Lead Opinion
Police in Springfield, Illinois, stopped Keenan Jackson for a traffic offense. He was not carrying a driver’s license. After a check of identifying details via the computer terminal in the squad car implied that the driver might not be who he claimed, Officer Sapetti decided to detain Jackson until his identity could be established. Sapetti handcuffed Jackson and, before seating him in the police car, patted him down for weapons; he found a hard item in Jackson’s crotch. The object turned out to be more than 50 grams of crack cocaine, and Jackson was indicted for a violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841. After the district court denied his motion to suppress this evidence, Jackson entered a conditional guilty plea that preserved his right to appeal the question whether Officer Sa-petti violated the fourth amendment.
Sapetti testified at the suppression hearing that Jackson had changed lanes without signaling. Jackson denied committing any traffic offense. The judge believed Sapetti rather than Jackson. Given that finding, Sapetti had probable cause to arrest Jackson. See Whren v. United States,
Jackson does not contend that the district judge’s factual conclusion is clearly erroneous. Nor does his appellate lawyer deny that a search incident to arrest is automatically valid under the fourth amendment. His brief does not cite Gus-tafson, Robinson, or Whren. Instead Jackson contends that Officer Sapetti did not have the level of suspicion that would have justified a pat-down search under Terry v. Ohio,
Omission of that argument does not result in plain error. The principal authority on which Jackson might have relied (had his lawyer been alert) is Knowles v. Iowa,
So let us go step by step through the events that led to the cocaine’s discovery. First step: stop of the car. That was supported by probable cause, given the district judge’s finding of fact. Second step: request for the driver’s license. This is reasonable in any traffic stop supported by probable cause. See also Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court, — U.S. -,
Third step: deciding to detain Jackson in the cruiser after he did not hand over a driver’s license, and information from the police database raised doubts about his identity. This is proper in principle given Atwater and must be called reasonable under the circumstances. Once Jackson failed to produce a driver’s license, the police could not put him back in the car and watch him motor off. (Jackson was traveling alone; no passenger was available to get behind the wheel.) Moreover, he could have been a fugitive. See United States v. Garcia, No. 04-1006,
Fourth step: searching a person about to be held for an indefinite period. Here the justification for that precaution, as articulated in Knowles and applied in Robinson and Gustafson, is present in full measure. Sapetti found the drug in a place from which Jackson could have retrieved a weapon had he possessed one. It would have been foolhardy to trundle Jackson into the squad car without ensuring that he was unarmed. Sapetti was entitled to reduce danger to himself before securing Jackson in the back seat for however long it took to find out who he really was. Likewise Sapetti was entitled to preserve any evidence that Jackson may have been carrying. That the search turned up
AFFIRMED
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The key question in this case is the type of detention to which Mr. Jackson was subject while waiting for Officer Sapetti to investigate his identity. As noted by the majority, the subjective intent of both parties- — -Officer Sapetti and Mr. Jackson— are irrelevant to the inquiry: The justification for the stop, as well as the nature of the resulting detention, both are governed by an objective standard. See Whren v. United States,
Considering Officer Sapetti’s statements and the other circumstances surrounding Mr. Jackson’s detention, I do not believe that the detention amounted to a full custodial arrest. Officer Sapetti did not tell Mr. Jackson he was under arrest; to the contrary, the officer told Mr. Jackson that he was not under arrest. Officer Sapetti detained Mr. Jackson for the purpose of investigating his identity; the officer gave no indication that Mr. Jackson’s moving violations were the reason for his being held. Furthermore, the nature of the detention, as communicated by Officer Sapet-ti to Mr. Jackson, was going to be brief— the officer was going to handcuff Mr. Jackson and secure him in the police car; Mr. Jackson was not being transported to police headquarters for booking. Far from suggesting an arrest, Mr. Jackson’s detention has all of the markings of a Terry stop — “a brief, investigatory stop,” United States v. Ocampo,
It is well-established that an officer conducting a Terry stop may conduct a protective search of the suspect for the pur
The district court did not reach this question. It concluded that Mr. Jackson’s detention constituted an arrest and consequently evaluated Officer Sapetti’s search according to the broader standard for a search incident to an arrest. It did not evaluate the search in light of Terry and Dickerson to determine whether the nature of the contraband became apparent to Officer Sapetti during the course of a reasonable search for weapons, or whether it became apparent only after manipulation of the object beyond that which Terry allows. See Dickerson,
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
