Crooker v. Variale ( 1995 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion



    November 8, 1995 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT



    ____________________


    No. 94-2183

    MICHAEL A. CROOKER,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    KENNETH VARRIALE, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Michael A. Ponsor, U.S. District Judge]

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________
    Cyr and Stahl, Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    Michael Alan Crooker on brief pro se. ____________________
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, and Karen L. Goodwin, _______________ _________________
    Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.


    ____________________


    ____________________























    Per Curiam. Plaintiff, Michael A. Crooker, appeals the __________

    grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant, ATF

    Agent Kenneth Varriale, in this Bivens action, see Bivens v. ______ ___ ______

    Six Unknown Named Agents, 403 U.S. 388 (1971), that ____________________________

    challenged a November 1991 search of, and seizure of items

    from, Crooker's residence and a seizure of an additional item

    pursuant to a July 1992 search of that residence. The

    district court concluded that Crooker was collaterally

    estopped from asserting several of the Bivens claims. As to ______

    those Bivens claims not precluded by collateral estoppel, the ______

    district court determined that the items had been

    constitutionally seized as within the scope of the warrant,

    in plain view, and/or Agent Varriale was not liable as he was

    entitled to qualified immunity.

    Upon careful review, we conclude that summary judgment

    was appropriate on all counts; although as to certain counts,

    we affirm on grounds different from the district court. See ___

    Four Corners Serv. Station, Inc. v. Mobil Oil Corp., 51 F.3d _________________________________ _______________

    306, 314 (1st Cir. 1995) (appellate court is free to affirm

    on any ground supported by the record). We pass the issue of

    collateral estoppel, affirming, instead, on an alternative

    ground of qualified immunity, the grant of summary judgment

    on the counts deemed precluded. As to the counts involving

    the November 1991 seizure of antique firearms and the July





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    1992 seizure of ammunition, Crooker has failed to allege a

    violation of his own Fourth Amendment rights.

    I.

    The district court, in a comprehensive memorandum, dated

    October 26, 1994, explained the factual and procedural

    background. We set out an abbreviated version, outlining

    only those facts and the procedural history necessary to

    explain the basis for our determination.

    Crooker was released from prison in February 1991 after

    serving a 4-to-5 year state prison sentence for possession of

    a machine gun. Pursuant to a warrant, Agent Varriale

    searched Crooker's residence on November 8, 1991, for

    firearms, ammunition, and related material. Agent Varriale

    seized, among other things, several antique and non-antique

    firearms, numerous rounds of ammunition, an address book, a

    firearms record card, and firearms publications.1

    Crooker was indicted on charges of being a felon-in-

    possession of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. 922(g).

    In this criminal proceeding, Crooker moved to suppress the


    ____________________

    1. As noted in our opening paragraph, there was a second
    search of Crooker's residence conducted in July 1992.
    Pursuant to a separate warrant issued in the course of an IRS
    investigation of Crooker for filing false tax refund claims,
    Agent Varriale assisted IRS agents in executing the July 1992
    warrant and seized ammunition from an antique firearm.
    In this Bivens action, Crooker does not contest the ______
    issuance of the July 1992 warrant. He claims only that the
    July 1992 warrant did not authorize or encompass a seizure of
    that ammunition.

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    evidence seized in November 1991, arguing that the warrant

    had been issued without probable cause and that items seized

    were outside the scope of the warrant. The motion to

    suppress was denied by Chief Judge Tauro.

    Thereafter, in exchange for the dismissal of the felon-

    in-possession indictment, Crooker pled guilty to an

    information charging him with conspiracy to possess firearms

    by a felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 371. By the

    dismissal of the felon-in-possession indictment, Crooker

    avoided the imposition of a mandatory 15-year term of

    imprisonment. The parties agreed to, and Judge Tauro

    imposed, an eight-year sentence for the charge to which

    Crooker pled guilty.

