United States v. Deontae Sweeney , 402 F. App'x 37 ( 2010 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 10a0672n.06
    No. 08-3597                                    FILED
    Nov 03, 2010
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                         LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                          )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                         )       ON APPEAL FROM THE
    )       UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    v.                                  )       COURT FOR THE NORTHERN
    )       DISTRICT OF OHIO
    DEONTAE SWEENEY,                                   )
    )
    Defendant-Appellant.                         )
    ____________________________
    Before: MARTIN, SUHRHEINRICH, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
    HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. After the district court denied Defendant Deontae
    Sweeney’s motion to suppress evidence seized from his vehicle, Sweeney stood trial on one count
    of possession with intent to distribute 50 grams or more of crack cocaine, 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (a)(1) and
    (b)(1)(A). The jury found him guilty of possession with intent to distribute at least 5 grams, but less
    than 50 grams, of cocaine base, 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (a)(1), (b)(1)(B), and the district court sentenced him
    to 262 months in prison. Sweeney appeals, challenging the denial of his motion to suppress. We
    AFFIRM.
    I
    The district court conducted a suppression hearing and found the following facts:
    Cleveland Police Officers Weaver and Goin[e]s were in a zone patrol car in
    the area of Signet, Imperial, East 123rd and East 126th in the City of Cleveland on
    May 14, 2007. The area is a high complaint area regarding drugs and gang activity.
    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    The officers testified that they observed individuals in the area in question, around
    the corner of Imperial and East 123rd streets. Officer Goin[e]s testified that he
    observed what appeared to be a drug transaction – one individual handing another a
    plastic baggie in exchange for cash. Although he did not immediately recognize
    Defendant as one of the individuals on the corner, he did see the man he later
    identified as the Defendant, enter the van in this case.
    Officer Weaver testified that he saw three or four men standing in front of a
    parked vehicle, a green minivan, on Imperial Avenue. Their attention was focused
    on their hands, an action that signified to the officer, based on his experience, that
    they were engaged in drug activities. When the men saw the police car, two of the
    individuals dispersed immediately and quickly walked down East 123rd. The other
    man got into the vehicle they had been standing in front of and pulled hurriedly away
    from the curb where he was parked. He did so directly in front of the police vehicle
    without signaling that he was entering oncoming traffic.
    The police car followed the Defendant for a few blocks. The officers called
    into dispatch the vehicle’s license plate number, which returned as registered to the
    Defendant. Officer Goin[e]s was familiar with the Defendant based on a prior drug
    arrest and another time when he was the victim of a car theft. He relayed that
    information to Officer Weaver. The officers pulled Defendant’s vehicle over.
    Officer Weaver approached the vehicle from the driver’s side and asked
    Defendant for his license and proof of insurance. Defendant was visibly shaking as
    he handed Officer Weaver his license. Officer Goin[e]s approached the vehicle from
    the passenger’s side and placed his face to the minivan’s tinted back, side window
    to look into it for safety reasons. The officer testified that he saw a Tanqueray bottle
    tucked into the netting in the back of the front passenger’s seat. He informed Officer
    Weaver of this. Officer Weaver also testified that he saw the liquor bottle, albeit he
    stated that he noticed it behind the passenger’s seat on the floor, leaning against the
    seat.
    Officer Weaver asked Defendant if he had any guns, knives, needles or
    anything else in the car that could hurt the officer. Describing Defendant’s
    demeanor, Officer Weaver testified that Defendant’s shaking became obvious and he
    was sweating, stammering and stuttering. Defendant was asked to clasp his hands
    together in front of him. The officers then conversed in the squad car. Upon
    returning to Defendant’s vehicle, Officer Weaver opened the door and asked
    Defendant to come out of the vehicle. Officer Weaver noticed Defendant move his
    hands towards his waistband. Concerned that he may have a weapon, the officers
    attempted to remove Defendant from the vehicle. At that time, the Defendant
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    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    appeared to reach back into the vehicle, which raised another safety concern for the
    officers. At that point, Officer Weaver drew his firearm and placed it in Defendant’s
    side as Defendant was put against the vehicle and told to place his hands on the car.
    Officer Weaver wrapped his arms around Defendant until Defendant was secured in
    handcuffs. Defendant was then patted down. Over $1,000 was found on his person.
    The officers searched the vehicle and retrieved the liquor bottle. Officer
    Weaver testified that it smelled like an alcoholic beverage. Defendant was given a
    ticket for the traffic citation and was arrested for the open container. The officers did
    an inventory search of the vehicle and discovered a black plastic bag in the glove box
    which contained a digital scale with crack cocaine residue, two plastic baggies
    containing approximately 84 grams of crack cocaine, and empty sandwich type
    baggies.
    Sweeney also testified at the suppression hearing, giving a very different account of the
    events. He testified that he had not been standing on the corner with the other men, but had been
    inside the convenience store located on that same corner, purchasing a t-shirt and a cigar. After
    leaving the store, he went directly to his vehicle and left; he did not speak with, or go over to, any
    of the men gathered there. Sweeney contended that after pulling him over, Officer Weaver
    approached his minivan, obtained his license, registration and insurance, and then returned to the
    police car; Officer Goines remained in the police car. Within seconds, Officer Weaver returned to
    the minivan with his gun drawn. When Officer Weaver found the money in Sweeney’s pocket,
    Sweeney told him that he was on his way to record a rap record and that the money was for the
    studio. He also showed Officer Weaver a flier for his music with his picture on it. Sweeney testified
    that he was not shown or told of any evidence that was confiscated from his vehicle, although the
    police did later tell him he was being charged with an open container violation and failure to yield.
    Sweeney testified that he knew there was no bottle visible in his vehicle at the time because he had
    just vacuumed the vehicle. He denied sweating or shaking.
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    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    The district court denied Sweeney’s motion to suppress from the bench, and later issued a
    written “order and decision.” The court rejected the motion on two grounds, each sufficient alone
    to support its decision. First, the court concluded that the officers had legitimately stopped the car
    under Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968), because they had a reasonable suspicion that Sweeney was
    engaging in illegal drug activity. The court acknowledged that there were inconsistencies in the
    officers’ accounts, but ultimately found credible their conclusion that they had witnessed the
    beginning of a drug transaction. The court relied on their testimony that they saw men gathered on
    the corner exchanging a plastic baggie for money (Officer Goines) and looking down at their hands
    (Officer Weaver). The court also relied on the fact that after the officers ran the vehicle’s license
    plate and Sweeney’s name came back, Officer Goines realized that he had arrested Sweeney for drug
    activities in the past. The court cited as significant the officers’ years of experience patrolling the
    area in question, their knowledge of complaints of drug activity, and Officer Goines’ experience
    making hundreds of arrests there, 75% of which he estimated were for crack.
    Second, the court found that the officers had sufficient cause to temporarily detain Sweeney
    because he had committed a civil traffic violation by failing to yield. The court noted that Sweeney
    did not dispute that he pulled away from the curb without signaling and that the state court found
    Sweeney guilty of the traffic violation.1 (District court docket #45 8-9.)
    1
    Sweeney’s charges of failure to yield and having an open container in a vehicle were
    adjudicated in Cleveland Municipal Court. The court held a hearing at which both officers and
    Sweeney testified. Sweeney was found guilty of the failure-to-yield offense, but acquitted of the
    open-container offense.
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    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    After concluding that the stop of Sweeney’s vehicle was legitimate, the court determined that
    the search of the vehicle was proper. The court concluded that, despite inconsistencies in the
    officers’ accounts of the location of the liquor bottle in Sweeney’s vehicle, the officers’ testimony
    was sufficiently consistent to show that they observed the bottle in plain view. That having been
    established, Sweeney’s subsequent arrest for violating open-container laws was legitimate, as was
    the inventory search performed on the vehicle that yielded the crack.
    II
    Sweeney’s arguments on appeal relate only to the stop of the vehicle. He does not challenge
    the officers’ plain-view observation of a liquor bottle behind the passenger seat of his vehicle, or the
    legitimacy of the ensuing arrest for the open-container violation, pat-down, or search of his vehicle.
    He does not challenge his sentence. 2
    2
    Sweeney’s counsel filed a merits brief and Sweeney filed a supplemental memorandum in
    support of his counsel’s brief pro se, which generally echoes his counseled brief’s arguments
    concerning the sufficiency and credibility of the officers’ testimony. To the extent that Sweeney’s
    pro se supplemental memo in support of appellant’s attorney, which he filed in August 2009, well
    before the Fair Sentencing Act took effect on August 3, 2010, could be construed as arguing that he
    should have been sentenced as if he had dealt in powder cocaine rather than crack, we note that the
    court granted him a 100-month variance for that very reason. Further, this Court recently held that
    the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, Pub. L. 111-220, 
    124 Stat. 2372
     (Aug. 3, 2010), does not apply
    retroactively. United States v. Carradine, – F.3d – , 
    2010 WL 3619799
    , at *4-5 (6th Cir. Sept. 20,
    2010), petition for reh’g en banc pending.
    In September 2010, Sweeney filed a supplemental authority letter pro se, pursuant to Fed.
    R. App. P. 28(j), calling to our attention State v. Singleton, 
    920 N.E.2d 958
     (Ohio 2009). Sweeney
    asserts that Singleton renders void ab initio at least one of the prior state convictions used to sentence
    him as a career offender. He also notes the passage of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, and that
    although he was charged with possessing 84 grams of cocaine, the jury convicted him by special
    verdict only of possessing more than 5 but less than 50 grams. Sweeney asserts that the district
    court’s issuance of the special verdict form without a request from him that a lesser offense
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    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    Sweeney contends that the officers did not establish that they had sufficient specific, articulable
    facts to support a reasonable suspicion that he was involved in criminal activity. He argues that the
    fact that he was present in a neighborhood known for drugs and other illegal activity cannot alone give
    rise to reasonable suspicion, and he contends that the officers’ testimony concerning the men on the
    street corner and what they were doing is too inconsistent to add sufficient additional support.
    We review the district court’s denial of Sweeney’s motion to suppress under a mixed standard
    of review. United States v. Davis, 
    430 F.3d 345
    , 351-52 (6th Cir. 2005). We will reverse the district
    court’s findings of fact only if clearly erroneous, but review de novo its legal conclusions. We review
    the evidence in a light most favorable to the government. 
    Id.
    A police officer is permitted to briefly detain a person for investigative purposes if the officer
    has a reasonable suspicion supported by articulable facts that criminal activity has occurred or is about
    to occur. United States v. Atchley, 
    474 F.3d 840
    , 847 (6th Cir. 2007). In evaluating whether there was
    a proper basis for a Terry stop, courts examine the totality of the circumstances. United States v.
    Smith, 
    594 F.3d 530
    , 537 (6th Cir. 2010).
    The district court did not err in concluding that the officers had reasonable suspicion that
    Sweeney was involved in illegal drug activity. The officers had considerable relevant experience. See
    United States v. Flores, 
    571 F.3d 541
    , 544 (6th Cir. 2009) (“While reasonable suspicion must be based
    instruction be given caused a constructive amendment of the indictment.
    The Government moved to strike Sweeney’s 28(j) letter. Because Sweeney’s letter advances
    new sentencing claims unrelated to his appeal, we will not consider his claims. See In re Lewis, 
    398 F.3d 735
    , 748 n.9 (6th Cir. 2005).
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    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    on more than ill-defined hunches, officers may draw on their experience and specialized training to
    make inferences from and deductions about the cumulative information available to them that might
    well elude an untrained person.” (internal quotations and citation omitted)). Officer Goines had nine
    years of experience in the southeast Cleveland district in which the events took place, had made
    hundreds of drug arrests (75% of them crack arrests), and had gained familiarity with the ways in
    which crack cocaine is sold on the street. Officer Weaver had eight years of experience in the relevant
    district, had made around 200 drug arrests (approximately 90% of them crack arrests), and also
    professed familiarity with the way crack was sold on the street.
    The officers also identified the specific corner at issue as having a large amount of drug activity
    – businesses at or near the intersection had made a number of drug-related complaints, and officers
    had made crack arrests in that area. See Illinois v. Wardlow, 
    528 U.S. 119
    , 124 (2000) (noting that the
    fact that the stop occurred in a high crime area “is among the relevant contextual considerations in a
    Terry analysis”). In addition, two of the houses on the block of Imperial where the events occurred
    had been the source of complaints regarding drug- and gang-related activity.
    In this context, the officers’ observations created a reasonable suspicion of illegal drug activity.
    Officer Goines (the passenger) testified that he and Officer Weaver (the driver) drove up to the
    intersection of Imperial and East 123rd Street around 3:20 p.m., where he saw a group of males
    standing at the corner. Goines was ten to fifteen yards away from the men and his view was not
    blocked. One of the men had money in his hands and the other males looked like they were holding
    clear plastic baggies. Goines testified that the activity was interrupted when one of the men looked
    up, saw the marked police car, and immediately departed the area, and the other two men did the same.
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    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    Cf. Wardlow, 
    528 U.S. at 124
     (“Our cases have . . . recognized that nervous, evasive behavior is a
    pertinent factor in determining reasonable suspicion.”) Two of the men walked away to the south,
    while the third entered a green minivan that was parked on Imperial Avenue, just east of 123rd Street.
    
    Id.
     The man in the van was one of the men who appeared to be holding a plastic baggie. Based on his
    experience and training, Goines thought that he and Officer Weaver had interrupted a drug deal.
    Officer Weaver testified that he saw several males gathered in front of a vehicle parked at the
    corner of Imperial and East 123rd Street. He saw that the men were looking at, and had their attention
    focused on, their hands, which Officer Weaver stated “was synonymous” with drug activity. Weaver
    testified that a couple of the males fled southbound after detecting the officers’ presence; he was able
    to identify these two individuals as “kids that live at [or “use”] 12318 Imperial,” one of the two
    gang/drug houses on the street. Weaver stated that a third man from the group turned around, entered
    the green vehicle, and hurriedly pulled away from the curb.3 Weaver stated that, based on his
    knowledge of the area, he believed he had seen criminal drug activity.
    In addition, as the officers followed the green minivan down the block (but before they stopped
    it) they called in the license plate number to dispatch and learned that the car was owned by Deontae
    Sweeney. Officer Goines knew Sweeney – he had arrested Sweeney for violation of state drug laws
    (crack cocaine) around February 2004. Cf. United States v. Johnson, 267 F. App’x 412, 414-15 (6th
    Cir. 2008) (unpublished) (fact that police believed suspect had prior arrest is relevant in determination
    whether there was reasonable suspicion); Joshua v. DeWitt, 
    341 F.3d 430
    , 446 (6th Cir. 2003) (police
    3
    At this point in his testimony, Officer Weaver called the vehicle a “green station wagon.”
    However, he later repeatedly affirmed his counsel’s characterization of the vehicle as a “minivan.”
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    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    awareness of criminal history is a factor that can be considered in determining whether there was
    reasonable suspicion). Although none of these factors standing alone is sufficient, see, e.g., Wardlow,
    
    528 U.S. at 124
    ; DeWitt, 
    341 F.3d at 446
    , under the totality of the circumstances, the officers had
    reasonable suspicion to stop Sweeney’s vehicle. Smith, 
    594 F.3d at 537
    .
    Sweeney accurately observes that the officers’ accounts do not match precisely. However, the
    only discrepancy Sweeney references specifically is the location of the group of males. East 123rd
    Street runs north-south and intersects Imperial Avenue, an east-west road, at a right angle. Officer
    Goines testified that the group of men were on the southeast corner of East 123rd Street at Imperial
    Avenue. Officer Weaver testified that they were gathered in front of Sweeney’s vehicle, which was
    parked on Imperial “at the corner” “within 30 feet of the intersection” with East 123rd. There are other
    discrepancies as well. Officer Goines observed money and baggies in the hands of the men, but
    Officer Weaver merely saw the men looking at their hands. Officer Goines testified that the fleeing
    men went south down East 123rd Street; Officer Weaver also testified that the men went south in the
    same area, but stated that they went via the driveways of abandoned homes and not on 123rd.
    However, the district court found the officers’ testimony credible based upon their appearance
    and demeanor on the witness stand, a conclusion that is entitled to deference on appeal. See United
    States. v Navarro-Comacho, 
    186 F.3d 701
    , 705 (6th Cir. 1999). While the district court did not
    resolve each inconsistency item-by-item, it did explain its confidence in the officers’ testimony, noting
    that such discrepancies indicate that the officers were not engaging in a “conspiracy or fabrication
    because if there was some sort of fabrication, the testimony would have been more consistent than it
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    United States v. Sweeney
    No. 08-3597
    was.”4 Cf. United States v. Bradshaw, 
    102 F.3d 204
    , 210 (6th Cir. 1996) (“Because the District Court
    was in the best position to judge credibility, and because that Court plausibly resolved the
    discrepancies in the testimony, its findings of fact should not be disturbed.”) In addition, at least some
    of the differences in the officers’ accounts (e.g., the more detailed information Officer Goines provided
    about the possible drug transaction) could reasonably be due to the fact that Officer Goines was the
    passenger in the patrol vehicle and could freely observe the activities on the corner, while Officer
    Weaver had driving duties dividing his attention.
    In sum, the inconsistencies in the officers’ accounts do not overcome the conclusion that the
    officers had reasonable suspicion of criminal drug activity, and thus, sufficient basis for a Terry stop.
    Because we affirm the district court’s determination that the stop was proper under Terry, we
    need not address Sweeney’s claims of error regarding the alternative grounds for upholding the stop.
    We AFFIRM.
    4
    The court made this statement in the section of its opinion concerning the officers’ sighting
    of the liquor bottle. However, in context, it appears to apply to the two officers’ accounts as a whole.
    -10-