United States v. Eric F. Sanders

954 F.2d 227, 1992 WL 6817
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 1992
Docket90-5654
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 954 F.2d 227 (United States v. Eric F. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth 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. Eric F. Sanders, 954 F.2d 227, 1992 WL 6817 (4th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

ERVIN, Chief Judge:

Eric Forward Sanders appeals his conviction for armed bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) and (d). He raises three issues on appeal: whether the district court erred in (1) admitting a confession resulting from an allegedly illegal arrest; (2) failing to dismiss because of the government’s destruction of potentially exculpatory evidence; and (3) relying on a prior conviction to classify Sanders as a career offender. While the district court did not err on the last two issues, we reverse and remand for a new trial with respect to the first issue.

I.

Sanders was taken into custody on October 26, 1989. An indictment, returned November 14, 1989, charged him with armed bank robbery. Following the selection of jurors, a suppression hearing was held. The court denied Sanders’ suppression motion, and subsequently the jury returned a verdict of guilty.

Sanders was sentenced on April 25, 1990 to imprisonment for 300 months under the United States Sentencing Commission Guidelines, with five years of supervised release to follow. Sanders timely appealed.

II.

A lone black male robbed a branch of the Security Federal Savings Bank in Green-ville, South Carolina, on October 13, 1989. The robber, wearing a white handkerchief as a mask and a hat pulled down low on his head, was holding a gun.

A motorist, Bill Searson, happened to drive by the bank immediately after the robbery. A teller following the robber from the bank flagged Searson down and Searson briefly pursued the bank robber’s vehicle as it left the crime scene. Searson told the police that the car was a small gray vehicle with damage on the passenger’s side. Searson later identified Sanders’ car as being similar to the vehicle he chased. 1

About ten days later, on October 23, 1989, Detective Terry Christy of the Green-ville City Police Department saw a small gray Toyota that resembled the vehicle *229 that Searson had described. Christy had a uniformed officer stop the car. Christy talked to the driver and determined his identity and correct address. The driver was Eric Forward Sanders, who presented his registration card and driver’s license. Christy wrote down the license tag number of the vehicle and later ascertained that Sanders and his wife were the owners of the Toyota. Nothing was said about a bank robbery during the October 23 stop, which lasted five to ten minutes.

On October 26, Christy directed two uniformed officers to stake out Sanders’ car and to stop Sanders if he attempted to drive away. Around 9:30 a.m., Sanders, walking with crutches, came out of his apartment and went to the parking lot where his car was parked. He got into his car, started it and backed it up to the other side of the parking lot. 2 After he stopped the car and as he was getting out of his vehicle, the police drove into the parking lot, blocking Sanders in. They asked Sanders about his improper license tags and about his headlights and sticker. Sanders admitted that he had an expired license tag, that his car was uninsured and that he had not paid taxes on it because he did not have the money. Sanders was then arrested without a warrant and handcuffed. There was a dispute as to whether the officers told Sanders why he was being arrested, but no one ever claimed that Sanders drove the car on any public street or highway or left the confines of the parking lot on the day in question.

Later that same morning, Sanders was given Miranda warnings by Christy and signed a waiver of rights form. Sanders then confessed to the October 13 bank robbery. Taking the position that no traffic laws were violated to justify the arrest, the defense moved to suppress the confession as the fruit of an illegal arrest.

At the suppression hearing, Christy testified that his entire purpose in instructing the officers to watch the car and arrest Sanders after he got in the car was so Christy could interrogate Sanders at the police station about the bank robbery and other robberies in which he was a suspect. Christy also testified that on October 26 he did not have probable cause to make an arrest on the bank robbery charge. The AUSA also stipulated that Sanders was not arrested for bank robbery; that he was arrested for traffic charges instead.

At the close of the suppression hearing and without making any findings of fact, the district court ruled that Sanders’ statement was given freely and voluntarily. When queried about the legality of the arrest, he added: “I overrule the motion. The arrest was legal.”

Sander’s trial followed and two tellers identified Sanders as the robber. The government also used the challenged confession against Sanders. At trial, the government was unable to present a videotape taken of the robbery in progress. The tape was erased in the process of duplication by a commercial lab. Sanders moved to dismiss the case based upon the government’s “destruction” of the evidence. He, however, neither alleged nor demonstrated bad faith on the part of the government in their handling of the tape. The district court did not rule on this motion to dismiss.

At sentencing, two prior offenses, a bank robbery and a murder, were the predicate for the district court’s classification of Sanders as a career offender under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1. It was Sanders’ position that these two offenses should have been consolidated since they shared a common motivation, namely, drug addiction.

III.

A.

Sanders first avers that his confession is the consequence of an illegal arrest. Sanders was eventually issued three traffic citations for his actions prior to his arrest on October 23, each of which has a central element that the vehicle was operated on the state’s highways. His first ticket, *230 # 5651, charged him with operating an uninsured vehicle. Section 56-10-270 of the South Carolina Code of Laws Annotated (Law Co-op 1976) makes it a misdemean- or for “any person to knowingly operate an uninsured motor vehicle subject to registration in this state.” Section 56-3-110, pertaining to registration, states that “every motor vehicle ... driven, operated or moved upon a highway in this state shall be registered_” (emphasis added). With reference to uninsured vehicles, the South Carolina Supreme Court explained in St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company v. Boykin, 251 S.C. 236, 161 S.E.2d 818, 821 (1968):

Liability insurance or its equivalent is not a requirement for ownership of a motor vehicle or for obtaining a certificate of title but is a prerequisite to licensing and registration of the motor vehicle in order to legally operate the same upon the highway. (Emphasis added).

The second ticket, # 5652, charged Sanders with driving with expired tags in violation of S.C.Code § 56-3-840, which makes it a misdemeanor “to drive, move, or operate on a highway

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Bluebook (online)
954 F.2d 227, 1992 WL 6817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-eric-f-sanders-ca4-1992.