United States v. Gold

77 F. Supp. 2d 936, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21031, 1999 WL 1219884
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedNovember 16, 1999
DocketNO. IP 99-110-CR H/F
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 F. Supp. 2d 936 (United States v. Gold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Gold, 77 F. Supp. 2d 936, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21031, 1999 WL 1219884 (S.D. Ind. 1999).

Opinion

ENTRY ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO SUPPRESS

HAMILTON, District Judge.

A federal grand jury indicted defendant Gary D. Gold for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) by possessing a firearm after having been convicted of a felony. Indianapolis police officers seized the firearm in question and arrested Gold after an officer stopped the car Gold was driving and issued a ticket for changing lanes without using his turn signal. After the officer stopped Gold’s car, he ordered Gold to step out of his car so he could explain the ticket, and then started to frisk Gold for weapons. Gold ran, dropped the firearm, *938 and was arrested. Gold has moved to suppress all evidence, including the firearm, obtained by law enforcement after the vehicle stop. The court held an evi-dentiary hearing on November 4, 1999. Pursuant to Rule 12(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, the court now states its findings of fact and conclusions of law. As explained in detail below, the court grants Gold’s motion to suppress because the officer did not have probable cause to stop Gold’s car for the charged traffic violation.

Findings of Fact

In the evening of April 8, 1999, IPD Officer Thomas Feeney was parked in a parking lot near the intersection of Arlington Avenue and 21st Street on the east side of Indianapolis. IPD had received complaints about possible drug trafficking at a nearby house, and Officer Feeney and IPD Officers Cavanaugh and Hopkins were observing the house. Just before 9:00 p.m., the officers observed a late model blue Cadillac pull up in front of the house. The driver, who later turned out to be defendant Gold, stopped the Cadillac in front of the house so that the street was blocked. The driver and the passenger then got out of the Cadillac and walked up to the house, leaving the Cadillac’s lights on and its engine running.

A few minutes later, the driver emerged from the house alone and returned to the Cadillac. The Cadillac pulled away from the house and began heading west on 21st Street. Officer Feeney began to follow the Cadillac so that he could check the license plate on the police computer. The driver stopped the Cadillac at the traffic light at 21st Street and Arlington Avenue.

As one approaches that intersection from the east, there are three marked lanes for westbound traffic. The left lane is for left turns south onto Arlington. The right and center lanes are simply normal traffic lanes. See Def. Ex. D (photograph of intersection from the west). The Cadillac was the first car stopped in the right westbound lane. Stopped next to it in the center lane was a pickup truck. Officer Feeney stopped his marked patrol car in the center lane directly behind the pickup truck.

The lane designations on westbound 21st Street change at the intersection with Arlington. West of the intersection, there are no broken white line markings to identify two separate lanes of westbound traffic. Instead, the pavement narrows quickly so that the westbound traffic must merge into one lane approximately 275 feet west of the intersection. The record before the court does not indicate that there are any signs warning westbound drivers that a “lane ends” or that they must merge into one lane.

Although the Cadillac was not signaling a turn, Officer Feeney was expecting the Cadillac to turn right, to go north on Arlington. When the light for westbound traffic on 21st Street turned green, however, both the Cadillac and the pickup truck drove straight through the intersection. The Cadillac accelerated rapidly. Without using a turn signal, the Cadillac pulled in front of the pickup truck as the westbound vehicles formed one lane of traffic.

Officer Feeney passed the pickup truck on the left and turned on his flashing fights to stop the Cadillac. The Cadillac immediately came to a stop on the shoulder of 21st Street in front of a house located at 5920 East 21st Street. The Cadillac’s left tires came to a stop on the white fine marking the edge of the traffic lane. Officer Feeney stopped his patrol car directly behind the Cadillac. His patrol car’s headlights pointed at the rear of the Cadillac. Officers Cavanaugh and Hopkins parked their patrol car behind Officer Feeney’s car.

Officer Feeney approached the front passenger side door of the Cadillac and asked the driver if he was having a medical emergency. After the driver replied no, Officer Feeney asked the driver to identify himself. The driver handed Officer Feeney an Indiana driver’s license with the name Gary Gold. Officer Feeney informed Gold that a computer check of the *939 Cadillac’s license plate had shown the plate was registered to two persons other than Gold. Gold said he had recently purchased the Cadillac and had not yet changed the registration. Officer Feeney then told Gold that he had pulled him over for failing to use his turn signal when changing . lanes.

Officer Feeney went back to his patrol car and wrote Gold a traffic ticket for failing to signal when changing lanes. Ex. 1. Officer Feeney also wrote a warning for improper use of a license plate Ex. 2. When he returned to the Cadillac, Officer Feeney again walked to the passenger side. Because the Cadillac was parked on the edge of the roadway and because of the traffic, Officer Feeney was also concerned about the risk that he could be struck by a car if he approached the Cadillac on the driver’s side. (Officer Feeney had been injured that way in a previous traffic stop, so he was especially aware of that danger.) Officer Feeney spoke through the passenger side window and asked Gold to exit the car so the ticket could be explained to him. The court credits Officer Feeney’s testimony about the location of the Cadillac and his safety concerns, as well as his testimony that it was his “normal practice” to ask drivers to step out of a car in such situations because he does not like to hand a traffic ticket through a passenger window. After asking Gold to step out of the Cadillac, Officer Feeney walked to the back of the Cadillac.

Standing near the Cadillac’s trunk, Officer Feeney watched as Gold stepped out of the car. Officer Feeney testified that Gold had his back turned “directly toward” him as he got out of the Cadillac. Gold was wearing a white, baggy T-shirt. Officer Feeney observed that the T-shirt was tucked into Gold’s waistband and that it was bunched up around Gold’s waist.

After noticing the bulges near Gold’s waistband, Officer Feeney asked Gold if he had a weapon. Gold answered that he did not have a weapon. Officer Feeney asked Gold to place his hands on the trunk of the Cadillac so Officer Feeney could pat him down for weapons. When Gold asked why he wanted to frisk him, Officer Feeney said he did not “feel like getting shot tonight.” Officer Feeney has patrolled the area near the intersection of 21st Street and Arlington for several years and knew that it is a relatively high crime area. Officer Feeney also knew that a few weeks before he stopped Gold, two people had been found shot to death in a car near the same intersection. At that point in the encounter, Officer Feeney had reasonable grounds for thinking Gold might have a weapon hidden in his waistband.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 F. Supp. 2d 936, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21031, 1999 WL 1219884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gold-insd-1999.