FACTS AND BACKGROUND
On November 12, 1992, at about 4:20 p.m., five New York City policemen responded to a police radio call of an anonymous tipster that in the parking lot of a White Castle restaurant at the corner of Pennsylvania and Wort-man Avenues in Brooklyn there was a four-door gray Cadillac with three black males, one of whom was armed with a gun. The armed man was reported to be 21 years old and wearing a hooded sweater.
The first policemen to reach the scene were Housing Authority police officers Timothy Brown and Richard Ferris. They entered White Castle’s parking lot, and approached a gray Cadillac that was parked, alone, at the back of the lot, about eight parking spaces from the White Castle building. They drove behind the Cadillac and parked at an angle so that the car could not move out of its parking space and so they would be in the car’s blind spot. Officer Brown proceeded immediately toward the rear passenger side of the Cadillac. He could not see into the car, however, because *101 its windows were darkly tinted, a circumstance that “aroused [his] caution level.”
Officer Brown opened the back door of the car and looked in. Seeing two black men1 in the front seat, he said to them, “Gentlemen, please step out of the car.” The passenger, later identified as Scott Burt, opened his door and stepped out of the car as directed. As he did so, officer Brown saw money in his lap, and more money fall from under his shirt to the ground. Officer Brown then patted Burt down, but found no weapon on him. He then moved Burt to the front of. the car so the other officers could search it.
Officer James Lavin, a foot patrolman, also responded to the radio call; he arrived at the scene as the Housing Authority officers were pulling up. Lavin approached the car. and directed the driver, defendant Steven Bold, to get out; he then searched Bold for a weapon, but found nothing. While other officers searched the ear, Lavin “kept the defendant on the ear”, that is, he had Bold keep his hands on the automobile with the officer’s own “hand on the top of his back” so that Bold could not move at all. Bold was not moved from this position until he was formally placed under arrest about 25 minutes later.
Two other officers of New York City’s 75th precinct, Emilio Fusco and James Kuhlmeier, responded to the radio call. After Lavin frisked Bold, Fusco looked into the car. On the floor he saw money, including $100 bills. He also saw on the floor what appeared to be a gun. When he picked the “gun” up, he realized it was a plastic toy gun.
Kuhlmeier at that point remembered that there had been a robbery earlier in the day at the Anchor Savings Bank on Liberty Avenue in Brooklyn. He radioed for a description of the robbers and obtained one that matched that of Steven Burt. He also learned that the robber had worn a tweed coat and carried a briefcase, two items that the officers had found in their search of the car. Burt and Bold were then placed under arrest and later were indicted for bank robbery.
Bold moved to suppress the evidence found in the car as well as some incriminatory statements he later made, on the ground that they were the fruits of the search and seizure in the White Castle parking lot, which were unlawful because they were made without reasonable suspicion. Specifically, Bold argued (1) that, “standing alone”, an anonymous tip of a man with a gun does not amount to reasonable suspicion justifying a seizure, (2) that the reliability of the anonymous tip is not shown simply by corroborating .easily obtained facts existing at the time of the tip, (3) that mere confirmation that a gray Cadillac was located at a specific White Castle could not add to the reliability of the report that one of the Cadillac’s occupants had a gun, and (4) that there were here none of the factors present in other cases — prior information about the informant, significant observations at the scene giving credence to the tip, or the location being noteworthy for the type of crime alleged — that would raise the tip to the level of a reasonable suspicion. The district court properly focused its analysis on whether the officers had, at the time they opened the car doors, a “reasonable suspicion” under
Terry v. Ohio,
[T]he suppression motion turns on the resolution of the issue of whether the information from the anonymous caller gave rise to the “reasonable suspicion” required for the police officers to open the doors of the Cadillac and order the occupants out so they could be frisked.
United States v. Bold,
The district court suppressed the evidence. Relying on
Alabama v. White,
Unfortunately for Bold, four months after the district court suppressed the evidence, we held, in circumstances closely analogous to those in this case, that an anonymous tip of a suspect with guns created a reasonable suspicion justifying a brief detention and search.
United States v. Walker,
DISCUSSION
In reviewing a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we will uphold findings of fact — what information the officers had, what acts were performed, and what statements were made — unless they are clearly erroneous.
United States v. Uribe-Velasco,
A police officer may, in appropriate circumstances and in an appropriate manner, stop a person for purposes of investigating possibly criminal behavior, even though there is no probable cause to make an arrest.
Terry v. Ohio,
a reasonably prudent man in the circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his safety or that of others was in danger * * *. And in determining whether the officer acted reasonably in such circumstances due weight must be given, not to his inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or “hunch,” but to the specific reasonable inferences which he is entitled to draw from the facts in light of his experience.
Id.
at 27,
Reasonable suspicion depends upon both the content of the information possessed and its degree of reliability.
