UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. HOSVALDO LOPEZ, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 05-30347
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
March 12, 2007
2913
Corrected Reprint 3/19/07; D.C. No. CR-04-114-KI; Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon; Garr M. King, District Judge, Presiding; Argued and Submitted May 5, 2006—Portland, Oregon
Before: William A. Fletcher, and John T. Noonan, Circuit Judges, and Louis H. Pollak,* District Judge.
Opinion by Judge Pollak;
Concurrence by Judge Noonan
*Honorable Louis H. Pollak, United States District Court Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation.
COUNSEL
Bryan E. Lessley, Office of the Federal Public Defender, Eugene, Oregon, for the appellant.
Charles W. Stuckey (argued) and Karin J. Immergut, Office of the United States Attorney, Portland, Oregon, for the appellee.
OPINION
POLLAK, District Judge:
In February 2005, the District Court of Oregon denied defendant Hosvaldo Lopez’s pretrial motion to suppress evidence found in his car. Lopez subsequently pled guilty to possessing methamphetamine with intent to distribute in violation of
I.
At a quarter past noon on March 4, 2004, while two law enforcement officers—members of the West Side Interagency Narcotics Team—were interviewing a witness in a narcotics investigation in the frоnt yard of a residence in Hillsboro, Washington County, Oregon, a man drove up, got out of his car and began to approach the group. The witness, however, motioned the man away, and when one of the officers called the man back, the man turned and drew a gun on the officers. According to the officers, the man appeared to try to fire the weapon but then returned to his car—a green Ford Focus—and sped away.
Based on the two officers’ description of the suspect, an alert was immediately issued for police to look for “an adult, male Hispanic in his 20s, thin build, taller, wearing a white sweater, and armed with a firearm.”1 An accurate description of the attempted shooter’s getaway car—including its make, model, and license plate number—wаs also provided.
At approximately a quarter to one in the afternoon—about half an hour after the front-yard encounter—the Ford Focus
The police staked out the area. About eight hours later, their vigilance was rewarded. Officers observed a white, 1990s Ford Taurus with tinted windows enter the parking lot and park near the Ford Focus. A female passenger, later identified as Alicia Polish, got out of the Ford Taurus, got into the Ford Focus, started it, and drove off, leaving through the west exit of the parking lot and entering the adjoining road. The Ford Taurus also departed; the driver was observed to be a Hispanic male, approximately twenty years old. Although the Ford Taurus left the parking lot through the southeast exit, it then turned onto the road on which the Ford Focus was traveling and proceeded to follow the Ford Focus at a distance of approximately four hundred yards.
Officers stopped both cars, using a “high risk traffic stop” technique involving multiple police cars, officers, and the pointing of firearms. The driver of the Ford Taurus was ordered out of the car at gunpoint, while surrounded by several police cars and officers. He was told to lie on the ground and was placed in handcuffs. Next, he was patted down for weapons; none were found. The police located his wallet and
At the station, Lopez was advised, in Sрanish, of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966), and his right to refuse to consent to a search of his Ford Taurus. Following questioning, he was asked to provide written consent to a search of his vehicle, which he did. During their subsequent search, police found a secret compartment behind the back seat of the car, which contained illicit drugs, cash, and a loaded firearm.
It was ultimately determined that the alleged attempted shooter—the suspect sought on March 4, 2004—was Roberto Lopez Gamez, the registered owner of the Ford Focus, and not appellant Hosvaldo Lopez.
II.
Lopez’s pretrial motion to suppress argued that, under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, his stop, detention, and ensuing custody constituted an illegal seizure and that any statements or other evidence obtained from him or from his vehiclе must be excluded as fruits of that illegality, or as evidence derivative therefrom. The District Court denied Lopez’s motion, holding that (a) the officers had the reasonable suspicion required for an investigative Terry stop (see Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968)), and (b), given that Lopez “substantially fit the description of the suspect,” “the arresting officers had probable cause to take defendant into custody.” The District Court also found that, at the police station, Lopez validly waived his Miranda rights and voluntarily consented to the search of his car.
