UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee v. Michael E. WALKER, Jr., Defendant-Appellant.
No. 14-1752.
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted: Sept. 11, 2014. Filed: Nov. 14, 2014.
771 F.3d 449
AFFIRMED.
B. John Burns, III, AFPD, argued, Des Moines, IA, for Appellant.
Marc Krickbaum, AUSA, argued, Des Moines, IA (James M. McHugh, Special AUSA, on the brief), for Appellee.
Before WOLLMAN, LOKEN, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
I. The Suppression Issue
The facts relied on by the district court in denying Walker‘s motion to suppress are not disputed. Shortly before 1:00 a.m., a caller informed emergency dispatch of a drive-by shooting at 1405 Idaho Street in Des Moines, Iowa. The dispatcher reported to police that the caller saw two African-American males getting into a “Suburban,” which then headed east on Cleveland Avenue. Officer Todd Wilshusen, on patrol nearby, responded. He knew that a witness in a recent murder investigation resided at the reported address, and that a suspect in the murder, Corey Rankins, lived two or three blocks east of 1405 Idaho Street. “Approximately a minute” after receiving the dispatch, Wilshusen spotted a Suburban backing out of the driveway to Rankins‘s house, the second vehicle Wilshusen encountered after the dispatch. Unable to see how many people were in the Suburban or their identities, Wilshusen turned his patrol car towards the vehicle and turned on his spotlight. Wilshusen exited his car and approached the Suburban, which had stopped. He saw Walker sitting in the driver‘s side backseat. The other occupants were three women. A search of the Suburban revealed the handgun that Walker seeks to suppress.
Walker argues that Wilshusen lacked reasonable suspicion to stop the Suburban. “For an officer to perform an investigatory stop of a vehicle, there must be reasonable suspicion . . . that criminal activity is afoot,” that is, “some minimal, objective justification for an investigatory stop.” United States v. Farnell, 701 F.3d 256, 261 (8th Cir. 2012) (quotations omitted). We determine whether an officer had reasonable suspicion de novo, evaluating “the totality of the circumstances . . . to see whether the detaining officer has a particularized and objective basis for suspecting legal wrongdoing.” United States v. Humphrey, 753 F.3d 813, 816 (8th Cir. 2014), quoting United States v. Arvizu, 534 U.S. 266, 273 (2002).
II. The Sentencing Issue
Walker argues the district court erred in imposing a four-level enhancement to his advisory guidelines offense level because he “used or possessed [the] firearm . . . in connection with another felony offense.”
Walker‘s Presentence Investigation Report stated that police interviewed the resident of 1405 Idaho Street after she called emergency dispatch. She reported hearing five or six shots outside the residence and saw two males running away and getting in the Suburban. Brought to the scene of the investigative stop, she identified Walker as one of the males. He was “visually tired, sweating, and out of breath,” and a loaded .40 caliber handgun was found in the pouch of the seat in front of him. The PSR recommended imposing the four-level enhancement. In response to Walker‘s objection, the Probation Officer identified “multiple felonious offenses” under the Iowa Code that “could be used to justify” the enhancement. At sentencing, the government established the facts stated in the PSR by the testimony of Officer James Chadwick, who interviewed the resident at the same time Wilshusen was stopping and searching the Suburban. The government argued, as it does on appeal, that Walker‘s conduct violated
At sentencing and on appeal, Walker raised a recurring issue regarding application of the
We construed amended Note 14(C) in United States v. Jackson, 633 F.3d 703, 705-06 (8th Cir. 2011), explaining that:
the plain language of § 2K2.1(b)(6) casts a broad net . . . . Application note 14(C) narrows the scope only slightly by defining “another felony offense” to exclude “the explosive or firearms possession or trafficking offense.” . . . The phrase “the . . . firearms possession . . . offense” in application note 14(C) most plainly refers to the underlying offense of conviction—in [this] case, possession of a firearm by a felon. Thus, the plain language of application note 14(C) excludes only the underlying firearms possession offense of conviction from the definition of “another felony offense.”
The other felony offense at issue in this case,
a person who goes armed with a dangerous weapon concealed on or about the person, or who, within the limits of any city, goes armed with a pistol or revolver, or any loaded firearm of any kind, whether concealed or not, or who knowingly carries or transports in a vehicle a pistol or revolver, commits an aggravated misdemeanor.
At sentencing, Walker argued that the district court “can‘t use another firearms offense” as the basis for applying the four-level enhancement. That argument was contrary to the plain language of Note 14(C) as construed in Jackson. On appeal, without citing Jackson, Walker complains that the district court, while finding by a preponderance of the evidence that Walker was involved in the shooting at 1405 Idaho Street, did not identify what other offense under state law Walker had committed. But this omission, if an error at all, was harmless because the facts as found by the court obviously supported a charge that Walker had violated
At oral argument, defense counsel put forward a different argument, suggesting that this case falls within the purview of Lindquist, where we held that the state law offense at issue—acquiring a handgun without a valid permit—was not “another felony offense” for purposes of the four-level enhancement because it “involved essentially the same conduct as his conviction for being a felon in possession of a firearm.” 421 F.3d at 756. We addressed this issue in Jackson, where we limited the rule in Lindquist to cases where a defendant “could not have committed the underlying federal offense without also violating the state offense that the district court used to support the [enhancement].” 633 F.3d at 707. That was true in Lindquist because state law precluded convicted felons from obtaining permits to acquire handguns.
Here, as in Jackson, Walker was not “doomed to automatically commit the additional felony when he violated
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
