Jorge Esparza-Mendoza appeals his conviction on one count of violating 8 U.S:C. § 1326, which prohibits previously deported aliens from reentering the United States. Esparza-Mendoza has not contested that he had been previously deported following a felony conviction for possession of cocaine in 1999, that he did not have the express сonsent of the Attorney General to return, and that his presence in this country was thus in violation of § 1326. Esparza-Mendoza’s only argument has been that the evidence used to support the charge and conviction was obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment and should have been suppressed.
The district court heard his motion to suppress and rejected it. In an extensive memorandum opinion, the court analyzed legal, social, and political precedent from colonial times to today, and came to the conclusion that previously deported felons cannot assert Fourth Amendment suppression claims.
1
See United States v. Esparza-Mendoza,
Esparza-Mendoza then entered a conditional guilty plea and the district court sentenced him to seventeen months imprisonment followed by thirty-six months of supervised release. Esparza-Mendoza timely appealed, and we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We conclude that Esparza-Mendoza’s encounter with police was consensual and thus did not implicate the Fourth Amendment. Therefore we affirm without having the opportunity to decide whether we agree with the district court’s comprehensive analysis of who are “the people” protected by the Fourth Amendment.
I. Background
A. The Facts
As noted by the district court, the facts of this case are essentially undisputed. Esparza-Mendoza illegally entered the United States from Mexico around March 1997. On April 19, 1999, he was convicted in Utah state court of a felony cocaine possession charge. The United States Immigration. and Naturalization Service (“INS”) subsequently gave Esparza-Men-doza notice it was bringing a deportation action against him. Esparza-Mеndoza did not contest the deportation, and on May *956 20, 1999, the INS ordered his deportation, warning him that reentry without permission would be a criminal offense. On May 22,1999, he was deported to Mexico.
On October 27, 2002, Deputy Tracey Cook of the Salt Lake County Sheriffs Office responded to a call reporting an altercation between two sisters at a residence in Kearns, Utah. When she arrived at the scene, Deputy Cook encountered two women. One was standing outside the home and the other in the doorway. The two confirmed they were sisters and had been involved in a verbal dispute. One added that the other had thrown a brick at a car parked in the driveway. The woman told Deputy Cook that the ear belonged to her boyfriend, but that “he didn’t want anything done about it.” R. Vol. II at 15. Deputy Cook told the woman she needed to speak to the boyfriend to ask about the damage and to verify that he was the owner. The woman said he was inside the residence and that she would get him.
The boyfriend came outside onto the porch to speak with Deputy Cook. He told Deputy Cook that the cаr was not his but belonged to a sibling. Deputy Cook testified at the suppression hearing that she then “stated I needed to get some identification from him and run the information on the vehicle.... ” The boyfriend responded by telling her that “he didn’t want anything done about the damages to the vehicle.” Id. at 16-17. Deputy Cook testified that she told him she found it strange that he would not want the damage investigated since the owner would probably be upset when he returned the vehicle damaged. She reiterated that she “needed” to see the boyfriend’s identification, and this time he provided her with an identification card that identified him as Esparza-Mendoza. Id. at 16-17, 28-29.
Deputy Cook called in Esparza-Mendo-za’s information to a dispatch officer, who advised her thаt Esparza-Mendoza was a deported felon and the subject of a fugitive warrant. In order to confirm that she was indeed dealing with the person named in the warrant, Deputy Cook contacted the INS. The INS agent spoke first to Deputy Cook and then directly, extensively, and in Spanish, with Esparza-Mendoza. After the INS agent confirmed that he was the subject of the warrаnt, Deputy Cook arrested Esparza-Mendoza.
B. The Case
As noted, Esparza-Mendoza does not contest the essential factual basis for his conviction. He was in the country in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. The only question before the district court was whether Es-parza-Mendoza’s identity and the information that the government gathered once it discovered his identity, such as the outstanding warrаnt and his criminal and immigration history, should be suppressed as the fruits of an illegal search and seizure.
At the suppression hearing, the government did not attempt to argue that Deputy Cook had any reasonable suspicion of criminal activity that would justify an investigatory detention of Esparza-Mendoza under
Terry v. Ohio,
*957
The district court ruled that once Espar-za-Mendoza initially refused to provide his identification, Deputy Cook’s “additional step of directing him to answer” made the encounter a non-consensual detainment.
Esparza-Mendoza,
II. Discussion
A. The Appeal
The parties take somewhat surprising positions on appeal. The government has elected not to defend the district court’s decision that the Fourth Amendment does not apply to Esparza-Mendoza — the only issue on which the court ruled in the government’s favor. Instead, the government simply says that while it is not “confessing error with respect to” that conclusion, it urges us to affirm by ruling in its favor on either of the first two issues. On the other hand, Esparza-Mendoza and the amici arguing in support of his appeal, while not ignoring the first two issues, urge us to concentrate on the issue on which he lost.