On appeal, Lopez concedes that the police possessed reasonable suspicion to stop his car, but he maintains that the police lacked probable cause to arrest him and that evidence obtained as a result of that arrest must be suppressed. The government maintains that the arrest was supported by probable cause. According to the government, “[i]t was reasonable to believe that the defendant was either the person involved in the earlier attempted shooting of the police officers or that he was an accessory after the fact, in violation of
III.
“In general, we review determinations of motions to suppress de novo.” United States v. Becker, 23 F.3d 1537, 1539 (9th Cir. 1994) (citing United States v. Khan, 993 F.2d 1368, 1375 (9th Cir. 1993)). This court reviews de novo whether probable cause to arrest Lopez existed, as the question raises mixed questions of law and fact. See Ornelas v. United States, 517 U.S. 690, 699 (1996); United States v. Carranza, 289 F.3d 634, 640 (9th Cir. 2002).
“We may affirm a district court’s denial of a motion to suppress on any basis supported in the record.” United States v. Ruiz, 428 F.3d 877, 880 (9th Cir. 2005); United States v. Albers, 136 F.3d 670, 672 (9th Cir. 1998).
IV.
In our view, the central questions to be addressed in determining whether Lopez’s motion to suppress was properly denied are whether, at the time Lopez, at the police station, consented to the search of his car, (a) he was under arrest, (b) there had been probable cause for that arrest, and (c) probable cause had not been dissipated. Because our answers to the latter two questions are dispositive of this appeal, we do not answer the first question, but rather assume without deciding that the District Court was correct in finding that the investigative stop of Lopez’s vehicle promptly escalated into what, “for Fourth Amendment purposes,” constituted a “full-scale arrest” of Lopez.
In the balance of this opinion, we start by examining what constitutes probable cause. We then address the two theories of probable cause for Lopez’s arrest advanced by the government. We find that the government’s first theory, while initially adequate to support Lopez’s arrest, was no longer viable by the time Lopez consented to the search of his car, since by then the police had acquired additional information that
A. The probable cause standard
[1] Under the Fourth Amendment, a warrantless arrest requires probable cause. See Michigan v. Summers, 452 U.S. 692, 700 (1981). Probable cause to arrest exists when officers have knowledge or reasonably trustworthy information sufficient to lead a person of reasonable caution to believe that an offense has been or is being committed by the person being arrested. Beck v. Ohio, 379 U.S. 89, 91 (1964). Alternatively, this court has defined probable cause as follows: when “under the totality of circumstances known to the arresting officers, a prudent person would have concluded that there was a fair probability that [the defendant] had committed a crime.” United States v. Smith, 790 F.2d 789, 792 (9th Cir. 1986). While conclusive evidence of guilt is of course not necessary under this standard to establish probable cause, “[m]ere susрicion, common rumor, or even strong reason to suspect are not enough.” McKenzie v. Lamb, 738 F.2d 1005, 1008 (9th Cir. 1984) (citing Henry v. United States, 361 U.S. 98, 101 (1959)).
[2] Probable cause is an objective standard. The arresting officers’ subjective intention (i.e., in this case, the crime for which they thought they were arresting Lopez) is immaterial in judging whether their actions were reasonable for Fourth Amendment purposes. See Devenpeck v. Alford, 543 U.S. 146, 153 (2004) (“Our cases make clear that an arresting officer’s state of mind (except for the facts that he knows) is irrelevant to the existence of probable cause . . . . [H]is subjective
In some instances there may initially be probable cause justifying an arrest, but additional information obtained at the scene may indicate that there is less than a fair probability that the defendant has committed or is committing a crime. In such cases, execution of the arrest or continuation of the arrest is illegal. As we explained in United States v. Ortiz-Hernandez, 427 F.3d 567, 574 (9th Cir. 2005), cert. denied, 127 S. Ct. 358 (2006):
A person may not be arrested, or must be released from arrest, if previously established probable cause has dissipated. “As a corollary . . . of the rule that thе police may rely on the totality of facts available to them in establishing probable cause, they also may not disregard facts tending to dissipate probable cause.” Bigford v. Taylor, 834 F.2d 1213, 1218 (5th Cir. 1988); BeVier v. Hucal, 806 F.2d 123, 128 (7th Cir. 1986) (citation omitted) (“The continuation of even a lawful arrest violates the Fourth Amendment when the police discover additional facts dissipating their earlier probable cause.”).
