stop if they have reasonable suspicion that criminal activity “is, has, or is about to occur.”
Samuels,
We are convinced the five calls placed to 911 dispatch possessed the requisite “indicia of reliability” to justify officers’ stop of the truck in which Defendant was riding on a suspected weapons violation. Contrary to Defendant’s position, the tip at issue in this case is readily distinguishable from the anonymous, unrecorded, and uncorroborated tip deemed unreliable in
J.L. See J.L.,
First, though the caller declined to provide his name, he called 911 from an unblocked telephone number. The caller should have expected that 911 dispatch tracks incoming calls and that the originating phone number could be used to investigate the caller’s identity.
Cf. Johnson,
Fifth, Officer Dupler corroborated the caller’s real-time account of the truck’s travel route
before
he initiated the stop.
See Broton,
Accordingly, the detailed nature of the tip “significantly circumscribed the number of people police could have stopped in reliance on it.”
Johnson,
Exercising the significant “skepticism and careful scrutiny” required in the anonymous-informant context,
see Easton v. City of Boulder,
B.
Defendant also challenges the district court’s denial of his suppression motion under Terry’s second prong. Specifically, Defendant argues the officers exceeded the scope of the stop and transformed it into an impermissible arrest when they detained him by “felony take-down.”
Terry,
Defendant concedes that a
Terry
stop is not rendered unlawful, per se, by officers’ use of handcuffs and weapons. We have upheld police officers’ use of handcuffs and guns during a
Terry
stop where they “reasonably believe” such measures are necessary to ensure officer safety.
See Neff,
Officer Dupler testified he believed that a loaded gun — by any measure an inherently dangerous weapon — was in the truck’s passenger compartment. The vehicle obviously had two occupants.
Maryland v. Wilson,
We, therefore, conclude the officers did not use excessive force in detaining Defendant and, thus, did not convert his deten
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tion into an unlawful arrest.
See United States v. Perdue,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Oklahoma law allows an individual to openly transport an unloaded pistol in a motor vehicle. 21 Okla. Stat. § 1289.7. " '[O]pen’ means the firearm is transported in plain view, in a case designed for carrying firearms, which case is wholly or partially visible, in a gun rack mounted in the vehicle, in an exterior locked compartment or a trunk of a vehicle.” Id.
. Defendant also argues the district court’s finding that the QuikTrip is located in a "high-crime area” was clearly erroneous. Our review of the record reveals that, despite Officer Dupler's testimony that portions of the area did not have "any problems” with crime, the Government introduced sufficient evidence at the suppression hearing to support the district court’s finding.
United States v. Romero,
No. 06-3092,
. In
J.L.,
the Supreme Court considered whether an anonymous, unrecorded caller's tip — that a "young black male standing at a particular bus stop and wearing a plaid shirt was carrying a gun" — was, without more, sufficiently reliable to lawfully initiate a
Terry
stop.
J.L., 529
U.S. at 268, 270,
