United States v. Jasper Black

482 F.3d 1035, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8182
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 2007
Docket07-70458
StatusPublished
Cited by249 cases

This text of 482 F.3d 1035 (United States v. Jasper Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth 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. Jasper Black, 482 F.3d 1035, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8182 (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinions

Opinion by Judge BETTY B. FLETCHER; Dissent by Judge BERZON.

ORDER AMENDING OPINION AND DISSENT AND AMENDED OPINION AND AMENDED DISSENT

B. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge.

ORDER

The opinion and dissent filed on October 26, 2006, United States v. Black, 466 F.3d 1143 (9th Cir.2006), are amended as follows:

AMENDMENTS TO OPINION

On page 1145, line 32 add the following sentence at the beginning of the paragraph: “First, the police did not have stopwatches in hand and could only approximate the elapsed times.” In the sentence that originally headed this paragraph, delete “First” and substitute “Second”. Delete from page 1145, lines 33-39:

Second, the times cited by the dissent are all approximate times. Rodriguez was dispatched at approximately 8:40 and arrived at approximately 8:43. If each approximation is off by a single minute, then Walker could have arrived at the apartment three minutes before Rodriguez — ample time for Black to have taken her inside the building. We conclude that the circumstances do support an objectively reasonable belief that Walker could be in the apartment.

At the end of the altered paragraph, add:

Third, what the officers knew at the time was that Walker said she would meet them at the scene, she was not there but her attacker was, and he denied living in the apartment though he had a key to it. These circumstances were reason enough for the officers to believe that Walker could very well be in the apartment injured. In addition, the attacker admitted that he was aware that the officers were investigating a domestic violence call. How did he know that? It could be that Walker told him earlier that she was calling the police. But a more serious alternative was also a possibility: Walker had returned and told Black that the police were on the way to which he had a violent response. The officers did not have the time to conduct a thorough examination of all the information that was available to them and to conclude, as we might after the fact, that this was an unlikely possibility.
[1038]*1038As the dissent rightly concedes, whether the actions of the police are objectively reasonable is to be judged by the circumstances known to them. They were not conducting a trial, but were required to make an on-the-spot decision as to whether Walker could be in the apartment in need of medical help; the objective circumstances did not require them to reach the conclusion that there was little or no risk that Walker was in the apartment in danger. To the contrary, the combination of these circumstances support an objectively reasonable belief that Walker could be in the apartment.

AMENDMENTS TO DISSENT

In the third full paragraph on page 1148, replace the sentence “The first officer arrived at 804 J Street, about three minutes after Walker called 911” with “The first officer, Rodriguez, arrived at 804 J Street at 8:43 a.m., three minutes after Walker ended her 911 call.”

1.In the last full paragraph beginning on page 1148, replace the first two sentences — “The majority argues that this timeline of the morning’s events somehow errs by relying— seemingly, too much — on the evidence before supported by the record. And yet, these are the facts before us and the facts upon which we must rely to make our decision.” — with the next three paragraphs:
The timeline of events in this case is amply supported by the record, courtesy of an exceedingly precise log — one that chronicles the relevant events down to the millisecond — from the Las Vegas police department’s communication center. According to that log, we know that Walker called 911 at exactly 8:39:3465 and that she spoke with a dispatcher until exactly 8:40:1749. We also know that Rodriguez was dispatched at exactly 8:42:5825 and that he arrived at 804 J Street at 8:43:2487 — again just over three minutes after Walker ended her 911 call.
The majority prefers to ignore these facts in favor of conjecture — specifically, its inference that Black knew the police were investigating a domestic violence incident because Walker herself told him about the 911 call, after hypothetically returning to the apartment. This hypothesis, however, does not accord with the tight timeline that makes it nigh unto impossible for Walker to have returned to the apartment after calling 911 but before Officer Rodriguez’s arrival. Moreover, by hanging its hat on this version of events, the majority ignores its own alternate, but far more plausible, scenario — namely, that Black knew the police were investigating a domestic violence incident because Walker told him that she would call 911 before fleeing the apartment. This inference does not hinge on Walker returning to the apartment after calling 911 and, thus, unlike the majority’s conjecture, would fit into the timeline presented; not surprisingly, the majority dismisses it. Equally plausible under the established chronological constraints is yet another possibility— that Black surmised that the police had arrived to investigate a domestic violence incident not because of anything Walker said or did, but simply because he had been involved in just such an incident earlier that morning. In short, not only does the majority base its analysis on pure conjecture, but the theories it spins out do not conform to the detailed timeline the record establishes.
2. On page 1149, begin a new paragraph with the text: “To be sure, none of the information.... ”
3. On page 1149, in the sentence beginning “To be sure, none of the infor[1039]*1039mation ...replace the word “here” with “in the record,” so that the sentence now reads: “To be sure, none of the information in the record affirmatively confirms exactly where Walker was after she made her 911 call.”
4. On page 1149, edit the sentence that begins “Instead, the government’s arguments .... ” so that it reads: “Instead, the government’s arguments, like the majority’s, amount to nothing more than insufficient ‘speculation.’ ”

AMENDED OPINION

On appeal, Jasper Black challenges his conviction as a felon in possession, arguing that the district court erred when it denied his motion to suppress the gun. We affirm.

I.

The police justify their entry into Black’s apartment, not as one looking for evidence of a crime but as a welfare search occasioned by a 911 domestic violence call. Police were dispatched to the apartment after Black’s ex-girlfriend, Tyroshia Walker, called 911 and reported that Black had beaten her up that morning in the apartment and that he had a gun. Toward the end of her 911 call, Walker told the dispatcher that she intended to return to the apartment with her mother in order to retrieve her clothing and that the two women would wait outside the apartment, in a white Ford pickup truck, for police to arrive. Officer Rodriguez was dispatched to the scene to meet the women. When he arrived at the apartment a few minutes later there were no signs of Walker, her mother, or the truck. Rodriguez contacted Officer Kikkert, who was already on his way to the apartment, and directed him to stop by the grocery store from which Walker had made her phone call.

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482 F.3d 1035, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 8182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jasper-black-ca9-2007.