The Government appeals from an adverse decision of the district court suppressing drugs and incriminating statements. We reverse.
The controlling facts are not complicated. During surveillance of a suspected drug house, two plainclothes detectives saw Locklin leave the house on foot. The detectives followed Locklin in an unmarked car, then pulled over to the curb where Locklin was walking and approached him on the sidewalk. The detectives identified themselves as police officers, asked Locklin to move closer, and asked for his name. Locklin told them his name and date of birth. The detectives neither detained nor ordered Locklin to remain with them on the sidewalk. When one of the detectives ran Locklin’s name through the computer of a marked police car parked in a lot near the sidewalk, the detectives learned Locklin was wanted for disorderly conduct. The detectives arrested Locklin, searched him, and found drugs in his clothing. Locklin made an incriminating statement after he was placed in jail.
The outcome of this appeal turns on whether the street encounter between Locklin and the detectives rose to the level of a seizure. We review this question de novo.
United States v. McKines,
We agree with the district court that a seizure did not occur when the detectives approached Locklin, identified themselves as police officers, and asked for his name.
See id.
at 2386;
Florida v. Rodriguez,
In the circumstances of this case, we believe a reasonable person would have felt free to walk away from the detectives and go about the person’s business.
See Mendenhall,
In our view, the record in this case does not permit the conclusion that Locklin was seized through an intimidating show of authority. Because consensual encounters between police officers and citizens are permitted, Locklin was not seized merely because he stopped moving forward to respond to the detectives’ overtures. Instead, for fourth amendment purposes, a seizure “is defined by the coercive nature of the [detectives’] conduct.”
United States v. Hooper,
