United States v. Anthony Philip Johnson, United States of America v. Chico A. Tillmon

64 F.3d 1120
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 11, 1995
Docket94-3822, 94-4039
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 64 F.3d 1120 (United States v. Anthony Philip Johnson, United States of America v. Chico A. Tillmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Anthony Philip Johnson, United States of America v. Chico A. Tillmon, 64 F.3d 1120 (8th Cir. 1995).

Opinions

DIANA E. MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Anthony Johnson and Chico Tillmon were convicted of conspiring to possess cocaine base with the intent to distribute and aiding and abetting its possession. On appeal they argue that the district court1 erred in denying motions to suppress statements they made after police stopped their vehicle and evidence seized during a search of their motel room. Tillmon raises additional points about the search warrant, and Johnson asserts that the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions. We affirm.

I.

The basic facts related to the stop of the vehicle and the search of the motel room are uncontroverted. On Friday, October 1,1993, at approximately 10:00 a.m., the St. Paul police department received an anonymous telephone call stating that “a couple of’ black males had arrived from Chicago that morning with a kilo of cocaine, that they were driving a black and gold Lexus automobile, and that they were staying either at the Excel Inn or the Ramada Inn east of St. Paul.

Investigating officers found a black and gold Lexus with Illinois plates in the parking lot of the Excel Inn. A cheek revealed that the car was registered to a woman in Chicago. The officers spoke with the motel desk clerk and learned that the desk had no information about the Lexus, but that Chico Till-mon of Chicago had rented room 222. He had arrived at about 9:20 a.m. that morning, paid cash for the room, and told the desk clerk that another person would be joining him. At the officers’ request the clerk called room 222 and verified that the Lexus belonged to the occupant.

Surveillance was instituted on the Lexus, some of which was videotaped. At 1:30 p.m. officers witnessed two black males (later identified as Tillmon and Anthony Johnson) get into the vehicle and drive approximately a half mile. The Lexus went through the parking lot of an apartment building at 292 Ruth Street and continued on to an apartment complex at 1920 Burns Avenue, approximately one mile away. The officers following the Lexus were aware that there had been narcotics investigations and undercover drug buys at both addresses.

Tillmon entered one of the Burns apartment buildings, and then he and Johnson helped an unidentified woman move a stereo speaker to her car. Tillmon and Johnson then went to an apartment on York Avenue where they spent about 15 minutes unloading and moving the speaker.

Tillmon and Johnson then returned to the Burns apartment. Tillmon was driving at a speed significantly slower than other traffic, changed lanes several times without signaling, and glanced around frequently. Sergeant Neal Nelson, a narcotics officer who followed the Lexus in an unmarked vehicle, [1123]*1123testified at the motion hearing that Tillmon drove as if he were trying to determine if the car were being followed.

When the Lexus arrived at the Burns apartments, it pulled into the parking lot, drove immediately out, and returned to the Ruth apartments. It entered the Ruth parking lot, but when an unmarked police surveillance vehicle followed it into the lot, the Lexus turned around and began to leave. It then met another car and backed into the lot. Tillmon and Johnson talked with two young men from the other car for about an hour. All four then got into the Lexus and went to a check cashing business where they remained for about 20 minutes.

At this point Sergeant Nelson decided to stop the Lexus, and he called for a uniformed squad ear to meet him at a nearby restaurant. Officer Ronald Sherbert responded. Nelson briefed Sherbert and asked him to make an investigative stop of the vehicle. Sherbert was to ask the driver where he was from, what he was doing in St. Paul, and where he was staying; he was to contact Nelson if the driver did not mention the Excel Inn.

At about 5:10 p.m. the Lexus drove away from the check cashing business and onto Johnson Parkway, where Sherbert observed it roll through a stop sign. Sherbert stopped the Lexus. He testified at the suppression hearing that he had observed a traffic violation but would have stopped it anyway because of Nelson’s instructions.

Tillmon did not have a driver’s license, so Sherbert placed him in the back seat of the squad car, consistent with regular procedure. Tillmon was not handcuffed or told that he was under arrest or about his Miranda rights. Sherbert asked Tillmon his name, and Tillmon identified himself as Javon Cheek. Sherbert ran an administrative check for a driver’s license under that name and discovered Javon Cheek had a valid license. Sherbert asked Tillmon the questions Nelson had requested, and Tillmon responded that he was from Chicago, that he had driven up with his aunt and another man, and that he was staying with a cousin. He did not mention that he had a room at the Excel Inn.

Sherbert contacted Nelson, who proceeded to the scene of the traffic stop, along with other officers. Nelson arrived within five minutes of the initial stop, and entered the rear of the squad ear to talk to Tillmon. He was not in uniform, and he left the door open. Nelson spoke with Tillmon for approximately ten minutes. He asked Tillmon if he were aware that he was not under arrest, and Tillmon replied affirmatively. In response to Nelson’s questions Tillmon repeated that he had come from Chicago with his aunt and one of the men on the sidewalk, and that they had arrived at 11 a.m. He added that they had dropped his aunt off and driven around to visit friends. When asked about a pager he was wearing, Tillmon stated that he had rented it at the cheek cashing store so that the mother of his newborn twins could reach him.

Tillmon was calm until Nelson asked if he had been at the Excel Inn; he then began to sweat and stammer and denied knowing of the motel or having been there. Nelson told Tillmon that surveillance officers had seen him at the motel, and Tillmon responded that he might have stopped there that morning with his aunt. Nelson asked if there were drugs in the car, and received Tillmoris permission to search it and him. No drugs were found.

While Sherbert and Nelson spoke with Tillmon, Johnson and the other two passengers 2 stood on the curb near the Lexus. An officer stood by them, but they were not in handcuffs or told they were under arrest. When Nelson finished talking to Tillmon, he approached Johnson and asked if they could talk in another squad car. Johnson agreed and indicated that he understood that he was not under arrest. Johnson told Nelson that his name was Kermit Davis and that he, the driver, and the driver’s brother had driven from Chicago the previous night. In response to questions he stated that the driv[1124]*1124er’s aunt had not travelled with them, and he denied any knowledge of the Excel Inn. Johnson then asked if he were free to leave, and Nelson replied that he was not. Nelson’s interview with Johnson lasted approximately five minutes.

After talking with Tillmon and Johnson, Nelson believed that he had probable cause to obtain a search warrant for the motel room. Nelson told the other passengers that they were free to go, but that Tillmon and Johnson were being detained because the ear was listed as stolen. Tillmon and Johnson were told they were being detained for investigative purposes and would be taken to the Excel Inn.

While Nelson filled out an application for a warrant, four officers went to the motel, transporting Tillmon and Johnson in separate squad cars.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 F.3d 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-anthony-philip-johnson-united-states-of-america-v-chico-ca8-1995.