RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
File Name: 10a0244p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
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Plaintiff-Appellee, -
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
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Nos. 08-4680/4682
v.
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Defendant-Appellant. -
CLINT WALKER,
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Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
Nos. 06-00003; 08-00073-001—Sandra S. Beckwith, District Judge.
Argued: August 4, 2010
Decided and Filed: August 12, 2010
Before: SILER and SUTTON, Circuit Judges; CLELAND, District Judge.*
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Kevin M. Schad, FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER’S OFFICE, Cincinnati,
Ohio, for Appellant. Benjamin C. Glassman, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES
ATTORNEY, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Kevin M. Schad, Richard
W. Smith-Monahan, FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER’S OFFICE, Cincinnati, Ohio, for
Appellant. Benjamin C. Glassman, Adam F. Seibel, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES
ATTORNEYS, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee.
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OPINION
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SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Clint Walker challenges his bank-robbery and
brandishing-a-firearm convictions in two respects: (1) the district court erred in denying
*
The Honorable Robert H. Cleland, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of
Michigan, sitting by designation.
1
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his motion to suppress evidence of the firearm obtained during a search of his duffel bag
and (2) it erred in imposing two consecutive sentences under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). We
affirm.
I.
On December 5, 2005, Special Agent Michael Kelly of the FBI arrived at the
scene of a bank robbery at the National City Bank in Sciotoville, Ohio. The bank’s
tellers told him that the thief had stolen $9,609 and gave a description of the perpetrator:
a white male, between five foot eight and six feet and between 160 and 180 pounds, who
wore dark clothing, gloves and a plastic or rubber skeleton mask with a hood, and who
was armed with a semi-automatic silver pistol. Other witnesses identified the get-away
vehicle as a blue Plymouth Voyager with wood-grain panels, and one witness provided
a full license plate number. Local authorities put out a BOLO (Be On the Lookout) for
the car and thief.
Among the officers in the area who received the BOLO was Officer Lee Bower
of the Portsmouth Police Department, located about twenty minutes from the bank.
Soon after receiving the bulletin, and twenty-seven minutes after the robbery, Officer
Bower spotted a blue van with wood-panel siding parked outside of Pollock’s Body
Shop. He called dispatch to confirm the license plate number. It was a match. Officer
Bower called for backup and drove into the body shop parking lot.
From his cruiser, Officer Bower watched Charles Burke cross the parking lot and
head toward the van. The officer exited the car and approached Burke, then noticed
Defendant Clint Walker, whom he knew as the owner of T & T Garage, walking toward
him with a black duffel bag slung over his shoulder. Officer Bower asked Walker
whether he was the one driving the van. He was. The officer asked him for
identification. In response, Walker walked to the other side of the van. When Officer
Bower followed and told him to stop, Walker explained, “Well, it’s right here in my
bag,” and he unzipped the duffel bag part way. R.45 at 12. Officer Bower grabbed the
bag, placed it on the ground and escorted Walker about eight feet away to the front of
the police cruiser. The officer frisked Walker for weapons.
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Backup arrived. Bower told Officer Steven Timberlake to pat Burke down,
which he did. Burke provided Officer Timberlake with identification, but Walker
renewed his insistence that his identification was in his wallet, which was in his bag.
The officers told him that they would retrieve the wallet from the bag, but Walker
responded, “I’d rather not let you get in the bag” because “I have some personal things
in there.” R.45 at 44. Officer Timberlake placed the bag on the hood of one of the
police cruisers and pulled the zipper open further.
With the bag unzipped further, both officers noticed a skeleton mask lying on
top. The officers handcuffed Walker and Burke and read them their Miranda rights.
“Where’s the gun?” Officer Bower asked, and Walker told him it was in the bag. R.45
at 36. “Where’s the money?” Officer Bower asked, and Walker looked away, declining
to answer. Id. Based on the information gathered during this exchange and the
information they already had, the police obtained a warrant to search the rest of Walker’s
bag, where (in addition to the mask) they found dark clothing, the money from the bank
and a .22 caliber Jennings chrome firearm.
On January 4, 2006, a federal grand jury in the Southern District of Ohio indicted
Walker for committing several crimes, including bank robbery and brandishing a
weapon at the National City Bank and at several other Ohio banks. Walker filed a
motion to suppress the evidence found in the duffel bag, claiming that Officer
Timberlake exceeded his authority under the Fourth Amendment when he unzipped the
bag. After a suppression hearing, the district court rejected the motion, ruling that the
officers conducted a permissible Terry stop. See Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).
