UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee v. Percy Lafayette GREEN, also known as Character, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 09-20585.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
July 1, 2010.
614 F.3d 375
Marjorie A. Meyers, Federal Public Defender, Laura Fletcher Leavitt, Assistant Federal Public Defender, Federal Public Defender‘s Office, Houston, TX, for Defendant-Appellant.
Before REAVLEY, WIENER, SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM: *
Defendant-Appellant Percy Lafayette Green entered a plea of guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of
I. Facts & Proceedings
A. Background
On April 16, 2008, two Houston police officers noticed Green driving away from the Advanced Motel, a location known for drug activity and prostitution. After observing him commit several traffic violations, the officers signaled Green to pull over, which he failed to do until a red traffic light at an intersection forced him to stop. As the officers approached Green‘s car on foot, one of them saw Green stuff a plastic bag of what appeared to be cocaine into the front waistband of his trousers. The officers instructed Green to get out of his car. After he complied, they conducted a pat-down and removed a bag from his waistband that proved to contain cocaine. The officers handcuffed Green and placed him in the back seat of their patrol car.
With Green secured in the patrol car, one of the policemen, Officer Turrentine, ran a check for outstanding warrants, but none was found. Meanwhile, the other policeman, Officer Duron, conducted an inventory of Green‘s car. An hour and a half elapsed between the time of Green‘s arrest and the arrival of a tow truck to remove Green‘s car from the side of the road. At no time was Green advised of his Miranda rights.
At some point during Green‘s hour and a half sojourn in the patrol car, he revealed,
When the officers and Green arrived at the motel, Green volunteered to go up to his room to retrieve Ms. Perkins and the narcotics himself, but Officer Turrentine refused Green‘s offer. Officer Turrentine testified that “I advised [Green] that I would go up to the room and get Amanda, and he agreed.” At that point, Green gave Officer Turrentine the key to Green‘s room, which the officer would need to gain entry.
Before proceeding to the motel room, Officer Turrentine asked Green if there was anyone in it other than Ms. Perkins and if there were any weapons in the room. Green answered that Ms. Perkins was the only person there and that there was a loaded shotgun under the mattress, which he had borrowed from a friend of his son. Green does not contend that the officer inquired about the gun‘s provenance or location; Green appears to have volunteered this information. It is undisputed that at the time Green was asked about the presence of firearms in the motel room (1) the officers were unaware of Green‘s status as a convicted felon on parole and (2) the officers had never advised him of his Fifth Amendment rights under Miranda.
Officer Turrentine approached Green‘s motel room and opened the door without knocking. Inside, he found Ms. Perkins asleep in the bed and saw some drug paraphernalia and several small rocks of crack cocaine on a bedside table. The officer woke Perkins and escorted her downstairs to the patrol car. Officer Turrentine then returned to the motel room and recovered the crack cocaine from the bedside table and the shotgun from under the mattress. When he returned to the patrol car, Officer Turrentine informed Green that he had not found the quantity of crack cocaine that he had expected from Green‘s description. Green offered—again, unprompted—to show the officer where the rest of the narcotics were located, so Officer Turrentine escorted Green up to the room where Green recovered two bags of crack cocaine that were hidden in two cereal boxes on the dresser. It appears that Green asked whether, in exchange for his cooperation, the officers would be willing to make a deal with him, but Officer Turrentine refused and returned Green to the back seat of the patrol car.
After recovering the additional crack cocaine, the officers ran a search on the shotgun they had recovered to determine whether it had been stolen. They also ran a search of Green‘s criminal history and discovered for the first time that he was a convicted felon on parole. At that point, the officers transported both Green and Perkins to the Harris County jail.
In April 2008, the Houston police department referred Green‘s case to the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF“) because Green was a convicted felon found in possession of a firearm. Before meeting with Green, ATF Agent Jacobs, who subsequently testified at the suppression hearing, reviewed Green‘s case file and noticed that it did not indicate that Green had been advised of his Miranda rights, but did reflect that he had admitted to the Houston police officers
When ATF Agent Jacobs interviewed Green for the first time at the Harris County Jail on June 18, 2008—a month after his initial arrest—the first thing he did was to advise Green of his Miranda rights. After Green executed a written waiver, he admitted to Agent Jacobs that he knew he was a convicted felon and should not have a firearm; that he knew the shotgun was under his mattress on the day of his arrest; and that the shotgun belonged to a friend of his son.
