*1 Before: MARTIN and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges; MARBLEY, District Judge. [*] _________________
COUNSEL ON BRIEF: Nathan A. Ray, BURDON & MERLITTI, Akron, Ohio, for Appellant. Daniel R. Ranke, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellee.
MARBLEY, D. J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MARTIN, J., joined. GIBBONS, J. (pp. 21–30), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
________________________ AMENDED OPINION ________________________ ALGENON L. MARBLEY, District Judge. Defendant-appellant Demetrion Gross appeals the criminal judgment and 180-month sentence issued by the district court upon his guilty plea to being a felon in possession of a firearm. Gross challenges the * The Honorable Algenon L. Marbley, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Ohio, sitting by designation.
1
district court’s denial of a motion to suppress evidence based on an alleged unlawful seizure. He also disputes the determination that he was an armed career criminal under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e), arguing that a prior conviction for escape was not necessarily a “violent felony” under the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”).
For the following reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of Gross’s motion to suppress as to the DNA swab and confession, reverse the district court’s denial of Gross’s motion to suppress as to the firearm, vacate the sentence imposed, and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
I.
In the early morning hours of November 15, 2007, Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority Police Officer Eric Williams was on general patrol of high-crime areas of high- and low-rise public housing. While passing through the parking lot of one of the housing complexes, Williams encountered a legally parked Oldsmobile automobile with the engine running but no apparent driver. Williams, however, noticed a barely-visible passenger who was slumped down in the front-passenger seat of the vehicle. He checked the vehicle’s license plates against an electronic database and discovered that there were no outstanding warrants or issues related to the owner of the car. Williams then parked his police vehicle directly behind the Oldsmobile and turned on his vehicle spotlights. He observed the passenger react to the spotlights by sitting up abruptly and then slumping down further in his seat. Williams then exited his police vehicle and approached the passenger side of the Oldsmobile by foot.
Williams encountered Gross sitting in the passenger seat and introduced himself by speaking through the closed passenger window. Gross then cracked the door to speak to Williams. Williams asked what he was doing in the area, and Gross replied that he was “over [at] his girlfriend’s house.” During the course of the conversation, Williams noticed a partially consumed bottle of Remy Martin cognac located on the passenger side of the center console. When Williams asked for identification, Gross said that he did not have any identification on him but he could get it if he could go into the house. Williams advised that it would not be necessary to do so if Gross would provide his name, date of *3 birth, and social security number. After Williams asked for them several times, Gross verbally gave Williams his identifying details.
Williams ran a warrant check, which revealed that Gross had an outstanding felony warrant for carrying a concealed weapon. He then advised Gross that he was under arrest, asked him to step from the vehicle, and took Gross into custody by handcuffing him. Williams briefly patted down Gross but did not conduct a search incident to arrest at the scene. Williams then transported Gross to the sheriff’s department.
When Williams and Gross arrived at the sally port of the sheriff’s department, Gross was searched again and passed through a metal detector. The metal detector went off, but, despite repeated attempts to locate the metal object triggering the detector and repeated passes through the machine, the officers were unable to locate the source of the problem. Gross was then escorted into the police bullpen, where he immediately asked to use the restroom. Gross entered a restroom pod that obscured Williams’s view of Gross from the shoulder down.
A short time later, officers discovered a .380 caliber firearm near the toilet that Gross had used. An investigation into how the firearm entered the jail revealed that Gross was the only inmate from the street to have access that day to the pod where the gun was located. On November 19, 2007, four days after Gross’s arrest, and while Gross was still detained, officers advised Gross of their investigation of the firearm and informed him of his Miranda rights. Gross then waived his Miranda rights, said that he knew who brought the weapon into the jail, but denied that it was his. The officers requested that Gross consent to a DNA test, but Gross refused. The following day, a search warrant was obtained to take an oral swab for the collection of DNA evidence. After taking the swab, DNA analysis revealed that genetic material taken from the firearm and its ammunition matched Gross’s DNA.