    After pleading guilty in his criminal case, Crooker

    moved to lift a stay that had been entered in his earlier

    Bivens action against Agent Varriale. Some of the Bivens ______ ______

    claims duplicated the allegations forming the basis for

    Crooker's suppression motion, i.e., that the application for

    the 1991 search warrant included deliberate false statements,

    that the 1991 search warrant was not supported by probable

    cause, and that the 1991 search exceeded the scope of the

    warrant. Relying on Allen v. McCurry, 449 U.S. 90 (1980) _____ _______

    (collateral estoppel applies to 1983 actions), the district

    court determined in the Bivens action that Crooker was ______

    collaterally estopped from relitigating the issues decided in



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    the suppression ruling previously entered in the criminal

    case. The district court granted summary judgment in favor

    of Agent Varriale as to the remaining Bivens claims, ______

    concluding that the items which were the subject of these

    counts were lawfully seized or detained or that, in any

    event, Agent Varriale was entitled to qualified immunity.

    II.

    Crooker contends that the district court erred in

    concluding that he is collaterally estopped. He cites to

    Haring v. Prosise, 462 U.S. 306 (1983), for the proposition ______ _______

    that entry of a guilty plea does not preclude a litigant from

    bringing a civil claim based on a Fourth Amendment violation

    arising out of the same set of operative facts. The Prosise _______

    Court held, inter alia, that since a plea can be accepted on _____ ____

    the basis of inadmissible evidence, the legality of a search

    is not "necessarily determined" by a guilty plea. Id. at ___

    316. We need not consider whether the issues raised by

    Crooker were precluded by any adjudication in the criminal

    case,2 because we affirm on alternative grounds -- namely

    ____________________

    2. We note, however, that the Prosise Court stated that one _______
    concern which animated its decision was the desire to
    preserve judicial resources. "The rule [rejected in Prosise] _______
    would require an otherwise unwilling party to try Fourth
    Amendment questions to the hilt and prevail in state court in
    order to preserve the mere possibility of later bringing a
    1983 claim in federal court." Prosise, 462 U.S. at 322. _______
    Further, the Court noted that in the case before it, there
    was "no repetitive use of judicial resources and no
    possibility of inconsistent decisions that could justify
    precluding the bringing of such claims." Id. at 322 n.11. ___

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    qualified immunity -- the district court's grant of summary

    judgment on the counts it deemed precluded. See Four Corners ___ ____________

    Serv. Station, Inc., 51 F.3d at 314 (appellate court is free ____________________

    to affirm on any ground supported by the record).

    Qualified immunity shields government officials

    performing discretionary functions from liability for civil

    damages so long as their conduct "does not violate clearly

    established statutory or constitutional rights of which a

    reasonable [police officer] would have known." Harlow v. ______

    Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). The qualified immunity __________

    defense sweeps broadly, protecting "all but the plainly

    incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law." Hunter ______

    v. Bryant, 502 U.S. 224, 229 (1991) (quoting Malley v. ______ ______

    Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 341 (1986)). As this court recently ______

    explained,

    appellate assessment of a qualified
    immunity claim is apportioned into two
    analytic components. First, if the right
    asserted by the plaintiff was "clearly
    established" at the time of its alleged
    violation, we are required to assume that
    the right was recognized by the defendant
    official; second, we will deny the
    immunity claim if a reasonable official
    situated in the same circumstances should
    have understood that the challenged
    conduct violated that established right.

    Hegarty v. Somerset County, 53 F.3d 1367, 1373 (1st Cir. _______ _______________

    1995) (quoting Burns v. Loranger, 907 F.2d 233, 235-36 (1st _____ ________

    ____________________

    Of course, Crooker's litigation of the suppression motion did
    require the expenditure of scarce judicial resources.

