Appellant Rogelio Lara appeals his conviction after a nonjury trial of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. 21 U.S. C.A. § 841(a)(1). Lara moved to suppress the introduction at trial of cocaine seized from a vinyl tote bag he was carrying when he arrived at Miami International Airport. After a hearing, the magistrate recommended that the motion to suppress be denied because Lara had abandoned the vinyl tote bag. After a hearing, the district court adopted the magistrate’s findings and recommendation and made an additional finding. Lara waived jury trial and was tried on stipulated facts. The question we must decide is whether and when a seizure took place, as this will determine whether the abandonment was the result of illegal police activity. Finding the record to be inadequately developed, we remand for further findings.
*894 FACTS
The hearing before the magistrate focused on the initial encounter between police officers and Lara and whether Lara’s actions and statements were voluntary. The magistrate made the following findings of fact:
1. On October 15, 1979, William Johnson, a police officer with the Dade County Public Safety Department assigned to the Airport Narcotics Unit at the Miami International airport since November 1977, observed the defendant, Rogelio Lara, purchase an airline ticket for cash at a National Airlines ticket counter at about 3:15 p. m.
2. At such time, Mr. Lara was carrying a leisure jacket over his arm, a fold-up suit bag and a brown colored small vinyl leather tote bag.
3. Mr. Lara was first in line — no one else was in the line.
4. Mr. Lara checked his fold-up suit bag with the ticket agent and thereupon proceeded towards Concourse F, a departure concourse for National Airlines.
5. Before getting to the Concourse, Rogelio Lara, walked over to his left and took a seat in the public seating area up against the rear of an elevator shaft in the center of the airport. 1
6. Mr. Lara is 38 years of age. From his appearance in Court, there is nothing sinister-looking about him.
7. Officer Johnson and his partner, Detective Everett Titus, followed Lara to where he was sitting. Johnson identified himself as a police officer, asked if he minded talking to the officer, and was thereupon asked to see his airline ticket.
8. The ticket was a one-way ticket to Washington, D.C., in the name of B. Garcia.
9. Officer Johnson then asked Lara for identification and as Lara was patting himself as if to look for his wallet, he was asked, “What’s your real name?”, to which he responded, “Rogelio Lara”.
10. Lara was again asked if he minded talking to the police officer and when asked where his identification was, said that, “it must be in the car . . . she brought me in the Mercedes”.
11. Another police officer, Detective Milan Pilat, walked up at that point and said that he had seen Lara exit from a station wagon occupied by a man, a woman and two children. 2
12. Lara was then asked if he would give permission to search his tote bag, which was sitting next to his feet at the chair he was then standing in front of.
13. Lara stated: “I don’t have a bag, that’s not my bag”.
14. Officer Johnson then told Lara that he “would like Mr. Lara to come downstairs with my partner and myself.”
15. Officer Johnson testified prior to that time Lara was free to leave.
Report and Recommendations, pp. 1-2 (transcript references omitted).
Downstairs, in a baggage handling room, a search of Lara produced a quantity of marijuana, which the district court suppressed as the result of an illegal arrest, a ruling the government does not appeal. The vinyl tote bag was placed among other bags, and a dog, trained as a narcotics sniffer, indicated that the bag contained a narcotic. A search warrant for the tote bag was then obtained. The search of the tote bag produced the cocaine in question and a wallet containing Lara’s identification.
On the basis of these findings of fact, the magistrate made numerous conclusions of law. The magistrate concluded that because of a lack of reasonable suspicion, Officer Johnson had no right to interrogate Lara initially. The magistrate did not expressly find that a seizure had occurred, but simply assumed the interrogation was an investigatory stop within
Terry v. Ohio,
After a hearing on the magistrate’s Report and Recommendation, the district court adopted the report in its entirety and approved the recommendations. 4 The district court made an additional finding that there was no nexus between the illegal arrest of Lara and the subsequent search of his person or of the tote bag.