On January 17, 2008, approximately two months after his arrest and while still detained, Gross, of his own accord, contacted Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms *4 Agent (ATF) Kimani Howell, to whom he had been previously introduced, and requested a meeting. On January 18, 2008, Agent Howell met with Gross and again advised him of his Miranda rights. Gross again waived his Miranda rights and gave a statement admitting to bringing the firearm into the police bullpen.
Gross was charged with one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Gross initially entered a plea of not guilty. He then filed a motion to suppress “all evidence obtained after the initial stop of the Defendant . . . that the government intends to introduce at trial.” Gross’s suppression motion was denied by the district court.
Gross thereafter pled guilty pursuant to a written plea agreement with the
government. In the plea agreement, Gross reserved the right to appeal the district court’s
denial of his motion to suppress. The plea agreement also noted that one of the bases for
his eligibility for a 15-year minimum sentence under the Armed Career Criminal Act
might be impacted by a legal question then pending before the Supreme Court. That
question dealt with whether an escape conviction based on a failure to report qualified
as a violent felony under the Act.
See Chambers v. United States
,
If the presentence report determines that the defendant’s escape convictions, which are referenced in the Indictment, rest solely on his failure to report to a penal institution or halfway house and the Supreme Court determines that an escape conviction based solely on the failure to report does not qualify as a violent felony, then the defendant understands that he will not be an Armed Career Criminal, as that term is defined in 924(e)(1). In that case, the defendant agrees that his base offense level will be 24 pursuant to [United States Sentencing Guidelines (“U.S.S.G.”)] Section 2K2.1.
The district court concluded that Gross was an armed career criminal under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e) and, pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 4B1.4, sentenced Gross to 180 months imprisonment concurrent with a state sentence then being served. Gross timely filed a notice of appeal.
II.
When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we review the district court’s
findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law
de novo
.
United States v.
Gross
,
A.
“This Court has explained that there are three types of permissible encounters
between the police and citizens: ‘(1) the consensual encounter, which may be initiated
without any objective level of suspicion; (2) the investigative detention, which, if non-
consensual, must be supported by a reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity;
and (3) the arrest, valid only if supported by probable cause.’”
Waldon
,
Although “[l]aw enforcement officers do not violate the Fourth Amendment’s
prohibition of unreasonable seizures” by approaching individuals in public places and
asking questions,
United States v. Drayton
,
To justify a brief, investigative stop under
Terry v. Ohio
,
Gross argues that it was improper for Williams to approach the parked vehicle in which Gross was sitting without some reasonable suspicion. According to Gross, Williams’s act of parking his marked police car directly behind the Oldsmobile, thereby blocking the car in the parking space, would cause a reasonable person not to feel free to leave the area and therefore constituted a Terry stop. He also contends that, at the time Williams parked his police car behind the vehicle in which he was sitting, Williams had already observed that the vehicle was legally parked and, based upon the check of an electronic database, knew that there were no outstanding warrants or issues related *7 to the owner of the car. Gross asserts, therefore, that there was no reasonable suspicion to approach the vehicle.
Gross is correct that when Officer Williams blocked the car in, he began an
investigatory
Terry
stop. We recently held that a similar act by this same Officer
Williams was a warrantless
Terry
seizure requiring reasonable suspicion.
See United
States v. See
,
It is readily apparent that, under the circumstances, Williams did not have a
particularized and objective basis for suspecting Gross of criminal activity at the time
of the stop. Indeed, Williams admitted at the suppression hearing that “at the time [he]
exited the car, it [was] safe to say that [he was not] aware that there was any crime being
committed.” The government does not argue that Williams had a reasonable suspicion
to block or to approach the car. Rather, the government asserts that, in light of the fact
that Williams observed a vehicle parked in a public parking lot with the engine running
and no driver behind the wheel in the early hours of the morning with a passenger
“slumped down ” in the front passenger seat, Williams’s “community-caretaking”
function required him to investigate the facts further.
