Lead Opinion
The government appeals the district court’s
I.
On March 28, 1989 Hayden agreed to a friend’s request to drive from Minneapolis, Minnesota, where Hayden resided, to Omaha, Nebraska, to pick up Jefferson at a bus station and return her to Minneapolis. Hayden wanted to use a rental car for the trip, but did not have a major credit card, so he had another friend, Prestley Johnson, rent an automobile for him. The rental agreement did not, however, list Hayden as an authorized driver.
Hayden picked up Jefferson in Omaha at 4:00 a.m. on March 29 and put her two suitcases in the car trunk. The defendants began travelling back to Minneapolis, with Hayden driving and Jefferson in the front passenger seat. When it became too foggy to drive, they pulled into an interstate rest area just west of Des Moines, Iowa. Because of cold weather, Hayden left the engine running to keep warm while waiting for the fog to lift.
A uniformed and armed Iowa Highway Patrol trooper drove into the rest area at around 6:40 a.m. and noticed the defendants’ automobile, which bore Minnesota license plates and a rental car decal. The trooper parked his patrol car behind the rental car and radioed thе license plate number to his dispatcher, who informed him that the car was registered to a car rental company at the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport. After calling for backup from another patrolman, the trooper approached the window on the driver’s side of the rental car. He testified that his purpose for going to the car was to make a “welfare check,” that is, to see if the occupants were suffering from carbоn monoxide poisoning or any other difficulties.
The trooper tapped on the window, awakened the defendants, and asked if they were all right. After requesting identification, he received Hayden’s driver’s license and Jefferson’s identification card. He asked Hayden if the vehicle was a rental car, and Hayden replied that it was. The trooper asked to see the rental agreement, which Hayden produced for him. He then asked Hayden to accompany him to the patrol car. The trooper made, this request while retaining possession of the items that the defendants had given him.
The trooper did not examine Hayden’s driver’s license, Jefferson’s identification card, and the ear rental agreement until he and Hayden were seated together in the front seat of the patrol car. The trooper first checked with the dispatcher to see if there were any outstanding warrants for Hayden оr Jefferson and learned that there were none. Next he asked Hayden for the origin and destination of the trip, which Hayden told him. The trooper then noticed that the rental agreement named Prestley Johnson as the renter and that no one else was listed as an authorized additional driver. In response to the trooper’s questions, Hayden explained that Johnson had rented the car so that he, Hayden, could pick up Jefferson in Omaha.
The troоper then returned to the rental ear to question Jefferson. Jefferson said that she and Hayden had not been anywhere in particular and were not going
The trooper asked Hayden for permission to search the car, but Hayden refused. Hayden asked the trooper for permission to go to the bathroom, but the trooper refused. Hayden also asked the trooper why hе and Jefferson were being detained, to which the officer replied, “I’m just on a fishing expedition.”
Over the police radio the trooper then obtained permission from the car rental company to impound the rental car. Although they were allowed to retrieve their personal property from the car, the defendants did not take the two suitcases out of the trunk. After impounding the car, the police conducted a purported “inventоry search” of the car and its contents. Inside one of the suitcases were nine kilograms of cocaine.
In granting the defendants’ motion to suppress, the district court held that when the trooper went up to the rental car and required the defendants to produce identification, they were seized within the meaning of the fourth amendment. The district court concluded that “[bjecause the seizure was not based on any articulable and reasonable susрicion, it was unreasonable, and therefore it was in violation of the Fourth Amendment” and that “[a]ll of the physical evidence and the statements of the defendants obtained after this initial unreasonable seizure is. tainted by the seizure ... and therefore is not admissible into evidence.”
II.
Ordinarily we will not reverse a district court’s finding that a fourth amendment seizure occurred unless the finding is clearly erroneous. See United States v. Archer, 840 F.2d 567, 571 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, — U.S. -,
A fourth amendment seizure of an individual occurs when governmental authorities “by means of physical force or show of authority ... restrain[ ] the liberty of a citizen.” Terry,
Although there is no “litmus-paper test” for determining whether an individual has been seized for purposes of the fourth amendment, see Florida v. Royer,
We have held that an individual was not seized under the fourth amendment when police officers approached a parked car in which he was seated and saw him place his hands down in front of the seat near the area of his feet. See United States v. Pajari,
Several factors have been considered by courts in determining whether an individual’s encounter with governmental authorities is. a fourth amendment seizure. In Mendenhall Justice Stewart offered the following examples of police conduct indicating a seizure has occurred: “the threatening presence of several officers, the display of a weapon by an officer, some physical touching of the person of the citizen, or the use of language or tone of voice indicating that compliancе with officer’s request might be compelled.”
