OPINION
Paul Glover entered a conditional plea of guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). He now appeals the denial of his motion to suppress evidence obtained during a stop-and-frisk in a deserted gas station parking lot in the wee hours of the morning. For- the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s denial of Glover’s suppression motion.
I.
In the early morning hours of March 24, 2009, Officers Aaron Skipper and Travis Archer of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department were patrolling the East-way Division of Charlotte, North Carolina in a marked police car. Each officer had been with the police department for six years and was familiar with the area. Officer Skipper had patrolled the Eastway Division since early 2004 and Officer Archer had been assigned to the area for his entire six years on the force. Based on their past experience as well as their nightly briefings on criminal activity, both officers knew that the Eastway Division was plagued by armed robberies and assaults.
Around 4:40 a.m., the officers pulled into a twenty-four hour gas station located at the intersection of Westover Street and Central Avenue. Both officers were familiar with this facility. Approximately one year earlier, Officer Skipper had investigated a robbery of this particular gas station and Officer Archer knew that it had been previously robbed as well. Officer Skipper was also aware that in the early hours of the morning, this gas stаtion remained open for business even though its doors were locked. Usually a single attendant would be on duty during these hours and he would either let one customer into the building at a time or deal with customers through a slot in the glass similar to a bank teller’s window.
On this occasion, however, the officers noticed that the attendant was outside the protection of the locked building. As Officer Skipper observed, he was instead bent down in the parking lot and “preoccupied” with using a large dipstick to check the levels of the fuel tanks. There were no vehicles in the parking lot at this time.
Aside from the attendant, the only person in the area was Glover, who was standing at the back corner of the station and appeared to be talking on a cell phone while wаtching the attendant. Glover’s location caught the attention of Officer Skipper, who knew from investigating a previous robbery that this area was not covered by the gas station’s surveillance cameras. Officer Archer also noticed Glover “glancing around the corner” and then pulling “his head back as if he were trying to hide.” According to the officers, Glover and the attendant were about forty-five to sixty feet apart at the time.
The officers pulled into the back parking lot from a side entrance and then drove around to the front as if they were exiting onto Central Avenue. As they drove through the lot, Glover “followed [their] movements with his eyes and head.” The officers agreed that Glover’s observation of the attendant was suspicious and they were concerned about the possibility of “[t]he store being robbed.” Officer Skipper suggested that they “should get out and speak with” Glover to “find out what he was doing.”
So instead of leaving, the officers circled back around and drove again into the sta
The officers parked the patrol car and walked over to Glover and the attendant, who were neithеr engaged in a conversation nor making eye contact with one another. Concerned that Glover was “stalking the clerk” and “believfing] him to have a weapon,” Officer Skipper informed Glover that he was going to pat him down and then proceeded to do so. When he patted Glover’s right pants pocket, he felt an object he believed was a gun barrel. Officer Skiрper then retrieved a handgun from Glover’s pocket and placed him under arrest.
In April 2009, a federal grand jury indicted Glover for being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Glover filed a pre-trial motion to suppress the evidence seized at the gas station. The district court then held a hearing on the issue during which it both heard testimony from Officers Skipper and Archer аs well as viewed the patrol car’s video recording of the incident. At the end of the hearing, the district court denied Glover’s suppression motion. Glover subsequently entered a conditional plea of guilty and the district court sentenced him to sixty months in prison. Glover now appeals the denial of his motion to suppress.
II.
A.
Glover contends that the stop-and-frisk in the gas station parking lоt violated the Fourth Amendment because Officers Skipper and Archer lacked reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. According to Glover, the fact that he was merely standing near a gas station attendant in a high crime area is not enough to create a reasonable suspicion that he was planning to commit a crime. This argument neglects the import of thе leading case in this area of law. In
Terry v. Ohio,
Terry
provides a good illustration of the type of preventive police action that complies with Fourth Amendment safeguards. While patrolling downtown Cleveland around 2:30 p.m., Officer McFadden noticed two men pacing back and forth in front of a store and conferring with one another as well as with a third man who soon left the area. Based in part on his years of experience with the neighborhood, Officer McFadden became suspicious that the men were casing the store in preparation for a robbery. Concerned that they might be carrying a gun, he followed the men, asked them what their names were, and then briefly patted one of them down, whereupon he discovered a revolver in the suspect’s coat pocket.
Id.
at 5-7,
The Supreme Court upheld this conduct as constitutional. Refusing to apply the Fourth Amendment in a manner that might “exact a high toll in human injury,”
Since
Terry,
the Supreme Court has reaffirmed that engaging in a stop-and-frisk to prevent a crime from occurring is a valid use of police authority.
