United States v. Rudolph Miffin, Jr. ( 2024 )


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  • USCA4 Appeal: 23-4040     Doc: 63        Filed: 08/23/2024   Pg: 1 of 23
    UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 23-4040
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    RUDOLPH DANIEL MIFFIN, JR.,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    No. 23-4105
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    JERMAINE DARNELL JOHNSON, a/k/a Jermaine Darrell Johnson, a/k/a Buck
    Johnson,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at
    Richmond. M. Hannah Lauck, District Judge. (3:21-cr-00029-MHL-2; 3:21-cr-00029-
    MHL-1)
    Argued: March 5, 2024                                       Decided: August 23, 2024
    Before DIAZ, Chief Judge, and RICHARDSON and RUSHING, Circuit Judges.
    USCA4 Appeal: 23-4040      Doc: 63        Filed: 08/23/2024     Pg: 2 of 23
    Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Chief Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in which Judge
    Richardson and Judge Rushing joined.
    ARGUED: I. Scott Pickus, LAW OFFICES OF I. SCOTT PICKUS, ESQUIRE, Glen
    Allen, Virginia; Timothy George McCormick, CHRISTIAN & BARTON LLP, Richmond,
    Virginia, for Appellants. Stephen Eugene Anthony, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
    ATTORNEY, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Jessica D. Aber, United
    States Attorney, Richmond, Virginia, Jacqueline Bechara, Assistant United States Attorney,
    OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee.
    2
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    DIAZ, Chief Judge:
    We consider on appeal the district court’s denial of Jermaine Darnell Johnson’s and
    Rudolph Miffin, Jr.’s motions to suppress certain evidence the police seized during a traffic
    stop.1 Johnson and Miffin contend that police officers impermissibly prolonged the stop,
    in violation of the Fourth Amendment, by subjecting Johnson, the driver, to a pat down
    and search of a bag on his person, in which they found a handgun and drug paraphernalia.
    Johnson and Miffin also assert that the officers violated the Fourth Amendment by
    prolonging the traffic stop to search the vehicle, Miffin’s person, and a similar bag on his
    person. During those searches, the officers found another handgun, an empty extended
    handgun magazine, drugs, and more drug paraphernalia.
    After the district court denied their motions to suppress,2 Johnson and Miffin entered
    conditional guilty pleas. Johnson pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm,
    and possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance. Miffin pleaded guilty to
    possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance. Both, however, reserved the
    right to appeal the claims that they raised in their suppression motions. The defendants
    1
    The district court also denied Miffin’s motion to suppress certain incriminating
    statements he made to federal agents while he was being transferred from the county jail,
    where he was detained following the traffic stop, as moot. United States v. Johnson, No.
    3:21-cr-29, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *24–25 (E.D. Va. June 30, 2022). Miffin doesn’t appeal
    that decision. In addition, the district court granted in part Johnson’s motion to suppress
    certain statements he made to the officers after he was handcuffed and before he was read
    his Miranda warnings. Id. at *23. The government doesn’t appeal that decision.
    2
    Miffin moved to adopt Johnson’s motion to suppress, which the district court
    granted. Id. at *8.
    3
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    bring those appeals now, challenging the searches of Johnson’s and Miffin’s persons, their
    bags, and the vehicle. Relying mainly on the search incident to arrest and automobile
    exceptions to the Fourth Amendment, we affirm.
    I.
    Because, as relevant here, the district court denied Johnson’s and Miffin’s
    suppression motions, we recount the facts in the light most favorable to the government,
    the prevailing party below. United States v. Slocumb, 
    804 F.3d 677
    , 681 (4th Cir. 2015)
    (cleaned up).
    A.
    Officer O.T. Broaddus encountered Johnson and Miffin during two stops in the early
    morning hours of September 1, 2020. The first stop was generally routine: while patrolling
    an area of Henrico County following a string of “vandalization[s] and burglaries,”
    Broaddus “came across a vehicle that was parked [in a dark area] . . . that had [its] lights
    on.” United States v. Johnson, No. 3:21-cr-29, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *2 (E.D. Va. June
    30, 2022). The illuminated vehicle “stuck out to” Broaddus, prompting him to “conduct[]
    a records check of the vehicle’s license plate.” 
    Id.
    While the check revealed that the license plate was linked to a different color
    vehicle, it didn’t indicate that any warrants were on file or contain any other information
    of concern. Still, Broaddus left his police cruiser and approached the vehicle, where he
    saw Miffin “sitting alone in the passenger seat with the door open.” 
