Appellant Donald Clay appeals from a judgment finding him guilty of possession of a firearm as a convicted felon, 18 U.S.C. App. § 1202(a)(1). The district court imposed an eighteen-month suspended sentence and four years of probation. For reversal appellant argues that the district court erred in failing to sustain his motion to suppress physical evidence obtained as a result of an alleged illegal search and seizure in violation of his fourth amendment rights. For the reasons discussed below, we reverse and vacate the judgment of the district court.
I. Background
Pursuant to a state search warrant issued on March 23, 1979, police entered the residence of Donald Love, located at 6213 Walrond, Kansas City, Missouri, in search of drugs, contraband and firearms. The search warrant was executed by uniformed and undercover agents during the early evening hours. Shortly after the search began, appellant, who was neither a suspect in the investigation nor an anticipated subject of the search, approached the house, knocked on the storm door and was confronted by Sergeant Tom Moss, an undercover police agent who was dressed in blue jeans and a T-shirt. Sgt. Moss opened the door, displayed his badge and identification, and ordered appellant into the house. Appellant immediately stepped backwards but did not attempt to run away. Sgt. Moss pulled out his revolver and again ordered appellant into the house. Appellant entered the house whereupon Sgt. Moss requested his investigator to conduct a pat down search. 1 A small quantity of marijuana and a gun were discovered.
Appellant moved to suppress the evidence seized. Appellant argued that the search was unconstitutional because it was done without a warrant, without probable cause, without consent, and not incident to a valid arrest. Appellant stressed that the stop and frisk was not based upon objective facts from which a police officer could reasonably conclude that appellant was involved in criminal activity. The government sought to justify the frisk under the doctrine of
Terry v. Ohio,
II. Discussion of Stop and Frisk
Whenever a police officer accosts an individual and restrains his freedom to walk away, he has “seized” that person.
Brown v. Texas,
We must determine initially whether Sgt. Moss’ action was justified at its inception and, if so, whether the subsequent “pat down” was reasonably related in scope to the circumstances that justified the interference in the first place.
Id.
at 19, 20,
In determining whether Sgt. Moss had a basis for initiating a frisk, there are two inquiries to be made: whether the officer was rightfully in the presence of the party frisked so as to be endangered if that person was armed, and whether the officer had a sufficient degree of suspicion that the party to be frisked was armed and dangerous.
Brown v. Texas, supra,
Only specific articulable facts taken together with rational inferences warrant the intrusion of an investigatory search.
Terry v. Ohio, supra,
First, we consider whether Sgt. Moss possessed specific, objective facts sufficient to establish that the initial seizure of appellant was justified. In his testimony, Sgt. Moss said that the search of Donald Love’s house had taken place during the evening hours; that marijuana, firearms and ammunition had been discovered in the house previous to appellant’s arrival; and that he knew Love was known to be armed and dangerous. In addition, Sgt. Moss testified appellant’s “hesitation” in complying with the order to enter the house and the danger associated with a white officer in a predominantly black neighborhood placed him in reasonable apprehension of bodily harm. The district court held that these “many specific facts quite naturally led [Sgt. Moss] to a reasonable suspicion that any person that came to the door was potentially armed and dangerous.” United States v. Clay, No. 79-00117-01-CR-W-4 (W.D.Mo. Dec. 6, 1979) (order denying defendant-appellant’s motion to suppress). We disagree.
An experienced police officer should not be apprehensive about executing a search warrant during the early evening hours in a predominantly black neighborhood that is not a high crime district. There is nothing inherently suspicious about a black man walking up to a private home on a street in a black neighborhood at 7:30 p. m.
See United States v. Beck,
Appellant’s conduct alone was not suspicious under the circumstances; he merely hesitated and took a step or two backwards (but did not turn around) when confronted at the door by an armed man in plain clothes from inside his cousin’s house. The government’s emphasis that appellant’s “hesitancy” created individualized suspicion falls far short of those cases dealing with flight, 3 furtive gestures, 4 or otherwise inexplicable sudden movements toward a pocket or other place where a weapon could be concealed. 5 Thus, appellant’s action in stepping backwards did not justify the search.
The question remains whether the evidence of criminal activity within the house being searched justified the police in searching anyone who approached the premises. The warrant is of no help to the government in its attempt to justify the search. The warrant only gave the police authority to be on the premises, not to search anyone that came to the door during the time of the search.
Because Sgt. Moss’ actions towards appellant were taken without an arrest warrant, the information to be considered is that available to the officer at the time of the stop and frisk.
Beck v. Ohio,
Beyond dispute, the police may take appropriate action to ensure their own protection when officers are carrying out their duty in executing a search warrant. The scope of that protection, however, is balanced against the fourth amendment rights of others. See note 9 infra.
The government relies in part upon the fact that firearms, marijuana, cocaine and
*161
heroin were found in the apartment prior to appellant’s arrival. Nothing in the record, however, establishes a nexus between the contraband discovered inside the house and appellant at the time he was stopped and frisked. Under the circumstances, it was plainly unreasonable to infer that no one other than a user of narcotics would be allowed on the premises.
