Lead Opinion
After the district court
I.
After an evidentiary hearing, the district court found the following facts to be true. On November 29, 2001, an unidentified caller telephoned the Des Moines Police Department and spoke to Officer Mike McBride. The caller reported that he had just picked up his child from 2765 NE 52nd Court, the residence of his child’s babysitter, a woman named Karen. The caller advised that while in Karen’s residence, he had seen a brick of white powder and a brick of what he believed to be marijuana. According to the caller, when he confronted her about the аlleged drugs, Karen said she “had to make a living.” Officer McBride called the Pleasant Hill Police Department and relayed this information to Officer Daniel Edwards. Edwards determined from his dispatcher that Karen Cash lived at the address in question and that there was a valid arrest warrant outstanding for Cash for violating a no-contact order. Edwards then relayed this information to Polk County Sheriffs Department Deputies Jeffrey Funaro and Matt Davenport.
Around 6:30 p.m., Edwards, Funaro, and Davenport traveled to Cash’s residence. They knocked on the door, and Cash answered. Funaro told her that there was an outstanding warrant for her arrest, and she responded that her attorney had arranged for the warrant to be recalled. Funaro contacted his dispatcher to reconfirm the validity of the warrant. While Funaro awaited a response, he and the other officers monitored Cash as she located a copy of the document purportedly
After the officers had been at Cash’s residence for about ten minutes, Funaro’s dispatcher reconfirmed the validity of the arrest warrant. Funaro therefore disregarded the document Cаsh had proffered and told her that she would be taken into custody. Edwards then made a protective sweep of the residence. Based on his training and experience, he was concerned that because Cash was allegedly involved with large amounts of drugs, there could be someone else present at the residence who could pose a danger to the officers as they attempted to take her into custody.
Edwards walked through the residence’s three bedrooms, laundry/utility room, living room, and kitchеn. In plain view atop the kitchen island, Edwards saw what he believed to be marijuana, marijuana seeds, and marijuana stems. He asked Cash about this material, and she denied that it was marijuana. Edwards then retrieved a field-test kit from his car and returned to the kitchen island to test the material, which tested positive as marijuana. While conducting the field test, Edwards looked down toward his feet and saw the open shopping bag Cash had earlier concealed from the officers behind the kitchen island. In it, he saw a baggie containing what he believed to be more marijuana. The officers then arrested Cash, secured the residence, and obtained a search warrant. In executing the search warrant, the officers retrieved methamphetamine, marijuana, pills, a large amount of cash, items related to drug consumption and distribution, and a pistol.
Cash moved to suppress the evidence, challenging the protective sweep of her residence. Applying Maryland v. Buie,
II.
Cash does not contest the district court’s factual findings, only its legal conclusion that the protective sweep was justified. We review this question of law de novo. See United States v. Boyd,
In Buie, six or seven police officers entered the defendant’s residence to execute a warrant for his arrest. The defendant emerged from the basement and was taken into custody. One officer then entered the basement “in case there was someone else” present, and he seized evidence he found in plain view.
Cash’s extreme nervousness toward the officers and her furtiveness in concealing the shopping bag from the officers were significant factors which we have previously held may establish reasonable suspicion for a Terry stop and frisk. See, e.g., United States v. Atlas,
Since an officer confronting a nervous and furtive suspect on the street has an articulablе reason to be concerned for his safety and may therefore conduct a Terry stop and frisk, it follows that an officer arresting a nervous and furtive suspect in an unfamiliar residence has an articulable reason to be concerned for his safety and may therefore conduct a Buie sweep. See generally Buie,
It was also a significant factor that the officers had been advised that Cash was in possession of large quantities of drugs. In upholding a Terry stop and frisk, we have previously held that “[i]t is reasonable for an officer to believe that an individual may be armed and dangerous when that individual is suspected of being involved in a drug transaction because weapons and violence are frequently associated with drug transactions.” United States v. Robinson,
Since an officer approaching a suspected drug trafficker in the open is justified in conducting a Terry stop and frisk out of concern that the suspect may resort to violence to thwart the encounter, it follows that an officer arresting a suspected drug trafficker in one room of a multi-room residence is justified in conducting a Buie sweep out of concern that there could be individuals lurking in the other rooms who may resort to violence to thwart the arrest. See generally United States v. Horne,
III.
