Lead Opinion
The defendant, Marc Notorianni, appeals from his conviction (after a bench trial) for possession, with intent to distribute, cocaine. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). He was sentenced to a year in prison, to be followed by a special parole term, and fined $5,000. The only issue on appeal is whether the search of his luggage at O’Hare Airport in Chicago violated the Fourth Amendment. Since the district judge believed the version of the events at O’Hare given by the officers who conducted the search, and Notorianni does not argue that their version is incredible, we are bound to accept it as true for purposes of this appeal.
Two experienced plainclothes officers of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Labik and Streicher, watched passengers dis
The government concedes that the officers’ inspired hunch did not amount to probable cause to arrest Notorianni, that it was not till they found the cocaine in the second suitcase that they had probable cause to arrest him or even that lesser degree of suspicion that will justify the sort of brief detention (“Terry stop,” after Terry v. Ohio,
So we do not think the voluntariness of Notorianni’s consent to the search of his luggage is an issue in this appeal. The only issue is whether Notorianni was detained when he gave his consent to the search. If he was, there was an unconsti
The applicable legal standard is no longer in doubt in this circuit. In United States v. Black,
It might appear that a test based on the perceived freedom of movement of the accosted individual would invite all sorts of tricky psychological inquiries. But this road to legal indeterminacy has been closed off by our holding in Black that the test is an objective one — the relevant perception that of the reasonable man rather than that of the actual defendant — an approach borrowed from Justice Stewart’s plurality opinion in United States v. Mendenhall,
So the question here is not whether Notorianni in fact believed himself free not to answer Agent Labik’s questions but whether a reasonable, which is to say the average, person in Notorianni’s position would have felt free to decline to answer. And we think the answer has to be yes. We know from Royer and Black and a host of other airport-surveillance cases that merely accosting a person in an airport, identifying yourself as a federal agent, and asking the person whether he is willing to answer questions do not create a setting in which the average person does not feel free to thumb his nose at the agent. (Maybe this is a wrong guess about what the average person feels in this situation but it is the law of this circuit.) An additional factor in this case is that the agent told Notorianni that he was conducting a narcotics investigation. But we cannot think that this made the circumstances coercive. On
Although none of the facts of this case seem to take it out of the orbit of our previous decisions, we are troubled that the district judge, while refusing to suppress the fruits of the search, did not make a specific finding that a reasonable person in Notorianni’s position would have felt free to ignore Labik when Labik asked to question him. Maybe an implicit finding to this effect can be inferred from the judge’s statement that “the second question to be resolved is ... Were they [Notorianni and Miss Marsh] free to go — come and go?,” followed shortly by, “I think the reviewing courts have implicitly viewed that particular conduct as not a seizure based upon the facts of the cases that have been decided.” But, in any event, we know the judge believed the officers’ version of what happened; and under the objective test that is the law in this circuit that version established as a matter of law that Notorianni was not seized.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I share the majority’s doubts whether the district court here made the key finding that Notorianni was “free to go.” Instead, Judge Aspen punctuated his reference to this subject with a question mark. The majority is ready to overlook this deficiency and to conclude as a matter of law, based on the officers’ version of the encounter, that Notorianni was free to leave. I think this approach is an unacceptable departure from the line of airport search and seizure cases in which we have emphasized reliance on the ultimate factual finding by the district court and in which we have reviewed this finding under the clearly erroneous standard. See, e.g., United States v. Black,
It is perfectly appropriate to indulge what may be a modest fiction that a person being casually questioned by a policeman about possible criminal activity feels entirely free to say nothing and move on. Such a psychological assumption does no violence to the fourth amendment and makes it possible for police to cope with drug traffic in a place like O’Hare Airport. But I would require almost without exception, an unequivocal determination by the finder of fact of the key and crucial ultimate fact — whether a reasonable person, under all the numerous facts and circumstances of the case, would have felt free to leave. For example, what is the significance of Labik’s failure to advise the defendant that he was not required to answer questions? The requirement of unequivocal factual findings is in my view hardly excessive in light of the almost unlimited combinations of factual circumstances which surround a procedure obviously open to subtle and not so subtle abuse.
The facts of this case may be, as the majority phrases it, within the “orbit” of
I would therefore remand for further findings of fact by the district court.
Notes
. We have recognized from the start that the proper application of the Black test (from United States v. Black, 675 F.2d 129, 134 (7th Cir.1982), cert. denied, — U.S.-,