B. Proceedings
In July 2008, a grand jury indicted Green for unlawful possession of a firearm by a convicted felon in violation of
In its opposition to Green‘s motion, the government asserted that the search of Green‘s entire motel room was consensual. The government also urged that Green‘s voluntary statements regarding the existence and location of the shotgun did not offend Miranda because they fell within the “public safety” exception as articulated in New York v. Quarles. 3
After a suppression hearing in January 2009, at which Officer Turrentine and ATF Agent Jacobs testified, the district court denied Green‘s motion in a ruling from the bench. In March 2009, Green entered a guilty plea on the condition that he be permitted to challenge the district court‘s ruling on his motion to suppress. This timely appeal followed.
II. Analysis
“We review a district court‘s factual findings surrounding a motion to suppress statements made in violation of Miranda under the clear error standard, and review conclusions of law de novo.” 4 We may affirm the district court‘s ruling on any grounds supported by the record. 5
A. The alleged Fifth Amendment violation
Green seeks to suppress the statements that he made regarding the presence and location of the shotgun in his motel room. He reiterates the contention he advanced in the district court that the officers violated his Fifth Amendment rights when they
Green analogizes his case to Brathwaite, contending that because he had already been in custody for an hour and a half, and because the officers had had plenty of time to obtain a warrant to search the motel room or to advise him of his rights, the government‘s contention—that the officers were faced with an immediate and ongoing threat to public safety, which trumped Green‘s Miranda rights—is specious.
The government counters that the public safety exception should apply because, unlike the situation in Brathwaite, the danger inherent in the instant situation had not yet passed: The officer asked about the presence of firearms before entering a motel room at the behest of an arrestee—a room that the arrestee had led the officer to believe would contain both a large quantity of crack cocaine and another drug user or dealer. In essence, the government contends that the fact that the police had sufficient time to advise Green of his Miranda rights or to seek a warrant, or both, is irrelevant to the applicability of the public safety exception.
The public safety exception archetypically applies in those situations in which law enforcement is confronted with an on-going conflict, arrest, or other volatile situation. 9 It does not apply, however, when law enforcement is simply aware of or believes that contraband may be located in a particular location to which the public does not have access, such as a vehicle or, arguably, a motel room. 10 The exception
As Green correctly notes, the facts of this case hardly suggest the conditions of exigency that justify the application of the exception. 13 The government does not explain—and the officers who testified at the suppression hearing were never asked—why they failed to Mirandize Green (which, unlike obtaining a warrant, would have taken but a few minutes) before they approached and entered the motel room. They obviously had ample time to do so without incurring any risk to themselves or to the public, and without jeopardizing their mission.
We need not address this issue, however, because Green‘s ex post Mirandized statement to the ATF agent, which was identical to his pre-seizure admission to the Houston police officers, is readily admissible. When juxtaposed, the Supreme Court‘s decisions in Elstad 14 and Seibert 15 provide the applicable analytic framework. In Seibert, the Supreme Court “refused to allow the post-warning confession where a ‘two-step interrogation technique was used in a calculated way to undermine the Miranda warning.‘” 16 The Court explained that “[t]he use of such a strategy involves an interrogator ‘rel[ying] on the defendant‘s prewarning statement to obtain the postwarning statement used against her at trial [,] ... [by] confront[ing] the defendant with her inadmissible prewarning statements and push[ing] her to acknowledge them.‘” 17
We have interpreted the resulting analytic framework for such “two-step” interrogations thus: ”Seibert requires the suppression of a post-warning statement only where a deliberate two-step strategy is used and no curative measures are taken; where that strategy is not used, ‘[t]he admissibility of postwarning statements [] continue[s] to be governed by the principles of Elstad.‘” 18 Green does not contend
In Elstad, the Supreme Court held that when a confession is obtained before the suspect has been Mirandized, “there is no warrant for presuming coercive effect where the suspect‘s initial inculpatory statement, though technically in violation of Miranda, was voluntary.” 19 Moreover, “a suspect who has responded to unwarned yet uncoercive questioning is not thereby disabled from waiving his rights and confessing after he has been given the requisite Miranda warnings.” 20 Under the principles of Elstad, “[t]he test for deciding if a statement is involuntary is if the tactics employed by law enforcement officials constitute a Fifth Amendment due process violation and are ‘so offensive to a civilized system of justice that they must be condemned.‘” 21 That is obviously not the case here. Green was under arrest, and had been for some time, when he was asked about presence of firearms in his motel room. This distinguishes his situation from defendants in similar cases in
Moreover, even if Green‘s statement to the Houston police could conceivably be deemed “coerced,” sufficient curative measures were taken: (1) His second interrogation was carried out by a different agent, whom he had never met and who was with a different law enforcement agency (the federal ATF); (2) more than a month elapsed between his initial statement to the Houston police officers and his interrogation by the ATF agent; and (3) there is no suggestion in the record that the ATF agent confronted him with his prior admission to the Houston police. 24
For these reasons, the district court did not err when it refused to exclude, on Fifth Amendment grounds, Green‘s statement regarding the presence and location of the shotgun in his motel room.