In sum, the district court correctly concluded that a rational and prudent police officer could reasonably suspect that the residence harbored one or more potentially dangerous individuals based on (1) the tip that Cash possessed large quantities of drugs, coupled with Edwards’s training and experience regarding the danger involved in dealing with individuals associated with large drug quantities; and (2) Cash’s extreme nervousness in interacting with the officers and her furtive concealment of the shoрping bag. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Ronald E. Longstaff, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Because I believe the protective sweep impinged upon Cash’s Fourth Amendment rights, I respectfully dissent.
The Fourth Amendment safeguards the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. The Fourth Amendment allows limited protective sweeps as a precautionary measure in conjunction with in-home arrests. Maryland v. Buie,
This court has consistently applied the Buie standard in cases posing the legal issue of the constitutionality of a protective sweep. See United States v. Boyd,
In my view, there is only one factor in this case — the suspicion of drugs in the home — that could have contributed to a reasonable belief the area to be swept harbored an individual posing a danger to those at the arrest scene. In my mind this factor, when considered in view of the mitigating factors present, does not lay a foundation for a reasonable suspicion that Cash’s trailer harbored an individual posing a danger to the officer or others. And I decline, as the majority would seemingly do, to create a bright line rule that “an officer arresting a suspected drug trafficker in one room of a multi-room residence is justified in conducting a Buie sweep out of concern that there would be individuals lurking in the other rooms who may resort to violence to thwart the arrest.”
In reaching its conclusion, the majority points to two factors in addition to the suspicion of drugs in the home which it found contributed to a reasonable belief the area to be swept harbored an individual posing a danger to those at the arrest sсene — Officer Edwards’s breadth of experience and Cash’s nervousness and furtiveness vis a vis the shopping bag. In my view these factors are insufficient to support a reasonable belief there were dangerous individuals at the arrest scene, and I will address them in turn.
First, the majority points to “the tip that Cash possessed large quantities of drugs, coupled with Edwards’s training and experience regarding the danger involved in dealing with individuals associated with large drug quantities.” As to Officer Edwards’s experience, the district court relied on his testimony аt the evidentiary hearing, during which he stated “[i]n my training and experience, individuals that are involved with large quantities of drugs have a very high potential of danger to officers when coming in contact with the police.” United States v. Cash, No. 01-230, slip op. at 4 (S.D. Iowa April 2, 2002) (district court order). Edwards testified any other individuals present in the trailer would pose a danger to the officers as they were taking Cash into custody, because a tipster had reported a large quantity of drugs to be in the house. Id. at 8.
Edwards has been a police officer for approximately ten years and has six years of experience as a narcotics investigator. He has been fired upon during his tenure as a narcotics officer, and has also had to discharge his weapon in defense against persons involved in the drug trade. The district court stated it was impossible to remove Officer Edwards’s training and experience from “the matrix of facts that define the circumstances which must be considered.” Id. (quoting Buie v. State,
The primary question presented on this appeal is whether Officer Edwards reasonably believed the area to be swept harbored an individual posing a danger to those at the arrest scene. In my view, the district court, in focusing on Officer Edwards’s history as an officer, еngaged in speculative theories about whether there could have been another individual in the house. These speculative theories did not support a reasonable belief the trailer home harbored an individual posing a dan
The protective sweep of a home requires more than a mere inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or hunch. See id. at 332,
The district court and the majority also point to Officer Edwards’s observations that Cash appeared nervous and reрeatedly moved the shopping bag. In my view, in the context of this arrest, Cash’s nervousness does not contribute to a reasonable belief based on specific and articulable facts which reasonably warranted Officer Edwards’s belief that the trailer harbored a potentially dangerous individual. Cash’s nervousness did not indicate the possible presence of other individuals in the trailer. Most individuals would be nervous when faced with a police presence in the home, and imminent arrest. Additionally, Officer Edwards claimed he waited outside for at least ten minutes witnessing nervous behavior by Cash — this admission means that for ten minutes Officer Edwards did nothing to respond to her nervous physical activity.