ISSUE
Before reaching the significant issue in this case — whether and when a seizure of Lara occurred — we must dispose of one theory relied upon by the district court. In discussing this theory, we assume arguendo — as the district court implicitly found— that the initial encounter with Lara was an illegal seizure. The district court found that there was no nexus between the illegal initial encounter of Lara and the subsequent search of his person and of his tote bag. We think this finding is clearly erroneous. If the police acted illegally in their initial encounter with Lara, then it is clear that the subsequent searches of his person and of his tote bag were all prompted by information gathered during such illegal activity. The link between any illegal activity and the discovery of the cocaine is too direct and proximate to permit a finding of attenuation from such illegality to allow admission of the discovered cocaine.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
The government argues only that there had been no seizure of Lara at the time he abandoned the tote bag, and thus there had been no illegal police activity at that time. 6 Both parties focus on this issue as the only *896 issue on appeal. Accordingly, we focus only on whether there was a seizure at the time Lara stated the tote bag was not his.
LAW
The recent decision by the Supreme Court in
United States v. Mendenhall,
Although
Mendenhall
gave no binding test for what constitutes a seizure, this court in
United States v. Robinson,
We found in Elmore that there was no seizure up until the time that a DEA agent carried the defendant’s airline ticket away to a counter. The defendant there was approached by two DEA agents, one of whom identified himself as a federal narcotics agent. When asked to see the defendant’s airline ticket, the defendant gave the ticket to the agents. Because the ticket bore the name “E. Gray,” the agent asked, “Mr. Gray?”, to which the defendant replied in the affirmative. When asked to provide additional identification, the defendant volunteered that his brother-in-law, E. Gray, had purchased the ticket in advance. The defendant then gave the agents a driver’s license with his proper name. Because one agent suspected something was wrong with the ticket, he took it to the counter for further investigation. The Elmore court *897 held there was a seizure at the time the ticket was removed from the vicinity of the defendant.
Two other decisions by this circuit, while not expressly stating the test found in
Robinson
and
Elmore,
have been concerned as to whether the suspects’ actions when approached by police were voluntary or the result of a show of authority.
United States v. Bowles,
In Bowles, we found that there was a seizure when a detective passed an individual who was walking down an airport concourse, held out his credentials, and turned to face the defendant, blocking his path and forcing him to stop. We analogized the situation there to a traffic stop by means of flashing lights or sirens, and found that the individual’s movement had been restrained. 9
United States v. Pulvano, supra, is quite similar to Elmore. Two DEA agents waited at an airport locker until a suspect approached the locker to retrieve a suitcase. The agents identified themselves and asked the suspect if he would answer a few questions. At the agents’ request, the suspect gave them his ticket. The agents asked for identification, and when the susp.ect’s driver’s license revealed a different name, they asked him why he was traveling under an incorrect name. The agents then asked if the suspect had any luggage, to which the suspect answered negatively. When the agents confronted the suspect with the information that he had been been seen with luggage, the suspect gave the agents consent to open the locker. It was only at the point that the agents took the suitcase and asked the suspect to accompany them to an office that a seizure took place.
Although United States v. Robinson, supra, adopted the objective test of Mendenhall (Justices Stewart and Rehnquist) and Elmore to determine when seizures occur, no definite conclusion was reached in that case on the seizure issue. There the defendant was approached by a single DEA agent in an airport who identified himself as a federal agent, displayed his credentials, and asked whether he could see the defendant’s airline ticket. The defendant gave the agent his ticket, and produced a driver’s license with a different name. The defendant denied that he was carrying narcotics and consented to the agent’s request that he permit a brief search of his person and his briefcase. Because the district court in Robinson found that there was a seizure on the basis of a pre-Elmore test, this court remanded for an evidentiary hearing applying the proper test. In remanding, we ordered the district court to consider the fact, if true, that the agent told the defendant he believed the defendant to be carrying narcotics.
Reviewing the facts and law of the above cases, we conclude that the district court in the instant case did not apply the proper standard in determining the legality of the police encounter with Lara. It is clear the district court was not aware of the test enunciated in Elmore. Lara could argue that the district court necessarily found there was an illegal seizure from the initial contact because the district court *898 suppressed all of Lara’s statements as involuntary. It is clear, however, that the district court relied on factors, some of which are proper and some of which are not, in finding Lara’s statements involuntary. First, the district court assumed that any encounter and interrogation of a citizen by a policeman which is not premised on reasonable suspicion is illegal. That this is an erroneous assumption is now well established in this circuit. United States v. Pulvano, supra; United States v. Robinson, supra; United States v. Elmore, supra. The Supreme Court in Terry was careful to point out:
[Ojbviously, not all personal intercourse between policemen and citizens involves ‘seizures’ of persons. Only when the officer, by means of physical force or show of authority, has in some way restrained the liberty of a citizen may we conclude that a ‘seizure’ has occurred.
