In this interlocutory appeal, the government challenges the district court’s order suppressing evidence seized during the course of a motor vehicle stop. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Kenneth Schiavo, Howard Winter, and Gennaro Farina were the subject of a drug investigation by federal agents and the Massachusetts State Police. As part of the investigation, the government provided a confidential informant (“Cl”) with $9,000 in government funds in a White New Balance bag to be used for the purchase of drugs. 1 On November 4, 1991, the Cl met Winter at the Centurian Pub in Sutton, Massachusetts, and gave him the $9,000 as partial payment for a kilogram of cocaine that Winter had delivered on November 1, 1991. After Winter took the cash, agents followed him with the intention of recovering the money. Agents also followed Schiavo, whom they believed to be Winter’s source of cocaine.
After Winter left the Centurian Pub, he went to his home in the Worcester area, then to Pudgie’s Lounge (“Pudgie’s”) in Worcester. He then left Pudgie’s, went home, and returned. After exiting Pudgie’s the second time, he went to the Chandlery Pub in Chelsea. Prior to Winter’s arrival at the Chan-dlery Pub, agents had followed Schiavo to this location. When Winter arrived, Schia-vo’s vehicle was parked outside. Winter remained in the pub for approximately twenty minutes and then departed in his vehicle. Approximately five minutes after Winter left, Schiavo came out of the restaurant, got into his vehicle, and exited the parking lot.
Trooper Thomas P. Duffy of the Massachusetts State Police and several other investigating agents had developed a strategy to recover the $9,000. Agents expected Winter to meet with Schiavo to give him the money that he had just received from the Cl. In the event that Schiavo met with Winter, agents would stop Sehiavo’s ear.
In accordance with this plan, Trooper Duffy followed Schiavo in an unmarked cruiser *8 when Schiavo left the Chandlery Pnb. As Schiavo drove onto Broadway Street in Som-erville, Massachusetts, Trooper Duffy, who was dressed in uniform, signalled to Schiavo to pull over. Schiavo pulled into the parking lot of a nearby supermarket, parked, and got out of his vehicle. Trooper Duffy asked Schiavo to produce his license and registration. 2 When Schiavo stood up after retrieving the registration from the glove compartment, Trooper Duffy noticed a large bulge protruding from the left side of Sehiavo’s jacket. Trooper Duffy immediately asked Schiavo if he had a weapon. Schiavo responded that he did not. Pointing to the bulge in Schiavo’s jacket, Trooper Duffy-asked Schiavo, “Is this all you here?,” to which Schiavo responded, “Mostly.” Trooper Duffy again asked Schiavo about the nature of the bulge and Schiavo informed him that it was a bag. At that point, Trooper Duffy-conducted a pat frisk of Schiavo.
After Trooper Duffy completed the pat frisk, Schiavo began to unzip his jacket in an apparent effort to show Trooper Duffy that he was not carrying a weapon. Without being asked, Schiavo stuck his hand inside his coat. Concerned that Schiavo was indeed armed, Trooper Duffy immediately instructed Schiavo to raise his hands. Trooper Duffy noticed a brown bag inside Schiavo’s jacket and asked what it contained. Sehiavo stated, “Just open my coat and take it.” Sehiavo then told Trooper Duffy that the bag contained approximately $11,000.
When Trooper Duffy inspected the contents of the paper bag, he found that it contained the white New Balance plastic bag that the Cl had given to Winter earlier. The bag contained $8,500. After discovering this money, Trooper Duffy seized money from Schiavo’s shirt pocket and the two front pockets of his pants. In total, Trooper Duffy seized $12,500 from Schiavo, including the $9,000 given to Winter by the Cl.
After his indictment, Schiavo filed a motion to suppress the currency as evidence. The district court found that because the incriminating nature of the bulge in Schiavo’s pocket was not immediately apparent to Trooper Duffy upon his initial pat frisk, the “plain feel” doctrine espoused in
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
— U.S. -,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s findings of fact, following the suppression hearing, including mixed findings of fact and law, for clear error.
United States v. RodrIguez-Morales,
PLAIN FEEL DOCTRINE
“[Sjearches and seizures conducted outside the judicial process, without prior approval by judge or magistrate are
per se
unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment — subject only to a few specifically established and well delineated exceptions.”