See United States v. Koger
, 152
1
That Gross was a passenger in the car rather than the driver is of no moment, as a passenger in
a seized vehicle is also made to feel that he is not free to leave.
See Brendlin v. California
,
The government relies on
Koger
for the proposition that a community-caretaking
purpose justified a
Terry
stop in this case. This reliance, however, is misplaced. In
Koger
, the arresting officer approached a running vehicle that was illegally stopped and
partially blocking a local highway.
Accordingly, because Officer Williams was unable to articulate a reasonable suspicion for the investigative stop, it constituted an unlawful seizure of Gross.
B.
The illegality of the stop, however, does not end the suppression analysis. We must consider whether the evidence to have been introduced against Gross, including the firearm, the DNA test, and Gross’s confession, must be suppressed under the exclusionary rule.
The animating purpose underlying the exclusionary rule is the deterrence of
unlawful government behavior.
Elkins v. United States
, 364 U.S. 206, 217 (1960)
(exclusionary rule’s “purpose is to deter – to compel respect for the constitutional
guaranty in the only effectively available way – by removing the incentive to disregard
it.”). The Supreme Court has “declined to adopt a ‘
per se
’, or ‘but for,’ rule that would
make inadmissible any evidence, whether tangible or live-witness testimony, which
somehow came to light through a chain of causation that began with an illegal arrest.”
United States v. Ceccolini
,
In view of the time that elapsed between the unlawful seizure of Gross in the
parked car and Gross’s subsequent voluntary confession, the first factor weighs
significantly toward attenuation.
[2]
Gross’s voluntary confession occurred approximately
two months later, on January 18, 2008. Having already been advised of his
Miranda
rights and having signed a written waiver of those rights, Gross notified ATF agents that
he wished to speak with them regarding how the firearm made its way into the jail.
Agent Howell advised Gross a second time of his
Miranda
rights, Gross signed another
written waiver of those rights, and only then did Gross admit to bringing the firearm into
the jail. The significant length of time between the unlawful seizure of Gross and his
voluntary confession while in lawful police custody on an outstanding arrest warrant
counsels a finding of attenuation in this case as to the confession.
See United States v.
Akridge
,
As to the second factor – the presence of intervening circumstances – there were intervening circumstances that served to sever the chain linking the unlawful detention and the DNA swab, further dissipating any taint. The DNA swab was only taken after a valid search warrant was obtained in order to swab Gross. The remaining piece of evidence is the firearm. Central to the determination of whether the firearm was purged of the taint of the illegal stop is whether the discovery of the warrant constituted an intervening circumstance. We hold that it did not.
We have not previously considered whether the discovery of a valid arrest
warrant may serve to dissipate the taint of an unlawful detention.
United States v.
Williams
, – F.3d –,
United States v. Hudson
,
In our analysis, we considered two cases from the Seventh Circuit,
United States
v. Green
,
Despite
Hudson
’s reliance on
Green
solely for the purpose prong, and our recent
and express pronouncement in
Williams
that we have not adopted the Seventh Circuit
cases, the dissent argues that
Hudson
stands for the proposition that, so long as the
purpose of a stop was not to arrest a suspect with an outstanding warrant, the incidental
discovery of a warrant during the course of the illegal stop is an intervening
circumstances.
