United States v. Elijah Smith , 456 F. App'x 572 ( 2012 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 12a0083n.06
    No. 10-1551                                   FILED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                             Jan 24, 2012
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT                          LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                                )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                              )
    )       ON APPEAL FROM THE
    v.                                        )       UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    )       COURT FOR THE EASTERN
    ELIJAH SMITH,                                            )       DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    )
    Defendant-Appellee.                               )
    )
    BEFORE: KEITH, GRIFFIN, and STRANCH, Circuit Judges.
    GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.
    The government appeals the district court’s order granting defendant Elijah Smith’s motion
    to suppress the evidence against him. We reverse and remand the case for further proceedings in
    accordance with this opinion.
    I.
    The events giving rise to this case began when Officer Juan Sifuentes of the Welasco Police
    Department in Texas contacted Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) Agent Ross Roel in
    Michigan to tell him that they had intercepted a Federal Express package with a half kilogram of
    suspected heroin that was being shipped to “Jason Christie” at 19975 Hartwell Street in Detroit.
    United States v. Smith, 
    684 F. Supp. 2d 937
    , 938 (E.D. Mich. 2010). After Agent Roel agreed to
    conduct a controlled delivery, Officer Sifuentes allowed the package to proceed on its normal route
    No. 10-1551
    USA v. Elijah Smith
    to a Federal Express facility in Detroit. When it arrived, a DEA canine positively alerted to the
    package for the odor of a controlled substance, and a subsequent field test at DEA headquarters
    confirmed that the substance was heroin. Agents then obtained a search warrant for the Hartwell
    Street residence from a Wayne County judge and repackaged a representative sample of the heroin
    for use in the controlled delivery. 
    Smith, 684 F. Supp. 2d at 938
    .
    The controlled delivery took place later that same day. Dressed in a Federal Express uniform,
    Officer Lindsey Pace parked a police vehicle disguised as a Federal Express delivery van in front of
    the Hartwell Street residence, got out, and knocked on the front door. An individual, later identified
    as Elijah Smith, answered the door, signed for the package, and then went back inside. 
    Smith, 684 F. Supp. 2d at 938
    . After Officer Pace departed, Smith opened the front door of the residence and
    looked north and south on Hartwell Street. 
    Id. Two minutes
    later, Smith walked out of the
    residence, got into a vehicle, and began to drive south. 
    Id. A transmitter
    attached to the package that
    was designed to alert officers to the movement and opening of the package had not been activated.
    The officers at this point moved in. Agent Roel’s vehicle and another undercover vehicle
    blocked the intersection where defendant was headed and activated their emergency lights and sirens,
    directing Smith to stop. Smith did not stop at the officers’ commands, however. He shifted into
    reverse and “recklessly” drove backward at a high rate of speed for approximately half a block, until
    other law enforcement vehicles boxed him in near the original delivery address. Smith, 
    684 F. Supp. 2d
    at 938-39. Once Smith was stopped, the officers exited their vehicles, identified themselves, and
    secured Smith in handcuffs. Smith, 
    684 F. Supp. 2d
    at 939. The officers also recovered the package
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    USA v. Elijah Smith
    of heroin, which they observed protruding from Smith’s waistband. 
    Id. Smith was
    subsequently indicted for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a
    controlled substance and possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance in violation of
    21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 841(a)(l). He filed a motion to suppress the evidence in the district court.
    After briefing and a hearing, the district court granted Smith’s motion. Smith, 
    684 F. Supp. 2d 937
    .
    It reasoned that “[Smith’s] arrest cannot be justified if authorities lacked a proper basis under the
    Fourth Amendment for attempting to stop him in the first place,” and it concluded that the drug
    evidence needed to be suppressed because the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to support “the
    initiation of the stop.” 
    Id. at 940
    n.3, 942. The government timely appeals.
    II.
    When reviewing a district court’s decision regarding a motion to suppress, we must consider
    the evidence “in the light most likely to support the district court’s decision.” United States v.
    Marxen, 
    410 F.3d 326
    , 328 (6th Cir. 2005) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). We
    review the legal aspect of a district court’s determination regarding the existence of reasonable
    suspicion or probable cause de novo. United States v. Pasquarille, 
    20 F.3d 682
    , 685 (6th Cir. 1994)
    (citation omitted).
    III.
    The government argues that the officers had reasonable suspicion to stop, as well as probable
    cause to arrest, Smith because he signed for and received a package known to contain heroin, peered
    up and down the street in a suspicious manner after signing for the package and just before leaving
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    USA v. Elijah Smith
    in a vehicle, and disregarded the officers’ order directing him to stop his vehicle by driving in reverse
    at a high rate of speed in the opposite direction until other officers boxed him in. We agree.
    A.
    The problem with the district court’s analysis is that the police did not need to justify their
    “attempt to stop” Smith. Smith, 
    684 F. Supp. 2d
    at 940 n.3, 942. The Fourth Amendment governs
    searches and seizures; it does not govern attempts at searches and seizures. If a suspect is not seized
    because he evades law enforcement – as Smith was not seized when he put his vehicle in reverse and
    drove away from the officers here – the Fourth Amendment is not implicated. Brendlin v.