Because the district court relied on improper as well as proper factors in evaluating the legality of the police conduct in their interrogation of Lara, and because the record does not develop sufficiently the facts relevant to the seizure issue, we prefer for the district court to determine in the first instance whether the encounter with Lara was sufficient to cause a reasonable person to believe he was not free to go. The district court is best able to determine whether and when a seizure has occurred, particularly here where the record is not adequately developed on points which are crucial to a determination as refined as the one in question.
11
Justice White in dissent in
United States v. Mendenhall, supra,
remarked that whether a seizure has occurred is a “fact-bound question with a totality-of-circumstances assessment that is best left in the first instance to the trial court .... ”
Several matters which would be relevant to this determination are suggested in the record, but are not fully developed. The encounter took place in an area of the airport which was characterized as relatively private. It is possible, if not probable, that the area was so private that Lara might have felt himself to be isolated from others. The magistrate found that Lara was approached by two officers, and that a third was at one point within earshot and joined in the questioning. There is no indication as to whether Lara could have seen the third officer when the other two officers approached him, how close the third officer was to the other two, and whether Lara could reasonably have believed the third officer was with the two officers. The record indicates that officer Johnson was not in uniform, and suggests the other officers were also not in uniform. However, there is no definitive evidence in the record that the other two officers were not in uniform. We know that the officer asked Lara, “What’s your real name?”, which in light of the lack of evidence that an alias was being used might suggest an accusation. Still, we do not know the tone of the officer’s voice, or how intimidating his question was. Finally, we know that Lara was seated, but we do not know whether the officers stood in such a way to block his exit or to indicate that he was not free to leave if he did not wish to answer their questions. The district court on remand should inquire into these and any other matters relevant to whether Lara would reasonably have considered himself free to leave.
As in United States v. Robinson, supra, we vacate the conviction and remand for a new suppression hearing and findings of fact and conclusions of law on the issue of whether and when there was a seizure and the legality of that seizure. If the district court finds there was a seizure before any reasonable suspicion existed, and before Lara’s disclaimer of ownership, then the alleged abandonment was tainted by illegal police conduct, and the cocaine must be suppressed. If it finds no seizure before Lara’s disclaimer or reasonable suspicion before any seizure, the original sentence should be reinstated.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Officer Johnson testified that the seat chosen by Lara was the most private seat to be out of sight in the concourse area.
. The only evidence offered by Lara contradicting the magistrate’s finding was his testimony that he was approached initially by all three officers.
.
Miranda v. Arizona,
. Because the district court adopted the magistrate’s Report and Recommendation in its entirety, we will often refer to the magistrate’s findings and conclusions of law as being those of the district court.
. We note also that the government does not attempt to sustain the judgment below on a theory that Lara’s abandonment was sufficient to eliminate the taint of an illegal seizure.
See United States v. Beck,
.
See United States v. Colbert,
Nor does the government argue a theory that, even if there had been a seizure sometime before Lara abandoned the bag, the officers had reasonable suspicion at the time of the seizure so that their actions would be legal. Accordingly, we express no opinion with respect to such a theory. See
United States v. Mendenhall,
. Justice Powell, joined by Justice Blackmun and Chief Justice Burger, did not address the question of whether there had been a seizure of the defendant in
Mendenhall,
but did not necessarily disagree with Justice Stewart’s opinion. Justice Powell noted that “the question of whether the respondent in this case reasonably could have thought she was free to walk away when asked by two government agents for her driver’s license and ticket is extremely close.”
. The
Elmore
court derived this test from
United States v. Wylie,
. The
Bowles
court noted that even if the facts in that case were virtually the same as those in
Elmore,
the
Elmore
holding had been seriously undercut by
United States v. Santora,
. Giving Miranda warnings in a police-citizen encounter which is otherwise a nondetention interrogation may very well elevate such an encounter to a seizure within the meaning of Terry in light of the public’s association of Miranda warnings with an arrest. We, however, express no opinion at this time on the overall effect of giving Miranda warnings on the reasonableness of a belief that one is not free to leave.
. While this circuit in United States v. Robinson, supra, in dictum, noted that in the absence of a dispute about the facts surrounding a police-citizen encounter, the appellate court can apply the appropriate legal standard to determine whether and when a seizure has occurred, the facts in this case are not well enough developed to permit this panel to exercise the “refined judgment” necessary to make such a determination.
