United States v. Gooch

499 F.3d 596, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 19831, 2007 WL 2372256
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 2007
Docket06-5914
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 499 F.3d 596 (United States v. Gooch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Gooch, 499 F.3d 596, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 19831, 2007 WL 2372256 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge.

Brett Fitzgerald Gooch was charged in a single-count indictment with being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(a). The district judge denied Gooch’s motion to suppress. Thereafter, Gooch pled guilty but reserved the suppression issue, which is now before this court. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Gooch’s motion to suppress.

I.

The now-defunct Club Prizm was a nightclub that was open to the public and located in a shopping center at the intersection of Nolensville Road and Old Hickory Boulevard in Nashville, Tennessee. Other businesses in the shopping center included a Laundromat, a liquor store, a hair salon, a paint store, and an Asian grocery store. In addition, the club was behind a Kroger supermarket that was open twenty-four hours a day. There was also an apartment complex located on the west side of the club. Police frequently visited Club Prizm due to complaints about fights, loud music, shootings, and a murder. In response to increased crime around the club and in the club’s parking lot, officers often conducted sweeps of the parking lot to look for contraband such as drugs or weapons. Police would conduct *598 these sweeps by walking through the aisles of the parking lot and peeking inside cars with flashlights to see if anything could be observed in plain view. At the suppression hearing, club owner Anthony Fidanza testified to the problems in the club’s parking lot and the surrounding neighborhood and stated that the police “made then-presence known for the most part for safety to make sure everything was fíne, which I welcomed that completely.” Joint App’x at 90.

Fidanza did not own the parking lot; rather, it was a common parking lot to be shared by all of the surrounding businesses. He had an arrangement with a valet service that worked in the parking lot on the club’s busiest nights. Fidanza did not pay for this service and did not receive any of the money it collected. The valet service did not actually park patrons’ cars. Instead, orange cones were placed in various parking spaces, and when a customer wished to park in a particular space, the valet would remove the cone and charge the customer to park there. Prices ran anywhere from $20 to $80 per vehicle, depending on how crowded the club was on that particular night and the location of the spot. (Apparently, there was a correlation between a patron’s status and how close his vehicle was to the club’s entrance.) The valet attended to about forty to fifty spaces in this “VIP area”; customers could park in the “outskirts” of the parking lot for no charge. In light of the fact that some patrons drove very expensive cars to the club, Fidanza employed some security guards in the valet area to watch the vehicles. Despite the valet service and security guards, pedestrians who were not club patrons could freely walk through the parking lot, including the VIP area, although few did so. Further, the police who entered the lot included the VIP area in their sweeps. According to Darryl Tyce, a security worker at Club Prizm, patrons became uneasy about the police presence in the parking lot.

On May 20, 2004, a valet was in the parking lot collecting money from patrons when uniformed officers from the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department (“Metro”) arrived in marked patrol cars. The officers were not asked to leave the premises. Officer Mark Anderson testified that during this sweep, he approached a Lincoln Town Car parked in the valet area and shined a flashlight straight into the windshield toward the car’s floorboard. Anderson noticed a purple velvet Crown Royal whiskey bag located underneath the driver’s seat. He observed what appeared to be the handle of a firearm sticking out of the bag, and informed the other officers in the area, including Officer Robert Bandish, who also observed the weapon. At this point, officers did not make any attempt to seize the weapon or open the car. Instead, Anderson reentered his patrol car and positioned it so he could watch to see whether anyone attempted to enter the Lincoln. Bandish pulled his patrol car alongside Anderson’s car and waited with him.

Meanwhile, Anderson ran the car’s license plate to determine the owner of the vehicle. 1 He discovered that the vehicle belonged to Gooch, that Gooch did not have a valid gun permit or valid driver’s license, and that Gooch had an extensive criminal history which included at least one felony conviction. Anderson pulled up Gooch’s mug shot on his laptop so that he *599 would be able to make a positive identification when Gooch exited the club. After a while, Anderson observed a person matching the mug shot and a female (later identified as Gooch’s wife, Seniqua King) enter the Lincoln. According to Anderson, Gooch got into the driver’s side and King got into the passenger’s side. After Gooch started the car and put it into reverse, Anderson, with Bandish at his side, approached the car with his gun drawn and demanded that Gooch place the car in park and exit the vehicle. 2 Gooch complied and was placed under arrest. Thereafter, officers conducted a search of the vehicle and seized a loaded Hi Point Model C9 9mm pistol. Gooch told the officers that he owned the gun for protection. Because Gooch was a convicted felon, he was charged with unlawfully possessing the pistol in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(a). Gooch filed a motion to suppress the firearm, which the district court denied on May 12, 2005.

In denying Gooch’s motion, the district court explained that the real inquiry in this case was whether Gooch had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the section of the parking lot where he parked his car. Referring to the testimony and photographs admitted into evidence, the district judge found that there were two driveways into the parking lot, neither of which were manned. Nor was there any fencing to block off the area. With respect to the placement of orange cones in certain places, the district court credited Anderson’s testimony that “there was no rhyme, no reason to the cones as to where they were.” Joint App’x at 145. The district court then explained:

[M]ost importantly, Mr. Tyce testified that everyone knew that Metro was doing sweeps of this parking lot, including the VIP area. He testified that when Metro was present, people would come to the door because they were concerned about their cars. And obviously people knew that these sweeps were going on, and there was no legitimate expectation of privacy.... This was a parking lot that was not owned by the owner of this club, really not controlled by the owner of the club. There were other businesses that used this parking lot, at least the Laundromat which was opened until late at night, that was entitled to use the parking lot. There was testimony that the public walked right through this parking lot regularly. There was a Kroger right nearby that was open [twenty-four] hours a day.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
499 F.3d 596, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 19831, 2007 WL 2372256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gooch-ca6-2007.