B. Probable cause to arrest Lopez as principal
The District Court was satisfied that there was probable cause to hold Lopez under arrest for the attempted shooting, given Lopez’s observed interaction with the green Ford Focus and the fact that he “substantially fit the description of the suspect.” We conclude, however, that when, subsequent to Lopez’s having been brought to the police station, he was asked to consent to the search of his car, the police lacked probable cause to believe that Lopez was the attempted shooter.
[3] While Lopez matched the general description of the suspect as a young Hispanic man, he did not fit the more specific aspects of the description—a description which had been provided by two trained law enforcement officers and had proved to be entirely accurate with respect to the getaway car. Most notably, Lopez is rather short at 5′6″, while the suspect was described as “taller” or “tall.” Lopez and the suspect also differed with regard to several mutable—and hence less consequential—characteristics or features: The suspect had a gun, but Lopez was found to be unarmed. The suspect did not wear eyeglasses, but Lopez was wearing prescription glasses. And the suspect was described as wearing a sweater, but Lopez, when apprehended, was not wearing a sweater.
[4] “Under the law of this Circuit, mere resemblance to a general description is not enough to establish probable cause.”
[5] In this case, Lopez’s resemblance to the suspect in terms of age, gender, and ethnicity had some, albeit modest, probative weight; however this modest weight was itself undercut by disparities which suggested that Lopez was not the sought-after suspect. Indeed, the government’s brief states that “the critical factor giving rise to probable cause was not the general description of the suspect, but the connection between the defendant and the suspect car, the green Ford Focus.”
[6] The government’s analysis, however, overstates the significance of Lopez’s connection to the getaway сar, insofar as it is contended that the connection shows Lopez was the attempted shooter. But cf. infra Part IV.C. And, more importantly, the government’s analysis fails to account for substantial, countering indicators. The effect of evidence which may support, or incline toward, a finding of probable cause can, of course, be vitiated by countervailing evidence. See Ortiz-Hernandez, 427 F.3d at 574. This was the case here, where
It is well established that a person’s mere presence or “mere propinquity to . . . criminal activity does not, without more, give rise to probable cause.” Ybarra v. Illinois, 444 U.S. 85, 91 (1979) (holding that police lacked probable cause to search a person based solely on his presence in a tavern at a time when the police had reason to believe the bartender possessed heroin for sale). We have distinguished the “mere presence” doctrine from cases in which the “facts and circumstances . . . support an inference that [an] individual is connected to the proximate criminal activity.” United States v. Buckner, 179 F.3d 834, 839 (9th Cir. 1999). Although the government argues that this is such a case, we find this case distinguishable from Buckner and the other cases cited by the government.
In Buckner, we concluded that the “attendant facts and circumstances support[ed] a fair probability” that the defendant—the sole passenger in a car carrying thirty-seven pounds of marijuana hidden in the dashboard and rear panels—“was linked to the crime of drug trafficking.” Id. We noted a number of relevant facts, including the fоllowing: the car belonged to neither occupant and was procured under suspicious circumstances, the car was entering the United States from a Mexican city known as a drug source, and officers considered it typical for drug traffickers to travel in pairs to deflect suspicion. Id. at 837, 839; see also Carranza, 289 F.3d at 640 (finding probable cause where inspectors knew that defendant was sole passenger in vehicle carrying commercial quantity of illegal drugs across the border; there was strong smell of gasoline coming from the vehicle, and gas tanks are frequently used to smuggle drugs; and driver of the vehicle made suspicious, false statements); United States v. Valencia-Amezcua, 278 F.3d 901, 906-08 (9th Cir. 2002) (finding probable cause based on defendant’s physical proximity to the crime scene
[7] The instant case is unlike Buckner, Carranza, and Valencia-Amezcua in several respects. To begin, Lopez was not directly or immediately associated with the scene of the crime (the attempted shooting). The public parking lot to which he delivered Ms. Polish (approximately eight hours after the incident involving the Ford Focus driver and the law enforcement officers) was at least some distance away from the crime scene, and Lopez did not make direct contact with the getaway vehicle—Polish was the one to take possession of the Ford Focus. In Buckner and Carranza, by comparison, the arrested person was present in a car when it was found to be transporting illegal drugs—providing both temporal and physical proximity to the commission of a crime. See Buckner, 179 F.3d at 838; Carranza, 289 F.3d at 637-39; see also Valencia-Amezcua, 278 F.3d at 907-08 (noting defendant’s physical and temporal proximity to the crime scene).