    Id.
     Broaddus and
    Miffin talked about “criminal activity in the area” before Johnson “walked up to the car.”
    4
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    Id.
     Broaddus then had a similar conversation with Johnson. Once the conversations ended,
    Broaddus left Johnson and Miffin—who both struck Broaddus as “cooperative and
    cordial”—and continued his patrol. 
    Id.
    The second stop, occurring only a few minutes later, is the subject of this appeal.
    There, Broaddus “saw a car pass him with an unlit light above its rear license plate.” Id.
    at *3. “Because the unlit light constituted an equipment violation,” id., Broaddus pursued
    the vehicle, activating his emergency blue lights once he caught up to it. The vehicle
    traveled another block before “stopping near an access road adjacent to [a] major
    intersection.” Id. “[G]iven the time of day, cars passed only intermittently, and the area
    was dark.” Id.
    Broaddus once more approached the vehicle alone and observed Johnson sitting in
    the driver’s seat with Miffin in the passenger’s seat. He realized at this point “that this was
    the same car” and occupants he had encountered during the initial stop. Id. Broaddus
    acknowledged as much to Johnson before informing him of the traffic infraction. Johnson
    noted that he was aware of the unlit tag light but “expressed concern” to Broaddus about
    the stop because Johnson was “on federal papers, a euphemism for federal supervision.”
    Id. (cleaned up). Broaddus assured Johnson “that he should not have much to be concerned
    about.” Id. (cleaned up).
    All the same, Broaddus asked Johnson and Miffin for identification, explaining,
    “When I stop a car, I need to identify both occupants.” Id. Both men complied. Broaddus
    also requested the vehicle’s registration, but “Johnson informed Officer Broaddus that he
    could not find [it] because the car belonged to someone else.” Id. Instead, Johnson gave
    5
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    Broaddus a vehicle inspection report, which Broaddus accepted because it “reprinted the
    car’s vehicle identification number.” Id.
    With the paperwork in hand, Broaddus “returned to his police cruiser to check [the]
    records.” Id. He confirmed that “Johnson was on federal supervision, although [the check]
    did not specify the nature of the underlying offense or provide any detail about Johnson’s
    criminal history.” Id. The check also instructed that Broaddus was “not to arrest [Johnson]
    unless a crime ha[d] occurred.” Id. (cleaned up). As for Miffin, Broaddus “received an
    alert classifying Miffin as a known member of the Crips Southwest Virginia gang,” which
    Broaddus knew, “based on his training and experience, . . . had a reputation for violence.”
    Id. at *4. But this alert qualified that “[s]tanding alone,” Miffin’s gang affiliation “d[id]
    not furnish grounds for the search and seizure of any individual, vehicle, or dwelling.” Id.
    About five minutes into the stop, and as Broaddus was conducting the records check,
    Sergeant Patrick English “arrived on the scene.” Id. Though English wasn’t called to assist
    Broaddus, it “was normal procedure” for one officer to “check on” another officer during
    a traffic stop. Id. English, standing outside Broaddus’s police cruiser, asked Broaddus
    about the stop. As Broaddus was responding, English “interrupted and stated, ‘There’s a
    lot of movement going around [in the car],’” id., and began walking toward the vehicle.
    Though English didn’t describe this movement any further, Broaddus “interpreted Sergeant
    English’s reaction as ‘unusual and suspicious because when Sergeant English said there
    was a lot of movement in that vehicle, and walked off, that meant that he observed
    something that may have been an officer safety issue.’” Id. (cleaned up).
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    English approached the passenger’s window, and Johnson leaned across Miffin to
    “volunteer[] [to English] that he was putting on his ‘slides,’ or slip-on sandals.” Id. English
    still noted “that there was reaching going on outside his view.” Id. (cleaned up).
    Broaddus, meanwhile, “continued to conduct the records check,” id., learning that
    the license plate on the vehicle was linked to a different vehicle. “This discovery gave
    Officer Broaddus some concerns that [the] vehicle may have been stolen,” although he
    “recognized that the issue with the license plates may have been due to DMV issues or
    administrative issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic.” Id. (cleaned up). Broaddus
    completed the records check and returned to the vehicle, “ask[ing] Johnson to exit the car
    so that they could speak privately about the issue with the license plates.” Id. Though
    Johnson initially “voiced his desire to wait inside the car until his wife arrived,” id., he
    exited the car after Broaddus told Johnson that he could have the car towed if Johnson
    didn’t comply.