[5]
Although the dissent is in accord with the Seventh Circuit, other circuits
have applied the exclusionary rule despite the discovery of an outstanding arrest warrant
during the course of an illegal search. In
United States v. Lopez
,
To hold otherwise would create a rule that potentially allows for a new form of police investigation, whereby an officer patrolling a high crime area may, without consequence, illegally stop a group of residents where he has a “police hunch” that the residents may: 1) have outstanding warrants; or 2) be engaged in some activity that does not rise to a level of reasonable suspicion. Despite a lack of reasonable suspicion, a well-established constitutional requirement, the officer may then seize those individuals, ask for their identifying information (which the individuals will feel coerced into giving as they will have been seized and will not feel free to leave or end the encounter), run their names through a warrant database, and then proceed to arrest and search those individuals for whom a warrant appears. Under this scenario, an officer need no longer have reasonable suspicion on probable cause, the very crux of our Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. Terry , 392 U.S. at 27–29; Williams , 2010 WL 3061336 at *9, n.6 (“Allowing information obtained from a suspect about an outstanding warrant to purge the taint of an unconstitutional search or seizure would have deleterious effects. It would encourage officers to seize individuals without reasonable suspicion-not merely engage them in consensual encounters-and ask them about outstanding warrants.”).
Furthermore, holding that the discovery of a warrant after an illegal stop is always a taint-removing intervening circumstance so long as the purpose of the stop is not because the officer believes the suspect has an outstanding warrant would create perverse incentives. We do not wish to create a system of post-hoc rationalization through which the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against illegal searches and seizures *15 can be nullified. Accordingly, while the discovery of the outstanding arrest warrant in this instance may be a factor in the attenuation analysis, it does not establish attenuation. In this case, Williams had no particularized and objective basis for suspecting Gross of criminal activity at the time of the stop, and no reasonable grounds to suspect that there might be an outstanding warrant arose during the duration of the seizure. Gross answered Williams’s questions, provided identification information, and did nothing to arouse particular suspicions. Nevertheless, Williams continued to detain him in order to run a warrant check. There was no rationale for this action.
The dissent insists that we can find attenuation in this case because the
outstanding warrant was discovered after Williams observed that Gross may have been
in violation of the open-container law. But the open container itself was a fruit of the
illegal stop, and not sufficiently attenuated to constitute an intervening circumstance.
In the cases the dissent cites, the defendants responded to the illegal stop with a new and
distinct crime that gave officers probable cause to make an arrest.
See supra
note 3.
These cases are inapposite to the present case. Unlike “flight from unlawful detention,”
the open container violation was not a “crime completely unrelated to the illegal stop,”
as the dissent claims, just like drugs found during an illegal search would not constitute
a new crime that could dissipate the taint of the initial illegality. Gross’s detention while
Williams ran the warrant check was not rationalized by the citation, but actually a
continuation of the illegal seizure. The open container violation is not a “new, distinct
crime,”
Castillo
,
In sum, the discovery of the outstanding warrant resulted from means that are indistinguishable from the illegal stop, and thus the warrant does not dissipate the taint of the unlawful detention in this case.
Finally, we consider the purpose and flagrancy of the official misconduct. As to
flagrancy, while it is disheartening that Williams had once before blocked in a car in a
similar manner, it was not until our recent decision in
See
, decided after the events in this
case, that it would have been clear to Williams that his methods were decidedly an
*16
investigatory stop and not a consensual encounter. As to purpose, Williams did not have
a lawful purpose for his stop, nor was he, as the officers were in
Green
, seeking evidence
against a third-party. He also did not, as in
Williams
, “immediately [ask] several
questions related to criminal activity other than trespassing.”
Williams
, 2010 WL
3061336, at *9. While Williams’s actions could be interpreted to have been “in the hope
that something might turn up,”
United States v. Shaw
,
In weighing the three factors – time, intervening circumstances, and purpose/flagrancy – we cannot conclude that the DNA swab and confession against Gross retain any taint from the initial unlawful seizure. The DNA evidence was obtained several days after arrest and only upon the issuance of a search warrant, and Gross’s confession occurred only after he voluntarily sought to give an incriminating statement to agents two months after arrest and after a second waiver of his Miranda rights. The firearm, however, was found just a short time after Gross entered the jail bullpen, the purpose of Williams's actions is a wash, and the discovery of the outstanding arrest warrant, in this instance, does not suffice to break the chain of causation.
