Lead Opinion
Pursuing an interlocutory appeal “from a decision or order of a district court suppressing or excluding evidence,” 18 U.S.C. § 3731, the government appeals the district court’s decision to suppress evidence seized from defendants-appellees, Brian J. Nee and Kevin M. Kelley. Kelley and Nee were charged with violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), which prohibits the possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, after police discovered two loaded weapons in Nee’s car during the course of a traffic stop. Although the district court found that the initial stop was permissible under Terry v. Ohio,
On appeal, the government argues that there was no constitutional violation, either because the district court erred in its factual findings about the purpose of the search, or, in the alternative, because the officers had an objectively reasonable basis for conducting a protective sweep of the car that justified the search irrespective of its true object, pursuant to Michigan v. Long,
I.
At approximately 9:30 p.m. on March 10, 1999, Boston Police Officers Gillis, Yalmo-kas and Cellucci, along with Massachusetts State Police Trooper Ball, were on duty in an unmarked car in the Dorchester section of Boston. The officers observed a green Ford Mustang and noted that: 1) there was a hole where the trunk lock should have been; 2) the rear license plate was hanging from a single screw; 3) there was no front license plate; and 4) the vehicle had dark tinted windows. Suspecting that the car might be stolen, the officers decided to stop the car and investigate it. Before they could, the car, driven by Nee with Kelley in the passenger seat and a third passenger, Brian Wallace, in the back, pulled into a gas station. The officers saw Nee exit the vehicle and begin to pump gas, and Kelley get out of the car from the passenger side.
The officers turned on their police lights and drove into the gas station. Trooper Ball approached Nee, offered a greeting, and advised him that the car he was driving had “no front plate, [a] rear plate hanging off, [a] trunk lock popped and windows [that were] too dark.” In the exchange that followed, Nee stated that
Ball directed Cellucei to get Nee’s driver’s license from the center console. Before doing so, Cellucei frisked Wallace who was still seated in the back seat, and again, no weapons were found. Officer Cellucei told the passenger to get out of the car. He and Officer Gillis then visually inspected the car through the passenger and driver’s side doors respectively before Cellucei entered the vehicle. Both saw a screwdriver located in the passenger door as well as some damage to the interior that was consistent with a stolen vehicle.
At this point the district court ceased to credit the officers’ story.
The district court rejected this account of the discovery of the guns. After noting that neither Cellucei nor Gillis testified to having seen the knapsack when they visually inspected the interior of the car, the court concluded that the knapsack was not located on the floor in front of the seat as the officers had testified. Instead, the district court found that the officers had not mentioned seeing the knapsack because it was actually located underneath the passenger seat, and that Cellucei had conducted an intentional search of the vehicle for evidence of a crime. As part of this search, therefore, Cellucei pulled the knapsack out from under the seat and then discovered the weapons that led to the arrest of the three men.
Before trial, Nee, Kelley, and Wallace filed motions to suppress the two loaded firearms found in the knapsack.
II.
In determining whether, in the absence of probable cause, an investigatory seizure and search violates the Fourth Amendment, we use the two-prong test set forth in Terry v. Ohio,
Limited searches of a person for weapons are constitutionally permissible adjuncts to a Terry stop if “a reasonably prudent man in the circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his safety or that of others was in danger.” Terry,
By its own admission, the government did not anticipate that the district court would not credit the officers’ “inadvertent” discovery description of the search of the vehicle. As a result, the government’s argument before the district court that this case fell under Long was based upon the inadvertent discovery of the guns by Cellucci, following his entry into the vehicle for the limited purpose of retrieving the license. According to the government, this entry was valid as a protective search under Long because it allowed the officers to continue their investigation while also excluding Nee from an area that could possi
On appeal, the government seeks to revive this Long argument through a challenge to the district court’s factual finding that Cellucci entered the vehicle to conduct an intentional search for evidence of a crime or contraband. “The findings of the district court after a hearing on a pretrial motion to suppress are binding on the court of appeals unless they are clearly erroneous.” United States v. Watson,
The government’s arguments, however, are unpersuasive. “Where evaluations of witnesses’ credibility are concerned, we are especially deferential to the district court’s judgment; we may overturn its decision only if, after reviewing all of the evidence, we have a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” United States v. Jones,
Officer Gillis testified that he saw an ignition switch on the passenger side floor of the vehicle. This was precisely where Cellucci claimed the knapsack was located, yet Gillis did not mention seeing the knapsack until after Cellucci had placed his hand on it. The district court also questioned the need for Gillis to assist Cellucci in his efforts to retrieve a license from a now empty car, noting that “[i]t did not take two officers, Gillis ‘leaning’ from the driver’s side, Cellucci ‘leaning’ from the passenger’s side, to retrieve Nee’s driver’s license from the center console of the car.” Moreover, the officers could have called in the license plate of the car to determine if it had been reported stolen or to check whether Nee was telling the truth when he said the car belonged to his wife, thereby addressing the suspicion that the officers testified prompted the stop of the car. Instead, the officers pressed forward with Cellucci’s entry and search of the vehicle. In light of such evidence, we do not have the necessary basis—a “definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed”—for rejecting the court’s credibility determinations. Jones,
The district court’s credibility determination that Cellucci entered Nee’s car in search of evidence of a crime undercuts the Michigan v. Long argument made by the government before the district court. Under established precedent, such a search exceeds the limited boundaries of the exception to the probable cause requirement created by Terry and Long. The purpose of a Terry “search is not to discover evidence of crime, but to allow the officer to pursue his investigation without
III.
