OPINION OF THE COURT
In this appeal, arising under the Fourth Amendment, we consider what constitutes submission to a police officer’s authority. Defendant Thomas J. Smith was arrested and charged with one count of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(a)(2), and one count of possession of cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). Smith filed a motion to suppress evidence and statements. After an evidentiary hearing, the District Court granted the motion, finding the officers had “stopped” Smith without the constitutionally required “reasonable cause.”
See Ter
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ry v. Ohio,
I.
Neither party disputes the following facts as determined by the District Court. On January 8, 2008, at approximately 3:15 a.m., Officers Rinehart and Muziol, in full uniform in a fully marked police vehicle, were conducting a high-visibility patrol in the 16th District of Wilmington, Delaware, an area of recent high crime activity. The police officers were under orders from their lieutenant to “stop and identify anyone that was out walking in that area, and to just basically make ... [their] presence known.” The officers saw Smith walking down the street, and pulled over about one foot away from him to speak with him and ascertain his identity and where he was going.
Officer Muziol leaned out the window of the patrol vehicle and said to Smith, “Can I talk to you for a second?” Smith stopped walking and turned at a 45 degree angle towards the car, seemingly agreeing to speak with the officers. Officer Muziol asked if Smith had any identification, to which he replied no. The officer asked Smith where he was heading and he replied he was going to his girl’s house. Officer Muziol then asked the location of his girl’s house and Smith responded, “I am heading to my girl’s house.” Officer Muziol repeated the question “where is your girl’s house?” several times, and Smith always responded by saying he was going to his girl’s house.
Officer Muziol then asked Smith to place his hands on the hood of the patrol vehicle so the officers could “speak with him further.” 1 Smith took two steps toward the vehicle, at which point one or both of the officers began to open their car doors. At the sound of the car door opening, Smith turned and ran. As both officers were still in the vehicle, they pursued Smith by car. Smith attempted to evade the officers by crossing a parking lot and began to scale a fence. Officer Rinehart exited the vehicle and began pursuing Smith by foot. Smith abandoned climbing the fence and began to run through the parking lot again, at which point Officer Rinehart observed a firearm fall from Smith’s waistband. Smith dropped to the ground a short distance later after one of the officers verbally commanded him to stop. But Smith resisted arrest and Officer Rinehart gave him a stun blow to the back of the head to gain control, after which he took Smith into custody. Officer Rinehart returned to the area where he had observed the firearm fall and retrieved a semiautomatic handgun. Before he was processed, Smith voluntarily admitted that he possessed approximately one gram of crack cocaine.
The District Court found that Smith was seized when Officer Muziol repeatedly asked him the same question, and in the alternative, he was also seized when, responding to the officer’s show of authority, Smith submitted and took two steps towards the hood of the car, before fleeing. The District Court found that the initial submission was “more than momentary, and not undercut by his subsequent at
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tempt to flee the officers.” “Because the officers did not have reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was afoot when they seized Smith,” the District Court found, the firearm, cocaine, and subsequent statements made by Smith were all fruits of the illegal seizure and must be suppressed.
See generally Wong Sun v. United States,
II.
The Fourth Amendment prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. U.S. Const, amend. IV. “The Fourth Amendment’s requirement that searches and seizures be founded upon an objective justification, governs all seizures of the person, including seizures that involve only a brief detention short of traditional arrest.”
United States v. Mendenhall,
Whether an encounter with a police officer constitutes a search and/or seizure under the Fourth Amendment requires consideration of “all the circumstances surrounding the encounter.”
Bostick,
The Supreme Court provides us with guidance. In
Mendenhall,
the Court listed several factors indicative of a seizure: “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 compliance with the officer’s request might be compelled.”
Furthermore, “[w]hen the actions of the police do not show an unambiguous intent to restrain or when an individual's submission to a show of governmental authority takes the form of passive acquiescence, there needs to be some test for telling when a seizure occurs in response to authority, and when it does not.”
Brendlin v. California,
III.
As noted, a law enforcement officer’s approaching a person and asking him questions on the street does not, without more, effectuate a seizure.