Applying these principles to this case, we conclude that both Hayden and Jefferson were seized for purposes of the fourth amendment at least by the time the trooper examined the rental agreement and learned that neither of the defendants was listed as an authorized driver. The initial approach of the trooper to the rental car, his tapping on the driver’s window, and his inquiry regarding the defendants’ physical
The government attempts to analogize this case to United States v. Poitier,
We do not believe that the encounter between the trooper and the defendants is sufficiently like the situation in Poitier for that case to have much persuasive weight here. Unlike the DEA agents in Poitier, see
Because the trooper did not have a reasonable basis for suspicion that the defendants were engaged in criminal activity at the time they were seized, we hold that the district court did not err in excluding from the evidence the defendants’ subsequent statements to the trooper and the items obtained from subsequent search of the car. The district court order is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Harold D. Vietor, Chief Judge, United States District Court, Southern District of Iowa.
. The fourth amendment provides, inter alia, that “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their рersons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated.” U.S. Const, amend. IV (emphasis added).
. The only information that the trooper had regarding the defendants before he examined the rental agreement was that they were parked at an interstate rest stop in a rental car from Minnesota. These facts are clearly not sufficient to establish a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. It was not until after the trooper examined the rental agreement and learned that neither of the defendants was an authorized driver that the trooper could have possibly had any basis for a Terry-type detention.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
This case vividly illustrates the perversity of the exclusionary rule. Here, an officer’s educated hunch led to the discovery of evidence (nine kilograms of cocaine) of substantial criminal activity. This discovery occurred as a result of information the officer developed by asking questions and examining documents in the course of his routine check of a parked car and its occupants at a highway rest stop. The ordinary law-abiding citizen, I believe, would think the officer should be commended for his fine work, and the cocaine dealers punished. Instead, because we hold (as I agree, under the existing case law, we must) that a “seizure” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment occurred before the officer had formed an objectively reasonable basis for suspecting the defendants of criminal activity, the exclusionary rule requires that the evidence be suppressed. The defendants thus exit unpunished, free to continue dealing illegal drugs to the pathetic addicts and contemptible scofflaws who comprise the national market for these substances. As for the officer, far from his being commended, it is judicially recorded that he blundеred, and the point once again is driven home that legalistic observance of even the most technical of the judge-created rules of search and seizure— rules which, like the Fourth Amendment itself, seek to protect law-abiding citizens from intrusive conduct by officers of the state — is more important than intelligent, courageous, and vigorous initiative to expose criminal activity and bring those responsible for it to the bar of justice.
It has been reported that since 1961, when in Mapp v. Ohio,
The time has come, it seems to me, for a serious reexamination of the exclusionary rule — its benefits, its costs, its consequences for the safety of our citizens, and its impact upon their confidence in the system of criminal justice their tax dollars support. This Court, however, is not the forum in which such a reexamination can take place. I therefore concur in today’s decision.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I fully concur in Judge Henley’s opinion. The officer acted illegally, seizing the defendants, effecting an arrest without any articulable suspicion or probable cause. He did not act in good faith. He admits that the seizure and interrogation was a mere fishing expedition.
Judge Bowman’s concurring opinion requires a brief response.
The fourth amendment protects the right of all of us to be left alone in our homes, our cars, and wherever we may go. If police are not deterred from illegal intrusions of privacy by excluding whatever evidence is seized, the fourth amendment will have no meaning or force. Surely an appreciation for the history and purpоse of our basic freedoms will never allow emotional fear to justify an environment where there is no check on the abuse of police power.
The fourth amendment protects the good guy as well as the bad. It would mean very little to anyone if it did not. The argument that since 1961 murders have doubled, rapes quadrupled, and robbery quintupled in part because of the exclusionary rule is a statement more fitting for headlines of the National Enquirer. It is irrationаl hyperbole totally unsupported in fact or in law.
Others have attacked the exclusionary rule.
. A recent thorough study of the deterrent effect of the exclusionary rule among Chicago narcotics officers concluded that the officers respect the rule and have learned to follow proper search and seizure procedures. Orfield, The Exclusionary Rule and Deterrence: An Empirical Study of Chicago Narcotics Officers, 54 U.Chi.L.Rev. 1016 (1987). The head of the Narcotics Section of the Organized Crime Division of the Chicago Police Department stated:
I would not do anything to the exclusionary rule. In my personal opinion it is not a detriment to police work. In fact the opposite is true. It makes the police department more professional. It enforces appropriate standards of behavior. * * * In this unit, seldom if ever does the law of search and seizure keep us from making the searches we should be able to make.
Id. at 1016. The officers themselves expressed understanding for the rule. One remarked, "[i]f you abolished the exclusionary rule you would be turning the police department loose. It would be like a military state of some sort. That situation has enormous possibility for abuse.” Id. at 1051.
The study found that when evidence was suрpressed, the officer was usually in court to hear why. To ensure his understanding, the officer was required to file a report with his superior and explain the reasons for the suppression. Repeated suppressions damaged an officer’s chances for promotion. The overwhelming evidence was that since Mapp v. Ohio,
. See, e.g., Stone v. Powell,