    Broaddus next asked Johnson if he had any weapons, and Johnson, after some back
    and forth, “indicated that he did not possess any weapons.” Id. at *5. To confirm, Broaddus
    asked if he could pat Johnson down. Though Johnson at first raised his arms as if to
    comply, he quickly dropped them and stated, “‘C’mon, bro, don’t do me like that, bro.’”
    Id. Johnson then “squared up,”3 id., and told Broaddus that he didn’t want Broaddus to
    search him.
    Broaddus testified that “it’s more or less a danger sign,” J.A. 133:21–22, to officers
    3
    when a suspect “squares up”—“a form of aggression” where “someone [is] getting ready
    to make an action that potentially is dangerous,” J.A. 134:4–7. Johnson and Miffin object
    7
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    Broaddus removed his hands from Johnson but noticed what he suspected was a
    marijuana flake on Johnson’s shirt. Id. He asked Johnson what the flake was, and Johnson
    replied, “That’s a problem.” Broaddus BWC 10:34.4 Though Broaddus told Johnson that
    he wasn’t “under arrest,” he explained that he was “detaining” Johnson because he had
    “marijuana on [him],” which is “illegal, okay?” Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *5. But
    “[m]oments later,” Sergeant English handcuffed Johnson’s hands behind his back. 
    Id.
     As
    Broaddus then led Johnson away, he asked whether there was more marijuana on Johnson’s
    person or in the car, and Johnson admitted that “the car’s center console contained a ‘blunt,’
    or a marijuana cigar.” 
    Id.
    After learning that the car contained more marijuana (about thirteen minutes into
    the stop), Broaddus “asked Johnson for a second time whether Johnson possessed any
    weapons because he was concerned that Johnson was armed and dangerous and that he
    might have additional marijuana on his person.” 
    Id.
     Before waiting for Johnson’s reply,
    but “because of those concerns,” Broaddus “opened a zipped cross-body bag draped across
    one of Johnson’s shoulders, resting flush against Johnson’s stomach.” 
    Id.
     Broaddus shined
    his flashlight inside the bag “and discovered a Glock 19” and “individually packaged
    narcotics.” 
    Id.
    to this description, but we defer to the district court’s factual determinations, United States
    v. Palmer, 
    820 F.3d 640
    , 653 (4th Cir. 2016) (cleaned up), which were based on both
    Broaddus’s testimony and his body worn camera footage.
    4
    Broaddus’s body worn camera footage was entered into evidence and reviewed
    during the suppression hearings.
    8
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    As the officers tried to remove the bag from Johnson’s shoulder and maneuver it
    around his cuffed hands, J.A. 138:3–8, Johnson began calling out to Miffin, shouting,
    “Hey, Juvie, they goddamn got the Glick out the bag, bro,”5 J.A. 138:18–23, 139:12–17;
    Broaddus BWC 14:29–14:50. This outburst prompted several responses. First, Broaddus
    cut the strap of the bag and walked away from Johnson to secure it in a police vehicle.
    Broaddus BWC 15:00–15:20. Broaddus then returned to Johnson, read him his Miranda
    warnings, and searched Johnson’s person, including his pockets, finding cash and other
    drug paraphernalia.
    Second, English instructed Officer Trevor Holmes, “who had arrived on the
    scene . . . and had been talking with Miffin, to ‘detain’ Miffin.” Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *6. Following Holmes’s commands, Miffin exited the vehicle, and Holmes
    told him that he “was ‘not under arrest,’” but “was simply ‘being detained right now.’” 
    Id.
    Still, “Holmes handcuffed Miffin, patted him down, and . . . read him his Miranda rights.”
    
    Id.
    With Johnson also secured, Broaddus approached Miffin and informed him “that
    they ‘found some stuff in the car,’” 
    id.
     (cleaned up), and asked him whether he had any
    drugs on his person, Broaddus BWC 22:25–23:08. Miffin, on whom Holmes had done a
    pat-down search, responded “that he did not have anything on his person, that he did not
    5
    The district court explained that a “‘Glick’ refers to a Glock loaded with an
    extended magazine.” Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *6 n.4.
    9
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    want to be searched, and that there was no reason to search him.” Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *6.
    Without searching Miffin, Broaddus left him handcuffed with Holmes, and searched
    the defendants’ vehicle with English. Broaddus found a Taurus 9mm pistol under Miffin’s
    seat, while English “recovered the blunt from the car’s center console, which also contained
    a digital scale and empty extended magazines for a handgun.” 