Based on the foregoing analysis, we conclude the DNA swab and confession evidence obtained against Gross is sufficiently attenuated from the prior unlawful seizure such that any taint has dissipated, but that the possession of the firearm was not sufficiently attenuated and must be suppressed as fruit of the poisonous tree. We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of Gross’s suppression motion as to the DNA swab and confession, but reverse as to the firearm, and remand for further proceedings.
III.
This Court reviews
de novo
the district court’s legal conclusion that a crime
constitutes a “violent felony” under the ACCA.
United States v. Hargrove
, 416 F.3d
486, 494 (6th Cir. 2005) (citing
United States v. Martin
,
Both Gross and the government urge the Court to remand the case to the district
court for consideration of whether Gross’s prior escape conviction is a crime of violence
under the ACCA. At sentencing, the district court concluded that Gross was an armed
career criminal under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e) based on three prior felony convictions in the
Ohio state courts: (1) felonious assault with firearm specification; (2) attempted
felonious assault; and (3) escape. In Gross’s plea agreement and at Gross’s plea hearing,
however, the parties anticipated that the district court’s ACCA analysis with respect to
the escape conviction might be implicated by
Chambers v. United States
,
The Supreme Court subsequently decided Chambers on January 13, 2009. The Court held that at least one type of escape conviction under Illinois law—“failure to report for penal confinement”—is not a “violent felony” under the ACCA. 129 S. Ct. at 689. Shortly thereafter, this Court decided in United States v. Ford that Chambers abrogated the Circuit’s prior view that “all escape offenses—from a failure to report at one end of the spectrum to a breakout at the other—constitute crimes of violence.” 560 F.3d 420, 423 (6th Cir. 2009) (citing cases). 6
In order to determine whether Gross was convicted of a violent felony under
Chambers
and
Ford
, we must now examine the nature of the Ohio escape statute under
6
In this context, the court treats a “crime of violence” under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1(a) the same as a
“violent felony” under the ACCA.
See Ford
,
No person, knowing the person is under detention or being reckless in that regard, shall purposely break or attempt to break the detention, or purposely fail to return to detention, either following temporary leave granted for a specific purpose or limited period, or at the time required when serving a sentence in intermittent confinement.
Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2921.34(A)(1).
“[I]n determining the nature of a defendant’s prior conviction, we apply a
‘categorical’ approach, meaning that we look at the statutory definition of the crime of
conviction, not the facts underlying that conviction, to determine the nature of the
crime.”
Ford
,
At first glance, it appears that the Ohio statute divides the escape conviction into
two distinct categories. First, the statute proscribes a purposeful break or attempt to
break from a detention
8
that the defendant knew or should have known had already
7
The PSR does not provide a factual description of the prior escape conviction. In any event, a
factual description of a prior conviction contained in a PSR may not be used to determine whether that
conviction is a crime of violence.
United States v. Wynn
,
8
“Detention” is broadly defined as:
arrest; confinement in any vehicle subsequent to an arrest; confinement in any public
or private facility for custody of persons charged with or convicted of crime in this state
or another state or under the laws of the United States or alleged or found to be a
delinquent child or unruly child in this state or another state or under the laws of the
United States; hospitalization, institutionalization, or confinement in any public or
private facility that is ordered pursuant to [state law]; confinement in any vehicle for
*19
commenced. Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2921.34(A)(1). Second, the statute proscribes a
purposeful failure to return to detention, either following temporary leave or when
serving a sentence of intermittent confinement. Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2921.34(A)(1).
It is not entirely clear that these two distinct categories demarcate the categorical line
between violent and non-violent felonies. Although the second category includes
precisely the type of “failure to report” violation that the Supreme Court found to be
non-violent in
Chambers
, the first category appears to include all other manners of
escape, including escape from arrest, escape from custodial confinement in a variety of
circumstances, and escape from a jail-program work detail. This category might include,
for example, the type of walkaway escape found not to be a crime of violence in
Ford
.
