United States v. Neely

345 F.3d 366, 2003 WL 22078433
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 2003
Docket02-60561
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 345 F.3d 366 (United States v. Neely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Neely, 345 F.3d 366, 2003 WL 22078433 (5th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

After filing an unsuccessful motion to suppress clothing taken from a hospital in which he was a patient, appellant Tony Neely proceeded to trial on charges of bank robbery and carrying or using a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence. The jury convicted him on both counts, and the district court sentenced him to 380 months’ imprisonment and five years’ supervised release. He now appeals the district court’s ruling on the motion to suppress and certain sentencing issues. We agree with Neely that the district court reversibly erred in denying the motion to suppress, and therefore reverse his conviction and remand for a new trial.

I

Testimony presented at the hearing on the motion to suppress revealed that on November 9, 2000, at 10:45 a.m., a man wearing a red and white windsuit and a ski mask over his face and carrying a .380 pistol walked into the Trustmark Bank in Southaven, Mississippi, a town situated on the state line between Tennessee and Mississippi and a suburb of Memphis, Tennessee. Upon entering the bank he shot a single round from his weapon into the ceiling and proceeded to the teller counter. He yelled to the lone teller behind the counter, Glenda Wheeler, to get down on the floor, and kicked in the gate accessing the area behind the counter. Once he was behind the counter he located Wheeler’s teller drawer and removed $17,097 in cash. Because the robber was covered from head to toe Wheeler was unable to identify his race or other identifying characteristics, nor were law enforcement officers who later viewed the bank’s videotape of the robbery.

After recovering the money, the robber ran out of the bank and jumped into the passenger side of a maroon Mazda 626 that had been waiting for him in the bank parking lot. As the Mazda attempted to pull out of the parking lot, a dye pack placed by the teller into the wads of stolen money exploded. Eyewitnesses reported that, after the dye pack exploded, both the driver and passenger of the vehicle opened the car doors to let the smoke escape. As they did so, the car hit a parked vehicle in the parking lot, and the jolt caused the passenger to drop currency onto the ground. As he leaned down to pick up the money, witnesses heard a pop and observed the passenger grab his chest or stomach area. Then both individuals exit *368 ed the vehicle and ran across the lot to a waiting black SUV and got into that car. The SUV left the lot and headed north towards Memphis.

From the parking lot agents recovered several thousand dollars with red stain on it. They also took samples from the interi- or of the Mazda, which they observed was splattered with red dye. The only evidence recovered from inside the bank was the bullet in the ceiling, a small crowbar, and a .380 casing from the spent round.

A few minutes after the robbery a 911 call came in from the Tulane Apartments in Memphis, roughly four and a half miles from the bank. The caller reported that an individual in apartment two, a second-story apartment, had sustained a gunshot wound to his chest. An ambulance and police personnel responded to the call and arrived to find Neely wounded and lying in the kitchen of the apartment. The ambulance workers quickly secured Neely and transported him the to Regional Medical Center, also known as “The Med,” in Memphis. At the foot of the rear stairs leading to the apartment police seized a banking bag and an empty plastic ice bag both stained with red dye.

At The Med, emergency personnel rushed Neely to the Shock Trauma Unit. During treatment the medical workers found it necessary to remove Neely’s clothing, which included a royal blue t-shirt and a pair of blue jeans. They placed the clothing in a plastic bag. Kerry Kirkland, the patient care coordinator for The Med’s 7 a.m. shift, testified that when someone such as Neely is brought into the trauma unit suffering from a gunshot wound and covered with blood, and medical personnel finds it necessary to cut his clothing off of his body, it is inventoried, placed in a plastic bag, and put into the clothing storeroom at back of the unit. The clothing is maintained in the storeroom for five to six days and, if the owner does not claim it, it is thrown away. Kirkland further affirmed that the hospital considered such clothing to belong to the patient even while in the hospital’s possession; that the staff at The Med does not consider the hospital to be an owner of the clothes.

While Neely was in surgery or shortly thereafter, a detective captain at the Sou-thaven Police Department, acting on information from the Memphis Police Department, dispatched an officer to The Med to retrieve Neely’s clothing. Although the officer had no warrant for the clothing, and police were then in the process of procuring an arrest warrant for Neely, medical personnel gave him Neely’s clothes upon the officer’s request. Lab analysis of the seized clothes revealed tear gas and red dye consistent with substances deployed in a dye pack.

Neely argued that the clothing and the lab results were inadmissible products of a warrantless search and seizure subject to no exception to the warrant requirement. The Government did not file a response to the motion, 1 but at the hearing held by the district court it argued that exigent circumstances — particularly the police captain’s concern that the bloody evidence would deteriorate or be contaminated while in the hospital’s possession — justified the seizure, and that, alternatively, Neely lost his privacy interest in the clothing by wearing them in front of hospital personnel and police officers after he was shot. 2 *369 The Government also suggested that the hospital was a joint possessor of the clothing and therefore it had authority to give them to the police, and that the seizure of the clothes was incident to Neely’s arrest, since it closely preceded procurement of the arrest warrant and for all practical purposes Neely was under arrest at the time of the seizure since he was shackled to his bed.

After the hearing the district court, in a written opinion, denied the motion to suppress, concluding that Neely had no reasonable expectation of privacy in his clothes while they were in the hospital’s possession, since he voluntarily submitted himself to medical treatment wearing the bloody clothes. However, it rejected the Government’s argument that possible deterioration of the defendant’s clothes created exigent circumstances justified seizing the clothes without a warrant. The trial court further concluded that the forensic testing of the clothes constituted a reasonable search incident to the defendant’s arrest. Neely now appeals.

II

In reviewing a district court’s determination of a motion to suppress, we accept the ruling unless clearly erroneous or influenced by an incorrect view of the law, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the prevailing party, here the Government. 3 Neely argues that the district court erred in focusing on whether he had a valid privacy interest in his clothing at the time the police seized them, because the existence of a privacy interest is relevant to the constitutionality of a search, not a seizure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
345 F.3d 366, 2003 WL 22078433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-neely-ca5-2003.