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
— U.S. -, -,
During a lawful
Terry-type
search, police officers may seize an object in “plain view” without a warrant if they have probable cause to believe it is contraband without conducting some further search of the object, i.e., if its incriminating character is “immediately apparent.”
Dickerson
at -,
In the present ease, there is no doubt that the police were justified under
Terry
in stopping Schiavo and frisking him for weapons. The issue we must therefore address is “whether the officer who conducted the search was acting within the lawful bounds marked by
Terry
at the time he gained probable cause to believe” that the bulge in Schia-vo’s jacket was contraband.
3
Id.
at -,
At the suppression hearing, Trooper Duffy repeatedly asserted that he did not know what the bulge contained even after he had conducted the pat frisk. In fact, he indicated that only after he had taken the bag of money from Schiavo’s jacket and examined its contents was he able to determine what the bulge was. Because Trooper Duffy did not know what the bulge was after the initial pat frisk and because he needed to conduct a further, unwarranted search of the bulge and its contents to determine what it was, the “plain feel” doctrine espoused in Dickerson does not apply.
The district court properly applied the legal standard described in
Dickerson.
The district court’s conclusion that the incriminating nature of the bulge in Schiavo’s pocket was not “immediately apparent” is not clearly erroneous. Trooper Duffy “overstepped the bounds of the strictly circumscribed search for weapons allowed under
Terry.” Id.
at -,
PROBABLE CAUSE AND EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCES
The Supreme Court has held that in light of the exigency arising out of the likely disappearance of a vehicle, warrantless searches of a vehicle do not contravene the Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment when such searches are based upon probable cause to believe that the vehicle contains evidence of a crime.
California v. Acevedo,
Although the government does not contend that the currency was seized pursuant to a vehicular search, the government does maintain that exigent circumstances justified seizure of the money without a warrant. The search of one’s person is more intrusive on the rights protected by the Fourth Amendment than the search of an automobile.
Cardwell v. Lewis,
“In enforcing the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures, the Court has insisted upon probable cause as a minimum requirement for a reasonable search permitted by the Constitution.”
Chambers v. Maroney,
The government challenges the district court’s finding that at the time of the search, Trooper Duffy lacked probable cause to believe that Schiavo possessed the serialized money. In its initial Memorandum and Order 5 the district court stated:
I note in passing that Duffy did not have probable cause to believe that the money was in Schiavo’s possession. More than two hours had passed between the Cl’s delivery of the money to Winter and Winter’s arrival at the Chandlery. During this time, Winter stopped at several places, at any one of which he could have left the money. There was therefore not even probable cause to believe that Winter had the money in his possession when he entered the Chandlery. Further, no one ever saw Winter deliver any money to Schiavo at the Chandlery. Duffy conceded that he had only a “hunch” that Schiavo had the serialized money when he left the Chandlery. [[ 6 ]] I consequently find that prior to stopping Schiavo, Duffy’s hunch did not rise to probable cause to believe that Schiavo possessed the serialized currency. Although Duffy did not conduct a search of Schiavo’s vehicle, I simply note that the evidence indicates that he would not, therefore, have had probable cause to support a warrantless search of Schiavo’s vehicle.
This finding by the district court is not clearly erroneous. We therefore affirm the district court’s order suppressing the evidence seized during the stop of Schiavo’s vehicle.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Prior to providing the Cl with this money, agents photocopied each bill in order to memorialize the serial numbers of the currency to be transferred to Winter.
. Trooper Duffy was wearing a transmitting device during his encounter with Schiavo.
. The government does not assert that the serialized money was in "plain view" at the time of the search.
.The government argues that probable cause developed during Trooper Duffy’s encounter with Schiavo. This contention is without merit. This argument overlooks the district court’s factfind-ing. The district court found that, "only after Trooper Duffy had taken the bag of money from Schiavo's jacket and examined its contents was he able to determine what the bulge was." This is a fact-specific finding, well within the district court's ken. Given the "greatly circumscribed” scope of appellate review applicable to such findings,
United States v. Rutkowski,
. Following the Supreme Court's decision in
Dickerson,
the district court reconsidered and reaffirmed its initial Order allowing Schiavo's motion to suppress the currency seized,
. In a footnote the district court stated that "This hunch only extended to the money being generally inside the vehicle. Duffy admitted that he never anticipated that the money would be on Schiavo's person.”