In any event, there is a missing fact that is crucial to guide and limit our analysis:
we do not know for what type of escape Gross was convicted. Where “it is possible to
violate a criminal law in a way that amounts to a crime of violence and a way that does
not,” we may “look at the indictment, guilty plea and similar documents to see if they
‘necessarily’ establish the nature of the prior offense.”
Ford
,
transportation to or from any facility of any of those natures; detention for extradition or deportation; except as provided in this division, supervision by any employee of any facility of any of those natures that is incidental to hospitalization, institutionalization, or confinement in the facility but that occurs outside the facility; supervision by an employee of the department of rehabilitation and correction of a person on any type of release from a state correctional institution; or confinement in any vehicle, airplane, or place while being returned from outside of this state into this state by a private person or entity pursuant to [state law]. For a person confined in a county jail who participates in a county jail industry program . . . “detention” includes time spent at an assigned work site and going to and from the work site. Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2921.01(E).
agreement or transcript of colloquy between judge and defendant in which the factual
basis for the plea was confirmed by the defendant, or . . . some comparable judicial
record of this information.’”
United States v. Anglin
, No. 08-5018,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part the district court’s denial of the motion to suppress, vacate Gross’s sentence, and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
___________________________________________________ CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART ___________________________________________________ JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part. I agree with the majority that a remand is necessary to determine whether Gross’s prior escape conviction is a crime of violence under the Armed Career Criminal Act. I also agree with the majority that both Gross’s confession and the DNA evidence linking him to the firearm are sufficiently attenuated from his unlawful seizure by Officer Williams to dissipate any taint from that police action. I disagree, however, with the majority’s reversal of the district court’s denial of the suppression of the firearm and therefore respectfully dissent.
The majority apparently concedes that the unexpected discovery of an
outstanding arrest warrant can be considered in the analysis of “whether the chain of
causation proceeding from the unlawful conduct has become so attenuated or has been
interrupted by some intervening circumstance so as to remove the ‘taint’ imposed upon
that evidence by the original illegality.”
United States v. Crews
,
The material circumstances of this case do indeed demonstrate such attenuation. Although the officer stopped Gross without reasonable suspicion, he discovered Gross’s arrest warrant only after he observed Gross in violation of state open-container laws. Gross was then arrested, processed at the jail, and, after four hours, a weapon was found in the jail cell that was later linked to Gross by DNA evidence. Under these circumstances, the evidence of the gun was sufficiently attenuated from the original stop to be admissible against Gross.
I.
Although the underlying rationale of the exclusionary rule is the deterrence of
unlawful government behavior, the Supreme Court has explained that “‘[w]hether the
exclusionary sanction is appropriately imposed in a particular case . . . is an issue
separate from the question whether the Fourth Amendment rights of the party seeking
to invoke the rule were violated by police conduct.’”
Hudson v. Michigan
,
Accordingly, we must determine whether “the unlawful conduct has become so
attenuated or has been interrupted by some intervening circumstance so as to remove the
‘taint’ imposed upon the evidence by the original illegality.”
Crews
,
A.
While we have not previously considered whether the
unexpected
discovery of
a valid arrest warrant may serve to dissipate the taint of an unlawful detention, we have
considered closely analogous circumstances. First, we have held that if a suspect’s
response to an illegal stop is a new and distinct crime, such as flight, any evidence
recovered incident to the arrest for that crime is not tainted by the unlawfulness of the
initial detention.
United States v. Castillo
,
Second, in
United States v. Hudson
, 405 F.3d 425, 438 (6th Cir. 2005), we
confronted the circumstance in which the police were looking for a particular suspect
with a known and outstanding arrest warrant. They observed a car driven by the
suspect’s girlfriend with two passengers inside who loosely matched a race-based profile
of the suspect.
Id
. The police effectuated a
Terry
stop, discovered Hudson and removed
him from the car, and a search of his person revealed illegal drugs.
