*312 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Defendant Omar Sharif McKoy, accused of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base and possession of cocaine base with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of a school in violation of §§ 841(a)(1) and 860(a), moves to suppress drugs seized by the police during an encounter with police on February 6, 2003. I find that the pat frisk search of McKoy conducted during an investigatory stop for a traffic violation was not supported by reasonable suspicion that he posed a threat to the officers’ safety. I will therefore allow the motion to suppress.
I. FINDINGS OF FACT
Having afforded the parties a full opportunity to develop the record in this matter, I find the following. On the afternoon of February 6, 2003, Boston Police Sergeant Michael Stratton and Officer Thomas Joyce were patrolling the Grove Hall neighborhood in Boston in plainclothes driving an unmarked Ford. They believed the neighborhood to be a high-crime area. At shortly after 4:00 P.M., Stratton and Joyce were driving down Cheney Street approaching Maple Street. They slowed their vehicle as they approached Maple to watch for traffic and to survey the area. When they came upon the intersection of Cheney and Maple, Stratton brought the car to a stop after seeing the defendant’s vehicle parked with its front extending out into the intersection blocking a handicapped ramp and with a license plate improperly displayed inside the windshield.
Stratton testified that Mr. McKoy “appeared startled” and “began to look from side to side, not looking back in our direction” after the two made eye contact. Joyce recounted the moment by testifying that he saw “a black male sitting in the driver’s seat. When he made eye contact with us, he looked away, began to act a little nervous, in my opinion, and we decided to investigate further.” Stratton also recalled that McKoy leaned and moved his arm toward the console area when eye contact was made.
The two officers left their vehicle and approached Mr. McKoy. 1 Upon approaching the vehicle, Sergeant Stratton saw the defendant once again move his arm. Although he was not entirely certain what McKoy was doing, Stratton testified that it looked like the defendant was putting something down. Joyce also saw the defendant move at this stage. In response to this movement, Stratton said to Joyce “ ‘[W]hat’s he doing [?][H]e’s doing something,’ or words to that effect.” Joyce— who, according to his testimony, was afraid for his safety — requested that the defen *313 dant get out of the car 2 and began to pat-frisk him. Not feeling any weapons in his waist area, Joyce moved to McKoy’s pockets where he felt something that he believed to be a bag of marijuana. His interest piqued, Joyce — using street slang for a small bag of marijuana — asked “what do you have, a sack on you?”, or something to that effect, to which Mr. McKoy replied affirmatively and was placed under arrest. A search of the ear produced no further evidence. A search of McKoy’s person resulted in the police seizing 5.63 grams of cocaine.
II. DISCUSSION
The Fourth Amendment protects “the right of people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures ....,” U.S. Const. amend. IV, and “[t]he question of whether an officer has reasonable grounds to ‘stop’ and ‘frisk’ falls directly within the Fourth Amendment’s proscription against unreasonable searches and seizures.”
United States v. Walker,
This is not to say that officers are entitled to frisk anyone they briefly detain. To have an adequate foundation for such limited searches, the officer “must have constitutionally adequate, reasonable grounds for doing so.”
Sibron v. New York,
It also must be kept in mind that because the police, regardless of their subjective intent for doing so, may stop anyone who has committed a traffic violation,
see Whren v. U.S.,
As already noted, the Fourth Amendment permits officers to detain an individual briefly on reasonable suspicion of criminal activity and to frisk him for weapons whenever there is an objectively reasonable belief that the subject is armed and dangerous.
4
This principle can be applied in a strained manner, because — considering the magnitude of the consequences of any one motorist drawing a firearm on a police officer — it is arguably objectively reasonable for an officer approaching virtually any strange person in a vehicle always to feel in danger.
See United States v. Thomas,
Courts have developed factors, and have called for the police to identify articulable facts, warranting frisks in an attempt to place real limits on police conduct during investigatory stops. But these boundaries have been subjected to constant pressure in the case law. This should come as no surprise considering the posture in which most of these cases appear before judges. Searches that result in no weapons or contraband being found do not — as a practical matter — make it to the courthouse door.
*315
Yet, they are events of real constitutional and cultural significance that courts are almost entirely free from addressing.
