Eаrkle Tyler was charged with possessing crack with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Tyler moved to suppress the crack, arguing that it was discovered only after police officers detained and searched him without reasonable suspicion. The district court denied this motion, and Tyler entered a conditional guilty plea. He now challenges the denial of his motion to suppress. Because the officers detained Tyler without reasonable suspicion that criminal activity may be afoot, the suppression motion should have been granted. We vacate Tyler’s conviction and remand with instructions.
I. Background
Officers Adam Clark and James Onohan of the Hammond, Indiana police department testified at Tyler’s suppression hearing and gave the following account of their encounter with him. At around 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, September 17, 2005, they were patrolling together in their squad car through a residential neighborhood in Hammond. They noticed a man, later identified as 29-year-old Earkle Tyler, walking near the intersection of Merrill and Rhode Streets with an open beer bottle in his hand. (Tyler lived at 830 Merrill Street, which is located about eight doors away from that intersection.) It looked to the officers as though there was “maybe one drink left” in the bottle. Onohan immediately told Clark, “[W]e need to stop this guy because he’s got a bеer bottle in his hand.” Clark testified that he and Onohan were then under the mistaken impression that it is illegal to have an open alcoholic beverage on the streets of Hammond, so they pulled over “to confront Tyler about the beer bottle.” Neither officer knew Tyler, and both conceded that other than seeing him cаrrying the open beer bottle, they had no reason to stop or question him.
The officers got out of the squad car and approached Tyler. Clark informed Tyler he was violating the law and asked “why he was being so nonchalant about walking on the street with a beer bottle.” Tyler answered that he had just picked up the bottle and was going to go throw it in the trash. Clark testified that Tyler acknowledged he had been drinking earlier in the day and smelled of alcohol, but both officers concluded he was not intoxicated.
The officers then asked Tyler for identification in order to check for outstanding
As Tyler was putting his identification back in his pocket, however, Clark noticed a “bulge” either under Tyler’s waistband or in his front pocket. Clark testified he had “no clue” what might have been causing the bulge, but he asked Tyler what it was. The officer testified that the bulge “could have been a gun[ ][or] a knife,” and after he asked Tyler what it was, it became “obvious” that it was “something that he didn’t want us to know about.” Tyler’s reaction made it appear to the officers that “something was wrong.” Tyler took a step back and raised the beer bottle to shoulder height. Clark interpreted this action as “a possible threat.” Clark and Onohan both grabbed the hand that was holding the beer bottle, and Tyler then dropped the bottle. Clark also grabbed at the bulge in Tyler’s pants and a struggle ensuеd. A purple Crown Royal bag was dislodged “within the course of the struggle,” although Clark conceded it was “possible” he put his hand inside Tyler’s clothing to get at the bulge. The officers’ written report, entered as an exhibit at the suppression hearing, contains this description of Clark’s recovery of the bag: “Officer Clark observed a bulge in Mr. Tyler’s left front pocket and questioned Mr. Tyler of what it was. Mr. Tyler immediately stepped back and Officer Clark was able to grab a purple Crown Royal sack out of his left front pocket.” The report does not state that Tyler raised his arm with the beer bottle. Nor does it indicate that Tyler was told he could leave before Clark first inquired about the bulge.
During the struggle, Tyler tried to snatch the bag back but was tackled, handcuffed, and placed in a squad car. Another officer who had arrived at the scene in response to Onohan’s call for backup picked up the Crown Royal bag and opened it. The bag contained about 30.3 grams of crack аnd 24 grams of powder cocaine.
Tyler initially was booked on a state drug charge. He also received a citation for having an “open alcoholic beverage,” ostensibly in violation of Hammond City Code § 99.16 (the current version is found at Hammond City Code § 99.26). The police report, as well as an affidavit prepared by a Drug Enforcement Agency task force officer and filed with the federal criminal complaint, both memorialize that the officers stopped Tyler because they observed him with an open alcohol container and told him “that it was against the law to walk down the street with an open alcohol containеr.” But a few days after Clark and Onohan issued the citation, their supervisor informed them that it was not illegal to have an open alcohol container on the streets of Hammond. The Hammond City Code (then § 99.16, currently § 99.26) prohibits possession of open alcoholic beverages only “in any park or park street,” with exception made for certain community events and properly permitted organizations.
At the suppression hearing, Clark acknowledged he and Onohan made a mistake about the open intoxicant law but testified that the main purpose for stop
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s denial of Tyler’s suppression motion according to a split standard of review. Historical facts are reviewed for clear error, and “due weight” deference is given “to [the] inferences drawn from those facts by resident judges and local law enforcement officers.”
Ornelas v. United States,
Here, as in the district court, the focus of Tyler’s argument is that he was detained without reasonable suspicion. The government, however, argues for the first time on appeal that Clark and Onahan did not detain Tyler at all. In the district court, the government argued that the officers conducted a
Terry
stop justified by reasonable suspicion that Tyler was publicly intoxicated, and the district court accepted this argument. The government now characterizes the encounter as consensual police-citizen questioning, which does not implicate the Fourth Amendment and need not be supported by-reasonable suspicion.
United States v. Drayton,
“ ‘[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
Here, the district court found the officers credible and accepted their version of events; at least as to the seizure inquiry (in contrast to the reasonable suspicion inquiry), the parties do not dispute the historical facts. Applying independent review and considering the facts in their totality, we conclude that a reasonable person in Tyler’s circumstances would not have believed he was free to leave. Although the encounter took place on a public street and the officers did not draw their weapons or (at least initially) lay hands on Tyler, they told him he was violating the law, took his identification from him and retained it while they ran a warrant check, and told him he could not leave until the warrant сheck was completed.
We find this case analogous to a line of cases in this circuit involving airport and train station stops by narcotics officers.
See McCarthur,
In this case, the officers told Tyler— mistakenly, as it turns out — that he was violating the law by carrying an open container of alcohol in public. A reasonable person would not feel free to walk away after being confronted by two police officers and told he was committing a crime in
So we have a seizure, and our next question is whether reasonable suspicion justified it.
See Terry,
As to the first argument, we have held that a mistake of law (as opposed to a mistake of fact) cannot justify an investigative detention.
United States v. McDonald,
We come, then, to the question of the district court’s reasonable suspicion ruling, which we review independently. Reasonable suspicion “is less than probable cause but more than a hunch,”
United States v. Lawshea,
That Tyler was walking down the street on a Saturday afternoon in September lawfully carrying an open beer supports only a suspicion that he was drinking, not that he was drunk.
Cf. United States v. Lenoir,
The absence of reasonable suspicion to justify the officers’ initial
Terry
stop decides this case; everything that followed was fruit of the poisonous tree.
See, e.g., United States v. Jerez,
Vacated and Remanded.