[8] Moreover, we find that attendant facts gathered by the police tended to dissipate, rather than support, probable cause to believe Lopez was the attempted shooter.7 After he was stopped, Lopez was positively identified as Hosvaldo Lopez, the registered owner of the Ford Taurus he was driving. When the police removed Lopez’s driver’s license from his wallet, they could readily compare it with the information they had from the Department of Motor Vehicles regarding the owner of the Ford Focus and see that Lopez and Gamez had different names. The police were also in a position to observe that Lopez’s appearance did not match the Department of Motor Vehicles’ physical description of Gamez.8 It should then have
been manifest that Lopez was not Gamez, the registered owner of the getaway car. Furthermore, police officers testified that “Lopez was actually very cooperative” and responded appropriately and “without hesitation” to all of the officers’ requests. Cf. United States v. Mills, 280 F.3d 915, 921 (9th Cir. 2002) (finding that defendant’s suspicious remarks to the police were a factor supporting probable cause).
[9] By the time Lopez was brought to the police station for questioning and to give consent to the search of his car, the police had observed and gathered a substantial amount of information. Given the totality of the facts the police had assembled by the time they commenced questioning Lopez at the police station, we conclude that the police did not then have probable cause to believe that Lopez was the attempted shooter.
C. Probable cause to arrest Lopez as accessory
Our conclusion that, at the time Lopez was questioned at the police station, the police did not have probable cause to regard Lopez as the attempted shooter does not, however, end our inquiry. The government’s brief on appeal suggests that, even if there was an insufficient basis from which to infer that Lopez was the person responsible for the earlier attempted shooting, there was still probable cause to arrest him as an accessory after the fact under
[11] The elements of the analogous Oregon crime of hindering prosecution are essentially the same—the commission of the underlying crime, acts aiding the perpetrator of that crime in escaping justice, and the intent to frustrate law enforcement—with the important exception that knowledge of the underlying crime is not required. See
[12] The extent to which Lopez fit the general physical description of the attempted shooter is obviously not relevant to an assessment of probable cause to arrest as an accessory under
[13] Although we find a dearth of specifically applicable precedent,11 we are satisfied that the facts known to the police in
this сase provided probable cause under the standard discussed in Part IV.A and the previous paragraph. The Ford Focus had been used as a getaway car,12 and presumably then abandoned, by a man who tried to use a firearm in an attempt to escape the scrutiny of narcotics investigators. The police could reasonably infer that this man, who was apparently ready to gun down a law enforcement officer, was involved in additional criminal activity—specifically, narcotics activity—and that he was also likely to have criminal associates. It was also logical to assume that the attempted shooter would be afraid to return and retrieve the car himself, and, moreover, that he might turn to a trusted associate for help. The background fаcts available to the police thus supported the inference of a fair probability that Lopez knew the Ford Focus was connected to a federal or Oregon crime.