Because we agree with the government that the encounter between Esparza-Men-doza and Deputy Cook was completely voluntary, it did not constitute a search or seizure under the Fourth Amendment. Thus we need not reach the other two issues in order to affirm the district court.
B. The Encounter
The first issue on appeal is whether Esparza-Mendoza’s encounter with the officer was consensual. On this issue, we must accept the district court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous.
See United States v. Glass,
Following the Supreme Court’s direction, we have recognized repeatedly that “[t]he Fourth Amendment proscribes unreasonable searches and seizures; it does not proscribe voluntary cooperation.”
United States v. Johnson,
The district court cited only one case in concluding that Deputy Cook detained Esparza-Mendoza,
INS v. Delgado,
The government is correct that in doing so the district court applied an overly strict rule against any additional questioning of an individual who has initially refused to cooperate completely. A reading of the unabridged passage from Delgado shows its more limited scope:
[Pjolice questioning, by itself, is unlikely to result in a Fourth Amendment violation. While most citizens will respond to a police request, the fact that people do so, and do so without being told they are free not to respond, hardly eliminаtes the consensual nature of the response. Unless the circumstances of the encounter are so intimidating as to demonstrate that a reasonable person would have believed he was not free to leave if he had not responded, one cannot say that the questioning resulted in a detention under the Fourth Amendment. But if the person refuses to answer and the police take additional steps-such as those taken in Brown — to obtain an answer, then the Fourth Amendment imposes some minimal level of objective justification to validate the detention or seizure.
Delgado,
Delgado
therefore tells us two important things. First, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the reasonable-person-in-the-totality-of-the-circumstances standard. Second, the Court directs courts to look to
Brown v. Texas,
In
Brown,
when police stopped the appellant and asked him to identify himself, he “refused to identify himself and angrily asserted that the officers had no right to stop him.... [One officer] then ‘frisked’ appellant.... When appellant continued to refuse to identify himself, he was arrested.... Following the arrest, the officers searched appellant; nothing untoward was found.”
Othеr cases from the Supreme Court and this court make it clear that
Delgado
does not require or permit such a black and white analysis. No “single factor will be dispositive in every case.”
Bostick,
We therefore turn to our own de novo review of this issue. The “proper inquiry necessitates a consideration of ‘all the circumstances surrounding the encounter.’ ”
Drayton,
In this case, Deputy Cook encountered Esparza-Mendoza on the porch outside his girlfriend’s home, and althоugh she may have been armed and in uniform (the record is silent on this point), there was no evidence that she drew her weapon or otherwise “exhibited an intimidating or coercive demeanor.” Nor were there any other officers confronting Esparza-Mendo-za. Deputy Cook’s desire to identify Es-parza-Mendoza might have been disconcerting to a person who had committed a crime, such as stealing the car or entering the country illegally, but “the ‘reasonable person’ test presupposes an
innocent
person.”
Bostick,
This case is, rather, like
Torres-Guevara,
where officers, having already asked the subject whether she was carrying drugs and to consent to a search, repeated their questions after the subject had declined to answer.
See
The distinction on which Esparza-Men-doza hopes to rely is that instead of
asking
for his identification, Deputy Cook
demanded
it. Though the fact that the request was made in a declaratory rather than interrogatory sentence may be relevant to our overall consideration, it does not so alter the totality of the circumstances to the point that a reasonable person would have felt compelled to respond. And although Esparza-Mendoza argues that he was forced to either give up his identification or “leave the family residence,”
see
Aplt. Reply Br. at 7, the reсord actually shows that he had a number of other options. There is no evidence that Deputy Cook would have gone into the home to pursue Esparza-Mendoza had he not come out at his girlfriend’s request, arrested him had he again refused to provide identification, or stopped him from simply going back
into
the family residence.
Cf. Delgado,
A reasonable person might indeed have felt compelled by simple good manners, or by an understаndable but nonetheless unnecessary unease around law enforcement officers, to accede to Deputy Cook. But a reasonable person should not have felt legally compelled to do so in these circumstances.
See Delgado,
III.
Conclusion
Because Esparza-Mendoza сonsensually revealed his identity to Deputy Cook, that identity and the information about Espar-za-Mendoza’s past were obtained without a Fourth Amendment seizure. Esparza-Mendoza was only seized after Deputy Cook and the INS determined that he was the subject of a fugitive warrant. Espar-za-Mendoza does not contest that Deputy Cook had adequate cаuse to arrest him at that point. Thus, there was no violation of the Fourth Amendment. This is sufficient to uphold the district court’s denial of the motion to suppress, and we need not address the other arguments made below and on appeal. The judgment below is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Fourth Amendment protects the "right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.... ”
