Rеubin R. Sanders was indicted for being a felon in possession of a firearm.
See
18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). He filed a motion to suppress evidence of the firearm, arguing that it was the product of an illegal seizure. The District Court
1
denied the
The facts in this case are not in dispute. At approximately 6:30 p.m. on January 23, 2006, Officer Toni Uredi of the Jackson County, Missouri, Sheriffs Department observed Donald Wilson driving a Plymouth Acclaim in Kansas City, Missouri. Aware that Wilson’s driver’s license was suspended, Officer Uredi began following the car. Officer Uredi radioed in the car’s license plate information and was told that the license plate number was not registered to a Plymouth Acclaim. 2 Officer Uredi activated his lights and initiated a traffic stop of the car. The car stopped in a parking lot next to an apartment building in what Officer Uredi considered to be a high-crime area. Before Officer Uredi could approach the car, Sanders, who was a passenger in the front seat, got out. Officer Uredi immediately ordered Sanders to reenter the car, which Sanders did after Officer Uredi repeated the order two more times. Officer Uredi then approached the driver’s side of the car to speak with Wilson. As he neared the car, Officer Uredi saw a black pistol grip protruding from Sanders’s left front pocket. Officer Uredi radioed for assistance. After other officers arrived, Sanders was forcibly removed from the car, and a semiautomatic pistol was removed from his pocket.
Sanders was arrested and charged with unlawful possession of a firearm under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Sanders filed a motion to suppress evidence of the gun on the ground that he was unlawfully seized when Officer Uredi ordered him to reenter the car, making evidenсe of the gun found on his person the so-called “poisonous fruit” of the seizure. Following an evidentiary hearing, the magistrate judge recommended that the motion to suppress be denied. The District Court adopted the magistrate judgе’s recommendation and denied the motion. Sanders entered a conditional plea of guilty, reserving the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. He now timely appeals the evi-dentiary ruling.
“On appeаl from a denial of a motion to suppress, we review for clear error the factual findings of the district court and we review
de novo
the legal determination that the Fourth Amendment was not violated.”
United States v. Robinson,
Sanders does not contest the legality of the initial stop of Wilson’s car. Sanders argues, rather, that Officer Uredi violated his Fourth Amendment rights by subsequently ordering him to reenter the stopped car — thereby detaining him— without a basis to infer that he was involved in criminal activity. If the detention was not reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, then the gun found as a result of the detention was the fruit of an illegal seizure and evidence of it should have been suppressed.
While the Supreme Court has not addressed this particular issue, it has decided the closely analogous question of whether a police officer may order a passenger in a vehicle to
exit
the vehicle during a lawful traffic stop.
Maryland v. Wilson,
The Court concluded that “as a matter of course,” a police officer may order passengers of a lawfully stopped car “to get out of the car pending сompletion of the stop.”
Id.
at 410, 415,
We believe that the reasoning in
Wilson
and
Summers
applies with equal force to the situatiоn before us, and we hold that Officer Uredi did not violate the Fourth Amendment when he ordered Sanders to reenter the car. When Officer Uredi stopped the car, he faced the same safety concerns discussed in
Wilson.
He was unassisted in a high-crime area, it was dark, and he was outnumbered by the occupants in the car. Officer Uredi testified that it is his usual practice at traffic stops to order all occupants to remain in the vehicle until the completion of the stop. He does this out of concern for his safety because he does not want “somebody [to] get ... out of [his] sight.” Tr. of Suppression Hr’g at 26. As in
Wilson,
the concerns for officer safety in this case were “weighty.”
Notes
. The Honorable Scott O. Wright, United States Distriсt Judge for the Western District of Missouri, adopting the Report and Recommendation of the Honorable John T. Maugh-mer, United States Magistrate Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. This information was erroneous; after stopping the car аnd making an arrest, Officer Uredi learned that the license plate number was registered to a Plymouth Acclaim.
. In Mimms, the Court adopted a bright-line rule that a police officer may order the driver of a lawfully stopped car to exit the vehicle.
. We have applied this rule in
United States v. Beatty,
.We reject Sanders’s argument that “[b]e-сause the stop occurred in the parking lot of an apartment complex, rather than on the side of [a] road subject to heavy traffic, the public safety concerns are not as weighty.” Br. for Appellant at 8. The
Wilson
Court considered a similar scenario: the danger to police officers arising from oncoming traffic is generally not present in the case of passen
. Sanders argues that a passenger who is prevented from leaving a car that has stopped at the passenger’s final destination faces a greater intrusion on his personal liberties than a passenger (like the passenger in
Wilson
) who is ordered out of a car and who is free to either leave or to wait until the completion of the stop to continue his travel.
See Wilson,
. We note that our holding is consistent with the opinions of every other circuit to address this issue.
See United States v. Williams,
