Swazine Swindle appeals from a judgment of conviction of the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Skretny, J.) entered after pleading guilty to unlawfully possessing a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). 1 The appeal poses the ultimate question whether on this record the Fourth Amendment requires exclusion of evidence the police obtained as a result of unreasonably initiating a Terry stop. 2 The officers in this case, although lacking *564 reasonable suspicion of Swindle’s criminal activity, ordered him to pull his car over. He did not immediately do so, subsequently breaking two traffic laws and throwing a bag of drugs out of his window before being apprehended while fleeing on foot. Swindle argues that the police seized him the moment they ordered him to pull over, and that the drugs therefore should have been suppressed as the fruit of an unconstitutional seizure. The government argues that the officers did not seize Swindle until they physically apprehended him, and that his behavior by then furnished ample grounds for his arrest. Constrained by relevant Supreme Court decisions, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. Background
A. Swindle’s Arrest
Four Buffalo police officers assigned to an FBI career criminal task force were patrolling the city in an unmarked car on June 11, 2002, in search of Kenneth Foster-Brown, a fugitive wanted for dealing drugs. All four officers had on previous occasions encountered Foster-Brown, a black man who was 5'8" tall and at the time weighed 145 pounds. Defendant-appellant Swindle, also a black man, is 6'1" tall and in June 2002 weighed 215 pounds.
During their patrol, the officers saw a black Pontiac Bonneville, a model of car that Foster-Brown had previously been seen “near” but had never been known to drive. The officers saw the car come to a halt in front of a known drug house that Foster-Brown had supplied in the past. The officers stopped their car and watched as a black man got out of the Bonneville, entered the house, left a short time later and drove away. The officers were unable to tell whether the man was Foster-Brown. In fact, the man in the Bonneville was Swindle. Thinking that he might be Foster-Brown, the officers followed in their car. Within a minute, by activating their police strobe light, they ordered Swindle to pull over.
Swindle disobeyed the officers’ order to stop and kept driving. As he did, he violated two traffic laws by crossing a double yellow lane divider and driving the wrong way on a one-way street. Swindle also reached into the visor above the driver’s seat, attempted to throw something out of the window and ultimately succeeded in throwing a plastic bag out of the car. The bag was found to contain 33 smaller bags of crack cocaine. Swindle eventually pulled over and fled on foot. The police apprehended him in a yard and placed him under arrest. He was charged with unlawful possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
B. The Suppression Hearing
Swindle moved to suppress the drugs on the ground that they were the fruit of an illegal seizure. A magistrate judge held a hearing at which one of the arresting officers and Swindle testified. According to the officer, the man who entered the drug house was a “dark skinned black male, approximately six foot tall, wearing a white muscle shirt, T shirt.” The officer admitted that he knew Foster-Brown to be a “5'8", 150 pound[] ...black male.” The officer also conceded that when Swindle was ordered to pull over, Swindle “had violated no Vehicle and Traffic law at that time.” Moreover, when asked whether he had seen Swindle “do anything illegal in any way, shape or form that day,” the officer answered: “Not prior to activating the courtesy light.” Further, the officer was asked “what was... your reason, the sole reason you activated your emergency light at that point?” He answered: “To ascertain if, in fact, Mr. Swindle was, in fact, Kenneth Foster Brown.” Swindle *565 testified that he was 24 years old, 6'1" tall and weighed 215 pounds on June 11. The government did not rebut or attempt to discredit this testimony.
C. The Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation
The magistrate judge first determined whether Swindle abandoned the drugs before or after being seized. Looking principally to three Supreme Court decisions for guidance on this question, the magistrate judge cited
California v. Hodari D.,
The magistrate judge next decided whether the officers had a legitimate basis for both ordering Swindle to stop and later arresting him. Citing Swindle’s presence at a known drug house, his refusal to pull over when ordered to do so, his violation of two traffic laws and his throwing the plastic bag from the window, the magistrate judge ruled that “by the time the defendant was actually seized, the police officers possessed not only reasonable suspicion to stop the vehicle, but probable cause to arrest the driver.”
Accordingly, the magistrate judge concluded that since “the crack cocaine had been discarded by the defendant prior to his seizure and [since] the defendant’s subsequent seizure was supported by probable cause, I recommend that the defendant’s motion to suppress the physical evidence be denied.”
D. Swindle’s Guilty Plea and Sentencing
In a two-page order, the district court accepted the magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendation “in its entirety, including the authorities cited and the reasons given therein.” Following entry of this order, Swindle agreed to plead guilty to a lesser included charge: unlawful possession of a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). Included in Swindle’s plea agreement was a reservation of “the right to appeal the denial of the defendant’s suppression motion.”
The district judge accepted Swindle’s guilty plea on July 24, 2003. Swindle had been in the custody of the United States Marshals since June 26, 2002. After accepting Swindle’s guilty plea, the judge released him on bail. In November 2003, the judge sentenced Swindle to time served plus one year of supervised release.
This timely appeal followed.