See Illinois v. Wardlow,
Courts are left, as a consequence, to define the overarching boundaries within which police must work in the context of discrete cases where officers make compelling, and often quite reasonable claims — as a practical if not a legal matter — that they felt in danger, and recovered probative evidence. The results — if not in each case, then as a broad trend — are predictable. Courts defer to the officer’s judgment and evidence is admitted in cases where the predictions and concerns of the officers have by definition been substantiated. Al *316 though the evidence itself is ordinarily not identified as part of the formal legal analysis, it is difficult to conclude it was objectively unreasonable for the officers to believe a suspect was armed when in fact he was.
But the heart of the reasonableness analysis in such cases, it must be remembered, is a balancing of interests — the police in their physical safety and citizens in their liberty. For this to be carried out on something other than an uncalibrated scale, the real costs to be borne on both sides must be acknowledged. If Terry becomes an automatic frisk rule in practice, 6 the Fourth Amendment rights of citizens — particularly those driving cars in high-crime neighborhoods — will be eviscerated. 7 To avoid that result, the reality must be faced that the government will have to sacrifice certain criminal convictions where they have more than enough probative evidence to convict. That, of course, also has significant social costs. Nothing in the Fourth Amendment, nor in Terry and its progeny, however, excuses the imposition of such costs to purchase a measure of privacy.
Turning to the facts and circumstances informing the officers’ reaction in this case: Mr. McKoy had violated two traffic ordinances; made a leaning movement when the officers first saw him; appeared nervous and avoided eye contact with the officers; and again moved as the officers got out of their unmarked cruiser and approached Mr. McKees car. In addition, the encounter took place in what was described as a “high-crime” area where, the officers were aware, there had been two incidents on successive evenings earlier that week when windows of private security vehicles had been shot out. The government argues that when considering the totality of the circumstances in this case, the officers were justified in frisking Mr. McKoy. In approaching the government’s argument, my “inquiry is a dual one— whether the officer’s action was justified at its inception, and whether it was reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first place.”
Terry,
Here, the validity of the stop is not the issue.
See
note-3
supra.
An officer need not refrain from stopping someone for a minor offense for fear the person may be dangerous. In
United States v. Villanueva,
It was highly desirable, if not the duty, of the patrol officers to make their presence felt and warn against future misbehavior even though doing so, in the officers’ opinion, would call for a safety search. Our sole question is the correctness of that opinion: “[WJhether a reasonably prudent man in the circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his safety or that of others was in danger.”
*317
Id.
at 199 (quoting
Terry,
It is certainly the case that while individual factors might not be sufficient, a collection of individually insufficient factors can give the police justification to frisk a detainee: “In reviewing the reasonableness of a
Terry
stop, a court must consider all of the relevant circumstances, which ‘are not to be dissected and viewed singly’; rather they must be considered ds a whole.”
Gilliard,
A.
“Nervousness”
— The government attempts to justify the frisk by first citing the defendant’s apparent nervousness upon seeing the officers. The case law makes clear that nervousness is a factor the police may consider.
See, e.g., Gilliard,
Nervousness may warrant even less weight when it is manifested in particular contexts. Justice Stevens, describing the inferences to be drawn when the police see somebody flee their presence, wrote:
Among some citizens, particularly minorities and those residing in high crime areas, there is also the possibility that the fleeing person is entirely innocent, but, with or without justification, believes that contact with the police can itself be dangerous, apart from any criminal activity associated with the officer’s sudden presence. For such a person, unprovoked flight is neither “aberrant” or “abnormal.” Moreover, these concerns and fears are known to the police officers themselves, and are validated by law enforcement investigations into their own practices. Accordingly, the evidence supporting the reasonableness of these beliefs is too pervasive to be dismissed as random or rare, and too persuasive to be disparaged as inconclu *318 sive or insufficient. In any event, just as we do not require “scientific certainty” for our eommonsense conclusion that unprovoked flight can sometimes indicate suspicious motives, neither do we require scientific certainty to conclude that unprovoked flight can occur for other, innocent reasons.
Illinois v. Wardlow,
B.