See, e.g., Michigan v. Long,
This makes sense.
Terry
balanced the government’s interest in protecting the public and the police from unnecessary risks and a suspect’s interest in avoiding a brief frisk of his person.
See
Because of its focus on police action designed to prevent an armed robbery, we believe
Terry
to be relevant here. It is more relevant than decisions upon which Glover relies, because those decisions do not concern the imminent outbreak of armed violence. Given that a reasonable suspicion inquiry is “multi-faceted, ‘one determination will seldom be a useful ‘precedent’ for another,’ ”
Ornelas v. United States,
B.
With
Terry
in mind, we now ask whether the facts of this case created a reasonable suspicion that Glover was planning to commit an armed robbery. As the Supreme Court has made clear, “An investigatory stop must be justified by some objective manifestation that the person stopped is, or is about to be, engaged in criminal activity.”
United States v. Cortez,
After considering the totality of the circumstances, we believe that Officers Skipper and Archer had reasonable suspicion to justify the stop-and-frisk of Glover. To start, the setting of the stop supports their suspicion that Glover was planning to engage in an armed robbery. The high degree of crime in an area and the lateness of the hour are each relevant factors in a reasonable suspicion inquiry,
Wardlow,
But the knowledge of the officers was even more precise than this. The officers knew that the gas station itself was the particular tаrget of criminal activity. Officer Archer knew that it had been robbed before and Officer Skipper himself had investigated a previous robbery of this facility. Both officers were therefore aware that this gas station was a tempting target before they set eyes on Glover. This is an important consideration. It cannot be conclusive, however, because the nature of an area or facility does not furnish particularized suspicion as to any individual suspect. The district court put it best: while “the high crime nature of the area” does not transform it into “a search zone,” it is nevertheless a relevant factor in a Terry analysis.
It is further relevant that Glover was watching the attendant at a time when few people would be around. Whereas in
Terry
Officer McFadden observed the suspects walking in front of a store around 2:30 in the afternoon in downtown Cleveland, the police here saw Glover watching a gas station attendant at 4:40 in the morning in a deserted parking lot. The lateness of the hour significantly lowered the risk that a robber would be observed or reported. The fact these events took place at this late hour only “compound[s] the suspiсiousness” of Glover’s behavior.
See United States v. Smith,
We also note the vulnerability of the gas station attendant himself. As the district
With this setting in mind, we now turn to Glover’s conduct. The officers observed him standing in the back corner of the station — a location that Officer Skipper knew fell outside the range of the station’s surveillance cameras — and appearing to be talking on his cell phone. Glover was obviously not there to buy gas, as there were no cars in thе parking lot. And he did not appear to be interested in purchasing anything else from the station, as he was not speaking with the attendant. In fact, the attendant told Officer Archer following the stop that “he did not know who this person was or why he was there.” Instead, Glover was watching the attendant, who was busy checking the fuel tank levels.
What is more, Officer Archer noticed that Glover was “glanсing around the corner” and then “would pull his head back as if he were trying to hide.” Such “nervous, evasive behavior” supports the reasonableness of the officers’ belief that Glover was preparing to commit a crime.
See Wardlow,
Finally, we cannot ignore Glover’s actions as soon as the police left his sight. As the patrol car drove through the parking lot, Glover remained in the back corner of the station and followed the officers’ movements until they left. But as soon as the police were gone, he suddenly left his location and planted himself next to the attendant. Although the officers were out of sight for only about fivе to six seconds, Glover had covered a distance of forty-five to sixty feet.
At this point, the attendant was in the most vulnerable position possible. He was outside of the protection of the locked building and bent over checking the fuel tank levels in a deserted parking lot. For all he and Glover knew, the police had completed their patrol of the station and would nоt be back for some time. Despite the fact that Glover was “standing, basically, over top of him,” the two men were neither making eye contact nor speaking to one another. As the district court concluded, Glover’s conduct suggests that he may have been taking advantage of the most auspicious circumstances to commit a robbery.
Given the setting and the conduct, wе believe Glover’s actions were sufficient to create a reasonable suspicion that “criminal activity [was] afoot.”
Wardlow,
III.
The stop-and-frisk of Glover was neither “the product of a volatile or inventive imagination” nor “undertaken simply as an act of harassment,” but was instead “the tempered act of a policeman who in the course of an investigation had to make a quick decision as to how to protect himself and others from possible danger, and took limited steps to do so.”
Id.
at 28,
The judgment of the district court is accordingly affirmed.
AFFIRMED
