DECISION AND ORDER
Dеfendant, Sammie Wesley (“Wesley”), was indicted on September 6, 1995. The indictment contains two counts. Count I charges Wesley with knowingly making a false and fictitious written statement in connection with his purchase of a shotgun, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(a)(6) and 924(a)(2). The alleged false statement was Wesley’s alleged representation on an ATF Form 4473 that he had not been convicted of a felоny, when in fact he knew that he had. Count II charges defendant with being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(a)(2).
There are two motions pending before the Court: (1) Wesley’s motion to suppress physical evidence, namely, a shotgun seized from his automobile by the police on July 31,1993; and (2) Wesley’s motion to dismiss Count II of the indictment.
SUPPRESSION MOTION
The Court held a suppression heаring on December 6, 1995. The only witness who testified was Officer Michael C. Salway (“Sal-way”) of the Rochester Police Department.
Salway, who had been a patrol officer with the Department for four years and served with the Monroe County Sheriffs Department in the jail for eighteen months, testified that he responded to an emergency 911 telephone call and interviеwed Deborah Davis (“Davis”). Davis told Officer Salway that the defendant had been pursuing her romantically for some time but that she had refused his overtures. On this particular day, he had apparently asked her for a date and when she refused Wesley became angry. She told Salway that Wesley went to his automobile and retrieved a “long gun” from the back seat. According to Davis, Wesley confronted her with the gun, pointed it at her and said “get in the car, bitch, or I will kill you.” At that point, a neighbor, apparently alarmed by the shouting, came out of her house to take her child indoors. At the same time, Davis ran screaming from the scene. Davis described the automobile as a maroon Cadillac with a molded spare tire carrier on the *83 trunk. At that point, Officеr Salway radioed into the Department of Motor Vehicles and immediately determined that a maroon Cadillac was registered to Wesley. Salway testified that he knew Wesley to have a violent history and to be abusive. Wesley was an inmate at the Monroe County Jail when Sal-way was employed there as a deputy sheriff.
Salway described Davis as very upset, frightenеd and shaking while she related her complaint to him. Salway talked to Davis about filing charges and she indicated that she would go to the police department the next day to file charges for menacing.
Salway estimated that he talked with Davis for about ten minutes and, after he made sure that she was secure, proceeded to drive through the area in search оf Wesley and the vehicle. After about five minutes, he observed defendant’s vehicle parked on Harvest Street, which was only two or three blocks away from the point where Wesley confronted Davis. Salway radioed that he had located the car and eventually other officers arrived. The car was locked but Salway testified that he was able to look intо the rear seat through the window at which time he observed what appeared to be a pistol-grip handle for a weapon. He then went to the other side of the car and saw what he observed to be a portion of the barrel as well. He had an instamatic camera and at some point took photographs of the back seat showing the cоndition of the weapon when he first observed it (Exs. 1, 2).
At this point, he called a supervising officer and a decision was made to seize the vehicle and the weapon as evidence used in the commission of a crime. A decision was made to tow the vehicle. Rochester Police Department procedures required that an inventory be conducted of the vehicle’s contents. The tow truck operator opened the car and Salway retrieved the weapon, which turned out to be a loaded 12-gauge shotgun.
Salway conceded that there was discussion about obtaining a warrant, but he believed it was an “emergency situation” because they had discovered the vehicle soon after the confrontatiоn between Wesley and Davis and because the officers did not know of Wesley’s whereabouts, whether he had another weapon or whether he might be still pursuing Davis. Salway said that he was concerned about Davis’ safety, the public safety and his own but was not specific as to what he thought might happen.
Apparently the vehicle was released a few days later to Wesley because Salway saw it in the neighborhood. The decision to release the vehicle had been made without Salway’s knowledge. The shotgun, obviously, was not returned to Wesley.
Wesley was arrested without a warrant on September 21,1993 for criminal possession of a weapon. Salway testified that he had difficulty locating Wesley. He had prepared a complaint but did not obtain a warrant until he had actually apprehended Wesley and taken him into custody.
Salway testified that had he found Wesley with the ear or seen him on the day of the incident, he would have detained him and arrested him.
Salway checked with police headquarters prior to searching for the car to verify that Wesley did have a criminal record. Salwаy, of course, knew that Wesley had been incarcerated in the Monroe County Jail but did not know the nature or extent of Wesley’s criminal record at the time he discovered the ear and seized the weapon.
Wesley moves to suppress the shotgun on the ground that the warrantless search and seizure of the gun were unlawful. This motion is denied.
