United States v. Tuggle

284 F. App'x 218
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 14, 2008
Docket07-30814
StatusUnpublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 284 F. App'x 218 (United States v. Tuggle) 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. Tuggle, 284 F. App'x 218 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Defendant-Appellee Bobby Tuggle, Jr., was charged with possessing a firearm as a convicted felon. The government appeals the district court’s granting of Tuggle’s motion to suppress the seized firearm. We reverse and remand.

I.

On March 7, 2007, Bobby Tuggle, Jr., was indicted on one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). On April 19, 2007, Tuggle filed a motion to suppress the firearm, arguing that it was the fruit of an unconstitutional search and seizure. A hearing on the motion was held on August 21, 2007. Officer Timothy Wilkinson was the only witness to testify at the hearing. He testified to the following events, which, according to the government, establish reasonable suspicion for the Terry stop and frisk of Tuggle. See Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct. 1868, 20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968).

At the time of the stop, Officer Wilkinson, an officer in the auto-theft division of the Baton Rouge Police Department *220 (“BRPD”), had been investigating an auto-theft ring at the Baton Rouge Metropolitan Airport where fifty to sixty vehicles had been stolen. On January 4, 2006, it was reported that a couple of the stolen vehicles, as well as the suspects involved, were located at 2915 Chippewa Street, and Wilkinson proceeded to that address. Wilkinson had specific information that the boyfriend of the woman living at the Chippewa residence was involved in the auto-theft ring. Although he had the boyfriend’s name, Wilkinson did not have a physical description.

The Chippewa residence, according to Wilkinson, was located in a high crime area known for narcotics and street crimes. Specifically, Wilkinson testified that several years prior to the auto-theft investigation, he had been involved in narcotics arrests on Chippewa, and that more recently he had examined police reports indicating narcotics activity there. Wilkinson was also aware of a shooting that occurred on the particular block involved in this case. However, he “couldn’t tell [defense counsel] for sure” whether narcotics arrests had been made in the last two years on Chippewa Street.

When Wilkinson arrived on Chippewa, he made an initial pass by the address in an unmarked police vehicle. He noticed two vehicles parked in the yard of the residence, “even [with], but towards the back part of the house.” Wilkinson copied down the license plate number of one of the vehicles visible from the road, ran the plate, and confirmed that the vehicle was stolen. He then notified the BRPD Uniform Patrol Division and requested assistance in returning to the residence to investigate and recover the stolen vehicle.

Within approximately ten to fifteen minutes, Wilkinson, accompanied by other BRPD officers, returned to the Chippewa residence where he had identified the stolen vehicle. BRPD Officer Steven Parks, who was traveling in a marked BRPD car, drove up to the residence behind Wilkinson. Additional BRPD officers in marked units arrived upon the scene within a “matter of seconds.” As Wilkinson and Parks approached the residence, they observed a car stopped in the middle of the roadway. Its motor was running and a “black male,” later identified as Tuggle, was leaning into its driver’s side window. As the officers pulled up, the vehicle “sped away.” At that point, Tuggle turned and “briskly walked away” from the officers and toward the stolen vehicle parked in the yard of the Chippewa residence. According to Wilkinson, based on his experience and the criminal nature of the neighborhood, Tuggle’s posture and behavior at the car were consistent with a street-level narcotics transaction. Further, because Tuggle subsequently approached the stolen vehicle, Wilkinson testified that he inferred that Tuggle might be one of the suspects involved in the auto-theft ring.

According to Wilkinson, Tuggle traveled about ten to fifteen feet away from the street and into the yard of the residence and was approximately fifteen feet away from the stolen vehicle when the officers called out to him to come back to their location. Yielding to their command, Tuggle turned around and headed back to the street. Wilkinson testified that when Tuggle reached the officers, he was “very nervous” and “shaking uncontrollably.” The officers conducted a patdown and discovered that Tuggle was carrying a .38 caliber revolver in his back left pocket. Tuggle was placed under arrest for illegally carrying a weapon. Thereafter, the officers recovered both vehicles in the yard, after confirming the second was also stolen.

Before making its decision on the motion to suppress, the district court asked Wilkinson whether Chippewa Street had side *221 walks. Wilkinson replied that it did not. The district court then surmised that anyone walking down the side of the street of the Chippewa residence would necessarily be walking toward the stolen vehicle. Wilkinson responded that a person simply walking down the street would not need to travel approximately fifteen feet into the yard of the Chippewa residence and come within fifteen feet of the stolen vehicle, as Tuggle allegedly had. The district court was also curious about what happened with the car and driver who had “sped away.” Wilkinson had testified that BRPD Officer Gewalt went after the vehicle, and the district court was interested in knowing what came of the stop. It found the fact that Wilkinson did not question Gewalt about his stop of the vehicle odd, stating, “If you thought you had a drug deal why didn’t you talk to one of the officers that followed up on the drug deal?” Wilkinson replied, “Well [Gewalt] came back to our location within just a couple of minutest,] and there was nothing to the stop that he had made.”

At the conclusion of the hearing, the district court found that the police lacked reasonable suspicion for a Terry stop and frisk of Tuggle on the date in question. First, discussing the “supposed drug deal,” the district court stated:

[T]he reasonable suspicion on that point is that [Tuggle] was standing at or leaning in the driver’s window of a vehicle that was stopped in the middle of the street. And when the police pulled up the vehicle pulled off, sped off and [Tuggle] walked away in a [manner] that was described as a brisk walk. None of those facts taken alone or together would provide reasonable suspicion that a drug offense was either occurring or about to occur. After the officers pulled up there was testimony that one of the officers pursued and stopped the car that had sped away. But Officer Wilkinson couldn’t say what happened after that because apparently nothing was told to him by the officer who stopped the vehicle. It strikes me as strange that if you think there’s a drug deal going on, and the car allegedly involved in the drug deal is stopped, seems to me somebody ought to say something about what happened after the car was stopped, why there wasn’t an arrest of the driver. Or if there was an arrest of the driver, what was found, and that sort of thing. There’s none of that in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
284 F. App'x 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tuggle-ca5-2008.