White,
In contrast to an informant the police have previously dealt with,
see Adams v. Williams,
Like this appeal,
Walker
involved the issue of whether reasonable suspicion existed after police were able partially to confirm an anonymous tip. In
Walker,
the anonymous tip was that a black man would arrive in New York that day on a train from the south and would be carrying automatic weapons. The suspect was described as “a black male, approximately 5'8" to 5'9", approximately twenty-five years old, very large and fat, clean shaven, with close-cropped hair.” The' tip did not include the suspect’s name, the city from which the train originated, the place where the subject had boarded the train, or the time of day the train was scheduled to arrive in New York. Police went to Penn Station, and when they saw a man getting off
*103
a train from Miami whose appearance was generally consistent with the' description provided by the tipster, they stopped and questioned him. When the police searched his luggage they found illegal firearms and ammunition, and then arrested him. We upheld the seizure, confirming that the evaluation of a police response to an anonymous tip must be based upon the “totality of the circumstances.”
Walker,
Police verification of the “innocent” factors of a tip lends support to a reasonable suspicion determination, because it would be reasonable for the police to believe that the allegations of illegality will be true as well.
Id.
As
in
Walker,
the anonymous tip in this ease did not itself provide information from which to conclude that the caller was honest or his information reliable. However, even before opening the car doors, the observations of the officers corroborated the tipster’s report of a particular type of car (a four-door gray Cadillac) in a particular location (the parking lot of the White Castle restaurant at Wortman and Pennsylvania Avenues in Brooklyn). Verification of this information supports the reliability of the tip. Moreover, as the district court recognized, the reason the officers were unable to obtain additional corroboration was that they could not see through the car’s darkly tinted windows. Also, the location of the car in a remote part of the parking lot, as police officer Lavin testified, “raised my suspicion that they might be having something to hide.”
See United States v. Alvarez,
White, the primary authority relied on by the district court, does not require a contrary result. There, the police received an anonymous, telephone tip that White would be leaving a particular apartment, at a particular time, in a particular vehicle; that she would be going to a particular motel; and that she would be in possession of cocaine. They immediately proceeded to the apartment building, saw a parked vehicle matching the caller’s description, observed a woman as she left the building and entered the vehicle, and followed her along the most direct route toward the motel, stopping her vehicle just short of the motel. A consensual search of the vehicle revealed marijuana and, after White was arrested, cocaine was found in her purse. The Supreme Court held that, standing alone, the tip .there was completely lacking in the necessary indicia of reliability, since it provided virtually nothing from which one might conclude either that the caller was honest or his information reliable, and gave no indication of the basis for his predictions regarding White’s criminal activities. As the events unfolded, however, the totality of the circumstances, demonstrated that significant aspects of the informant’s story were sufficiently corroborated to furnish reasonable suspicion. Although not every detail was verified — e.g., the name of the woman leaving the apartment building or the precise apartment from which she left — the officers did corroborate that a woman left the budding, got into the described car, and travelled in the predicted direction.
As in White, the tip in this case took the form of an anonymous telephone call. Unlike White, however, the anonymous tipster in this appeal did not predict future events, but instead advised the police of a present situation that three men possessed a gun and were inside in a particular car, in a particular parking lot,, outside of a particular restaurant. There was no need here for any predictions of future conduct, because when verified by the officers, the tipster’s information *104 was sufficient under Terry to warrant further investigation.
There is nothing in
White
that precludes police from acting on an anonymous tip when the information to be corroborated refers to present rather than future actions.
United States v. Clipper,
Furthermore, in White, the anonymous tip related to a drug deal; the tip here related to a man with a gun. The distinction is significant and important:
Th[e] element of imminent danger distinguishes a gun tip from one involving possession of drugs. If there is any doubt about the reliability of an anonymous tip in the latter case, the police can limit their response to surveillance or engage in “controlled buys”. Where guns are involved, however, there is the risk that an attempt to '“wait out” the suspect might have fatal consequences.
Id. at 951.
Where the tip concerns an individual with a gun, the totality-of-the-eireumstances test for determining reasonable suspicion should include consideration of the possibility of the possession of a gun, and the government’s need for a prompt investigation.
Id.
at 949-51. “The unique dangers presented to law officers and law-abiding citizens by firearms are well chronicled.”
Id.
An officer who is able to corroborate other information in an anonymous tip that another person is in actual possession of a gun is faced with an “unappealing choice”.
United States v. McClinnhan,
The district court painted a frightening picture when it noted that (1) 200 million handguns and other lethal firearms are in circulation in the United States, (2) more than 4.2 million firearms are added to that total each year, and (3) these weapons caused some 37,000 gunshot deaths in the United States in 1990, and approximately 259,000 nonfatal injuries.
Bold,
Considering the totality of the circumstances in this case, including .the limited ability of the officers to confirm all of the anonymous tip information, the report that the occupants of the car possessed a gun, and the statistical likelihood that the gun was illegal, we conclude that the intrusion upon the privacy of the car’s occupants was minimal and that the officers had a reasonable suspicion under Terry that authorized their opening of the ear doors and questioning the occupants. We therefore reverse the district court’s order granting the motion to suppress.