The facts of this case are similar to those in
United States v. Martin,
The district court granted the defendant’s motion to suppress the items seized from the truck. In an opinion authored by Judge *84 Timbers of the Second Circuit (sitting by designation), the Court of Appeals reversed. The court held first that there was no “search” of the truck’s interior because the agent had simply observed what would hаve been in plain view to any person who looked through the truck’s window. Id. at 206-07. The court further held that the entry into the truck and the seizure of the gun parts were justifiable under the “automobile exception” to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement, because the agent had probable cause to believe that the items seized were evidence of a crime. Id. at 207-08.
The sаme result is called for in the case at bar. As the court stated in
Martin,
the initial observation of the shotgun in this case did not implicate the Fourth Amendment, because looking through a car’s windows does not constitute a “search” for purposes of the Constitution.
1
Thus, Salway’s “conduct was not a ‘search’ because a person who parks a car — which necessarily has trаnsparent windows— ... does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the visible interior of his ear.”
United States v. Hatten,
I also find that the warrantless seizure of the gun fell within the automobile exception, which allows “law enforcement officials [to] conduct a warrantless search of a movable vehicle when they have probable cause to believе it contains contraband or evidence of a crime.”
United States v. Vassiliou,
Moreover, the fact that the automobile was parked and unoccupied does not affect the applicability of the exception. For a vehicle to fall within the automobile exception, it is not necessary that it be occupied or moving at the time of the police officer’s intrusion into the vehicle. What matters is whether it was movable.
Vassiliou,
In the case at bar, defendant’s vehicle was parked on the street and could have been driven away at any time. Salway did not know defendant’s wherеabouts, and had no way of knowing whether or when defendant would return to the vehicle.
See California v. Carney,
These circumstances also support a finding that the warrantless entry into the vehicle was supported by thе existence of exigent circumstances. Although the Government presents this as an alternative to the automobile-exception theory, to some extent the two doctrines are intertwined, for it is the “exigent circumstances resulting from the automobile’s inherent mobility that the Supreme Court has recognized as justifying the automobile exception to the warrant requirement.”
Vassiliou,
Moreover, even if some additional factors are required to constitute exigent circumstances for a warrantless search of an automobile, circumstances such as those found here — the car parked on the street, with the possibility that the defendant could arrive at any time and drive it away or remove or destroy evidence in the ear — have been found to constitute exigent circumstances.
Reis,
MOTION TO DISMISS COUNT II
Defendant moves to dismiss Count II of the indictment on the ground that 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) is unconstitutionаl. Defendant asserts that Congress exceeded its authority under the Commerce Clause, U.S. Const, art. 1, § 8, cl. 3, in enacting this statute because the acts prohibited by the statute — receiving and possessing a firearm that has moved in interstate commerce — have no relationship to interstate commerce.
Although it is not cited in his motion, defendant appears to be relying оn
United States v. Lopez,
— U.S. -,
Several Courts of Appeals have addressed the constitutionality of § 922(g)(1) in light of the
Lopez
decision, and they have uniformly held that it passes constitutional muster. In
United States v. Rankin,
The reason that
Lopez
does not require a finding that § 922(g)(1) is uncоnstitutional was in fact identified by the
Lopez
Court itself. The Supreme Court noted that in
United States v. Bass,
The requirement of § 922(g) that the defendant’s possession of the firearm or ammunition must have been “in or affecting com
*87
merce,” then, supplies the critical element that rendered § 922(q) constitutionally infirm in
Lopez.
Prior to
Lopez,
concerning § 922(g) violations, it was well-established that this interstatе-commerce element is an element of the offense that the Government must prove at trial.
Bass,
Nothing in
Lopez,
then, calls into question the continuing validity of
Bass
or of
Scarborough v. United States,
Defendant also contends that Count II should be dismissed because it is duрlicitous. Defendant maintains that § 922(g)(1) bars receipt of a firearm, or possessing a firearm “in or affecting commerce.” Defendant argues that the indictment, which charges defendant with “reeeiv[ing] and possess[ing]” a firearm, alleges two separate offenses in one count.
I am not persuaded by this contention. Section 922(g)(1) makes it unlawful for a felon “to ship or transport in interstate or foreign commerce, or possess in or affecting commerce, any firearm or ammunition; or to receive any firearm or ammunition which has been shipped or transported in interstate or foreign commerce.” Thus, “receipt and possession are simply two means of violating the same provision ...”
United States v. Austin,
CONCLUSION
Defendant’s motions to suppress physical evidence and to dismiss Count II of the indictment are denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Strictly speaking, therefore, the "plain view” doctrine does not apply to Salway's observation of the gun, since that doctrine is concerned with the seizure of items that come within an officer’s view during a constitutionally permissible intrusion.
Martin,
. Lasanta
seems to call into question
Paulino 's
statement that the automobile exception requires only that probable causе existed and that the space searched was an automobile.
Lasanta,
. While the Court in Bass held that § 1202(a) contained an interstate-commerce nexus, it was not until Scarborough that the Court was faced with the question of what would constitute an adequate nexus.
