OPINION OF THE COURT
After receiving a tip from an informant, two officers stopped Larry Valentine on a city street late at night and discovered a gun. The gun was subsequently suppressed, however, when the government prosecuted Valentine for being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) and (2).
In suppressing the gun, the District Court reasoned that under
Florida v. J.L.,
We will reverse. We hold that the officers had reasonable suspicion before ordering Valentine to stop. This case is distinguishable from
J.L.
and our recent decision in
United States v. Ubiles,
I
Around 1:00 a.m. on May 8, 1999, Officers Woodard and Contreras were patrolling near the intersection of Columbia and 18th Avenues in Irvington, New Jersey, an area that the officers described in uncon-tradicted testimony as “very bad” with “[a] lot of shootings.” App. at 63. As the officers approached the intersection, a young black man in his early twenties flagged them down and explained that he had just seen a man with a gun.
The informant said that the gunman was wearing a blue sweat top, blue pants, and a gold chain around his neck. He added that the suspect was dark skinned, had a beard, and was accompanied by a young man. When asked to identify himself, the informant refused, a response that Officer Woodard testified is common, and one that is understandable if the informant feared retribution from the armed man or entan *353 glement with the police. The officers did not question the informant further and immediately went in search of the gunman.
About 50 to 100 feet north of the intersection where the officers had met the informant, Woodard and Contreras saw three men standing in a well-lit parking lot near a chicken restaurant. One of the men matched the informant’s description of the armed suspect given moments ago, and another was a young male in his twenties, also as the informant described. The third was an older man who appeared to be in his sixties.
The officers, who were in uniform and in a marked car, stopped and stepped out of their vehicle. The three men in the parking lot reacted by walking away, northwards. Contreras ordered the young male with Valentine to stop, and he obeyed, putting his hands up and walking toward the squad car. But when Woodard told Valentine, who was about ten feet away, to come over and place his hands on the car, Valentine responded, “Who, me?” and charged southwards toward Woodard. As Valentine ran, trying to push aside Woodard’s outstretched arms, the officer grabbed his shirt and wrestled him to the ground. During the scuffle, Woodard heard a ting as Valentine’s silver, fully-loaded handgun hit the ground. Neither officer had seen the gun before that moment.
We have jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3731, and conduct plenary review of the District Court’s determination of whether the officers had reasonable suspicion to stop and frisk Valentine.
Ornelas v. United States,
II
Under
Terry v. Ohio,
We begin our analysis with the Supreme Court’s recent opinion,
J.L.,
the case that prompted the District Court to reconsider its initial denial of Valentine’s suppression motion. In
J.L.
the Supreme Court held that police officers lacked reasonable suspicion to make a
Terry
stop when an anonymous caller reported that “a young black male standing at a particular bus stop and wearing a plaid shirt was carrying a gun.”
Florida v. J.L.,
529 U.S. at-,
Discussing the reliability of anonymous tips, the Court explained, “Unlike a tip from a known informant whose reputation can be assessed and who can be held responsible if her allegations turn out to be fabricated,
see Adams v. Williams,
The informant’s tip in our case is different from the telephone call in
J.L.
First, unlike
J.L.,
the officers in our case knew that the informant was reporting what he had observed moments ago, not what he learned from stale or second-hand sources. At the suppression hearing, Officer Woodard was asked, “Did [the informant] say how long ago.that he saw the individual carrying a gun?” Woodard replied, “About — maybe a second ago,, two seconds ago.” App. at 68. So the officers could expect that the informant had a reasonable basis for his beliefs. The Supreme Court has recognized the greater weight carried by a witness’s recent report, such as when “the victim of a street crime seeks immediate police aid and gives a description of the assailant.”
Adams v. Williams,
Second, the officers had more reason to believe that the informant was credible than the officers did in
J.L.,
for a tip given face to face is more reliable than an anonymous telephone call. As the Fourth Circuit recently explained, when an informant relates information to the police face to face, the officer has an opportunity to assess the informant’s credibility and demeanor.
United States v. Christmas,
Many cases have recognized the difference between in — person informants and anonymous telephone calls.
See, e.g., Florida v. J.L.,
529 U.S. at-,
Valentine contends that the District Court made a finding that the informant left the area after giving the officers the tip, and therefore this informant could not have been easily held accountable. He also complains that the officers could have , questioned the informant further. In response to the latter objection, we are not going to second-guess the officers’ decision to pursue the suspect immediately. The officers knew the suspect was still in the vicinity, and had they stalled for more lengthy questioning of the informant, the armed suspect could have escaped detection.