On April 19, 2007, a different grand jury in the Eastern District of Kentucky
indicted Walker on separate charges of bank robbery and brandishing a firearm, after
which the court transferred the case to the Southern District of Ohio. On July 8, 2008,
Walker signed a plea deal covering both indictments and pled guilty to two counts each
of bank robbery and brandishing a firearm, but reserved the right to appeal the
suppression ruling. The guilty plea covered counts stemming from robberies at the US
Bank in Ironton, Ohio, and the Peoples Bank in South Shore, Kentucky, in return for
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which the government dropped the charges stemming from the National City Bank
robbery.
Walker’s presentence report gave a guidelines range of 425 to 435 months,
including 41 to 51 months for the bank robbery charges, 84 months for the first
brandishing charge (the mandatory minimum) and 300 months for the second
brandishing charge (also the mandatory minimum). Neither party objected to the
calculation, though the government moved under § 3553(e) for a downward departure
to 318 months. The district court agreed that a downward departure was appropriate,
and it sentenced Walker to 277 months and one day in prison and ordered him to pay
$59,355.65 in restitution.
II.
In addressing Walker’s challenge to the district court’s suppression ruling, the
parties share some common ground. They agree that Officers Bower and Timberlake
had “reason to believe that [they were] dealing with an armed and dangerous individual,”
Terry, 392 U.S. at 27, based on the BOLO and based on Walker’s statements at the body
shop parking lot linking him to the get-away vehicle, see Walker Br. 11; U.S. Br. 9.
They agree that the two officers could take “necessary measures” to determine whether
Walker had a weapon and to “neutralize the threat.” Terry, 392 U.S. at 24; see Walker
Br. 11; U.S. Br. 9. And they agree that the officers were entitled to make some form of
limited search of Walker’s duffel bag. See Walker Br. 11–12; U.S. Br. 10.
They part company over the scope of the search. While Walker concedes that
the search was “justified at its inception,” Terry, 392 U.S. at 20, he argues that, when the
officers unzipped the duffel bag, they exceeded their authority because the search was
no longer “reasonably related in scope” to its justification, id. What the officers should
have done, he says, is perform a “frisk” of the outside of the bag to feel for weapons.
Walker Br. at 11–12.
A search, however, is not unreasonable merely because officers did not use the
“least intrusive” means. City of Ontario v. Quon, 130 S. Ct. 2619, 2632 (2010). Based
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on the description of the robbery in the BOLO, including the warning that the thief was
armed, Walker’s statement that he was driving the car that matched the license plate of
the robber’s car and his response to the request for identification, the officers had a
“perfectly reasonable apprehension” that Walker had a weapon in the duffel bag that he
was carrying. Terry, 392 U.S. at 26. Understandably, the concern for officer safety
extends not only to a suspect himself but to “the area surrounding a suspect” where he
might “gain immediate control of weapons.” Michigan v. Long, 463 U.S. 1032, 1049
(1983). Unzipping the bag more than it was already unzipped was “an efficient and
expedient way” to determine whether a gun lay on the top of the bag, ready for use.
Quon, 130 S. Ct. at 2623. After unzipping the bag and looking inside, the officers
conducted no further search of the bag until they had a warrant. On this record, it is fair
to say that the search was reasonably designed to discover weapons that might pose a
threat to the officers’ safety, namely weapons lying on the top of the already partially
unzipped duffel bag. See Terry, 392 U.S. at 29. As in Terry, the sequence of events
reflects the “tempered act” of a police officer who in the midst of an encounter with an
armed suspected bank robber “took limited” and reasonable “steps” to protect himself
and his fellow officer. Id. at 28. Outside the scope of the warrant requirement, the
Fourth Amendment demands neither best practices nor formulaic adherence to one
search method over another—just that the “searches and seizures” not be
“unreasonable.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. This modest search into the top of the bag was
reasonable.