Also, the district court expressly concluded “Officer Edwards did not conduct the sweep to safeguard the officers against Ms. Cash, but rather, against other individuals who may have been present and unseen.” Id. at 9, n. 4. This poses an internal inconsistency with the court’s reliance on Officer Edwards’s statement that Cash’s nervousness, coupled with her repeated movement of thе shopping bag, caused him to believe a protective sweep was prudent under the circumstances. It is undisputed Officer Funaro had already handcuffed and detained Cash at the time Officer Edwards commenced the protective sweep. If the district court specifically found Edwards did not conduct the sweep to safeguard against Ms. Cash, then I fail to see the significance of Cash’s nervousness.
I believe the majority’s Terry analysis of Cash’s nervousness suffers from a similar defect as the district court’s reliance on Ms. Cash’s nervousness as justificаtion for the protective sweep. The majority concludes “an officer arresting a nervous and furtive suspect in an unfamiliar residence has an articulable reason to be concerned
Further, I believe the circumstances in this case include numerous mitigating factors, despite the reported presence of drugs, which support a conclusion there was no reasonable, articulable belief there was a person or persons in Cash’s mobile home who posed a danger to those at the scene. First, the fact officers allowed Cash the opportunity to call her mother to assume care of Cash’s five-year-old daughter indicates there was no reason for the officers to believe another adult was present at the scene. The officers’ conduct in waiting while Cash arranged for someone to care for her daughter is not at all consistent with them having a reasonable belief someone else was in the premises. Also, if the police had a reasonable belief there could be a person other than Cash lurking in the home, one wonders why police did not remove the small child from the trailer and out of the way of potential harm.
Additionally, the officers’ оverall treatment of Cash confirms they did not consider her a threat. Cash was never frisked nor was she handcuffed for at least ten minutes. Cash was also permitted to roam freely around the trailer, and her interaction with the officers was apparently calm and relatively positive (despite her nervousness). Further, no officer drew a weapon for the ten minutes they were there before Edwards conducted the protective sweep. And the arrest warrant was for a violation of a civil no-contact order — not a criminal charge. Also, Deputy Funaro testified he lacked any information to suggest the presence of others. In addition, none of the officers checked the rear of the mobile home for their protection when they arrived. In sum, having carefully considered the facts and context of the arrest, I conclude there are not sufficient factors in this case to give rise to a reasonable belief based on specific and articulable facts which, taken together with the rationаl inferences from those facts, reasonably warranted Officer Edwards’s belief the area swept harbored an individual posing a danger to the officers or others.
This conclusion is entirely consistent with controlling precedent of this court, for to my knowledge we have never upheld a sweep on so thin a foundation. This case is distinguishable from those cases in which this court has upheld protective sweeps as permissible, as those cases all include additional factors not present in this case. See United States v. Clayton,
This case is also distinguishable from cases which may not have involved a suspicion of drugs, but did involve additional factors, not present in this case, reasonably suggesting the presence of danger to those at the arrest scene. See United States v. Jones,
Having carefully considered the facts and circumstances in this case, I believe Officer Edwards did not pоssess a reasonable belief, based on specific and articula-ble facts, that the area swept harbored an individual who posed a danger to the officers or others on the scene. The majority and the district court could not articulate legally sufficient facts in support of the protective sweep because the officers themselves could not identify them. The execution of an in-home arrest for a nonviolent offense simply should not be used as a pretext to perform a protective sweep for evidence of another offense. See Buie,
. In Whren v. United States, the Supreme Court stated "[sjubjective intentions play no role in ordinary, probable-cause Fourth Amendment analysis."
. Although Cash does have a criminal history, there is nothing in the record to indicate the officers were aware of her record or Officer Edwards relied upon her record as justification for the protective sweep.