United States v. Lockett,
The District Court relied upon
Johnson v. Campbell,
Johnson filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging the stop and arrest violated his Fourth Amendment rights. On appeal, we agreed and found for Johnson as a matter of law.
Although there are some similarities, Johnson is distinguishable. A reasonable person, in Smith’s position, would have felt free to terminate the encounter with the officers. In contrast to Johnson, Smith’s initial and subsequent responses were not clearly a refusal to consensually engage. As Officer Rinehart testified, “we didn’t know what was going on, why he kept giving us the same answer to different questions.” It was reasonable for the police officers to re-state the question as they had been given a nonsensical answer. 3 There was no overt indication the questioning was not part of a consensual encounter between the officer and Smith as there was in Johnson.
At this point in the encounter the police officers had not made any show of authority while questioning Smith nor had they told Smith he was being detained. In
Johnson,
the police officer advised Johnson at the beginning of the encounter that he was being detained, precisely the assertion of authority which
Hodari D.
determined indicated an attempted seizure.
Hodari D.,
To ensure that Smith’s participation in the questioning was not “an individual’s submission to a show of governmental authority tak[ing] the form of passive acquiescence,”
Brendlin,
IV.
In the alternative, the District Court found there was a show of authority when Officer Muziol “instructed Smith to place his hands on the vehicle ... [and] that Smith initially submitted to this show of authority when he took two steps toward the police vehicle in compliance.” Assuming the officer’s instruction was a show of authority, the question is whether, from an objective perspective, taking two steps towards the car was in fact a submission.
The District Court relied upon
United States v. Brown,
We found Brown “clearly submitted to this show of authority” as he stayed by the officer and turned to face the police car when prompted to do so by the officer’s demand. Id. at 246. There was some dispute whether Brown had fully placed his hands on the car or was in the process of doing so when he attempted to flee (after which a firearm was discovered on his person). 5 But, we determined this dispute was not relevant because either way, Brown demonstrated more than momentary compliance by “turning to face the police car and placing (or moving to place) his hands on the vehicle.” Id. We determined that Brown’s movement to face the car and movement of his hands to the car hood was a submission to the officer’s show of authority and effectuated a seizure.
Brown is distinguishable. The officer told Brown he was not free to go until the robbery victim arrived. Brown had already submitted to this show of authority (the officer’s demand for him to stay) when the officer asked him to face the car and place his hands on the hood. While the moment that Brown turned to face the car was the first physical contact between the officer and the defendant, Brown already had submitted by following the officer’s order to stay put. In other words, his submission by that point was manifest.
In
United States v. Valentine,
decided six years before
Brown,
we found momentary compliance was not enough to trigger a seizure under
Hodari D.
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In
United States v. Coggins,
we determined a suspect had been seized (i.e., submitted to the officer’s show of authority) despite a subsequent flight.
V.
In sum, the evidence here does not support either of the two seizures found by the District Court. In the first instance, there was no show of authority by the police officers. Smith was not told he was detained. He was never physically touched by either officer, nor was his movement impeded by their presence. In the second instance, his two steps towards the officers’ vehicle did not indicate submission to the officers’ show of authority. Given the totality of the circumstances, there is nothing to suggest Smith’s two steps or his non-responsive answers represented manifest compliance with the officer’s orders.
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the order of the District Court suppressing the evidence and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Officer Rinehart explained at the suppression hearing that Officer Muziol asked Smith to place his hands on the hood ”[t]o ascertain his identification and conduct further identification checks, to see where he was heading, because his answers to what Officer Muziol was asking and his overall body language ... was enough to have him stopped and put his hands on the hood of the car.”
. The District Court had jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3231 to hear this motion and we have jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731. When reviewing a suppression order, we exercise plenary review over the District Court’s legal conclusions and evaluate its factual findings for clear error.
United States
v.
Torres,
. There is no record evidence specifying the number of times Officer Muziol asked Smith the same question; at oral argument, the lawyers referred to Officer Muziol asking the same question "several times.”
. In
Brown,
police received a tip that two men who fit the description of robbery suspects were in a nearby convenience store. The description was especially bare-bones; the police were looking for two black males with dark clothing.
. Imminent physical contact by a police officer with a suspect can be indicative of a seizure.
See Mendenhall,