    Id.
     And “[i]n the front seat
    area, the officers discovered a large quantity of baking soda, a common cutting agent for
    narcotics, and several bags in the backseat that appeared to contain narcotics.” 
    Id.
    Broaddus then returned to Miffin, searching his person “and a cross-body bag strapped to
    his person similar to the one strapped to Johnson’s.” Id. at *7. During these searches,
    Broaddus found “additional individually packaged bags containing suspected narcotics.”
    Id.
    B.
    Johnson and Miffin were each charged with a separate count of possession of a
    firearm by a felon, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1), and with a combined count of
    possession with intent to distribute heroin and cocaine, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (a)(1)
    and (b)(1)(C). Johnson and Miffin moved to suppress evidence that they argued was
    obtained as the result of unreasonable warrantless searches incident to unreasonable
    warrantless seizures, in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
    The district court held an evidentiary hearing on the defendants’ motions, in which
    it heard testimony from Broaddus and English and reviewed several officers’ body worn
    camera footage. The court then heard separate oral argument on the motions after a round
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    of supplemental briefing. It also allowed the parties to file a second round of supplemental
    briefing after the argument.
    As relevant here, the district court denied Johnson’s and Miffin’s motions to
    suppress the evidence obtained during the searches of Johnson’s crossbody bag and the
    vehicle.
    To begin, the court found that the traffic stop was “lawful at its inception because
    Officer Broaddus witnessed a traffic violation, giving him probable cause to initiate the
    traffic stop.” Id. at *8. And it held that Broaddus didn’t impermissibly prolong the traffic
    stop given that he was “investigat[ing] the issues pertaining to the car’s registration and
    license plates” and that “these actions did not extend the stop longer than reasonably
    necessary for Officer Broaddus to complete his initial objectives.” Id. at *11. In so holding,
    the district court rejected the defendants’ argument that Broaddus unreasonably extended
    the stop beyond those initial objectives by conducting the pat-down frisk of Johnson and
    by conducting the later searches because those were justified under several exceptions to
    the Fourth Amendment.
    The district court, for example, determined that Broaddus had reasonable suspicion
    that Johnson was armed and dangerous, justifying his initial protective frisk under Terry v.
    Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968). Then, as to the search of Johnson’s crossbody bag, the district
    court found that it was justified as a search incident to Johnson’s arrest for the traffic
    violation. Finally, as to the search of the vehicle, the district court found that the seized
    evidence would have been inevitably discovered because the vehicle—lacking proper
    license plates—was inoperable.
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    After the district court’s decision, Johnson and Miffin waived indictment and
    entered conditional guilty pleas, while reserving the right to appeal the issues raised in their
    suppression motions. Johnson pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm
    and to possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance, and the district court
    imposed a sentence of ninety-six months’ imprisonment followed by three years’
    supervised release. Miffin pleaded guilty to possession with intent to distribute a controlled
    substance, and the district court imposed a sentence of eighty-five months’ imprisonment,
    also followed by three years’ supervised release.
    This appeal followed.
    II.
    Before us, Johnson and Miffin bring two challenges. First, they argue that Broaddus
    unreasonably extended the traffic stop by patting Johnson down and searching his
    crossbody bag, so the district court erred by not suppressing the evidence seized during
    that search. They next contend that the officers unreasonably extended the stop by
    searching the defendants’ vehicle, so the district court again erred by not suppressing the
    evidence seized during that search. We disagree on both fronts but will address each
    argument in turn.6
    Johnson and Miffin concede that Broaddus had probable cause to initiate the stop
    6
    and don’t challenge the length of the stop while Broaddus investigated the license plate
    issue.
    12
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    A.
    We’ll begin with the defendants’ challenge to the pat down of Johnson’s person and
    search of Johnson’s crossbody bag. In reviewing the district court’s denial of a suppression
    motion, “we review legal conclusions de novo and factual findings for clear error.” United
    States v. Pulley, 
    987 F.3d 370
    , 376 (4th Cir. 2021) (cleaned up). And we “evaluate[] the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the government.” United States v. Perry, 
    92 F.4th 500
    , 509 (4th Cir. 2024) (cleaned up). We conclude that neither the pat down nor the search
    violated the defendants’ Fourth Amendment rights because the former constituted a
    protective Terry frisk, and the latter constituted a permissible search incident to arrest.
    1.
    The Fourth Amendment guides our analysis. It protects “[t]he right of the people to
    be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and
    seizures.” United States v. Gist-Davis, 
    41 F.4th 259
    , 263 (4th Cir. 2022) (quoting U.S.
