Joseph Cellitti pleaded guilty to possessing a firearm after sustaining a felony conviction, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), while reserving the right to challenge on appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence. We now vacate and remand.
Background
Police in Rockford, Illinois, received a call in the early morning hours of August 13, 2002, that a man with a gun was threatening people on Gilbert Avenue. The first officer to respond, Harold Combs, encountered three people hiding behind a building. One of them, James Singleton, told Officer Combs that he had been walking home when he was confronted by a man later identified as Cellitti. Singleton said that Cellitti had verbally accosted him and then threatened him with a beer bottle. At that point, Singleton told the officer, a white Dodge Neon had turned onto the street and screeched to a halt next to him and Cellitti. A woman, later identified as Cellitti’s fiancée, Melissa Bauer (“Melissa”), and her brother, Kevin Bauer (“Kevin”), jumped out of the car; Kevin joined Cellitti in attacking Singleton while Melissa tried to restrain both her brother and fiancé. During the commotion Singleton retreated to his apartment, retrieved a kitchen knife, and returned to the street. But he quickly ran for cover, Singleton continued, when he saw Cellitti exit a nearby house at 2215 Kilburn Avenue carrying an assault rifle that Cellitti loaded and pointed at him. The other two people hiding with Singleton — his fiancée and a neighbor — had also witnessed Cellitti’s unprovoked assaults, and they provided Officer Combs with similar accounts.
Officer Combs radioed this information to backup officers, who proceeded to 2215 Kilburn Avenue and entered a breeze-way behind the house. The police then shouted for the occupants to come outside. Cellit-ti, Melissa, Kevin, and two others exited, and the officers handcuffed all of them. After approximately five minutes of calling into the house, officers entered and conducted a protective sweep. They located four additional adults, all of whom they brought outside and handcuffed (there were also two children in the house). The police then lined up the nine adults 1 and brought Singleton over to the group. Singleton immediately identified Cellitti as *621 the man who had brandished the rifle and Melissa and Kevin as the occupants of the white Neon. The officers then determined that Melissa owned the house — where she lived with Cellitti — and they obtained her consent to search the house for the rifle. The officers failed to locate a gun in the house, but happened upon a set of keys under a cushion on a sofa in the living room. Officer Combs seized the keys and used them to attempt to unlock a white Dodge Neon that was parked in front of the residence. The keys did not fit the Neon or any of several other cars parked near the house.
Officers transported the nine adults to a police station, where Melissa was placed in a holding cell and handcuffed to a bench. The record is silent about what happened to the other occupants of the house once they arrived at the station. Meanwhile, other officers still at the scene located Melissa’s maroon Buick automobile parked two blocks from 2215 Kilburn Avenue and discovered that the keys recovered from the house unlocked the car. The officers did not search the car, but instead towed it to an impound lot. Back at the police station, two detectives spoke with Melissa, and she signed a form consenting to a search of the Buick. After she consented to the search, she was promptly released from custody. Approximately six hours had passed from the time the police initially responded to the call until Melissa signed the consent form. Police searched the Buick and found a loaded Sturm Ruger .223 caliber assault rifle in the trunk.
Discussion
Cellitti acknowledges on appeal that the officers’ initial entry into the home was justified by exigent circumstances,
see Michigan v. Tyler,
At the outset the government contends that Cellitti cannot challenge the consent search of the Buick because it was Melissa, not Cellitti, who gave that consent.
See Rakas v. Illinois,
We turn then to Melissa’s consent. Whether she freely and voluntarily consented to the search is a factual question, which we review for clear error.
United States v. Pedroza,
But there is a flaw in the district court’s reasoning because the court failed to consider why Melissa was in custody. Having been placed in handcuffs, driven to the police station, locked in a holding cell, and chained to a bench for several hours, her encounter with the police had progressed beyond an investigatory detention,
see Terry v. Ohio,
Consent given during an illegal detention is presumptively invalid.
See Pedroza,
Although the search of the Buick cannot be upheld on the basis of Melissa’s consent, we must consider whether the officers had an alternative ground to search the car without a search warrant. Several events led to the officers’ search of the Buick and we must consider each in turn, beginning with the seizure of the keys. Again, we note that in the district court the government conceded that Cellitti had “standing” to challenge the seizure of the keys, and we accept its concession. The officers seized the keys while they were searching the house for the rifle. When a citizen consents to a search of her property, the police must constrain their search and seizures to the scope of the consent.
Florida v. Jimeno,
What is less clear, however, is whether the incriminating nature of the keys was “immediately apparent.”
See Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
The testing of the keys in the lock of the Buick, and the impoundment and warrant-less search of the car occurred as a direct result of the officers’ illegal seizure of the keys, and thus are fruits of the poisonous tree.
See Fields,
Vaoated and RemaNded.
Notes
. At one point, Officer Combs testified that nine people exited the house; at another, he testified that there were ten people in the lineup. The discrepancy for our purposes is immaterial.
