Shahid R. Pratt, a felon, entered a conditional plea of guilty to possessing ammunition in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(a)(2). In so doing, he preserved the right to appeal the district court’s 1 denial of his suppression motion. Pratt now exercises that right. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Officers Gary Snyder and Anthony Mel-kowski happened upon Pratt while on routine patrol in a marked police cruiser at around nine-o’clock on the evening of March 15, 2002, in Kansas City, Missouri. Pratt was walking eastbound in the middle of 43rd Street, near Tracy Avenue, even though sidewalks were provided on both sides of the street. Pratt had been arrested on prior occasions by Officer Snyder for drug violations, outstanding warrants, and traffic violations, so Officer Snyder recognized Pratt when he came into view. Officer Snyder also knew Pratt was a convicted felon and, on previous occasions, dispatch had informed Officer Snyder that Pratt was “10-31,” meaning he had been armed during prior encounters with the police.
Officers Snyder and Melkowski approached Pratt in their cruiser. Pratt looked at the officers over his left shoulder twice, and then jogged to an adjacent open lot. The officers concluded he was trying to avoid them.
When Pratt reached the open lot, he leaned over and appeared to spit something from his mouth. Officer Snyder had observed him do the same thing in December 1999 during an arrest in the same area. On that occasion, Pratt spat crack cocaine.
The officers decided to do a “pedestrian check” on Pratt because he was violating a municipal ordinance and state law by walking in the street. They drove into the open lot, got out of the cruiser, and approached Pratt on foot. Upon their approach, Pratt turned his back to the officers and put his hands in his pants-pockets. The officers ordered him to remove *1121 them three times to no avail. Given Pratt’s noncompliance and shifty behavior, the officers removed his hands from his pockets and placed him in handcuffs. -The officers testified that they handcuffed Pratt to ensure both their and Pratt’s safety and did not regard Pratt as being under arrest at that time.
Once in handcuffs, Officer Melkowski patted down Pratt’s outer clothing and felt something in his front left pants-pocket. Believing the item was a weapon, Officer Melkowski then reached into the pocket and pulled out five rounds of live ammunition. A drug dog was then summoned to the scene to search for the item Pratt had spit from his mouth. Nothing was found.
Because the officers knew Pratt was a felon, he was placed under what the officers termed an “investigation arrest” for possessing ammunition. He was also given a ticket for walking in a street with sidewalks alongside.
Pratt moved to suppress the ammunition in the district court, contending that when Officer Melkowski reached into his pocket and retrieved the ammunition, he violated the Fourth Amendment prohibition on unreasonable searches because he exceeded the proper scope of a protective “frisk” under
Terry v. Ohio,
Pratt appeals, making the same challenge he made in the district court. Pratt does not challenge the initial contact between him and the officers, nor the officers’ use of handcuffs to detain him.
II. DISCUSSION
“We review the factual findings of the district court as to what the parties said or did for clear error; we review the district court’s finding that the Fourth Amendment, has not been violated de novo.”
United■ States v. Bloomfield,
Pratt’s warrantless search must fall within an exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment to be reasonable. Relevant to this case are the exceptions for
Terry
searches and searches incident to arrests.
Terry
provides ah exception to the warrant requirement for limited searches (i.e., “frisks”) of persons “stopped” by police if the police reasonably suspect the individual is armed. This type of search is limited to a pat-down of the individual’s outer clothing, but the officer may seize items from the individual’s pockets if the incriminating nature of the item is immediately apparent through the officer’s sense of touch.
See Minnesota v. Dickerson,
Also, if an officer has arrested the individual, the officer may search the individual’s person incident to that arrest and may reach into his pockets.
United States v. Robinson,
To determine which search standards apply to Pratt, we must determine whether he was arrested or stopped. The standard for determining when police-citizen contact constitutes an arrest for purposes of a search incident to arrest is unclear. The Fourth Amendment itself does not mention arrests or stops; rather it protects individuals from unreasonable “seizures.” Traditionally, the term “arrest” denoted a seizure of the person.
Dunaway v. New York,
The traditional equivalence of seizures of the person and arrests was clouded by
Terry. Terry
carved out an exception to the probable-cause requirement. Specifically,
Terry
allows officers to make minimally intrusive seizures so long as there exists reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot. These seizures have been dubbed “stops.”
Post-Terry,
the term “arrest,” or
“de facto
arrest,” has been used to describe those seizures that exceed the bounds of
Terry
— those seizures that, given their intrusiveness generally or in a given case, can be justified only upon a showing of probable cause.
See, e.g., United States v. Bell,
Though a seizure exceeding what is allowed under
Terry
is a
de facto
arrest, an arrest is not limited to that which exceeds
Terry.
As the Court stated in
Hodari D.: “Terry
unquestionably involved conduct that would constitute a common-law seizure; its novelty (if any) was in expanding the acceptable
justification
for such a seizure, beyond probable cause.”
The fact that a seizure of a person predicated upon probable cause is properly regarded as an arrest, is fully supported by case law in the analogous forum of traffic stops.
See United States v. $404,905.00 in U.S. Currency,
Applying this analysis to the instant case, Pratt was arrested. First, the officers had probable cause to arrest Pratt before they approached him.
2
The officers observed Pratt violating state and local law and were authorized
3
under state and local law to arrest him for such a violation.
See Atwater,
Second, because the officers had probable cause to arrest Pratt,
Terry
is inapplicable. Pratt was therefore arrested if he was seized, and in this case Pratt was seized when he was physically restrained by the officers.
See Hodari D.,
Although the officers testified that they did not believe they had arrested Pratt when they physically restrained him, this fact does not change the outcome. An officer’s uncommunicated subjective intent is irrelevant to the question of whether an individual has been seized.
Mendenhall,
Because Pratt was arrested, the question becomes whether the subsequent search of his person was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. The search of an arrestee’s person has long been upheld as reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, and we see no reason to depart from this notion here.
See Chimel v. California,
Because the search here was incident to a lawful arrest, Pratt’s pocket was lawfully searched and the bullets found. Having come by the evidence lawfully, and knowing Pratt was a felon, the officers also had probable cause to continue their arrest of Pratt on the additional possessory offense. 4 The district court properly denied the motion to suppress.
*1125 III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. The Honorable Nanette K. Laughrey, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri, adopting the report and recommendation of the Honorable Sarah W. Hays, United States Magistrate Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. “We may recognize the existence of probable cause on appeal, though the district court did not analyze the situation in similar fashion.”
United States v. Sturgis,
. We do not revisit the issue of how state law impacts the Fourth Amendment inquiry where officers are not authorized to make an arrest under state law because the officers here were empowered under Missouri law to arrest Pratt.
See United States v. Bell,
. We do not think the fact Pratt was ultimately given a citation for walking in the street impairs our analysis. In
Knowles v. Iowa,