See United States v. Peep,
The government also urges the court to put great weight on the fact that Love, the target of the search, was known to be armed and dangerous. This argument is diminished largely because at the suppression hearing Sgt. Moss testified that he did not mistake appellant for the owner of the premises. Sgt. Moss also testified that he did not know that appellant had been previously convicted of a felony. Thus, the facts here do not distinguish appellant from anyone else who may have approached the house. The fourth amendment does not authorize the detention and search of all persons who may be present,
United States v. Di Re,
Furthermore, the Terry majority held that under usual circumstances an officer is obligated to conduct some form of cursory investigation prior to frisking, perhaps so that the suspects may readily explain their actions before being subjected to the additional intrusion. In stating the holding of the court, Chief Justice Warren stated:
[W]here in the course of investigating this behavior he identifies himself as a policeman and makes reasonable inquiries, and where nothing in the initial stages of the encounter serves to dispel his reasonable fear for his or others’ safety, he is entitled ... to conduct a carefully limited search.
Not all stops call for a frisk.
8
Protective searches are authorized only when the police officer has suspicion that the individual before him may be armed or otherwise presently dangerous.
Sibron v. New York,
Because there was an opportunity for inquiry when appellant appeared at the door, inquiry should have been made. An officer is not warranted in relying upon circumstances deemed by him suspicious, when the means are at hand to either verify or dissipate those suspicions without risk.
See, e. g., United States v. Magda,
To justify a search of this type, the officer must have knowledge that the visitor
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previously had been engaged in serious criminal conduct,
Stroeber
v.
Commission Veteran’s Auditorium,
The initial frisk of appellant was simply not supported by a reasonable belief that he was armed and presently dangerous, a belief which the Supreme Court has invariably held must form the predicate to a pat down search of a person for weapons.
See, e. g., Adams v. Williams,
The state has asked this court to extend the “narrow scope” of the
Terry
doctrine to permit a frisk for weapons on less than reasonable belief or suspicion directed at the person to be frisked, simply because the person happens to arrive at the premises where an authorized narcotics search is taking place. We reject the invitation to do so.
9
Recently, the Fifth Circuit also rejected that argument in
United States v. Cole,
The Fifth Circuit reversed the district court’s decision on that count 10 holding that, “in the absence of specific articulable facts to believe that appellant was armed and dangerous, Cole’s mere presence on the premises did not justify a personal search.” Id. at 899. The governing principle in both cases is the same 11 : an officer’s pat down of a person cannot be justified solely by the individual’s mere presence on the premises described in the search warrant.
In our view, Sgt. Moss had nothing more than “mere suspicion” of possible criminal activity or danger based upon appellant’s approach to the house. After reviewing the circumstances surrounding the stop as a whole, we conclude that Sgt. Moss did not have reasonable suspicion, based on objective facts that Clay was involved in any criminal activity. We hold that on the facts presented, the district court erred in refusing to suppress the gun seized. Such error went to the heart of the government’s *163 case. The judgment of the district court is reversed and vacated.
Notes
. Three other men approached the house and were detained inside by the police. Two of the men were identified as Edgar Wright and Theotis Byers; the third man’s identity was never determined. Wright and Byers testified that they had arrived at the home before Clay and had also been detained by the police officers. Sgt. Moss testified that Clay arrived first and the others came shortly after. The district court accepted the officer’s account of the order of arrival. At trial the testimony of the officers present during the search indicated that the defendants were frisked immediately upon arrival at the house. The defense witnesses, however, all testified that a delay of between five and ten minutes transpired after they entered the house and the officers frisked them. The district court also credited the police account of these events surrounding the timeliness of the search and concluded that the frisk was conducted immediately upon the arrival of the visitors. The factual findings of the district court do not appear to be clearly erroneous, thus are left undisturbed by this court.
.
See also United States v. Palmer,
.
E. g., Sibron v. New York,
.
E. g., United States v. Wright,
.
E. g., Chimel v. California,
.
Stroeber v. Commission Veteran’s Auditorium,
. The
Branch
court, in dictum, discussed but did not reach the question of whether the officers would have had reasonable suspicion sufficient to justify an “investigatory stop.”
.
See
Model Code of Pre-Arraignment Procedure § 110.2(4) (Proposed Official Draft, 1975) providing that an officer who has stopped a person may pat down for a weapon “if the officer reasonably believes that his safety or the safety of others then present so requires. This requirement is “intended to preclude routine frisking in association with all stops or even some classes of stops.”
Id. See United States v. Brignoni-Ponce,
. In the interest of his own protection, Sgt. Moss could have denied appellant the right to enter the premises while the search was being conducted.
E. g., State v. Clift,
. Cole’s conviction was upheld on count II which involved the admissibility of evidence resulting from the search of his truck.
. The information held by Sgt. Moss at the time of the search did not even equal the information held by the arresting officers in Cole. The officers in Cole testified that they had prior information about the defendant; here, Sgt. Moss admitted at the suppression hearing “that he had never seen or heard of Donald Clay prior to his appearance at the door.”