    California, 
    551 U.S. 249
    , 254 (2007) (“[T]here is no seizure without actual submission; otherwise,
    there is at most an attempted seizure, so far as the Fourth Amendment is concerned.”); California
    v. Hodari D., 
    499 U.S. 621
    , 626 (1991) (“[The Fourth Amendment] does not remotely apply . . . to
    the prospect of a policeman yelling ‘Stop, in the name of the law!’ at a fleeing form that continues
    to flee. That is no seizure.”); United States v. McCauley, 
    548 F.3d 440
    , 443 (6th Cir. 2008) (“We
    determine whether reasonable suspicion existed at the point of seizure—not . . . at the point of
    attempted seizure.”) (emphasis in original).
    Smith acknowledges this fact, but argues that the government waived its argument that
    evidence of his would-be flight is relevant because it “cited no cases and developed no argument for
    the proposition that a seizure does not occur until the defendant submits to authority.” However,
    while the government may not have fully developed the argument before the district court, it
    certainly raised the issue. In response to Smith’s motion to suppress, the government asserted that
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    USA v. Elijah Smith
    Smith’s flight from the officers in his vehicle supported a finding of reasonable suspicion or probable
    cause. The district court rejected that contention, making clear that it considered Smith’s would-be
    flight irrelevant because it occurred after the police attempted to seize him. We decline to hold that
    the government waived the issue by failing to develop or press its argument any further. Cf. United
    States v. Archibald, 
    589 F.3d 289
    , 296 (6th Cir. 2009) (holding that the government waived an issue
    on appeal because it failed to present the issue to the district court at all).
    Smith also asserts that we should remand the case because whether he actually fled from the
    officers is “a fact-bound issue” and “[t]he district court may very well have determined that [he] was
    merely attempting to get out of the path of oncoming emergency vehicles, rather than attempting to
    flee.” We disagree. There is no dispute that when “agents moved in to block [Smith’s] vehicle[,]
    [Smith] . . . switched the vehicle into reverse” and went the other way at a high rate of speed. 
    Smith, 684 F. Supp. 2d at 938
    (“[Smith’s vehicle] immediately went in reverse very fast northbound” and
    the police vehicles “with the emergency lights and siren . . . followed.”). Regardless of how the
    district court might have viewed Smith’s conduct, and regardless of Smith’s intent, reasonable
    officers would have seen it as evasive. See Watkins v. City of Southfield, 
    221 F.3d 883
    , 889 (6th Cir.
    2000) (“We deem the ignoring of orders to pull over the vehicle to be equivalent for these purposes
    to attempting to flee from police upon a signal to stop.”).
    B.
    The facts in this case are familiar. We upheld a district court’s denial of a motion to suppress
    in nearly identical circumstances in United States v. Bartholomew, 
    310 F.3d 912
    (6th Cir. 2002).
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    USA v. Elijah Smith
    In that case, the United Parcel Service (“UPS”) contacted the police regarding a suspicious package.
    
    Id. at 916.
    The police determined that the package contained marijuana, and an undercover officer,
    posing as a UPS driver, delivered the package to the labeled address. 
    Id. A man
    named Warren
    Harris answered the door, signed for the package, and went back inside. 
    Id. He then
    left the house
    by the back door and walked through the neighborhood in a manner suggesting to the police that he
    was trying to determine whether he was being observed. 
    Id. After several
    minutes, Harris got into
    a car that had stopped for him and the police followed in an unmarked van. 
    Id. The occupants
    of
    the car apparently became aware that they were being followed and shortly thereafter parked and fled
    on foot. 
    Id. Upon review,
    we held that these facts gave the officers probable cause to arrest one of
    the car’s former passengers, Richard Bartholomew. 
    Id. at 919.
    The present case is essentially the same. Here, Smith signed for and received a known
    package of heroin; he glanced up and down the street in a suspicious manner before leaving in a
    vehicle; and he subsequently ignored the officers’ commands for him to stop the vehicle, instead
    shifting into reverse and driving at a high rate of speed away from them for approximately half a
    block until other officers boxed him in. 
    Smith, 684 F. Supp. 2d at 938
    -39. Because “the facts and
    circumstances within [the officers’] knowledge . . . were sufficient to warrant a prudent person in
    believing that [Smith] had committed or was committing an offense,” i.e., that he knowingly
    possessed the heroin, the officers had probable cause to arrest Smith at the time he was seized.
    United States v. Smith, 
    549 F.3d 355
    , 359 (6th Cir. 2008) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted); cf. also United States v. Dotson, 
    49 F.3d 227
    , 231 (6th Cir. 1995) (explaining that
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    USA v. Elijah Smith
    “Dotson’s efforts to flee, coupled with [the detective’s] reasonable suspicion that Dotson was
    involved in criminal activities, established probable cause to arrest Dotson.”).
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s order suppressing the evidence and
    remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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