Id.
at 429. His
identity as the suspect with the outstanding arrest warrant was then confirmed.
Id
. After
we determined that the stop was unlawful because there was no reasonable suspicion to
believe Hudson was in the car, we suppressed the drugs found on Hudson. We noted
that “when the police make an illegal stop for the very purpose of arresting the person
stopped, they are thereby exploiting the illegal stop in a manner prohibited by the Fourth
Amendment and the evidence obtained in a pat-down of the arrested suspect or in a
search incident to the arrest must be suppressed.”
Id.
at 440. In our analysis, we looked
to a line of Seventh Circuit cases involving the very issue before us here.
Id.
(discussing
United States v. Green
,
In
Green
, the Seventh Circuit upheld the admission of evidence obtained during
the search of a car incident to an arrest on an outstanding, previously-unknown arrest
warrant discovered during a warrant check following an illegal seizure.
It would be startling to suggest that because the police illegally stopped an automobile, they cannot arrest an occupant who is found to be wanted on a warrant—in a sense requiring an official call of “Olly, Olly, Oxen Free.” Because the arrest is lawful, a search incident to the arrest is also lawful.
Id. [1] The Seventh Circuit subsequently reaffirmed this analysis in Johnson . 383 F.3d 538, 546 (7th Cir. 2004).
In
Hudson
, we approved of this analysis and “agree[d] with the Seventh Circuit
that the admissibility of evidence obtained in an illegal stop depends on the
purpose
of
the stop.”
1982).
The majority’s statement that “[a]lthough both Green and Johnson are cases in which the Seventh Circuit held that the discovery of a warrant during an illegal stop constituted an intervening circumstance, in Hudson , we relied on Green only to emphasize that the purpose of an illegal stop or search is determinative of whether the fruits of the search will be suppressed,” is nothing short of baffling. (Maj. Op. at 12–13.) Our discussion of Green and Johnson most certainly considered the question of whether an arrest warrant could serve as an intervening circumstance; we sought to distinguish Green and Johnson on the very basis that the Hudson’s arrest warrant was known prior to the illegal stop. Hudson itself makes this point unmistakably:
The [ Green ] court reasoned that the officers’ incidental discovery of the outstanding warrant “constituted an intervening circumstance sufficient to dissipate any taint caused by the illegal automobile stop.” [111 F.3d] at 521. The court explained why the search incident to the valid arrest was sufficiently purged of the primary taint, i.e., the illegal stop: In this case, while the police inappropriately stopped the Greens, the purpose of the stop was not to seek evidence against the Greens , but to obtain evidence against Mark Williams [the fugitive] . . . . Nor did the police exploit the stop in order to search the automobile. Rather the search came only after they learned that Avery was wanted on a warrant and arrested him . . . . Our conclusion that the evidence is admissible in this case also will not lessen the deterrent effect of the exclusionary rule on unconstitutional automobile stops because the general rule of exclusion is unchanged. It is only in the unusual case where the police, after a questionable stop, discover that an occupant is wanted on an arrest warrant that the intervening circumstances exception will apply.
Id. at 523 (emphases added). A more recent pronouncement from the Seventh Circuit reaffirms this analysis. See United States v. Johnson , 383 F.3d 538, 546 (7th Cir. 2004) (holding that because the officers discovered valid warrants only after they illegally stopped the defendant, the search and arrest of the defendant could not be deemed the purpose of the stop). As these decisions indicate, when the police make an illegal stop for the very purpose of arresting the person stopped, they are thereby exploiting the illegal stop in a manner prohibited by the Fourth Amendment and the evidence obtained in a pat-down of the arrested suspect or in a search incident to the arrest must be suppressed.
It therefore follows that, where the purpose of the illegal stop is entirely unrelated
to the arrest of a particular individual—here, the purpose was the investigation of an
unusual circumstance encountered on patrol—a lawful arrest upon the subsequent
incidental
or
unexpected
discovery of an outstanding warrant is an intervening
circumstance that weighs strongly toward attenuation.