In response to the former objection, we have reviewed the record carefully and conclude that the District Court made no factual finding about what the informant did. Indeed, because no evidence was presented either way on the issue, any factual finding that the informant did leave the area would have been clearly erroneous. We simply do not know what the informant did after the officers left.
What matters for our purposes is not that the officers could guarantee that they could track down the informant again. As the Supreme Court has said in cases like
Gates,
the question is whether the tip should be deemed sufficiently trustworthy in light of the total circumstances. And in this case the circumstances support the reliability of the tip: the informant was exposed to retaliation from Valentine and knew that the officers could quickly confirm or diseonfirm the tip; and the officers could assess the informant’s credibility as he spoke, knew what the informant looked like, and had some opportunity to find the informant if the tip did not pan out. From the fact that the officers acted, and acted quickly, after receiving the tip, a court may deduce that the officers thought the tipster’s demeanor, voice, and perhaps a host of other factors supported the reliability of the tip.
Cf. Ornelas,
The reliability of a tip, of course, is not all that we must consider in evaluating reasonable suspicion; the content of the tip must also be taken into account, as well as other surrounding circumstances. If we focus on the content of the tip, Valentine can invoke our recent holding that, in some contexts, even if police officers have a reliable tip saying that someone is carrying a gun, that information alone will not provide enough evidence to support a
Terry
stop.
See United States v. Ubiles,
*356 In Ubiles several officers were overseeing a festival in the Virgin Islands when an elderly man approached them and pointed out a man he had seen in the crowd with a gun. We suppressed the gun recovered from the officers’ frisk of the suspect, and explained, “For all the officers knew, even assuming the reliability of the tip that Ubiles possessed a gun, Ubiles was another celebrant lawfully exercising his right under Virgin Island law to possess a gun in public.” Id. at 218.
We also acknowledged, however, that reasonable suspicion does not require that the suspect’s acts must always be themselves criminal. In many cases the Supreme Court has found reasonable suspicion based on acts capable of innocent explanation. Most recently, in Wardloiv the Court held that headlong flight from the police in a high-crime area provides reasonable suspicion, despite the fact that flight is not by itself illegal and could have completely lawful and rational explanations. The Court explained:
Even in Terry, the conduct justifying the stop was ambiguous and susceptible of an innocent explanation. The officer observed two individuals pacing back and forth in front of a store, peering into the window and periodically conferring. Terry,392 U.S. at 5-6 ,88 S.Ct. 1868 . All of this conduct was by itself lawful, but it also suggested that the individuals were casing the store for a planned robbery. Terry recognized that the officers could detain the individuals to resolve the ambiguity. Id. at 30,88 S.Ct. 1868 .
Wardlow,
Despite the obvious danger posed by an armed man in a crowd, we concluded in
Ubiles
that the tip, standing alone, did not provide reasonable suspicion because nothing in “the defendant’s behavior pointed to the presence of illegal activity.”
Our case is distinguishable from
Ubiles.
First, there is the broader context. Valentine was walking around at 1:00 a.m. in a high-crime area known for shootings. While an individual’s presence in a high-crime area is not by itself sufficient to warrant a
Terry
stop,
Wardlow,
Moreover, it is well established that - officers are allowed to ask questions of anyone — and gun owners are no exception — without having any evidence creating suspicion.
Florida v. Bostick,
As the Supreme Court noted in a case much like ours, an officer has “ample reason to fear for his safety” while investigating a person reported to have a concealed weapon at 2:15 in the morning in a high-crime area.
Adams v. Williams,
In evaluating the totality of the circumstances, we must also take into account that Valentine and the two men with him immediately began walking away from the patrol car when it arrived. Walking away from the police hardly amounts to the headlong flight considered in
Wardlow
and of course would not give rise to reasonable suspicion by itself, even in a high-crime area, but it is a factor that can be considered in the totality of the circumstances. As the Supreme Court recently said, “nervous, evasive behavior is a pertinent factor in determining reasonable suspicion.”
Wardlow,
In summary, we conclude that the officers had reasonable suspicion after they received the face-to-face tip, were in a high-crime area at 1:00 a.m., and saw Valentine and his two companions walk away as soon as they noticed the police car.