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    Cir. 1990) (citations omitted)). In the context of qualified

    immunity, summary judgment is warranted if the plaintiff

    fails to generate a trialworthy issue by undermining the

    evidence supporting the defendant officer's objectively

    reasonable belief that his actions were lawful. Dean v. ____

    Worcester, 924 F.2d 364, 367 (1st Cir. 1991). _________

    The rights which Crooker says were violated -- the right

    to be free from a search conducted pursuant to a warrant

    premised on deliberate misstatements, the right to be free

    from a search conducted pursuant to a warrant unsupported by

    probable cause and the right to be free from a search for

    items not adequately described in the warrant -- are clearly

    established. Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154, 164-65 (1978) ______ ________

    (reciting that the Fourth Amendment demands a factual showing

    sufficient to comprise probable cause and demands that it be

    a truthful showing); Krohn v. United States, 742 F.2d 24, 26 _____ _____________

    (1st Cir. 1984) (same); Berger v. New York, 388 U.S. 41, 55 ______ ________

    (1967) (reciting the Fourth Amendment's requirement that a

    warrant particularly describe the things to be seized);

    United States v. Morris, 977 F.2d 677, 681 (1st Cir. 1992) ______________ ______

    (same), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 1588 (1993). Consequently, ____________

    our analysis turns on whether a police officer in Agent

    Varriale's position reasonably could have believed that his

    actions did not violate those rights. As regards the actions

    surrounding the 1991 search warrant, an objectively



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    reasonable officer could have believed that Varriale's

    actions did not violate clearly established law.

    Crooker contends that the following statement, submitted

    by Agent Varriale in support of the 1991 warrant application,

    was deliberately false:

    In my experience, it is common for
    individuals who are prohibited from
    legally possessing firearms--but who wish
    to do so illegally--to have a household
    or family member or associate who is
    properly licensed to possess firearms,
    make purchases of firearms and ammunition
    which are then in fact used by the
    prohibited person. In this way persons
    who are prohibited from legally
    possessing firearms are able to possess
    firearms without creating any record of
    transactions in their name. Based on my
    training and experience, I believe that
    such a ruse is likely where, as here,
    significant amounts of ammunition are
    being received through mail orders and
    the purchasing party need not appear in
    person.

    Crooker argues that this statement is false because it is not

    "common" for prohibited individuals to buy firearms and

    ammunition through family members and that the amount of

    ammunition bought was not "significant." He proposed to

    demonstrate that such schemes were not "common," by comparing

    the large number of lawful gun owners in the United States

    with the small number of "straw-purchasing" schemes detected

    each year by law enforcement.3 And he contended that the

    ____________________

    3. Crooker neither produced such data, nor requested
    additional time within which to do so. See Fed. R. Civ. P. ___
    56(f).

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    amount of ammunition purchased could not be termed

    "significant" when compared with the 2,000 - 6,000 pounds of

    ammunition Crooker's supplier shipped daily.

    Crooker's claims fall far short of generating a

    trialworthy dispute as to whether Agent Varriale deliberately

    supported his warrant application with false information.

    Rather, his argument amounts to little more than a semantic

    game. Crooker produced absolutely no evidence to refute the

    statement that Agent Varriale, based on his experience,

    considered firearms purchases by close family members to be a

    common method by which prohibited individuals attempt to

    acquire firearms illegally. A law enforcement officer, with

    experience in such matters, could reasonably conclude that a

    particular pattern of criminal behavior was "common" without

    undertaking a statistical analysis encompassing all firearm

    purchases in the United States. And a reasonable officer

    reasonably could conclude that the fifty-one boxes of

    ammunition which were delivered to Crooker's residence during

    the previous four months represented a "significant" amount

    of ammunition.

    Crooker's second claim is that the search of his

    premises violated the Fourth Amendment because the 1991

    search warrant was not supported by probable cause. Once

    again, we inquire whether a reasonable officer, in Agent





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    Varriale's position, reasonably could have believed that a

    search did not violate Crooker's rights.

    In United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897 (1984), the _____________ ____

    Supreme Court held that evidence seized under an invalid

    warrant, believed in good faith to be valid by the officers

    who executed it, should not be suppressed under the

    exclusionary rule. Leon explicitly noted that the standard ____

    of "objective reasonableness" used in assessing a qualified ____ __ _________ _ _________

    immunity defense should be used to determine when evidence ________ _______

    seized under a technically invalid warrant, should be

    excluded. Id. at 922. The Court stated, ___

    [I]n most such cases, there is no police __ ______
    illegality and thus nothing to deter. . . __________
    . In the ordinary case, an officer cannot
    be expected to question the magistrate's
    probable-cause determination or his
    judgment that the form of the warrant is
    technically sufficient. '[O]nce the
    warrant issues, there is literally
    nothing more the policeman can do in
    seeking to comply with the law.' Stone _____
    v. Powell, 428 U.S. 465, 498 (1976) ______
    (Burger, C.J. concurring).

    Id. at 921 (emphasis added). ___

    In Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S. 335 (1986), the Court made ______ ______

    clear that the Leon analysis serves as well in the qualified ____

    immunity analysis applicable to police officers in the

    position of Agent Varriale.

    [W]e hold that the same standard of
    objective reasonableness that we applied
    in the context of a suppression hearing
    in Leon, [468 U.S. 897 (1984),] defines ____
    the qualified immunity accorded an


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    officer whose request for a warrant
    allegedly caused an unconstitutional
    arrest. Only where the warrant
    application is so lacking in indicia of
    probable cause as to render official
    belief in its existence unreasonable,
    Leon, [468 U.S.] at 923, will the shield ____
    of immunity be lost.

    Id. at 344-45 (footnote omitted). ___

    The Leon Court set forth three circumstances wherein ____

    good-faith reliance upon a neutral magistrate's probable

    cause determination could not be found. First, in

    circumstances where the police submitted affidavits in

    support of the warrant application, which they knew, or

    should have known, were false. Id. at 923. The affidavit ___

    submitted in support of the 1991 search warrant contained no

    such statements. Second, the police cannot place good-faith

    reliance upon a warrant issued by a magistrate who has

    "wholly abandoned his judicial role." Id. There is no such ___

    suggestion in this case. Third, the police cannot assert

    good-faith reliance on a warrant issued on the basis of an

    application which was "so facially deficient -- i.e., in ____

    failing to particularize the place to be searched or the

    things to be seized -- that the executing officers cannot

    reasonably presume it to be valid." Id. The 1991 warrant ___

    issued for Crooker's residence was entirely regular on its

    face. Consequently, in executing the 1991 warrant Agent

    Varriale was entitled to place good-faith reliance upon the




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    search warrant, as an objectively reasonable basis for

    executing the warranted search of Crooker's residence.

    Crooker's third claim is that the search conducted by

    Agent Varriale exceeded the scope of the warrant. The

    warrant authorized a search for "ammunition and firearms,

    possession of which constitute a violation of Title 18,

    United States Code, Section 922(g), firearms maintenance

    equipment, records of purchases, deliveries and receipts of

    firearms and ammunition, including invoices, bills of sale .

    . . and correspondence which constitute evidence of violation

    of [18 U.S.C. 922(g)]."

    Crooker first contends that seizure of the modern

    firearms was outside the scope of the warrant, because Agent

    Varriale did not have probable cause to believe that the

    firearms actually belonged to him (and hence were possessed

    in violation of 922(g)) and not Susan Bartnicki, with whom

    he was living at the time of the November 1991 search (and

    who was not barred from possession by 922(g)).

    Nonetheless, a reasonable officer could reach the conclusion

    that the firearms were possessed by Crooker based upon 1) the

    fact that Crooker had signed for and tendered the payment for

    ten boxes of ammunition, 2) the fact that the firearms were

    within Crooker's residence and 3) the fact that the key to

    the gun safe was hanging in Crooker's bedroom.





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    Crooker also contends that the seizure of antique

    firearms was outside the scope of the warrant, because they

    are not within the purview of 922(g). See 18 U.S.C. ___

    921(a)(3), (16) (defining antique firearms and exempting same

    from definition of "firearms" regulated under 922). We

    affirm summary judgment for Agent Varriale on this count

    because, in any event, Crooker did not allege any violation

    of his Fourth Amendment right with respect to the seizure of ___

    the antique firearms. "Fourth Amendment rights are personal

    rights which, like some other constitutional rights, may not

    be vicariously asserted." Alderman v. United States, 394 ________ ______________

    U.S. 165, 174 (1967). The Fourth Amendment's prohibition

    against unreasonable seizures protects a possessory interest

    in property. "[A] seizure deprives the individual of

    dominion over his or her person or property." Horton v. ______

    California, 496 U.S. 128, 133 (1990).4 Although Crooker has __________

    claimed that, even as a convicted felon, he may lawfully own

    and possess antique firearms, he alleged in the Bivens "Third ______

    Amended Complaint" that the particular antique firearms

    seized pursuant to the November 1991 warrant belonged to

    ____________________

    4. Of course, the Fourth Amendment also protects against
    unreasonable searches. "A search compromises the individual
    interest in privacy." Horton, 496 U.S. at 128. Crooker had ______
    a legitimate expectation in the privacy of his home. As the
    searching officers had a valid search warrant and discovered
    the antique firearms during the course of, and within the
    permissible scope of, their authorized search for modern
    firearms, however, Crooker's privacy interest was not
    violated.

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    Bartnicki, who is not a party to this complaint. Similarly,

    Crooker may not complain about the seizure of the ammunition

    taken from an antique firearm during the course of the July

    1992 search as he has alleged that that firearm and

    ammunition belonged to Bartnicki.5

    As to the remaining items seized under the 1991 warrant,

    we agree with the district court.6 The address book and the

    firearms record card and handwritten notes were either within

    the scope of the warrant authorizing the seizure of "records

    of purchases, deliveries and receipts of firearms and

    ammunition, including . . . correspondence which constitute

    evidence of violation of Title 18, United States Code,

    Section 922(g)" or legitimately seized as being within "plain

    view." We further agree that, in any event, Agent Varriale

    was entitled to qualified immunity because a reasonable

    officer in Varriale's position could so believe. Similarly,

    we conclude that the legal papers and firearms publications

    (counts which the district court found barred by collateral

    estoppel) were constitutionally seized as within the scope of

    the warrant, in plain view, or that, in any event, Agent

    Varriale is entitled to qualified immunity.

    ____________________

    5. Crooker was never charged in his criminal proceeding with
    the unlawful possession of any of the antique firearms seized
    in November 1991 or the ammunition seized in July 1992.

    6. We also agree with the district court's conclusion with
    respect to Crooker's complaint about the detention of a
    package from Shooter's Equipment Company.

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    Finally, although not raised as a separate count in his

    Bivens complaint, during the course of the district court ______

    proceedings Crooker complained about the retention of items

    seized. Whether Agent Varriale was personally responsible __________

    for the retention of the items and had authority to order the _________

    return of items taken in the search and, thus, is the proper

    defendant with respect to such a claim is of some doubt.

    See, e.g., Go-Bart Co. v. United States, 282 U.S. 344, 354-55 _________ ___________ _____________

    (1931) (reciting that because the United States Attorney had

    control of the prosecution, the papers seized were held

    subject to his control and direction, although in the

    immediate care and custody of the officer who seized them);

    Thompson v. Williamson, 962 F.2d 12 (8th Cir. 1992) ________ __________

    (unpublished per curiam) (affirming summary judgment in

    Bivens action seeking return of property in favor of FBI ______

    agent who alleged that he could not release property without

    approval of AUSA). In any event, Crooker has not been clear

    as to which items he refers. He, of course, is not entitled

    to the return of any contraband. And, insofar as Crooker is

    referring to the antique firearms seized in November 1991 and

    the ammunition seized in July 1992, Crooker's failure to

    establish that he is the rightful owner, see supra, defeats ___ _____

    this claim. Finally, insofar as he may be referring to

    personal papers, Crooker now states that his property has





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    been returned. We conclude, therefore, that this claim is

    moot.

    Affirmed. _________















































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