This case is presently before the Court upon Dennis Szymkowiak’s appeal from his conviction for possession of an unregistered weapon in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 5861(d) and § 5871. Szymkowiak contends that the district court erred in failing to suppress the weapon, the seizure of which should not have been excused under the “plain view” exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement. Upon consideration of the issues presented by this appeal, we agree that the weapon was unlawfully seized and therefore vacate the district court’s judgment.
On February 22, 1982, Toledo police officers obtained a warrant to search Szym-kowiak’s apartment for specified items of jewelry and a T.Y. set. Detective John Connors and four other Toledo policemen executed the warrant. They did not find the jewelry or the T.V. The officers did, however, discover and seize two weapons. The firearms were not mentioned in the warrant and the officers did not anticipate that they would be found on the premises.
Detective Higbie entered a safe in the bedroom where he found jewelry, guns and ammunition clips. He removed these items to the living room. While searching the dining room area, Officer Gerken found an AR-15 weapon next to the couch. On the floor next to the couch, Gerken found a case which contained ammunition for the weapon. After looking at the AR-15 and the other firearms, the officers could not determine whether the guns seized were designed or specifically adapted to fire a succession of bullets. They therefore could not determine whether possession of these guns was illegal.
The officers called the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) and asked Agent Haverstick to come to the apartment to look at the firearms. Haverstick, arriving at the apartment about thirty minutes later, stated that possession of the guns was not in violation of federal law, but was probably in violation of Ohio state law. The officers testified that the guns contained no clips and were not reported as stolen. Haverstick further stated that he could not clearly determine without disassembling the firearms whether they had been illegally adapted for fully automatic performance. The officers decided to seize the guns, based upon Haverstick’s recommendation.
Szymkowiak thereafter was charged with unlawful possession of two automatic weapons, a R PB Industries pistol, SM 10 model (count I) and a Colt AR-15 rifle (Count II). The latter weapon is relevant to this appeal. Appellant moved to suppress the rifle on the theory that it had been seized from his apartment in violation of the Fourth Amendment. United States Magistrate James G. Carr conducted a hearing on the Motion to Suppress. On December 14,1982, the magistrate issued a report and recommendation, finding that the weapon had been lawfully seized pursuant to the “plain view” exception to the warrant requirement. Appellant filed objections to the magistrate’s report and recommendation. District Judge Don J. Young, however, adopted the magistrate’s recommendation to deny the Motion to Suppress and held that the officers in this case complied with the requirements of the “plain view” exception to the warrant requirement. We disagree.
The “plain view” exception to the warrant requirement was first explored in
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
The issue before us, therefore, is whether Szymkowiak’s criminality was “immediately apparent” to the officers from their “plain view” of the seized weapon. In
Texas v.
Brown, -- U.S. --,
In its plurality opinion, the Court reasoned that the “plain view” exception is an extension of the Fourth Amendment’s “probable cause” requirement.
[t]he seizure of property in plain view involves no invasion of privacy and is presumptively reasonable, assuming that there is probable cause to associate the property with criminal activity.
The
Brown
decision’s formulation of the “immediately apparent” test is consistent with this Court’s earlier pronouncements of that test in
Gray,
The rifles were not contraband; there was no nexus between the rifles and the crimes of selling and possessing intoxicating liquor without a license....
the officers at that time [did not] have any knowledge of any other crimes. It was only after Trooper Brodt had seized the weapons, copied down the serial numbers, left the defendant’s premises, and then ran the information taken off the rifles through the National Crime Information Center that he learned that they were stolen and hence incriminating, (emphasis added).
In United States v. Truitt, we reiterated these general guidelines to the “plain view” exception, but upheld the seizure of evidence under the particular facts of that case. While conducting a lawful search, the executing officers in that case inadvertently discovered a sawed-off shotgun. This Court concluded that probable cause was “immediately apparent” to those officers from the particular nature of the viewed object and the circumstances of its discovery. We stated that Coolidge
*98 fully provides the justification for the seizure of the shot-gun if that shot-gun can qualify as “an incriminating object” found under circumstances where “it is immediately apparent to the police that they have evidence before them.”
Unlike the officers in
Gray,
a sawed-off shotgun in private hands is not an intrinsically innocent object. The possession of it is a serious crime, except under extraordinary circumstances.
The standard which we have gleaned from
Gray, Truitt,
and
Brown,
therefore, requires a reviewing court to determine whether, under the circumstances of each case, probable cause was both “immediate” and “apparent” to the executing officers from the nature of the object viewed. We believe that this standard is mindful of the Supreme Court’s constant warning that any exception to the Fourth Amendment’s Warrant Clause be “carefully delineated."
Brown,
The requirement that probable cause be “immediate” from the discovery of the object specifically averts the “danger inherent in such a situation that officers will enlarge a specific authorization, furnished by a warrant or an exigency, into the equivalent of a general warrant to rummage and seize at will.”
See Brown,
After a careful examination of the controlling case law, the applicable policies and the record in this case, we conclude that the executing officers’ probable cause to connect the seized weapon with criminal activity was neither “immediate” nor “apparent.” The incriminating nature of the evidence seized was at no time “apparent” to the seizing officers or agents. We note initially that no “nexus” whatsoever exists between the seized weapon and the items particularized on the search warrant.
See United States v. Gray,
While we recognize that “probable cause” is not proof beyond a “reasonable doubt,”
see Truitt,
Yet, even if probable cause of criminality were “apparent” to the ATF expert, such probable cause clearly was not “immediately” so. The record in this case is clear that the executing officers who discovered the weapon could not
“at the time"
of discovery determine whether its possession was unlawful.
See Gray,
Because we conclude that probable cause of criminal activity was neither “immediate” nor “apparent” to the officers from the discovery of the firearm, we hold that the seizure of that evidence in this case violated the Fourth Amendment.
Accordingly, we conclude that the Motion to Suppress should have been granted and we hereby VACATE the conviction.