See Johnson
,
There is even more reason to find attenuation in this case: the outstanding arrest warrant was discovered only after Gross was observed in violation of the open-container law . Just as a suspect’s flight from unlawful detention provides probable cause for police to arrest and search the suspect, so too does the discovery of an outstanding arrest warrant which follows from the observation of a crime completely unrelated to the illegal stop. The combination of these intervening circumstances—Williams viewing 2 The dicta from United States v. Williams , 615 F.3d 657, 670 (6th Cir. 2010), cited by the majority does not change this fact. In Williams , special-duty police officers approached a small group of individuals standing in front of an affordable-housing complex. Id. at 662. One of the officers recognized Williams as a non-resident and told him that he was again trespassing on the housing-complex property. Id. He then asked Williams if there were any outstanding warrants for his arrest, and Williams responded that he thought there might be one outstanding. Id. The officer asked if Williams was armed, and the response lead the officer to believe he was in fact armed. Id. The officer then performed a pat-down search, discovered a concealed firearm, and arrested Williams. Id. We affirmed the suppression of the firearm because “the information obtained [through the officer’s questioning] was not ‘the product of free will under Wong Sun .’” Id. at 670 (quoting Brown , 422 U.S. at 603). Though our discussion of the case included consideration of Green , Johnson , and Hudson , and though we indeed commented that “we have never adopted the [the Seventh Circuit’s] approach as the law of this circuit,” our holding rested solely the fact that the officer “obtained his information by asking Williams a question during an illegal encounter in which a person would not feel free to leave or to refuse to answer questions.” Id. The facts in Williams —the officer recognized Williams, asked about warrants and weapons, and discovered the weapon immediately after Williams indicated that he may have a weapon—readily distinguish it from Hudson or the case at bar.
the open-container violation and then running a positive warrant check—transformed
what had been an unlawful encounter with police into a lawful arrest and detention on
an unrelated charge.
[3]
And, “[p]ursuant to this lawful arrest, the officers were authorized
to search [Gross], and the evidence seized as a result of the search is admissible.”
Jefferson
,
The majority also relies on two cases from our sister circuits to support its view
and implies that the views of other circuits differ from that of the Seventh Circuit on this
point. Neither, however, can be read to support the result in this case or the notion that
other circuits apply a different rule. In
United States v. Lopez
,
United States v. Luckett
,
A finding of attenuation is also supported by the majority’s conclusion that “the
purpose and flagrancy of Williams’s actions do not weigh heavily in the attenuation
determination.” (Maj. Op. at 16.) With respect to purpose, it is clear that Officer
*29
Williams sought to investigate an unusual situation that he encountered late at night: a
running car in a parking lot with no driver and a passenger slumped down in the front
seat. But a police officer’s desire to investigate unusual circumstances encountered
while on patrol is not necessarily a suspect purpose.
See See
,
Furthermore, Williams’s unlawful stop in this case was not the type of flagrant
act that can overcome the significant attenuation created by the timing and intervening
circumstances discussed above. While it is true that Williams had once before blocked
in a car in a similar manner, it was not until our recent decision in
See
, filed after the
events in this case, that it would have been clear to Williams that his methods were
decidedly an investigatory stop and not a consensual encounter.
See
,
Given those circumstances, there is sufficient attenuation between the initial unlawful seizure of Gross and the discovery of a firearm on the jail-cell floor. The presence of intervening circumstances in the form of an open-container violation and the subsequent discovery of an outstanding arrest warrant, the lack of evidence of unlawful purpose or flagrant conduct, and the circumstances by which the evidence was discovered well after arrest all favor application of the attenuation doctrine in this case.
II.
For the foregoing reasons, I would conclude that the evidence against Gross is sufficiently attenuated from the initial illegality such that exclusion is unwarranted. Accordingly, I would affirm the district court’s denial of Gross’s motion to suppress.