    Const. amend. IV). And the right extends to investigatory stops and associated protective
    frisks “that fail to comply with the criteria articulated in Terry v. Ohio.” 
    Id.
     (citation
    omitted).
    An officer who has conducted a lawful traffic stop may conduct a protective frisk if
    he “has a reasonable suspicion that one of the automobile’s occupants is armed” to ensure
    “the officer’s protection and the safety of everyone on the scene.” United States v.
    Robinson, 
    846 F.3d 694
    , 696 (4th Cir. 2017). Reasonable suspicion “is a less demanding
    standard than probable cause,” and “considerably less [demanding] than a preponderance
    of the evidence.” Gist-Davis, 41 F.4th at 264 (cleaned up).
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    Still, reasonable suspicion isn’t toothless: It requires that an officer “be able to
    articulate more than an inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or hunch” that an
    individual is armed and dangerous. Id. (cleaned up). The officer may consider “a host of
    factors” in doing so, United States v. George, 
    732 F.3d 296
    , 299 (4th Cir. 2013), and we
    evaluate those factors under “the totality of the circumstances, giving due weight to
    common sense judgments reached by [the] officer[] in light of [his] experience and
    training,” Gist-Davis, 41 F.4th at 264 (cleaned up).
    The district court summarized the “host of factors” that it considered in its
    reasonable suspicion calculus and assigned weight to each. Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    ,
    at *13 (citing factors and cases). It assigned, for example, “substantial weight” to “the
    information [Broaddus] received from the records check,” as well as the movement English
    “observed . . . within the car.” Id. at *15. The district court then assigned only “some
    weight” to the fact that (1) the stop occurred “in a high-crime area,” id. at *14, (2) the stop
    occurred “at 1:25 a.m. in a dark location,” id. at *15, and (3) Johnson was “unusual[ly]”
    nervous and “evasive,” id. at *16. Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the
    government and deferring to the district court’s credibility determinations, we see no reason
    to disturb the district court’s reasoning and agree that, taken in their totality, these
    circumstances allowed Broaddus to reasonably suspect that Johnson was armed and
    dangerous.
    Turning first to the records check, Broaddus learned from the check that “Johnson
    was on federal supervision and that Miffin was a reported member of the Crips,” a gang
    with “a reputation for violence.” Id. at *15; see also United States v.
    Holmes, 376
     F.3d
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    270, 278 (4th Cir. 2004) (crediting suspect’s criminal history and violent gang affiliation
    as relevant factors in reasonable suspicion analysis). Broaddus, moreover, “reasonably
    suspected he was dealing with a possible stolen vehicle considering that the records check
    associated the license plates on [the d]efendants’ car with another vehicle.” Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *15 (cleaned up).
    As for the movement in the vehicle, English not only “abruptly interrupt[ed]”
    Broaddus to note the movement, but also “promptly approach[ed] the vehicle to get a better
    view” of the movement. 
    Id.
     The district court credited Broaddus’s testimony that
    English’s behavior “possibly signal[ed] an officer safety issue,” 
    id.
     (cleaned up), given that
    “[s]uspicious movements such as [Johnson’s] . . . ‘can be taken to suggest that the suspect
    may have a weapon,’” 
    id.
     (quoting George, 
    732 F.3d at 299
    ) (cleaned up).
    Finally, for the three other factors, the district court was right to acknowledge that,
    alone, they were “minimally probative,” id. at *14; see also id. at*15–16, but that they
    could still be considered within the reasonable suspicion framework. This court has
    allowed the crime rate where the stop occurred, United States v. Mitchell, 
    963 F.3d 385
    ,
    391 (4th Cir. 2020), the early morning hours in which the stop occurred, and a suspect’s
    demeanor to play some role within that framework, George, 732 F.3d at 299–300.
    In this case, the stop occurred in a higher-crime area. Indeed, Broaddus was
    patrolling there because of recent criminal activity in the vicinity. And the stop occurred
    in the early hours of the morning, which “may alert a reasonable officer to the possibility
    of danger.” Id. at 300. Then, Johnson became less compliant as Broaddus sought to clarify
    the records check—declining to exit the vehicle to discuss the license plate issue with
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    Broaddus, “squaring up” to Broaddus when he did exit the vehicle, and resisting
    Broaddus’s questions about whether he possessed any weapons.7
    Johnson and Miffin resist this conclusion, arguing that the officers and Johnson
    “were laughing about the situation,” so “[c]learly,” they weren’t “in fear for [their] safety.”