“High-Crime” Locale
— The government also cites the high-crime rate in the neighborhood (including specific knowledge of two recent evening shootings of security car windows) as a factor to be considered.
9
Police are permitted to do so; but, again, that alone is not a sufficient basis to support a frisk or even, for that matter, a stop.
See United States v. Stanley,
C.
“Movements”
— As already noted, it was natural to exhibit some nervousness in the presence of police officers. Without a more specific showing that this was such disproportionate nervousness that it can suggest consciousness of guilt of some crime involving dangerous weapons, I cannot find that simply looking nervous and avoiding eye contact with police in a high-crime area after committing a traffic violation provides sufficient grounds to frisk. The government, however, adds an additional layer to be considered in the analysis: that Mr. McKoy was seen leaning forward and moving his right arm. The real question, then, becomes whether nervousness in a high-crime area, when combined with the movements made by the defendant, provided the officers with the “reasonable belief [Mr. McKoy was] armed.”
Terry,
Certain movements enter into the equation when considering the totality of the circumstances confronting police officers. Attempting to meet their burden in this case, the government analogizes the situation here to those in a number of cases where what were labelled “furtive gestures” were cited by courts denying motions to suppress evidence. In so doing, however, the government’s argument veers close to proposing that movement by someone being approached by a police officer is by definition furtive. That is not the *320 case. The movement must be interpreted in context to determine if it is actually furtive, if it in fact gives rise to a reasonable belief that the suspect is armed and dangerous.
Even after fully considering the movement under the totality of the circumstances, I find that the government has failed to show that the frisk of Mr. McKoy was permissible. The eases relied upon provide excellent examples of when officers may frisk a suspect. But they are quite different from the record in this case. An extended discussion will illustrate how far this ease is from those properly permitting a frisk.
In
United States v. Nash,
The government also cites the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Den-ney,
*321
The “furtive gesture” in
Denney
teaches that movement alone is not what courts are to consider, but rather movement signifying danger within a particular context. Applying the ruling in
Denney
to the case before me — a case where there was no other indication of firearms, no aggressive behavior by the defendant, and no exertion of authority and disobedience of that authority before the movement at issue— would do “enormous violence to context.”
Blackie v. Maine,
The government also relies on
United States v. Moorefield,
[I]n response to [the officer’s] instruction to [the defendant] to remain in the vehicle with his hands in view, [the defendant] attempted to exit the vehicle and then raised and lowered his hands several times. In addition, [the defendant] leaned back and appeared to shove something down toward his waist.
There is also no testimony in this case that the officers saw any physical indications that the defendant was armed, unlike, for instance,
United States v. Mitchell,
Finally, as already noted, no inferences could be drawn from the type of crime Mr. McKoy was suspected of committing. This is important to remember when attempting, as the government does, to analogize this ease to ones such as
United States v. Cole,
One case cited by the government in its attempt to show that the search was justified could be read to admit evidence in circumstances no more suspicious than those in this case. In an unpublished D.C. Circuit opinion,
United States v. Draine,
In sum, the only indications in this case that Mr. McKoy was dangerous were (a) generalized notions regarding the neighborhood, not inferences drawn from his suspected crime, and (b) movements and nervousness in the presence of police, not physical reactions in contravention of an order to stop moving or apparent efforts at concealment. To admit the evidence would be a legal determination that if one commits a traffic violation in a high-crime neighborhood he will be subject to a frisk whenever he appears nervous and moves. The case law does not support such a simplistic and far-reaching conclusion and I decline to adopt it.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the mo *323 tion to suppress is GRANTED. 14
Notes
. It is not entirely clear from the record whether or when McKoy became aware that Stratton and Joyce were police officers. Following the hearing in this matter, Stratton submitted a supplemental affidavit asserting that he wears his badge on his belt and, although he cannot remember exactly where Joyce wore his badge on that day, is sure that it was visible. The affidavit also mentions other indications that the two were police officers. There is no indication that the defendant questioned in any way the authority of Joyce to remove him from the car. Therefore, I find that the defendant knew he was dealing with police officers — if not when they were in their car — at least at the point when they were approaching his car on foot. Yet, as this memorandum will detail, even if I assume he knew they were police officers the moment he first saw them, the frisk would not be reasonable under the facts in this case. And, to the extent McKoy did not know the two men were police officers, the frisk becomes even less justifiable, because the nervousness and movements witnessed could not be interpreted as reactions to a police presence.
