United States v. Terry Brown

558 F. App'x 386
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 2014
Docket13-60223
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 558 F. App'x 386 (United States v. Terry Brown) 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. Terry Brown, 558 F. App'x 386 (5th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Terry Thomas Brown challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Terry Thomas Brown, together with co-defendant Anthony D. Jones, was charged by indictment with four counts of aiding and abetting the passing of counterfeit $100 bills. Brown moved to suppress evidence obtained as the result of an unlawful arrest. Specifically, Brown seeks to suppress incriminating statements he made to *388 a Secret Service special agent while he was in detention.

The district court held an evidentiary hearing on Brown’s motion and a similar motion filed by Jones. At the hearing, Chip Benjamin, a police officer with the City of Tupelo, Mississippi, testified that on July 30, 2011, he received a dispatch call to a residence, where he spoke with Kasi Guyton about her receipt of a counterfeit $100 bill at her yard sale. Benjamin arrived at Guyton’s home within ten minutes of the call and possibly “less than five minutes” after the call. Guyton reported that a black male accompanied by a white male had given her the money, which she discovered was counterfeit when she went to a nearby store to try to get change. The employees at the store identified the bill as counterfeit by using a marker pen. Guyton told Officer Benjamin that the black male had given her the bill.

Officer Benjamin testified that Guyton said the men were driving “a newer model silver Toyota four-door truck with Florida [license] plates.” She stated that the black male was wearing a green shirt and blue jeans. During the conversation, a truck matching Guyton’s description drove by. Officer Benjamin asked Guyton if the truck that drove by looked like the one the men were in, and she responded affirmatively. Officer Benjamin immediately returned to his patrol car and followed the truck. Officer Benjamin could tell that the vehicle matched the make, model, and col- or of the truck described by Guyton, and when he caught up to it he saw that it had Florida license plates.

Officer Benjamin observed the vehicle turn into a gas station, and he followed. When Officer Benjamin pulled into the gas station, the black male was in the driver’s seat of the vehicle and the white male was “standing outside the [passenger] door.” Officer Benjamin activated his patrol car’s blue lights as he pulled into the station. The white male looked directly at Officer Benjamin’s patrol car and the flashing lights. 1 He then “hurriedly tr[ied] to get in the [convenience] store” located at the gas station. Officer Benjamin instructed him to “get back in the truck,” but the man did not heed the instruction. Officer Benjamin exited his vehicle, pulled his service weapon, and again ordered the man back to the truck, at which point he complied. 2 Officer Benjamin testified that when the man returned to the vehicle, Officer Benjamin noticed open beer cans on the floorboard of the vehicle’s passenger side. 3 He ordered both men to place their hands on the dashboard.

Officer Benjamin obtained both men’s driver’s licenses and told the driver the reason for the stop. In the courtroom, he identified Jones as the driver of the vehicle and Brown as the passenger. Officer Benjamin testified that when he spoke with *389 Jones at the gas station, Jones was wearing clothing matching the description given by Guyton. Officer Benjamin informed Jones that he was suspected of passing counterfeit money, and asked Jones several questions about where he was coming from and why he was in Tupelo. Jones explained that he was driving from Alabama to Tennessee to pick up his daughter. Officer Benjamin testified that Jones’s story “didn’t make sense” to him.

Guyton then arrived at the scene. Officer Benjamin had not asked her to follow him; she came to the gas station on her own initiative. She identified Jones as “the guy” who gave her the counterfeit bill, and told Jones, “[y]ou gave me a fake hundred-dollar bill.” Jones responded that he did not know the bill was counterfeit and he would “make it right.” Officer Benjamin then removed Jones from the truck and had him place his hands on the vehicle. Officer Benjamin checked Jones’s pockets and found a counterfeit $100 bill, at which point Officer Benjamin handcuffed Jones and placed him under arrest. During a search of Jones’s vehicle, officers found another counterfeit bill in Jones’s wallet, which was on the driver’s seat; a large sum of counterfeit money in the passenger side door; and another large counterfeit sum in a book in the back seat. There was also a computer printout of yard sale locations in the Tupelo area. Legitimate money was found separate from the counterfeit bills, in the driver’s side door. Items that appeared to be from yard sales were in the bed of the truck. 4

A second officer, Clay Hassell, arrived at the scene and took Brown into custody while Officer Benjamin spoke with Jones. Officer Hassell patted down Brown and did not find any counterfeit bills on him. When a third officer, Nathan Sheffield, arrived, he escorted Brown to Officer Benjamin’s vehicle. Officer Sheffield testified at the hearing that he noticed the smell of alcohol on Brown’s breath and person. Officer Sheffield also testified that he noticed open containers of alcohol on the floorboard of the vehicle’s passenger side.

Officer Benjamin stated that Jones did not commit a traffic violation. He testified that Guyton did not provide any information about the clothing worn by the white male accompanying Jones, and she did not speak with Brown when she arrived at the gas station. Officer Benjamin had no information at the time of the stop that Brown was in possession of counterfeit money. Officer Benjamin stated that at the time Brown returned to the vehicle, he was being detained, and that “[t]he open containers and the smell of alcohol on him” were the reasons for his detention.

The district court denied both defendants’ motions to suppress in an oral order three weeks after the hearing on the motion. It found that Guyton had described “the persons” that had paid her with the counterfeit bills, that Brown was the passenger in the truck, and that he had “almost immediately exited the truck and attempted to walk into the convenience store.” The court noted that when Guyton arrived at the scene, she said to “one or both defendants, ‘[y]ou gave me a fake 100-dollar bill.’ ” The court stated that Jones replied “that he did not know it was fake, T will make it right,’ ” which was “indicative to the [cjourt that Jones and the other occupant, Brown, were aware that the currency passed at the yard sale was counterfeit currency.” The court *390 found that Officer Benjamin frisked both defendants and that “counterfeit money was found on their person,” as well as within the vehicle.

The court performed a two-tiered reasonable suspicion analysis under Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct.

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558 F. App'x 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-terry-brown-ca5-2014.