Terrell Arnold, Jr., pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm by a felon under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) pursuant to a conditional plea agreement. Under the plea agreement, he reserved his right to challenge on appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress under the Fourth Amendment evidence seized during the search of his car. Arnold contends that the police officer at the scene, Officer Shawn Ford, exceeded the scope оf a protective search when after a traffic stop he pulled down the armrest in the back seat, which opened into the trunk, and found a loaded revolver. Arnold also argues that the officer’s actions cannоt alternatively be characterized as part of a valid inventory search. Because we conclude that the search did not exceed the bounds of a protective search, we affirm the district court’s judgment.
I
Offiсer Ford of the Hammond Police Department testified at the suppression hearing that he was patrolling Michigan Street on the night of January 25, 2002, when he spotted Arnold driving a four-door Pontiac Bonneville with a burned-out headlight. Arnold wаs the sole occupant of the vehicle. Noticing the burned-out headlight, Officer Ford followed the Bonneville. After observing the Bonneville swerve off and back onto the road, Officer Ford initiated a traffic stop.
Officer Fоrd put on his siren and signaled for the Bonneville to pull over to the side of the road, and Arnold immediately obeyed. Officer Ford then pulled his car behind Arnold’s, illuminating the inside of the Bonneville with his spotlight. After Officer Ford observed Arnold turn around tо look back at him, Arnold then wormed his way between the passenger and the driver’s seats into the back seat. Officer Ford testified that Arnold appeared to have been either retrieving or placing something in the back seat, although Officer Ford could not see below Arnold’s shoulders. Arnold then returned to the driver’s seat.
After observing Arnold’s unusual action, Officer Ford left his patrol car and approached the Bonneville. Officer Ford asked Arnold tо step out of the car. He also asked whether Arnold had a gun; Arnold said no. Officer Ford conducted a pat-down because he feared that Arnold had retrieved a weapon from the back seat, but the pat-down рroduced no weapon. Officer Ford then placed Arnold in the back seat of the patrol car so that he could ensure that the traffic stop was completed safely. He noticed that Arnold appeаred very nervous and was sweating “a little bit.” On the other hand, Arnold was cooperative and was neither belligerent nor smelled of alcohol. A driver’s license check revealed that Arnold had only a learner’s permit and nеeded to be accompanied by a licensed driver. In Indiana an officer may write a citation for driving on a learner’s permit without a licensed driver and request that the vehicle be towed, which Officer Ford decided tо do.
Before towing the vehicle, Officer Ford searched it. He offered two reasons for the search: first, he needed to ensure that there were no weapons in the open spaces of the car that cоuld be stolen or would endanger the towing personnel, and second, Arnold’s unusual actions gave him “a lot of concern for what might be in the vehicle.”
Charged with possession of a firearm by a felon, Arnold responded with a motion to suppress the handgun. He argued that the officer did not have reasonable suspicion to search thе car, and in any event he exceeded the scope of a protective search. Furthermore, Arnold contended that the officer did not conduct a permissible inventory search because the initial decision to impound the vehicle was not pursuant to any established policy or routine. The district court held an evidentiary hearing and determined that the search had been permissible under the Fourth Amendment. The court reasoned that the totality of the circumstances — Arnold’s unusual action of clambering into the back seat, the reasonable inference that Arnold may have been hiding or retrieving a weapon, and his nervous demeanor — provided the officer with reasonable suspicion to search the car. Relying upon
United States v. Veras,
II
On appeal Arnold first argues that the search exceeded the scope of a protective search under
Michigan v. Long,
An officer with a reasonable suspicion that a motorist may be armed аnd may be able to gain immediate control of weapons may conduct a protective search of the passenger compartment of the vehicle without a warrant.
Long,
The Supreme Court in
Long
defined the scope of a permissible protective search by borrowing the standard for vehicle searches incident to arrest established in
New York v. Belton,
Although no court seems to have addressed the specifiс problem of a trunk that is readily accessible from inside the passenger compartment, we see no reason to distinguish this accessible area from any other. We have already held that a secret compartment built into the back seat of a vehicle is within the scope of a search incident to arrest,
Veras,
51
F.3d
at 1372, and that locked glove compartments are within the boundaries of searches under
Long, Holifield,
In this case Officer Ford had reasonable suspicion that Arnold may have retrieved or concealed a weapon based on his unusual movements. See
United States v. Fryer,
That the officer reached into the trunk while he was inside the car, by pulling down the armrest in the back seat, does not mean that his search automatically exceeded the boundaries delineated in
Long.
An officer armed solely with reasonable suspicion may not search the trunk of a vehicle when the motorist would not have been able to reach a weapon located there,
Valance v. Wisel,
Arnold also argues that Officer Ford was not justified in conducting the search because the officer had no intention of allowing Arnold to reenter the vehicle with only a learner’s pеrmit. Arnold fails to acknowledge, however, that Officer Ford may have permitted him to gather items from the car before leaving the scene even if the officer would not have permitted him to drive the vehicle. This argument also overlooks the possibility that Arnold, who sat unhandcuffed in the back of the patrol car, could have broken away from Officer Ford’s control.
See Long,
Under the circumstances, we have no occasion to address the govеrnment’s plain view argument, which it failed to present before the district court and thus waived. Similarly, because we have found this search justified under Long, we have no need to address the government’s effort to justify the search as a valid inventory search.
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
