At 8:25 one October night in an Indiana town, a patrolling police officer received word from his dispatcher that eight min *655 utes earlier a store had been held up by a black man wearing dark clothing and brandishing a silver-colored pistol, who having cоmpleted the robbery had fled on foot. Fifteen to twenty minutes after receiving the news the officer spotted a blaсk man in dark clothing less than a mile from the site of the robbery. There were few pedestrians about, so the officer thought this might be the robber. He told him to stop and to take his hands out of his pockets. The man immediately complied, whereupon thе officer noticed a silver-colored gun sticking out of the pouch in the man’s sweatshirt; and so he arrested him. It was Broomfield, who has been convicted of being a felon in possession of a gun and challenges his conviction on the ground that the officer violated the Fourth Amendment in stopping him.
The district judge thought the stop governed by
Terry v. Ohio,
Gilding the lily, the officer testified that he was additionally suspicious because when he drove by Broomfield in his squad car before turning around and getting оut and accosting him he noticed that Broom-field was “starting] straight ahead.” Had Broomfield instead glanced around him, the offiсer would doubtless have testified that Broomfield seemed nervous or, the preferred term because of its vagueness, “furtivе.” Whether you stand still or move, drive above, below, or at the speed limit, you will be described by the police as acting suspiciously should they wish to stop or arrest you. Such subjective, promiscuous appeals to an ineffable intuition should not be credited.
United States v. Jones,
This discussion assumes that the stop rose to the level of a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment; if not, howevеr, it didn’t have to be based on reasonable suspicion or anything else. “[A] seizure does not occur simply because а police officer approaches an individual and asks a few questions.”
Florida v. Bostick,
So suppose that during the search for the robber the police had spotted a young woman walking near the store, obviously not a suspect, and had said to her, “Excuse me, we’re investigating a robbery, and we’d likе to know whether you’ve seen a black man wearing dark clothing.” The asking of such a question of a pedestrian by a police officer would bring the pedestrian to a halt. So it would be a “stop” in a literal sense. But would it be a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment? Broomfield’s lawyer at argument said yes, but
Childs
and
Hooper
say no. The interference with personal liberty is too slight to activate constitutional concerns. The Constitution should not be trivialized in the fashion suggested. The maxim
de minimis non curat lex
is as sensible a limitation on the making of trifling constitutional claims as on other silly litigation.
Hudson v. McMillian,
Had the pedestrian in our example told the officer to bug off and he had insisted that she remain and answer his questions, the innocuous stop would become a seizure,
INS v. Delgado,
Before the рolice officer in this case had a chance to pose a single question to Broomfield, he noticed the gun, at which point he had probable cause to arrest him as the suspected robber, though, as it happened, Broomfield was never prosecuted for the robbery because the clerk at the store that had been robbed could not identify him as the robber. That is an aside; the relevant point is that the stop had not yet ripened into a Terry stop, requiring reasonаble suspicion to be lawful, when the officer saw the gun. All the officer had said was take your hands out of your pockets, an obvious precaution since it was dark and an armed robber was on the loose. It was only after the officer spоtted the gun and thus had probable cause to arrest that he asked Broomfield “where he was going or what he was doing.” Until it turned into a lawful arrest, the stop had *657 lasted only seconds. Though supported by reasonable suspicion, it didn’t need to be, because it didn’t last long enough to count as a seizure.
AFFIRMED.
