Appellant Luis Gomez (“Gomez”) appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence. Gomez asserts that police lacked reasonable suspicion to justify their decision to stop and search his vehicle, thereby tainting the evidence used to convict him. Under the particular facts of this case, we conclude that the district court did not err in finding that the responding officers were justified in stopping and searching Gomez’s vehicle in keeping with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment. Thus, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Gomez’s motion to suppress and Gomez’s subsequent conviction.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On October 20, 2008, the Austin Police Department received a 911 call from a concerned citizen who, when asked his name, identified himself as “Mike.” Mike informed the operator that he had seen an unidentified Hispanic man around twenty years of age and weighing 175 to 180 pounds brandishing a “black and gray” pistol and threatening individuals at a “little yellow gas station” on “the corner of Ceaser [sic] Chavez and Comal.” Mike also told the operator that the man had entered a black Honda SUV, license plate T80PDW, with a white female driver and black male front-seat passenger. While Mike readily provided his name to the operator, he declined to wait for police to arrive at his location after telling the operator he was late for work. The 911 system revealed that Mike’s telephone number was 512-542-9561 and that the call had
The 911 dispatcher promptly forwarded the following information to patrol units in the area via text message:
10/20/2008 07:45:28 blk honda suv lp t80pdw w/blk pistol
10/20/2008 07:46:03 driver wf, bm passenger side ... hm 20 yoa
10/20/2008 07:47:14 180 drk wearing ... .hm pulled out blk/gry pistol ... .will be major brand gas station
10/20/2008 07:47:48 call no longer at loc ... .just saw male w/pistol.
Officers testified that they were told the name of the caller who reported the incident, his address, and his phone number. With respect to the phone number, the officers testified that most of the calls they respond to come from home or cellular phones, and they assumed they could follow up later as usual. Moreover, the officers testified that they did not know the tip had been called in from a payphone at the time of the stop.
Only a few minutes later, while en route to the scene, one of the responding officers spotted the vehicle described in the 911 call heading in the opposite direction, turned around to follow it, and radioed in the license plate information to confirm he had the correct vehicle before conducting a felony stop with assistance from two other patrol cars. The officers removed the driver, a black male later identified as Timothy Mitchell, and the front passenger, a white female later identified as Heather Hall (“Hall”), from the ear. Hall informed officers that there was a handgun in the back of the car that belonged to the male passenger in the backseat. At that point, Gomez was removed from the vehicle. As Gomez was removed, officers spotted a handgun protruding from underneath the back of the driver’s seat in plain view. The officers seized the gun. While still detained at the scene, Gomez was identified as a convicted felon and arrested for illegally possessing a weapon. Gomez was subsequently charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
Gomez moved to suppress all evidence obtained during the felony traffic stop. The district court conducted an evidentiary hearing in which the Government presented testimony from three police officers who responded to the 911 call. The Government also submitted: (1) an audio recording of the call; (2) a transcript of the call; (3) a video of the ensuing traffic stop recorded from one of the officers’ cars; and (4) the Austin Police Department Incident Detail Report. Following the hearing, the district court denied Gomez’s motion on the grounds that the factual information available to the officers at the time of the stop was sufficient to create reasonable suspicion justifying their actions. Gomez subsequently entered a conditional plea of guilty, expressly reserving the right to appeal the district court’s denial of his suppression motion. Gomez timely appealed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
In evaluating a district court’s denial of a defendant’s motion to suppress, we review factual findings, including credibility determinations, for clear error, and we review legal conclusions de novo.
United States v. Solis,
III. DISCUSSION
The only issue presented in this appeal is whether the district court erred when it concluded that the officers who searched Gomez’s vehicle, thereby uncovering the firearm in his possession, had reasonable suspicion to conduct a felony stop. On the specific facts of this case, we conclude that the district court did not err in so holding.
Under
Terry v. Ohio,
Whether a 911 call provides reasonable suspicion to justify a stop is determined on a case-by-case basis.
United States v. Vickers,
As the district court found below, Mike’s emergency 911 call to police readily satisfies three of the four factors set forth in Martinez. Mike provided an extraordinary amount of detail in his call — a description of open criminal activity including the coloring of the weapon involved; the location of that activity, details about the suspect’s race, age, and weight; the make, model, and license plate number of the suspect’s vehicle; and the race and gender of other passengers in the vehicle. Officers were subsequently able to verify a number of these claims including all of the vehicle information, the race and gender of the other passengers, and, to an extent, the location, as the ear was stopped headed away from the gas station only a few short minutes after Mike’s 911 call. Finally, the record reflects that police spotted the car and conducted the stop very shortly after receiving Mike’s tip, thus satisfying Martinez’s fourth factor.
Hence, the only major dispute in this case revolves around whether the “anonymous” nature of Mike’s call to 911
Even assuming Mike was an “anonymous tipster,” however, the officers still had reasonable suspicion in light of the remaining factors set forth in
Martinez.
Gomez argues that the Supreme Court decision in
Florida v. J.L.,
Here, Mike was not reporting a concealed weapon. Even the limited information transmitted to police by the 911 dispatcher conveyed that Mike had seen someone pull out a pistol in public at a
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Gomez’s motion to suppress and Gomez’s subsequent conviction.
Notes
. Gomez contends
Burbridge
is distinguishable because the reporting citizen in that case directly confirmed that officers had apprehended the right individual as officers conducted a stop based on the citizen's tip.
. The same factual disparity distinguishes this court’s decisions in
United States v. Martinez,
