United States v. Tamaran Bontemps

977 F.3d 909
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 13, 2020
Docket19-10195
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 977 F.3d 909 (United States v. Tamaran Bontemps) 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. Tamaran Bontemps, 977 F.3d 909 (9th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No. 19-10195 Plaintiff-Appellee, D.C. No. v. 2:18-cr-00099-JAM-1

TAMARAN EDWARD BONTEMPS, Defendant-Appellant. OPINION

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California John A. Mendez, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted May 11, 2020 San Francisco, California

Filed October 13, 2020

Before: Ryan D. Nelson and Daniel A. Bress, Circuit Judges, and James S. Gwin, * District Judge.

Opinion by Judge Bress; Dissent by Judge Gwin

* The Honorable James S. Gwin, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Ohio, sitting by designation. 2 UNITED STATES V. BONTEMPS

SUMMARY **

Criminal Law

The panel affirmed a criminal judgment in a case in which the district court denied the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence, and the defendant entered a conditional guilty plea to being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm.

Police detained the defendant after observing a bulge under his sweatshirt that likely indicated a concealed firearm, which is presumptively unlawful to carry in California. After searching the defendant, a convicted felon with an outstanding felony warrant, police determined he was carrying a loaded gun in a shoulder holster. The panel held that the district court did not clearly err in crediting an officer’s testimony that he observed on the defendant a “very large and obvious bulge” that suggested a concealed firearm. The panel further held that reasonable suspicion supported the stop, and that the district court therefore properly denied the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence found during the search.

Dissenting, District Judge Gwin wrote that, without other corroborating evidence, a sweatshirt bulge alone did not give an objectively reasonable and particularized suspicion to stop the defendant.

** This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader. UNITED STATES V. BONTEMPS 3

COUNSEL

Ann C. McClintock (argued), Assistant Federal Defender; Heather E. Williams, Federal Defender; Federal Defender’s Office, Sacramento, California; for Defendant-Appellant.

David Spencer (argued) and Timothy H. Delgado, Assistant United States Attorney; Camil A. Skipper, Appellate Chief; McGregor W. Scott, United States Attorney; United States Attorney’s Office, Sacramento, California; for Plaintiff- Appellee.

OPINION

BRESS, Circuit Judge:

Police detained Tamaran Bontemps after observing a bulge under his sweatshirt that likely indicated a concealed firearm, which is presumptively unlawful to carry in California. After searching Bontemps, a convicted felon with an outstanding felony warrant, police determined he was carrying a loaded gun in a shoulder holster. The question in this case is whether police had reasonable suspicion of illegal conduct sufficient to justify the stop. We hold that the district court did not clearly err in crediting an officer’s testimony that he observed on Bontemps a “very large and obvious bulge” that suggested a concealed firearm. We further hold that reasonable suspicion supported the stop. The district court therefore properly denied Bontemps’s motion to suppress evidence found during the search. 4 UNITED STATES V. BONTEMPS

I

We describe the events surrounding the stop based on the testimony of Vallejo Police Department Detectives Jarrett Tonn and Kevin Barreto at a hearing on Bontemps’s motion to suppress, as well as Tonn’s and Barreto’s police reports and bodycam footage.

On April 18, 2018, Tonn and Barreto were patrolling Vallejo in a black police SUV. Barreto drove while Tonn sat in the front passenger seat. At around 3:51 p.m., the detectives observed a group of four young African American men walking eastbound on Robles Way, a two-lane road with a center turn lane in a mixed residential/commercial area (at one point Tonn described Robles Way as “a two-lane road on either side of the small concrete divide,” but the road was in fact narrower and had no concrete divide).

As the detectives drove past the group, Barreto noticed that one of the men, Quinton Mills, appeared to be carrying a concealed handgun in the pouch pocket of his sweatshirt. Barreto made a U-turn so that the officers could get a closer look. At this point, the men were walking eastbound on the south side of the street, and the officers were driving five to seven miles per hour westbound. Detective Barreto slowed the vehicle further as they approached the group. Although Barreto already “wasn’t going fast,” he “slowed down fairly rapidly” “so [the officers] could look at them.” 1

From the passenger seat, Detective Tonn could “very clearly” see the four men on the sidewalk, who were not 1 The dissent contends that Tonn and Barreto testified inconsistently. That is not the case. As the district court recognized, Tonn merely began his account once the officers had already made their first U-turn and were driving westbound. UNITED STATES V. BONTEMPS 5

“very far away” on the other side of the street. Tonn observed that Bontemps, who was walking in front with Mills, also “had obvious indicators of having a firearm.” According to Tonn, based on his “training and experience as a police officer,” both Bontemps and Mills had “bulges in parts of their body” that were “consistent with carrying a firearm in public.”

In particular, Bontemps, who was wearing a light gray sweatshirt that was partially zipped up, “had a very obvious bulge on his left side just above the waist area, kind of halfway maybe between his waist and his left armpit.” Due to this “very large and obvious bulge in Mr. Bontemps’ sweatshirt on his left side above his waist,” as well as Detective Tonn’s training and his encounters with “numerous people with firearms,” Tonn believed Bontemps was carrying a concealed gun.

After the SUV passed by the group, the detectives turned around and pulled up behind the four men, exited the vehicle, and ordered the group to stop and sit on the curb. All four complied. Mills had his hands in his front pocket, where Detective Barreto suspected he was concealing a firearm. Barreto unholstered his service pistol, held it by his side, and told Mills to remove his hands from the pocket. Barreto then ordered Mills to keep his hands up, reached into Mills’s sweatshirt pocket, and removed a 9mm Glock 19 handgun with a live round in the chamber. (A later search uncovered a twenty-two-round magazine with nine live rounds in Mills’s pants pocket.)

As Barreto was dealing with Mills, Bontemps became argumentative and began yelling at the officers and cars passing by. As the situation escalated and the officers called for backup, Detective Tonn deployed his Taser on Bontemps to subdue him. Tonn, who also had his gun drawn, ordered 6 UNITED STATES V. BONTEMPS

the men to lie on their stomachs. The detectives then handcuffed and searched Bontemps, uncovering a loaded .40 caliber Glock 22 handgun concealed in a shoulder holster on the left side of his body. The handgun’s serial number had been drilled off, rendering it unreadable. When officers ran Bontemps’s information, they discovered he was on felony probation for carrying a loaded firearm in public and had an outstanding warrant for a probation violation.

In May 2018, a grand jury returned an indictment charging Bontemps with one count of being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
977 F.3d 909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tamaran-bontemps-ca9-2020.