. It is not entirely clear from the face of Joyce’s testimony when the defendant made his last movement in relation to when he was asked to leave his vehicle. One portion of Joyce's testimony seems to state that McKoy leaned forward after Joyce had requested he leave the car:
As we get to the car, again, when we asked the person, Mr. McKoy, to step out of the car, he again reached forward. And we couldn’t see what he was doing. I wanted him out of the car as quick as possible, because, yes, I was in fear for my safety at that time.
Examining the encounter in context, however, in light of the testimony of Stratton, I find that the second movement was witnessed as the officers approached, before McKoy was asked to leave the car, and that promptly upon being asked, McKoy left his vehicle.
. Of course, the police did not actually stop the car in this case. At the point when they asked McKoy to leave the car, however, they had seized him for purposes of the Fourth Amendment.
The police officers in this case were justified in stopping the defendant and effecting this initial seizure because they had probable cause to believe he had committed two separate traffic violations.
See Whren v. U.S.,
. The Terry doctrine is designed as an amelioration of the rigors of traditional Fourth Amendment rules. The doctrine attempts to provide police officers with greater flexibility while also creating enforceable limits in the face of practical realities making such enforcement quite difficult. Some believe that the very concept of frisking a suspect on mere suspicion has insufficient constitutional footing. For instance, Justice Scalia has observed that he is
unaware ... of any precedent for a physical search of a person thus temporarily detained for questioning. Sometimes, of course, the temporary detention of a suspicious character would be elevated to a full custodial arrest on probable cause.... At that point, it is clear that the common law would permit not just a protective "frisk,” but a full physical search incident to arrest. When, however, the detention did not rise to the level of a full-blown arrest ..., there appears to be no clear support at common law for physically searching the suspect.
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
. The civil enforcement of constitutional remedies is by and large not a productive — and consequently in my nearly two decades of experience in dealing with such issues has been an infrequently used — manner of invoking judicial scrutiny in this setting because civil rights plaintiffs face an uphill battle in enforcing the Fourth Amendment by way of alternatives to the exclusionary rule. See 1 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 1.10 (4th ed.) (noting that most of what "has been written concerning those other remedies” conclude "that these other remedies are inadequate”).
[T]he potential advantages of civil suits are seldom realized. Such suits are few and far between, and therefore relatively punchless as punishing mechanisms, for a number of reasons: potential plaintiffs' ignorance of their rights and fear of police reprisals; the expense of civil litigation; the obstacles created by incarceration; and the inchoate nature of the injury (which deters lawyers as well as potential plaintiffs from bringing suit). Those suits that are brought are seldom completely successful, again for a number of reasons: the good-faith defenses available to officer-defendants; the unsympathetic nature of many plaintiffs (who are often criminals, or at least associated with criminality); the biases of juries; and, as with exclusion, the efficacy of police perjury. Even if the officer loses, he or she is often indemnified, judgment proof, or both, minimizing the impact of the verdict on the officer.
Christopher Slobogin, Why Liberals Should Chuck the Exclusionary Rule, 1999 U. Ill. L.Rev. 363, 385-86 (1999) (footnotes omitted).
In one study of litigation data in the Central District of California from 1980-81, the authors found that "constitutional tort plaintiffs do significantly .worse than non-civil rights litigants in every measurable way” and "are less likely to have counsel than other litigants.” Theodore Eisenberg & Stewart Schwab, The Reality of Constitutional. Tort Litigation, 72 Cornell L.Rev. 641, 677] 680 (1987).
The lack of success of the vast majority of civil rights claims against federal officers (so-called
Bivens
actions), where the defendants also enjoy qualified immunity, is also illuminating.
See Vaughan & Potter 1983, Ltd. v. United States,
No. 92-F-1767,
. See David A. Harris, Particularized Suspicion, Categorical Judgments: Supreme Court Rhetoric Versus Lower Court Reality Under Terry v. Ohio, 72 St. John's L.Rev. 975, 977 (1998) ("Soon, given the direction of the law, this system of categorical rules will allow police to stop and frisk almost anyone they want, with minimal interference from the courts.”).