Invoking Whren v. United States,
The implications of this argument about the scope of the Terry /Long exception to the probable cause requirement are substantial. Accepting it would require the reversal of our decision in Lott,
It is a cardinal principle that “[tissues not squarely raised in the district court will not be entertained on appeal.” United States v. Barnett,
The government filed four legal memoranda objecting to suppression of the evidence seized pursuant to the search of Nee’s vehicle. Although the cornerstone of the government’s claim on appeal as to the irrelevance of the officers’ subjective intentions is the purported conflict between Whren and Lott, that conflict is not mentioned in any of these memoranda. Indeed, the government cites to Whren only twice, both times for the simple proposition that the officers could stop the vehicle and order the occupants out of the car. Though Lott is discussed, the government only distinguishes the facts in that case from the facts here as the officers presented them, rather than attacking the legal principles underlying the Lott holding.
Moreover, there is nothing in the memo-randa that serves as an equivalent to the alternative argument the government now presses on appeal. Though the government does suggest that the officers were entitled to perform a full search of the car for weapons, this suggestion is based upon the officers’ subjective motivations, as they were expected to testify to them. Indeed, the subjective motivations of the officers are central to the analysis in the government’s memoranda. The government never argues that these subjective motivations are irrelevant or that the district court should ignore the officers’ subjective purpose and undertake an objective analysis of the facts. “Judges are not expected to be mindreaders. Consequently, a litigant has an obligation to spell out its arguments squarely and distinctly, or else forever hold its peace.” United States v. Zannino,
Although the raise-or-waive rule is not absolute, “it is relaxed only in extréme cases. Arguments not raised below will be entertained on appeal only in horrendous
Affirmed.
Notes
. Despite these indicia that the car might be stolen, the car in fact belonged to Nee's wife and was properly in his possession.
. The district court initially found as fact in its order granting the motions to suppress that Officer Gillis had not confirmed the presence of a screwdriver or ignition switch on the passenger side of the vehicle. As the court acknowledged when denying Wallace’s later motion to sever, see infra at 13 (discussing motion), that specific finding was erroneous.
.The district court granted Nee’s motion in an order dated June 16, 2000. However, the court afforded additional time to Kelley and Wallace so that they could submit memoran-
. The government does not challenge on appeal the district court’s conclusion that the officers lacked probable cause to conduct a search of the vehicle.
. The government concedes that the district "court ... found that the officers discovered the gun by engaging in an illegal search of the car, and then the knapsack, for contraband.” Government's Brief at 9; see also id. at 26, 27 & 31. Unlike the dissent, we cannot read the decision of the district court in any other way.
. Even on appeal, the government's attack on Lott has the flavor of a work in progress. In its principal brief, the government claims in a footnote that the "extent to which Lott remains viable after Whren is obviously suspect.” Despite the fact that Lott is directly on point and controlling precedent unless Whren does overrule it, see, e.g., United States v. Wogan,
Dissenting Opinion
The Michigan v. Long standard is clear: a protective area search of the car is constitutional as long as the police officers can point to “specific and articulable facts which ... reasonably warrant [them] in believing that the suspect is dangerous and the suspect may gain immediate control of the weapons.”
At the suppression hearing, Officer Cel-lucci stated that he entered the car for the sole purpose of retrieving Nee’s license. Cellucci testified that while he was reaching to the center console, the passenger seat gave way, causing him to “inadvertently” discover the weapons inside the knapsack. The district court discounted this testimony, finding Cellucci’s account “simply not credible.” Instead, it found that Cellucci intended to search the car when he entered it. The district court made no further finding concerning the purpose of the search. A protective area search under Long is consistent with these findings. That is, even if the officers lied about entering the car to retrieve Nee’s license and were in fact conducting an intentional search for weapons, Long permits such an intentional search if the officers believed that the suspects might have access to weapons located therein. The question for the court, then, was whether the officers did in fact possess a reason
The majority, however, infers from the district court’s opinion that the search was for contraband, not weapons, thereby rendering a Long analysis irrelevant. See Lott,
First, the inferred factual finding cannot be squared with the record, which suggests that the officers consistently suspected that the car contained weapons. It is uncontested that upon entering the scene, the officers frisked all of the defendants. Cf. Lott,
Second, other aspects of the district court’s opinion tend to support a conclusion that the officers had a reasonable fear for their safety. For example, in its conclusions of law, the court states that “where [the officers’] suspicions went be
Finally, I am concerned by the fact that the Michigan v. Long argument, although raised in the district court, is not so much as cited in the district court’s orders. As the hearing transcript reveals, it was also not addressed orally.
To conclude, I believe that the district court failed to complete its analysis below by neglecting to determine whether the officers’ intentional search was nevertheless a permissible area search under Michigan v. Long. For this reason, I would remand this case for further findings in that vein. I respectfully dissent.
. But see United States v. Menard,
. Given that the officers conceded from the outset that they had no probable cause to search the car, moreover, the Long analysis appears to be the only analysis pertinent to this case.
. Interestingly, the majority, like the district court, suggests that the officers’ suspicion was pretextual, noting that if they really believed the car was stolen, they "could have called in the license plate of the car to determine if it had been reported.” It is paradoxical that a disingenuous suspicion could constitute the main focus of the subsequent search.
. The only reference to Long occurred in the colloquy regarding standing, during which the court stated, "[The officers are] not even suggesting that they had probable cause to search the car, and they're not suggesting that they had probable cause to, quote, frisk the car, whatever that means, to look for weapons.” An "automobile frisk,” of course, is a common way of referring to protective area searches under Long. See Lott,
. This is the paradigm suggested by Lott, though it was not squarely addressed since in that case, this Court found that the officers did not exhibit a fear for their safety in addition to having an improper motivation for the search. Lott,