    Appellants’ Br. at 16. And they contend that “[t]he stop was for a traffic infraction,” during
    which Broaddus “never voiced any concern for his safety or that of the other police officers
    then present.” Id. at 18.
    But that Broaddus had cordial interactions with Johnson doesn’t mean he didn’t
    reasonably suspect that Johnson was armed. Nor does our standard require an outward
    expression of that suspicion. See United States v. Branch, 
    537 F.3d 328
    , 337 (4th Cir.
    2008) (explaining that “the lawfulness of a Terry stop turns not on the officer’s actual state
    of mind at the time the challenged action was taken, but rather on an objective assessment
    of the officer’s actions” (cleaned up)).
    There’s no question that Broaddus (1) initiated the stop in the early morning hours
    in a higher-crime area, (2) learned that Johnson was under federal supervision, that Miffin
    was in a violent gang, that the vehicle had mismatched plates, and that there was movement
    in the vehicle, and (3) observed Johnson become more agitated and less compliant as he
    7
    The district court rightly identified “the complex reality of citizen-police
    relationships in many cities,” including Richmond, Virginia, so that “Johnson’s
    hesitations” (or evasive behavior) merited less weight in its reasonable suspicion analysis.
    Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *16.
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    tried to unravel the plate issue. Under our standard, we’re satisfied that reasonable
    suspicion existed, justifying Broaddus’s protective frisk of Johnson.
    2.
    We address next Johnson and Miffin’s argument that Broaddus impermissibly
    prolonged the stop by searching Johnson’s crossbody bag. The district court held that the
    search was conducted as a valid search incident to arrest for the traffic infraction, even
    though the search preceded the arrest. Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *17. We agree.
    A search incident to arrest “is a traditional exception to the warrant requirement of
    the Fourth Amendment,” in which “law enforcement officers [who] have probable cause
    to make a lawful custodial arrest . . . may—incident to that arrest and without a warrant—
    search the arrestee’s person and the area within his immediate control.” United States v.
    Currence, 
    446 F.3d 554
    , 556 (4th Cir. 2006) (cleaned up). An officer may do so, even
    before an official arrest is made, to “remove any weapons that [a suspect] might seek to
    use in order to resist arrest or effect his escape,” and “to prevent the concealment or
    destruction of evidence.” 
    Id.
     But as with the reasonable suspicion standard, this exception
    isn’t limitless.
    The Supreme Court narrowed this exception in Arizona v. Gant by holding that, in
    the vehicular context, police can “search a vehicle incident to a recent occupant’s arrest
    only when the arrestee is unsecured and within reaching distance of the passenger
    compartment at the time of the search.” 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 343 (2009) (emphasis added). This
    court in United States v. Davis then extended that holding to reach “non-vehicular
    containers that were not on the arrestee’s person.” 
    997 F.3d 191
    , 197 (4th Cir. 2021).
    17
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    Like this case, the “non-vehicular container[]” in Davis was a bag, so the main
    question was whether the suspect “could have accessed the backpack at the time of the
    search.” Id. at 198 (cleaned up). The answer there was no, where the suspect had dropped
    his backpack and was laying on the ground with his handcuffed hands behind his back, and
    where the officer had just had “his service weapon drawn.” Id. Under those circumstances,
    “there [was] no doubt that Davis was secured and not within reaching distance of his
    backpack,” id., when the officer searched it.
    Johnson and Miffin would apply Davis’s holding here. Though the defendants don’t
    dispute that Broaddus had probable cause to arrest Johnson for the traffic infraction,8 see
    Reply Br. at 8, they argue that Johnson, like Davis, “had been placed in handcuffs with his
    hands behind him,” Appellants’ Br. at 20. They also repeat that “[a] threat to officers’
    safety Johnson was not.” Id.
    But the defendants overlook critical differences between Davis and this case. To
    begin, Broaddus had reasonably determined that Johnson was a threat to officer safety by
    the time he searched Johnson’s crossbody bag. And Broaddus had also observed what he
    suspected was marijuana on Johnson’s clothing after the initial pat down.           Though
    8
    Johnson and Miffin don’t raise a temporal challenge to the search incident to arrest
    or otherwise argue that too much time elapsed between the traffic infraction and
    Broaddus’s search of Johnson’s crossbody bag. See Currence, 
    446 F.3d at 557
    (“Temporally, searches incident to arrest must be substantially contemporaneous with the
    arrest, and although a search can occur before an arrest is made, a search may not precede
    an arrest and serve as part of its justification.” (cleaned up)).