II. Discussion
On appeal, Swindle argues that the drugs he threw from his car should have been suppressed as the fruit of an illegal seizure. Swindle claims that he was seized at the “moment the emergency overhead lights went on” in the officers’ vehicle, at which time the police lacked reasonable suspicion to order a stop. The govern
*566
ment argues that Swindle was not seized for Fourth Amendment purposes until the officers “physically grabbed him in the yard,” by which time Swindle’s behavior had generated probable cause for an arrest. The district court ruled for the government, finding that Swindle was not “seized” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment until the officers physically apprehended him. Accordingly, the court ruled that the drugs Swindle discarded prior to his capture were admissible. Since the court’s ruling on the suppression motion turned on the legal question of when Swindle was seized, we review the decision de novo.
See United States v. Peterson,
A. The Order to Stop
Swindle asserts — and the government does not dispute — that the officers
initiated
a
Terry
stop of Mr. Swindle when, with overhead emergency lights activated, they tried to pull over his vehicle. We agree that any reasonable driver would understand a flashing police light to be an order to pull over, although the Supreme Court has said that such an order would not give rise to a “stop” unless the driver submitted to the order or was physically apprehended.
See Hodari D.,
We review a district court’s finding of reasonable suspicion de novo.
See Ornelas v. United States,
The magistrate judge — whose recommendations the district court adopted in their entirety — concluded that Swindle’s
presence at a known [drug] house for a short period of time; failure to pull over upon activation of police emergency lights; act of reaching into the fabric material between the roof of the driver’s compartment of the car over the windshield and thereafter attempting to discard an object from the vehicle; and then actually discarding a knotted off clear sandwich bag, provided the officers with reasonable suspicion to stop the defendant....
With the exception of Swindle’s entering the drug house, all of the events on which the magistrate judge relied in finding reasonable suspicion occurred after the officers
initiated
the
Terry
stop by ordering Swindle to pull over. The magistrate judge relied on a Ninth Circuit decision in which the “pivotal issue [was] whether the ‘founded suspicion’ essential to the stop of [the defendant’s] car [could] be based in part on events occurring after the border patrol car turned on its red lights and
*567
siren, but before [the defendant’s] car was actually stopped after a chase.”
United States v. Santamaria-Hernandez,
Our circuit has never squarely decided whether reasonable suspicion may be premised upon events occurring after a person is ordered to stop but before he or she is physically apprehended. 3 The parties’ supplemental briefs did not direct us to any compelling authority from other jurisdictions. 4
The circuits that have confronted the question have held or suggested that events occurring between the initiation and completion of a
Terry
stop may contribute to a finding of reasonable suspicion for the stop.
See United States v. Valentine,
While not explicitly addressing the point from which reasonable suspicion must be measured, other courts have emphasized that a stop must be justified at its inception.
See Feathers v. Aey,
Upon consideration of the issue, we believe that a police officer should not be empowered to order someone to stop unless the officer reasonably suspects the person of being engaged in illegal activity. We find this position most faithful to
Terry
’s own prescription that, when stopping a suspect, a police “officer’s action [be] justified at its inception.” Terry, 392 U.S.
*568
at 20,
It appears, however, that current Fourth Amendment jurisprudence draws just such a distinction.
Hodari D.
strongly implies — without explicitly holding— that an unreasonable order to stop does not violate the Fourth Amendment and that the grounds for a stop may thus be based on events that occur after the order to stop is given.
See
Of special note to our discussion here, the
Hodari D.
Court made two critical observations. First, it “accepted] as true for purposes of this decision[] that [the police] pursuit qualified as a show of authority calling upon Hodari to halt.”
Id.
at 625-26,
Hodari D. thus implicitly authorized a defendant’s seizure based on events occurring after issuance of an unreasonable order to stop. We are therefore compelled *569 to conclude that the magistrate and district judges in Swindle’s case did not err by considering events that occurred after Swindle was unreasonably ordered to pull over.
And the order to pull over was indeed unreasonable. Although we cannot say that the Fourth Amendment requires a police officer to have reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot before ordering a person to stop, we believe that the order in Swindle’s case was a clear abuse of police authority. At the moment they ordered Swindle to stop, the officers had merely observed an unidentified black man drive up to the drug house in a Bonneville (a model the police associated with Foster-Brown), enter the house, leave a short while later and then drive away.
This is not enough information on which to reasonably order a person to stop. First, the fact that Swindle drove a Pontiac Bonneville, a model of car that Foster-Brown had previously been seen “near,” is insignificant given that the government failed to show that Foster-Brown drove a Bonneville or even that the one Swindle drove was the one Foster-Brown had been seen near. Cf.
United States v. Green,
Ultimately, the officers ordered Swindle to stop because they believed him to be “a black male meeting the description of Foster-Brown,” and wished to “confirm or dispel their suspicions that the Bonneville’s driver was Foster-Brown.” The officers certainly may have suspected Swindle of being Foster-Brown, but the relevant question is whether that suspicion was reasonable.