Even in the face of this suspicious behavior, there is, of course, a possibility that Lopez was an unwitting acquaintance of Ms. Polish’s, who simply drove her to the parking lot, with no guilty knowledge or illicit motive. However, the police were not required to believe to an absolute certainty, or by clear and convincing evidence, or even by a preponderance of the available evidence, that Lopez had committed a crime—what was required was a fair probability, given the totality of the circumstances. The police had good reason to suspect that a criminal enterprise (the rеcovery of the Ford Focus, with the intent to impede the identification of the vehicle’s owner, the attempted shooter) was afoot, and that Lopez was playing a key role in that enterprise. Lopez was connected to the Ford Focus—an instrumentality of the underlying crime—and he appeared to be taking steps to avoid detection. Upon being stopped, Lopez apparently offered no explanation for his actions.13 A plausible, innocent explanation for his conduct
[14] We think that Lopez’s role in bringing a driver to rescue the Ford Focus, taken in conjunction with his apparent effort to follow the Ford Focus out of the parking lot, could properly have been perceived by a police officer as suspicious activity. While not of overwhelming evidentiary weight, this activity could have been regarded by a reasonable police officer as grounding an inference that Lopez was assisting a federal offender—the attempted shooter—with the intent to hinder or prevent his apprehension. We therefore find that the police had probable cause to believe Lopez was an accessory after the fact, under
D. The motion to suppress
[15] We have concluded that the knowledge and information available to the police would have led a reasonable officer to believe that there was a fair probability that Lopez was an accessory to a crime committed in the course of the attempted shooting. The police gathered no information tending to dissipate that inference prior to the point at which Lopez consented to the search of his car. Accordingly, we find that, at the point when Lopez signed the consent to search, the police validly held Lоpez under arrest pursuant to probable cause. Because the arrest was justified by probable cause, and the consent to search was voluntary, the District Court correctly denied the motion to suppress.
V.
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the decision of the District Court denying Lopez’s motion to suppress, and we AFFIRM the resulting judgment of conviction and sentence.
AFFIRMED.
NOONAN, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
What the police knew was that Lopez was not the registered owner of the Ford Focus whose rescue he had aided and whose driver he had then taken steps to follow. What would these facts suggest to a reasonable police officer? The police knew that the gunman had engaged in a desperate enterprise—an attempt to break up a police investigation by directing deadly forсe at the police themselves. Would such a criminal have used his own car? Not likely. That Lopez didn’t own the Ford Focus didn’t help him a bit. In terms of diluting probable cause it was a zero, just as his submissive behavior was a zero.
What might have dissipated probable cause was a plausible explanation by Lopez of why he engaged in the rescue of the Ford Focus. At the suppression hearing, he offered no less than two accounts of why he dropped off the lady with the keys to the Ford Focus and why he followed her out of the parking lot. The record is barren of evidence that he offered these explanations to the police at the time of his arrest. Lopez’s failure to give an innocent connection with the car must have loomed large in the mind of the pоlice. Only an unreasonably slack officer would have brushed off the connection.
That Lopez had no idea why he had been pursued from the parking lot, surrounded by police cars, and at gun point
If Lopez was not himself the gunman, it was probable that he was in on the gunman’s scheme. The police knew that the gunman was part оf a drug conspiracy. Why else would the gunman have tried to use a gun to stop a police narcotics investigation? It was reasonable to think that a conspiracy of this kind, leading to an act of violence against law enforcement, must have more than two members. The chances were fair that the gunman would not himself return to the car but use another member of the gang to get it. Arriving, after dark, in a car whose windows were tinted so darkly that they violated state law, Lopez drove directly to the car that had been used in the attempted shooting earlier in the day, dropped off a driver with keys fitting that car, and then, after the kind of evasive maneuvers designed to thwart surveillance, had followed the Focus. There was a fair probability that Lopez’s actions were thоse of, if not the gunman himself, then a fellow conspirator.
As long as Lopez did not offer an explanation of his role—and the record shows no evidence that he did at the police station—a police officer could reasonably believe that they had in custody either the gunman himself or another participant in the drug conspiracy the gunman was trying to defend by his desperate assault on the police. Either way, probable cause was present and undiminished at the time that Lopez consented to the search of his car.
Notes
(c) Provides or aids in providing such person with money, transportation, weapon, disguise or other means of avoiding discovery or apprehension; or . . .
(e) Suppresses by any act of concealment, alteration or destruction physical evidence which might aid in thе discovery or apprehension of such person . . . .
