United States v. Hathcock

103 F.3d 715, 1997 WL 6104
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1997
DocketNo. 96-1501
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 103 F.3d 715 (United States v. Hathcock) 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. Hathcock, 103 F.3d 715, 1997 WL 6104 (8th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

HANSEN, Circuit Judge.

Following his conditional plea of guilty to possessing a controlled substance with intent to distribute it, Gregory W. Hathcock appeals the district court’s1 denial of his motion to suppress evidence obtained as a result of an encounter he had with an officer prior to his arrest. We affirm.

I.

On July 1,1994, four officers of the Omaha Police Department, including Sergeant Mark T. Langan and Officer Mark Lang, were conducting surveillance of flights arriving at Eppley Airfield in Omaha, Nebraska, from the west coast. The officers were looking for individuals who were transporting drugs into Omaha. Gregory Hathcock arrived late that evening on a flight originating from the west coast and exited the plane with another individual. The officers saw the two persons [717]*717walk together a few feet and then split up in the corridor. Hathcoek was carrying a duffel bag and did not retrieve any luggage from the luggage carousel. He sometimes walked very quickly, trotting, and other times walked slowly. Hathcoek seemed to be nervous, looking back and forth. He walked out to the taxi cab stand area, but no taxi cabs were there at the moment.

Sergeant Langan had observed Hathcock’s behavior- and had concluded that Hathcoek met the profile of a drug courier. The sergeant followed Hathcoek and approached him at the taxi cab stand area. The sergeant showed his police badge, told Hathcoek his name, and informed Hathcoek he was with the Narcotics Unit of the Omaha Police Department. Sergeant Langan asked Hathcoek if he would mind answering a few questions, and Hathcoek said he would not mind. The officer explained that he was at the airport to identify possible drug couriers arriving from the west coast and that this was his reason for wanting to talk to Hathcoek. He asked whether Hathcoek understood this; Hath-cock replied that he did.

When asked his name, Hathcoek identified himself as “Greg Johnson.” Sergeant Langan asked to see Hatheock’s airline ticket, and Hathcoek produced a ticket issued to Greg Johnson. Langan then asked for permission to search Hathcock’s duffel bag for drugs. Hathcoek said that he first wanted to go to a residence at 5040 Corby Street and that Sergeant Langan could search the bag at that location in about an hour.

Sergeant Langan asked Hathcoek whether he had any identification, and Hathcoek replied that he did not. Langan then asked Hathcoek whether he would show the officer his wallet. Hathcoek took out his wallet. When Langan asked whether he could look though the wallet for identification, Hathcoek replied that that would be fine and handed the wallet to the officer. Langan asked Hathcoek a second time whether the wallet contained any identification, and Hathcoek again said no.

Sergeant Langan searched Hathcock’s wallet. He found a traffic ticket and a medical card, both in the name of Gregory W. Hatheock. The sergeant asked Hathcoek whether his name was, in fact, Gregory Hathcoek, rather than Gregory Johnson. Hathcoek admitted that his real last name was Hathcoek, and that he was only flying under the name of Gregory Johnson. Sergeant Langan then placed Hathcoek under arrest for providing “false information to a police officer.” The entire exchange lasted about three minutes.

Sergeant Langan took Hathcoek to the security office of the airport and ran a records check on him. The check revealed no outstanding warrants for Hathcoek. Langan then asked Hathcoek for permission to search Hathcoek’s duffel bag. Hathcoek told Langan he would consent, but his bag contained some fragile items. The sergeant said he would simply stand and watch if Hathcoek would unzip the bag and remove the items himself. Hathcoek agreed to this.

Hathcoek unzipped his bag. He removed and ripped up a paper label carrying the brand name “Poly.” Hathcoek also took out a pair of jeans, but then shook them, put them back in the bag, and zipped it up. Interpreting Hathcock’s conduct as a denial of consent to search the bag, Sergeant Langan asked another officer to watch Hathcoek and went into the hallway, where he told a third officer, Officer Mark Lang, that he was going to arrange for a drug dog to sniff Hathcock’s duffel bag. Langan left to make the arrangements.

While Langan was gone, Officer Lang entered the security office and asked Hathcoek for permission to search the bag. Hathcoek picked up the bag, lifted it a short distance from the floor, and then threw it back down. He said, “Go ahead and search it. You’re going to find what you want anyway.” (Supp. R. at 127.) Officer Lang searched the bag and found a small amount of marijuana and a bundle of 492 grams of crack cocaine wrapped in plastic Poly tape.

Hathcoek was charged under state law with possession with intent to deliver crack cocaine. Hathcoek filed a motion to suppress the crack cocaine. The trial court granted Hathcock’s motion, finding that the initial encounter was a Terry stop that was not based on a reasonable, articulable suspicion.

[718]*718The state appealed to the Nebraska Court of Appeals. Contrary to-the trial court, the appellate court found there was reasonable suspicion to support a Terry stop, but further found that Sergeant Langan did not have probable cause under Nebraska state law to arrest Hathcock, because the officer was not working on “an actual criminal matter” within the meaning of section 28-907(1)(a) of the Nebraska Revised Statutes (1989) when he approached Hathcock.2

Following the decision of the Nebraska Court of Appeals, Hathcock was charged and indicted in federal court with intent to distribute crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1988). Hathcock again filed a motion to suppress the crack cocaine. At a hearing on this motion, Sergeant Langan testified that he had arrested Hathcock based on his belief that Hathcock had violated section 20-26 of the Omaha Municipal Code, which prohibits providing false information to an officer. Sergeant Langan also testified that he did not specifically tell either Officer Lang or, later, the state court prosecutor that he had arrested Hathcock on the basis of a violation of the municipal code rather than the state code.

Hathcock also .presented evidence at the suppression hearing. In support of his argument that he was arrested under state (not municipal) law, he offered the opinion of the Nebraska Court of Appeals and the testimony of the technician who had processed the paperwork when Hathcock was booked into jail.

The magistrate judge3 concluded that the crack cocaine was admissible. First, she determined that the state appellate court’s decision was not dispositive on this federal constitutional question. Second, applying an objective standard to determine whether Langan had probable cause to arrest Hath-cock, she found that the arrest was valid, regardless of whether Sergeant Langan’s subjective intent was to arrest under state or municipal law. Finally, she found that Hathcock had voluntarily consented to Officer Lang’s search of his bag. Thus, she recommended that the district court deny Hatheoek’s motion to suppress.

The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation and denied Hathcock’s motion to suppress. Hath-cock then entered a conditional plea of guilty, reserving the right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress.

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Bluebook (online)
103 F.3d 715, 1997 WL 6104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hathcock-ca8-1997.