See, e.g., Sokolow,
It appears that the only obvious physical characteristic the men shared was the col- or of their skin. But courts agree that race, when considered by itself and some
*570
times even in tandem with other factors, does not generate reasonable suspicion for a stop.
See, e.g., Whren,
Having considered the “ ‘totality of the circumstances’ ... to see whether the detaining officer ha[d] a ‘particularized and objective basis’ for suspecting legal wrongdoing,”
United States v. Arvizu,
Requiring a police officer to have reasonable suspicion to order a stop would be truer to Fourth Amendment values than the current rule.
See, e.g., INS v. Delgado,
B. The Seizure
Swindle does not dispute the government’s claim that the officers had probable cause to arrest him by the time he was physically apprehended. Instead, Swindle argues that he was seized when the officers activated their police light because no reasonable driver would have felt free to ignore that order to stop. 5
Swindle’s definition of “seizure” comes from a line of Supreme Court decisions that began with Justice Stewart’s opinion in
United States v. Mendenhall,
which stated that a “person has been ‘seized’ within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment only if, in view of all of the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.”
wore no uniforms and displayed no weapons. They did not summon the respondent to their presence, but instead approached her and identified themselves as federal agents. They requested, but did not demand to see the respondent’s identification and ticket. Such conduct without more, did not amount to an intrusion upon any constitutionally protected interest.
Id. at 555. “In short,” wrote Justice Stewart, “nothing in the record suggests that the respondent had any objective reason to believe that she was not free to end the conversation in the concourse and proceed on her way, and for that reason we conclude that the agents’ initial approach to her was not a seizure.” Id. at 1878
The Court adhered to the
Mendenhall
definition of “seizure” in
Michigan v. Chesternut,
the police conduct involved here would not have communicated to the reasonable person an attempt to capture or otherwise intrude upon respondent’s freedom of movement. The record does not reflect that the police activated a siren or flashers; or that they corn- *572 manded respondent to halt, or displayed any weapons; or that they operated the car in an aggressive manner to block respondent’s course or otherwise control the direction or speed of his movement. While the very presence of a police car driving parallel to a running pedestrian could be somewhat intimidating, this kind of police presence does not, standing alone, constitute a seizure.
Id.
at 575,
In this case,
Mendenhall
and
Chestemut
appear to favor Swindle: a reasonable driver clearly would not feel “free to disregard the police presence and go about his business,”
id.,
in the face of a flashing police light. If such a feeling were the sole determinant of what constitutes a seizure, Swindle probably would have won suppression of the evidence against him. But in
Hodari D.,
the Court explained that
Mendenhall’s
rule of a seizure occurring “only if’ a reasonable person would feel restrained by a police order “states a
necessary,
but not a
sufficient,
condition for seizure.”
In reaching its result, the
Hodari D.
Court cited
Brower v. County of Inyo,
in which the police pursued the driver of a stolen car for approximately 20 miles before the driver crashed into a police-erected roadblock. The
Brower
Court had decided that the driver’s collision with the roadblock amounted to a seizure because “Brower was meant to be stopped by the physical obstacle of the roadblock— and... he was so stopped.”
Seven years after
Hodari D.
was decided, the Court followed this rule that an order to stop must be obeyed or enforced physically to constitute a seizure. In
County of Sacramento v. Lems,
the Court observed that “a police pursuit in attempting to seize a person does not amount to a ‘seizure’ within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.”
In light of the above cases, we must conclude that Swindle was not seized until the police physically apprehended him, and therefore that the drugs did not have to be suppressed as the fruit of a poisonous tree.
See Taylor v. Alabama,
A substantial argument could be made that a broader definition of “seizure” — or some other remedy — is required to adequately protect Fourth Amendment values from the harms flowing from police initiation of
Terry
stops without reasonable suspicion. Although the
Hodari D.
Court stated that “[o]nly a few of those orders [to stop], we must presume, will be without adequate basis,”
id.
at 627,
III. Conclusion
As we are compelled to hold that Swindle was seized only when the police physically apprehended him — at which time the officers had probable cause for an arrest— we must conclude that the drugs Swindle discarded prior to his apprehension were not the fruit of a Fourth Amendment seizure. We therefore affirm Swindle’s conviction.
Notes
. The district court sentenced Swindle to time served plus one year of supervised release.
. In a
Terry
stop, discussed in
Terry v. Ohio,
. In
United States v. Lifshitz,
. We requested and received supplemental briefs from the parties on the question whether applicable law requires the police to have reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is occurring before ordering a motorist to stop.
. Swindle cites a New York traffic law to underscore his argument that he was not free to ignore the officers' order to pull over. That law reads: "No person shall fail or refuse to comply with any lawful order or direction of any police officer or flagperson or other person duly empowered to regulate traffic.” N.Y. Veh. & Traf. Law § 1102 (McKinney 1996). Swindle argues that this law illustrates how drivers, as compared to pedestrians, are especially constrained when confronted with a police order to stop. Since we believe that even without a law such as § 1102, a reasonable person would feel obliged to pull over in response to a flashing police light, it is not necessary to address Swindle’s contention regarding the effect of state law in this case.