    18
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    marijuana was decriminalized in Virginia at the time,9 that state policy did not dispel the
    “indisputable nexus between drugs and guns,” United States v. Harris, No. 21-4657, 
    2023 WL 5165273
    , at *1 (4th Cir. Aug. 11, 2023) (quoting United States v. Sakyi, 
    160 F.3d 164
    ,
    169 (4th Cir. 1998)), which “creates a reasonable suspicion of danger to the officer,” Sakyi,
    
    160 F.3d at 169
    .
    Johnson and Miffin also gloss over that Johnson’s bag, at the time it was searched,
    remained on his person and that Johnson himself, though handcuffed, “still could walk
    around somewhat freely,” United States v. Ferebee, 
    957 F.3d 406
    , 419 (4th Cir. 2020).
    And with the crossbody bag “resting flush against Johnson’s stomach,” Johnson, 
    2022 WL 2373700
    , at *5, the officers could have “reasonably” believed that Johnson could access
    its contents, Ferebee, 957 F.3d at 419.
    These facts contrast with those in Davis, where the arrestee was face-down on the
    ground with his hands handcuffed behind his back and where the arrestee’s bag was no
    longer under his control. In Davis, we also acknowledged that “an arrest scene may be
    more fluid—and an arrestee less secure—when officers must not only maintain custody of
    the arrestee, but also stay vigilant of . . . any efforts by confederates to interfere.” 997 F.3d
    at 200. Here, Miffin—a known member of a violent gang—was also on the scene, so the
    officers had to balance their awareness of him, and his access to the bag, as well.
    Taking these circumstances together, we won’t disturb the district court’s
    conclusion that the search of Johnson’s bag was a valid search incident to his arrest.
    9
    
    Va. Code Ann. § 18.2-250.1
    (A) (repealed effective July 1, 2021).
    19
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    B.
    Johnson and Miffin’s final argument is that the officers unconstitutionally
    prolonged the stop by conducting a warrantless search of the vehicle. Though the district
    court found that the officers would have inevitably discovered the evidence during an
    inventory search, we instead affirm because the officers could search the vehicle under the
    automobile exception to the Fourth Amendment.10
    1.
    The automobile exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement
    provides that “if a car is readily mobile and probable cause exists to believe it contains
    contraband, the Fourth Amendment . . . permits police to search the vehicle without more.”
    United States v. Kelly, 
    592 F.3d 586
    , 589 (4th Cir. 2010) (cleaned up).11 “[O]nce police
    have [the requisite] probable cause, they may search every part of the vehicle and its
    contents that may conceal the object of the search.” 
    Id. at 590
     (cleaned up). And we have
    recognized that “[a]n officer’s detection of marijuana creates such probable cause.” United
    States v. Alston, 
    941 F.3d 132
    , 138 (4th Cir. 2019) (cleaned up).
    10
    Though the district court admitted the evidence under a different theory, we may
    “affirm [the district court’s decision] on any ground supported by the record.” United
    States v. Perez, 
    30 F.4th 369
    , 374 (4th Cir. 2022) (cleaned up).
    11
    In Kelly, we explained that the automobile “exception applies as long as a car is
    ‘readily mobile’ in the sense that it is being used on the highways or is readily capable of
    such use.” 
    592 F.3d at 591
     (cleaned up). Thus, it’s of no moment that Johnson and Miffin
    were handcuffed—and unable to drive the vehicle—at the time of the search because the
    vehicle itself could have been driven.
    20
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    Broaddus had probable cause to search the vehicle. Before he conducted the search,
    Broaddus (1) saw a flake of marijuana on Johnson’s shirt, (2) learned from Johnson that
    there was more marijuana in the vehicle, and (3) found a gun in Johnson’s crossbody bag.
    What’s more, Broaddus heard Johnson call out to Miffin that they had found the “Glick”
    in his bag, raising the possibility that there were other concealed firearms.
    Johnson and Miffin challenge the application of the automobile exception on two
    grounds. First, they repeat that marijuana was decriminalized then in Virginia, so it
    couldn’t be “contraband” for purposes of the exception. And second, they argue that
    because the district court suppressed some statements Johnson made to the police after he
    was handcuffed but before he was given his Miranda warnings (that there was a “blunt” in
    the vehicle’s center console), the evidence seized based on those comments should also be
    suppressed as “fruit of the poisonous tree.” Reply Br. at 14 (cleaned up). We’re unmoved
    by either argument.