. See David A. Harris, Frisking Every Suspect: The Withering of Terry, 28 U.C. Davis L.Rev. 1, 6 (1994) ("If ... we now think that only automatic frisks following every Terry stop can make officers safe, we should be willing not only to say so directly, but also to confront the full range of consequences of that conclusion.”).
.It should be added that although I base my findings on the assumption that Mr. McKoy, at least at some stage before leaving the car, knew that he was dealing with police officers, that is less than clear from the record. Therefore, there is even more reason to question the significance of his nervousness. If Mr. McKoy was not entirely sure who these men approaching him were, he had every reason to be nervous and to avoid eye contact.
The government's claim that he would have no reason to think anybody but police officers would approach him is not at all persuasive. People confront their fellow citizens with bad intentions for any number of reasons or no reason at all. It is one of the reasons the officers would be on patrol: to protect the residents of the neighborhood from such encounters. In that way, the high-crime rate of the neighborhood is not only a factor that may be considered when assessing police conduct, but also when interpreting the conduct of Mr. McKoy. In any event, even assuming Mr. McKoy was aware from the very beginning that these were police officers coming toward him, his nervousness, while a factor, gets the officers only a small measure closer to being justified to search the defendant's person.
. The location of the stop is described as "an area of increased violence involving firearms and drug activity" in a Boston Police Incident Report dated February 6, 2003 authored by Sergeant Stratton regarding the arrest of Mr. McKoy. The February 6 report also states that "officers had knowledge of two incidents at this location where a marked security cruiser was shot at.” The two shootings of security vehicle windows are the subject of a February 1, 2003 incident report by other officers.
. Judge Bownes, in his dissent in Trullo, warned against the reflexive lessening of privacy interests in high-crime neighborhoods:
[W]e are asked to find reasonable suspicion on the basis of quite general characteristics of a sizeable area of the city, when the suspicion was not grounded in any specific information about date, time, or the partic *319 ular individuals.... It would seem that, for the court, the [neighborhood] is a per se region of lessened expectation of privacy, at all times of the day and at all periods of the year, where practically unlimited deference is granted to police officers' discretion.... [T]he court ... has effectively eliminated any fourth amendment scrutiny of police suspicions concerning activity [in that part of the neighborhood].__
Trullo,
. See Margaret Raymond, Down the Comer, Out in the Street: Considering the Character of the Neighborhood in Evaluating Reasonable Suspicion, 60 Ohio St. L.J. 99, 100-01 (1999) ("Observations of minimal significance are sometimes elevated to reasonable suspicion based on the character of the neighborhood in which the suspect is found; in a 'high-crime' area, standing on a street corner or sitting in a parked car have been held to amount to reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot. Such cases raise the significant danger that persons are being subjected to stops based on the neighborhoods in which they are found, rather than the behavior in which they engage while in a particular neighborhood.”) (footnotes omitted).
. The government also references an unpublished opinion by the First Circuit,
United States v. Greene,
. The court did discuss the issue although it did not need to reach the question as to the driver, since he was challenging a search of a fellow passenger, a claim for which he had no standing.
. The defendant also seeks to suppress the evidence in this case by arguing that the officer, upon feeling the marijuana, was not immediately able to discern that it was contraband pursuant to the "plain feel” doctrine. In addition, he contends that the officer’s subsequent question regarding the substance violated his Miranda rights. Because the evidence will be excluded on other grounds, it is unnecessary to reach these questions. I note, however, that for the protections of Miranda to apply, the subject must be both in custody and subject to an interrogation. In this case, Mr. McKoy was simply the subject of an investigatory stop at the time he got out of his car and was frisked.
Additionally, the officer did not immediately seize the contraband upon feeling it. Instead, he inquired of the defendant what it was. Absent custody, the officer was free to ask, and the defendant was free not to respond. He did respond, however, and upon the defendant’s answering, the officer had probable cause to arrest him and did so. The seizure and subsequent search — if the initial frisk had been permissible — would have been incident to that lawful arrest.