We have been down this road before. In United States v. Williams, 962 F.2d
1218, 1223–24 (6th Cir. 1992), the officer asked to look in a suspect’s purse for weapons
and even to “feel or squeeze” it, but she refused. Id. at 1222. The officer opened the
purse and found cocaine, after which we upheld the search as a reasonable one. Id. at
1222–24. Walker says Williams differs from today’s case because the defendant there
did not suggest a lesser measure, a frisk of the outside of the purse. True enough, but
that does not change the essential holding there or here—that the officers reasonably
opened the bag under the circumstances. See Terry, 392 U.S. at 20; see also Quon, 130
S. Ct. at 2632.
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The directive to steer clear of “unreasonable” searches cannot be reduced to a
“frisk first” or any other one-size-fits-all command, which is presumably why courts of
appeals have declined to adopt a “frisk first” requirement for Terry searches. See, e.g.,
United States v. Shranklen, 315 F.3d 959, 963–64 (8th Cir. 2003); United States v.
Thomson, 354 F.3d 1197, 1200–01 (10th Cir. 2003); United States v. Rhind, 289 F.3d
690, 693–94 (11th Cir. 2002); United States v. Brown, 133 F.3d 993, 998–99 (7th Cir.
1998). Other courts likewise have recognized that non-frisk search methods may be
reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. See, e.g., United States v. Landry, 903 F.2d
334, 337 (5th Cir. 1990) (grabbing a bag and looking inside); People v. Jackson, 590
N.E.2d 240, 241 (N.Y. 1992) (shining a flashlight through a plastic bag). The courts’
job is to ask what was reasonable under the circumstances, not to poke and prod for
lesser-included options that might not occur to even the most reasonable and seasoned
officer in the immediacy of a dangerous encounter.
If it is a loaded gun that concerns the officer, moreover, it is by no means clear
that poking and prodding the outside of a duffel bag is the most sensible way to find it.
No doubt, the frisking of the outside of a bag intrudes less on the privacy of the suspect.
But at what cost? Who looks for a gun by aimlessly grabbing and manipulating the
outside of a large bag that may or may not contain the gun—and a loaded gun at that?
That, we suspect, is not what gun-safety programs recommend. If Terry permits officers
to open a closed container located in a car after a stop and after the officers have
removed the passengers from the car, see Long, 463 U.S. at 1050–51, it surely permits
an officer to unzip a duffel bag, one that is already partially unzipped, to see what is
lying on top of it.
Walker claims that two cases say that officers making a protective Terry search
must always frisk first. See United States v. Vaughn, 718 F.2d 332 (9th Cir. 1983);
McDowell v. State, 965 A.2d 877 (Md. 2009). The argument has more sizzle than steak.
Vaughn for one lays down no such categorical rule. The Ninth Circuit considered two
searches of a briefcase, one of which was “thorough[],” 718 F.2d at 333, and determined
that, under the circumstances, the decision to open the bag and search through it was not
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reasonably related to the safety justification, id. at 335. The court did not, however,
establish a categorical “frisk first” requirement; it merely applied Terry to the facts of
an unexceptional case. Cf. United States v. Flippin, 924 F.2d 163 (9th Cir. 1991)
(upholding a Terry search where officers opened a heavy make-up bag). In McDowell,
the Maryland Court of Appeals acknowledged that a frisk is not required when it is
“impracticable or is not likely to reveal the desired information.” 965 A.2d at 885. That
approach could well excuse the officers’ actions here, as the search for a loaded weapon
by prodding the outside of a duffel bag may well be “impracticable,” and may well be
quite dangerous, and prodding the outside of a bag may “not [be] likely to reveal the
desired information” if the gun is wrapped in other items, see Shranklen, 315 F.3d at
963–64. At best, the decision might be construed as creating a presumption in favor of
a frisk of containers, requiring the officer to give an “articulated reason why a pat-down
[of the container] might not suffice.” McDowell, 965 A.2d at 885. But that thumb-on-
the-scales approach is difficult to square with the totality-of-circumstances
reasonableness inquiries mandated by Terry and Long, to say nothing of Quon, a
Supreme Court decision post-dating McDowell that says the proper scope of a Terry-like
search turns not on best (or least-intrusive) practices but on whether the method chosen
was reasonable.
Beyond the scope of the search, Walker raises one other issue in a letter brief.
He argues that the officers did not have any reasonable concern for their safety once they
had moved Walker eight feet away from the duffel bag, requiring them to obtain a
warrant before looking into it. But Walker did not just forfeit this argument; he waived
it. In his opening brief, he said that he “does not dispute that, as the district court found,
the circumstances gave rise to reasonable suspicion that he may be armed and
dangerous. . . . [T]he constitutionally proper course of action for the officers would have
been to frisk, or feel, [his] bag for weapons prior to taking any further action.” Walker
Br. 11–12. This concession—that some search of the bag was justified—cannot co-exist
with his new theory that “the officer’s safety was not an issue . . . and a warrant was
necessary to open the bag.” Walker Ltr. Br. 1.