    On the defendants’ first point, they’ve provided no caselaw explaining why an
    illegal substance (even a decriminalized one) like marijuana doesn’t still constitute
    contraband. While Virginia may have made marijuana possession a civil offense, the drug
    remains illegal under state law, and its possession is still a crime under federal law.12 See
    12
    We contrast the automobile exception with the search incident to arrest exception.
    The former requires only probable cause that the object of the search contain “contraband,”
    Kelly, 
    592 F.3d at 589
    , while the latter requires a lawful arrest, which in turn must be
    supported by probable cause that an arrestee committed a “crime,” see Atwater v. City of
    Lago Vista, 
    532 U.S. 318
    , 354 (2001) (allowing for arrest if “an officer has probable cause
    to believe that an individual has committed even a very minor criminal offense” (emphasis
    added)). So, while marijuana—decriminalized then by the Virginia legislature—might not
    21
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    United States v. Castillo Palacio, 
    427 F. Supp. 3d 662
    , 672 (D. Md. 2019) (recognizing
    that “possession of marijuana in any amount remains illegal,” even after its
    decriminalization in Maryland, such that marijuana constitutes contraband (quoting
    Robinson v. State, 
    152 A.3d 661
    , 680, 683 (Md. 2017))); People v. Looby, 
    68 V.I. 683
    , 698
    (2018) (concluding that although decriminalized in the Virgin Islands, possession of
    marijuana remains unlawful and is considered contraband). Because marijuana possession
    is still illegal, even if subject to only a civil penalty in Virginia, it remains “contraband”
    for purposes of the automobile exception.13 See Davis, 997 F.3d at 201 (allowing search
    under automobile exception if probable cause exists that “contraband” or “evidence of a
    crime will be found” (cleaned up)).
    On the defendants’ second point, we’ve long recognized that physical or “derivative
    evidence obtained as a result of an unwarned statement that was voluntary under the Fifth
    Amendment is never fruit of the poisonous tree.” United States v. Sterling, 
    283 F.3d 216
    ,
    219 (4th Cir. 2002) (cleaned up). That principle applies here, where officers obtained a
    be evidence of a crime, it could nonetheless qualify as contraband. See, e.g., United States
    v. Pascual, 
    502 F. App’x 75
    , 78 n.3 (2d Cir. 2012) (explaining that “the ‘scope of the search
    authorized [by the automobile exception] is broader’ than that authorized in searches
    incident to arrest” (quoting Gant, 556 U.S. at 347)).
    13
    The defendants’ citation to Commonwealth v. Branch, No. 0132-22-1, 
    2022 WL 2202895
    , at *4 (Va. Ct. App. June 21, 2022), doesn’t change our minds. The court merely
    “[a]ssum[ed] without deciding that decriminalized, unlawful marijuana” was “considered
    ‘contraband’ for purposes of the Fourth Amendment” before holding that “the
    circumstances [there] did not provide the officers with probable cause that other contraband
    or evidence of a crime would be found in the vehicle.” 
    Id.
     Such circumstances existed
    here, including evidence of additional marijuana.
    22
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    voluntary statement, though it was “in technical violation of Miranda.”           Correll v.
    
    Thompson, 63
     F.3d 1279, 1290 (4th Cir. 1995).
    Such a technical—unlike a constitutional—violation doesn’t inherently “taint,” 
    id.,
    the physical evidence that law enforcement seized, so it needn’t be suppressed. And, in
    any event, Broaddus had other indicia of contraband, such as the marijuana flake and the
    unsuppressed statement about the gun, to justify searching the vehicle under the automobile
    exception.14
    III.
    For these reasons, the district court’s judgment is
    AFFIRMED.
    14
    Because we affirm the district court’s refusal to suppress the evidence seized in
    the vehicle under the automobile exception rather than the inevitable discovery doctrine,
    we don’t address the defendants’ argument that the doctrine wouldn’t support the
    admissibility of evidence found on Miffin’s person after the search of the vehicle. See,
    e.g., Reply Br. at 19. If Miffin had argued that the search of his person was not lawful even
    in light of evidence discovered under the automobile exception, it would have been
    unavailing. Law enforcement officers lawfully detained Miffin and lawfully conducted the
    preceding searches, so they “inevitably would have searched the car and found the gun,”
    Alston, 941 F.3d at 139.
    23
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 23-4040

Filed Date: 8/23/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/26/2024