C. The alleged Fourth Amendment violation
When a defendant challenges the constitutionality of a search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment, and the district court denies the motion to suppress based on live testimony at a suppression hearing, we accept the trial court‘s factual findings unless they are “clearly erroneous or influenced by an incorrect view of the law,” and we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party. 25 “The ultimate conclusion about the constitutionality of the law enforcement conduct is reviewed de novo.” 26 We may affirm the district court‘s exclusionary ruling on any rationale supported by the record, although “where a police officer acts without a warrant, the government bears the burden of proving that the search was valid.” 27
Green claims that, when Officer Turrentine looked underneath the mattress and recovered the shotgun, he exceeded the scope of the consent that Green had given to search the motel room. Green seeks to suppress the shotgun as fruit of the poisonous tree. 28 He contends that the scope of his consent was encapsulated in his response to Officer Turrentine‘s declaration that he—and not Green—would go into the motel room and bring Ms. Perkins back to the patrol car, presumably so that Green could speak with her. Thus, Green insists that Officer Turrentine was not authorized to search under the mattress and seize the shotgun that was found there because doing so went beyond merely retrieving Ms. Perkins. The government responds that, by telling the officers not just about Ms. Perkins but also about the large quantity of narcotics in his room; by pleading with them to enter; by giving them the key; and by uttering no words of restriction or limitation whatsoever, Green effectively gave the officers his unconditional and unqualified consent to search every part of the room.
“A warrantless entry into and search of a dwelling is presumptively unreasonable without a warrant unless consent is given or probable cause and exigent circumstances justify the encroachment.” 29 These Fourth Amendment protections extend to the rooms of guests in motels. 30 “[T]he standard for measuring the scope of consent under the Fourth Amendment is that of ‘objective’ reasonableness—what would the typical reasonable person have understood by the exchange between the officer and the suspect?” 31
When the police are relying upon consent as the basis for their warrantless search, they have no more authority than they have apparently been given by the consent. It is thus important to take account of any express or implied limitations or qualifications attending
Although “[o]bjective reasonableness is a question of law that is reviewed de novo ... the factual circumstances surrounding the consent ‘are highly relevant when determining what the reasonable person would have believed to be the outer bounds of the consent that was given.‘” 33 The scope of consent may also be limited by “the stated object of the search.” 34 “Where the defendant has failed to limit the scope of the search, the question that remains in determining its validity is whether, under the totality of the circumstances, the search was reasonable.” 35
By insisting that we consider only his nonspecific acquiescence in Officer Turrentine‘s statement that he would enter the motel room and retrieve Ms. Perkins from it, Green essentially urges us to adopt an artificially surgical approach to delimiting the outer bounds of consent. Such an approach cannot be squared with the reasonableness standard that our precedents have established for analyzing the scope of consent, especially when, as here, Green‘s actions so belie his claims. 36 He told the officers that there were large quantities of narcotics inside his motel room and gave them the key to the room; 37 he neither spoke nor implied any limiting instructions as to the areas they could (or could not) search; 38 he never objected to either of Officer Turrentine‘s two return trips to the room. 39 In fact, Green even accompanied Officer Turrentine back up to the room to help the officer find the narcotics that he had failed to locate on previous trips; and Green volunteered—without being asked—the location and pedigree of the shotgun that was hidden under the mattress in his room. Obviously, this is not a situation in which the officer entered the premises with firm instructions—or even implications—from Green to proceed only from point a to point b, or to recover only a single item from a discrete location within the room. 40 On the contrary, Green gave the officers broad consent to search the room and,
As with Green‘s statement concerning the shotgun, we perceive no error in the district court‘s refusal to suppress the shotgun itself.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we are satisfied that the district court‘s denial of Green‘s motion to suppress his statement regarding the existence of the shotgun as well as the shotgun was fully justified. His resulting conviction and sentence are, in all respects,
AFFIRMED.