The government offers another grounds for distinguishing this case from Ubiles. Unlike the Virgin Islands, New Jersey not only makes it a crime when a' person “knowingly has in his possession any handgun, including any antique handgun, without first having obtained a permit to carry the same,” N.J.S.A. § 2C:39-5(b), but also New Jersey presumes that someone carrying a handgun does not have a permit to possess it until the person establishes otherwise. See N.J.S.A. § 2C:39-2(b). New Jersey also has strict permit requirements and a rigid investigation and approval process that buttress the statutory presumption. See N.J.S.A. § 2C:58-4.
Given the evidence supporting the informant’s tip in this case, we need not consider New Jersey’s regulatory scheme or determine under what circumstances New Jersey’s presumption would provide reasonable suspicion for a Terry stop.
III
The District Court expressly held that inquiry about reasonable suspicion in this case should be confined to events before Woodard ordered Valentine to stop. Because the District Court reached this issue, we think it is important to explain why that holding was erroneous.
*358
While it is true that the “reasonableness of official suspicion must be measured by what the officers knew before they conducted their search,”
J.L.,
529 U.S. at-,
The facts of Hodari D. illustrate how the concept of a seizure should be applied. When two police officers approached a group of four or five youths gathered around a car, the group immediately dispersed, prompting one officer to pursue Hodari, the respondent. By taking a side street, the officer was able to overtake Hodari. Surprised, Hodari tossed away what appeared to be a small rock, moments before the officer tackled him. The central question before the Supreme Court was whether the small rock, which turned out to be crack, should be suppressed.
The Court held that even assuming that the officers did not have reasonable suspicion to stop Hodari when the pursuit began, the crack should not have been suppressed, for Hodari never complied with the police officers’ original show of authority and therefore was not seized when he threw the crack aside.
Other courts have applied Hodari D. and considered a suspect’s conduct after he failed to comply with an officer’s show of authority.
See, e.g., United States v. Johnson,
In
Johnson,
for example, two officers in an unmarked car were patrolling a high-crime area and pulled into a parking lot where two people were sitting in a parked car with a young woman standing nearby. As the officers approached, they saw the woman lean into the passenger’s window and hand the defendant, Johnson, an object. As the officers drew closer, the woman walked away, and Johnson made what the officers described as a “shoving down” motion. Thinking Johnson might be armed, one officer drew his gun, advised his partner to do the same, and shouted, “Let me see your hands.”
The D.C. Circuit reasoned that if the seizure had taken place when the officers drew their guns and ordered Johnson to show his hands, the court “doubt[ed] very much” whether the officers would have had reasonable suspicion to make a stop.
Id.
at 1316. Johnson did not comply, however, with the officers’ show of authority. “On the contrary, he continued to make ‘shoving down’ motions, gestures that were the very opposite of complying with Fulton’s order, and which a reasonable officer could have thought were actually suggestive of hiding (or retrieving) a gun.”
Id.
at
*359
1316-17. Those actions, the court held, gave the officers reasonable suspicion for the search that revealed the crack.
Cf. Watkins v. City of Southfield,
We conclude that as in Johnson and Moorefield, what Valentine did after he failed to comply with the police officers’ orders can be considered in evaluating reasonable suspicion. Valentine hopes to distinguish cases like Johnson and Smith by claiming that in fact he had already been seized before he charged toward Officer Woodard. He says that when Woodard ordered him to come over and place his hands on the car, he momentarily “complied” with the order, stopped, and gave his name. This “compliance,” he protests, was enough to trigger a seizure.
We have reviewed the record carefully and find no evidence in support of Valentine’s theory that he even momentarily complied, and some evidence, such as Woodard’s police report, appears to rebut the theory. But regardless, no factual determination is necessary, for even if we accept Valentine’s version, it would not show that he was seized before he charged Woodard.
Under some circumstances we have held that a defendant was seized despite his subsequent flight. In
United States v. Coggins,
But Valentine’s case is easily distinguishable, for his momentary “compliance” is a far cry from the lengthy detention in
Coggins. Cf. United States v. Hernandez,
And once we consider Valentine’s actions after Woodard’s order, it is clear that we have an independent ground for finding that the officers had reasonable suspicion. For if headlong flight in a high-crime area provides reasonable suspicion under Wardkno, then charging toward a police officer in a high-crime area also by itself provides reasonable suspicion.
For the foregoing reasons, the District Court’s order of April 27, 2000, will be reversed. The case will be remanded to the District Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