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Even were that not the case, there is nothing to this argument. Invoking Arizona
v. Gant, 129 S. Ct. 1710 (2009), Walker claims that officer-safety concerns could not
extend to the duffel bag, which was eight feet from Walker at the time of the search.
Gant, however, dealt with a search incident to arrest, id. at 1714, and prohibited a search
where there was no “possibility of access” by the suspect, id. at 1719. There are at least
two crucial differences between that case and this one. One, Officers Bower and
Timberlake by no means had the scene under control or their safety secure. Not only did
they not outnumber Walker and Burke, who were unrestrained and not yet in custody,
but Burke also was standing just three feet from the bag at the time of the search. Cf. id.
(officers outnumbered the suspects, who were handcuffed and secured in separate patrol
cars). The possibility of access by one of the suspects was not remote.
Two, according to Walker’s own telling, the officers did not have probable cause
to arrest either suspect when the search was made. If true, that left the officers with a
difficult set of options. They could make a limited search of the bag to ensure their own
safety. Or they could arrest the suspects and take them into custody, even though it
might not yet have been clear that probable cause existed that they had robbed the bank.
Or they could let the men go and return the un-searched bag to Walker. Faced with these
kinds of split-second judgments, police officers, it is clear, have a much more difficult
job than we judges, who may take several weeks (if not months) to resolve these kinds
of issues. That is why we do not “require that police officers take unnecessary risks in
the performance of their duties.” Terry, 392 U.S. at 23; see also Long, 463 U.S. at
1051–52. Where, as here, the only alternative is to give a suspect access to a potential
weapon (in an un-searched bag), a Terry search for weapons is justified—and
reasonable.
III.
Walker also has filed a supplemental brief, arguing for the first time that his
sentence should be vacated and remanded in light of United States v. Almany, 598 F.3d
238 (6th Cir. 2010). Walker Supp. Br. 1. Almany held that the mandatory minimums
required by § 924(c) do not apply where a greater minimum sentence is provided for the
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drug offense or crime of violence that serves as the predicate for the § 924(c) violation.
Id. at 241–42. It relied on the language of § 924(c), which says that the mandatory
minimums apply “[e]xcept to the extent that a greater minimum sentence is otherwise
provided by this subsection or by any other provisions of law.” Id. at 241; 18 U.S.C.
§ 924(c)(1)(A). The “except” clause, says Walker, applies to his two § 924(c)
convictions. That may or may not be the case, but Walker cannot clear a more
prominent hurdle: He did not raise the argument below and cannot satisfy plain error.
See Johnson v. United States, 520 U.S. 461, 463 (1997); Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b).
A party pressing a forfeited claim bears the burden of proving that the error
affected his “substantial rights,” namely that the error was prejudicial in a variety of
respects. See United States v. Olano, 507 U.S. 725, 734 (1993). Yet Walker cannot
make a “specific showing of prejudice,” and thus he is not entitled to resentencing. Id.
at 735. In fact, he has not even attempted to make a showing of prejudice, since his brief
makes no reference to the proceedings below beyond the alleged error. Walker cites a
few cases in his discussion of the “substantial rights” prong, but none says anything
about the effect of the alleged error in this case. Walker also has not shown that he
improperly received any additional time, which would be no easy task here. The court
sentenced Walker to just over 277 months in prison, below even the twenty-five year
(300 month) minimum sentence that he now argues should apply. Walker thus was
sentenced below the greater of the two statutory minimums (300 months), which is a far
cry from Almany, where the defendant was sentenced to an aggregate of the two
statutory minimums.
Walker invokes United States v. Gillis, 592 F.3d 696 (6th Cir. 2009), which held
that the government had not proved harmless error when the record did not clearly show
that the same sentence would be imposed on remand. Id. at 699. But the harmless error
standard applied in Gillis differs from the plain error standard applicable here precisely
because the burden of persuasion shifts, under the plain error standard, to the party
raising the claim. Olano, 507 U.S. at 734–35. We therefore reject Walker’s claim for
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resentencing because he has not shown that any error, even assuming for the sake of
argument that one occurred, affected his substantial rights.
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm.