DocketNumber: No. 18-1753
Citation Numbers: 915 F.3d 431
Judges: Barrett, Ripple, Wood
Filed Date: 2/7/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Travis Vaccaro entered a conditional guilty plea to possessing a firearm as a felon,
Our summary of the facts is taken from an evidentiary hearing on Vaccaro's motion to suppress. Milwaukee police officers Aaron Frantal and Matthew Tracy stopped Vaccaro for running a red light. Officer Frantal testified that Vaccaro stopped his car and made a "very ferocious move" by "bending at the waist." Vaccaro then leaned toward the passenger seat and "made another aggressive move with his entire top torso and both arms into the back seat of the vehicle." Officer Tracy added that he saw Vaccaro "double over bending at the waist" and then reach toward the passenger side of the car. Officer Frantal testified that Vaccaro's movements took under five seconds. Afraid that Vaccaro might be trying to "gain control of something from the back seat," Officer Frantal drew his gun and ordered Vaccaro out of his car. The officers immediately handcuffed Vaccaro, and Officer Frantal patted him down.
Meanwhile, Officer Tracy asked Vaccaro questions about his movements. Vaccaro expressed frustration to the officers and mentioned that "people are trying to kill me." Vaccaro also said that he merely "took [his] coat off" when he pulled over. After saying that he was going to search the car, Officer Tracy asked Vaccaro seven times whether there was a gun in the car. Vaccaro responded once to reiterate that someone was trying to kill him and another time to say "I don't have anything." Officer Tracy added that Vaccaro appeared to be "extremely nervous" and in a "real amped-up state," which contributed to the officer's belief that Vaccaro was under the influence of drugs.
As Officer Tracy questioned Vaccaro, Officer Frantal found a GPS monitor on Vaccaro's ankle. Vaccaro confirmed that he was on supervision for "false imprisonment," which the officers understood to be a felony. Officer Frantal did not discover a weapon during the frisk. But both officers testified that they noticed a rifle case in the backseat. Neither officer said anything, they testified, for fear of their safety; they did not want to alert an "agitated" Vaccaro that they had seen the case.
The officers then locked Vaccaro, still handcuffed, in the backseat of their squad car. Officer Frantal testified that Vaccaro "did not appear to be fully stable" as he was led to the car. Officer Frantal called in the traffic violation to dispatch, which drew back-up officers to the scene.
Meanwhile, Officer Tracy returned to Vaccaro's car and began searching the front seats. Officer Frantal then approached the vehicle. He soon remarked that he saw a rifle case in the backseat. The officers then removed a coat on top of the rifle case and eventually confirmed that a rifle was inside it.
The magistrate judge recommended that the district court deny Vaccaro's motion to suppress. She credited the officers' testimony that Vaccaro had made furtive movements because Vaccaro had admitted to taking off his jacket; therefore, she said, the officers had reasonable suspicion to frisk Vaccaro for weapons. But she discredited the officers' testimony that they had seen a rifle case in the back of Vaccaro's car before locking him in the squad car. The legality of the search therefore depended on whether Vaccaro's furtive *435gestures provided the officers with reasonable suspicion to search the passenger
compartment of the car in addition to Vaccaro's person. She concluded that they did.
Vaccaro objected to the magistrate judge's report and recommendation, arguing that the immediate frisk was not justified by reasonable suspicion and that the search of the car was not a lawful protective search under Long . The government argued that both the frisk and car search were reasonable. Vaccaro's furtive movements justified the pat-down search, the government said, and locking Vaccaro in the squad car before the vehicle search enabled the officers to "avert[ ] a calamitous and explosive event."
The district judge sided with the government and denied Vaccaro's motion to suppress. The judge accepted the magistrate judge's findings of fact and discredited the officers' testimony that they had observed the rifle case in the backseat before they searched the car. But Vaccaro's furtive movements provided the officers with reasonable suspicion that he had "potentially armed himself or concealed a firearm," which warranted a protective frisk. The district judge also concluded that the vehicle search was reasonable under Long . Although Vaccaro was handcuffed and locked in a squad car during the search, he was not under arrest and could still be "dangerous" or gain "immediate access" to weapons. While the officers' "stated bases for their suspicion of dangerousness ... are few," the judge observed, he was "constrained" to find that the officers had reasonable suspicion that Vaccaro was dangerous based on his "furtive movements," the "relatively late" time of the stop, and the officers' belief that Vaccaro was on drugs. Citing United States v. Arnold ,
Vaccaro then conditionally pleaded guilty to knowingly possessing a firearm as a felon.
On appeal, Vaccaro renews his challenge to the pat-down frisk and to the search of his car. We review the district court's underlying factual findings for clear error, and we review de novo the district court's legal conclusions, including its determinations of reasonable suspicion. See Ornelas v. United States ,
Vaccaro contends that the district court mistakenly credited the officers' testimony that he made furtive movements before exiting his car. This argument can be dispatched quickly. Vaccaro protests that because the officers lied about seeing the rifle case before locking him in the squad car, they were also incorrect (or untruthful) about his movements. But the district court may credit all or part of a witness's testimony, especially when there is more than one permissible reading of the evidence. See United States v. McGraw ,
*436See United States v.Thurman ,
Because Vaccaro cannot show that the district court clearly erred in finding that he made furtive movements before leaving the car, he cannot show that the pat-down was unlawful. Vaccaro's movements, including bending forward at the waist and reaching toward the passenger and rear seats, reasonably suggested that he could be reaching for or concealing a weapon. See United States v. Evans ,
Vaccaro also protests that the frisk was unreasonable because the officers handcuffed him unnecessarily. Handcuffing a suspect during a pat-down search for weapons should be the rare case. See United States v. Smith ,
Vaccaro next argues that the district court should have suppressed the rifle because the officers discovered it during an unlawful search of his car. The government asserts that Michigan v. Long justified the search. The Long exception to the warrant requirement permits the police to search a vehicle when there are "genuine safety or evidentiary concerns." Arizona v. Gant ,
Long 's first prong is satisfied here because the officers had reasonable suspicion to believe that Vaccaro was dangerous at the time they searched the car. In addition to Vaccaro's furtive movements, the officers suspected that Vaccaro was under the influence of drugs, which gave them greater reason to fear for their *437safety. See Long ,
The second prong of the Long inquiry requires the government to establish that the officers reasonably suspected that Vaccaro could gain "immediate control" of weapons in the vehicle. See
In Arnold , which we decided before Gant , the motorist made furtive movements upon being stopped by police.
At oral argument, we asked the government whether Gant limited or overruled Arnold , and it maintained that Arnold is still good law. We agree. In Arnold , it was reasonable to believe that the defendant, who was not under arrest, could have regained access to his vehicle. See id . at 238, 241 ; see also Gant ,
Thus, if Vaccaro had been under arrest, Gant would control. And if Vaccaro contended that he had been under arrest, we would face the difficult task of determining whether this Terry stop became an arrest. See, e.g. , United States v. Bullock ,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Vaccaro also conceded that he did not argue in the district court that his detention amounted to an arrest, rather than a Terry stop.