FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
February 10, 2009
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v. No. 08-5047
LUIS GONZALES SANCHEZ, JR.,
a/k/a Luis Sanchez,
Defendant - Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA
(D.C. NO. 4:07-CR-00141-JHP-2)
William D. Lunn, Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Defendant - Appellant.
Jeffrey A. Gallant, Assistant United States Attorney, (David E. O’Meilia, United
States Attorney, with him on the brief), for Plaintiff - Appellee.
Before HARTZ, HOLLOWAY, and O’BRIEN, Circuit Judges.
HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
Luis Gonzalez Sanchez Jr. 1 was standing by a vehicle in the driveway of
the house of Omar Silvar when police officers arrived to execute a search warrant
for the house. An officer ordered him to get down, but he fled. He was quickly
apprehended, and a search of his person yielded incriminating evidence. About
an hour later, after the search of the house was completed, Mr. Sanchez was
formally arrested. He pleaded guilty in the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Oklahoma to a charge of possession of marijuana with intent
to distribute, see 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(D). His plea reserved his
right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress the evidence seized from his
person and Silvar’s house, and he has appealed that decision.
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm the district court’s
decision denying suppression. In particular, we hold as follows: (1) The search
warrant for the house was lawful even though the affidavit for the warrant
provided no direct evidence of criminal conduct at the house. If law-enforcement
officers have probable cause to believe that a person is a supplier of illicit drugs,
then the officers have probable cause to search the person’s home for such
contraband and evidence. (2) Officers executing a search warrant of a home may
detain persons they encounter standing by a vehicle in the home’s driveway. (3)
1
Mr. Sanchez signed his name as Luis Sanchez Gonzalez Jr. several times
in his plea agreement in district court. But to be consistent with the charging
documents and other materials in this case, we refer to him as Luis Gonzalez
Sanchez Jr.
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In Oklahoma if such a person flees the officers after being ordered to get down,
the officers have probable cause to arrest him for violation of a statute prohibiting
obstruction of an officer performing his duties. (4) Officers may search the
person of one who is apprehended after such flight, even though (a) the
apprehended person is not formally arrested until the search of the home has been
completed, and (b) the formal arrest is not for the offense of obstructing an
officer. We also hold that the district court did not err in any challenged
procedural rulings related to the suppression hearing.
We first address the validity of the search warrant. Then we describe the
events during the execution of the warrant and explain why the officers’ actions
were lawful. Finally, we discuss the district court’s procedural rulings at the
suppression hearing.
I. VALIDITY OF THE SEARCH WARRANT 2
The search warrant in question authorized officers to search for marijuana,
drug paraphernalia, drug-sale proceeds, firearms, cellular telephones, pagers,
records, ledgers, computers, keys, unexplained wealth, and proof of ownership at
the “house, building or premises, the curtilage thereof and appurtenances
thereunto belonging” at 713 South Norwood Avenue in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
2
We need not address whether Mr. Sanchez has standing to challenge the
warrant, because “even assuming that defendant does have standing, it is clear
that there was no constitutional violation.” United States v. Scarborough, 128
F.3d 1373, 1377 n.2 (10th Cir. 1997).
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R. Vol. I Doc. 34-3 at 2. Supporting the warrant was an affidavit of Tulsa Police
Department Officer Ronald Leatherman, which set forth the following
information: Leatherman had a bachelor’s degree in criminal-justice
administration, had worked for the Tulsa Police Department for seven years, and
was a narcotics investigator in the department’s Special Investigations Division.
He had received training in narcotics-investigation techniques from federal and
Oklahoma agencies. During a two-week period a confidential informant had
made multiple purchases of marijuana from a seller identified as Seth. Before
each transaction Leatherman would listen to a telephone conversation between the
informant and Seth in which Seth set a location for the exchange and stated that
he would check with his supplier. After searching the informant’s person and
vehicle for drugs, surveillance officers would follow the informant to the location
set by Seth and watch the informant purchase the marijuana from Seth using cash
provided by the police. The informant gave the officers the marijuana he had
purchased from Seth. At each transaction the officers observed a white Chevrolet
pickup driven by an unknown man. The informant identified the man as Seth’s
supplier and said that the man gave the marijuana to Seth at the time of the buys.
After one of the transactions, officers followed the man to 713 S. Norwood. He
drove his truck on a circuitous but nonstop route home, a driving pattern that
Leatherman described as “[a] tactic commonly used by drug dealers to avoid
detection by law enforcement officials.” Id. Doc. 34-4 at 3. Utility records
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showed that Omar Silvar resided at 713 S. Norwood. A driver’s license photo
obtained from the Oklahoma Department of Public Safety confirmed that Silvar
was the pickup driver seen by officers at the buys.
Leatherman’s affidavit further states that “[t]hrough [his] training and
experience, [he] ha[s] also learned that individuals that sell/distribute illegal
drugs often store additional quantities of illegal drugs . . . at their residence. It is
also common for individuals that distribute illegal drugs to store the money they
receive from selling illegal drugs at their residence.” Id. It goes on to say that
“[t]he fact that Omar Silvar returned to his residence (without stopping at any
other locations) after delivering marijuana to ‘Seth’ during the controlled
purchases indicates that Silvar has the proceeds from selling the marijuana at his
residence.” Id.
Mr. Sanchez does not challenge the sufficiency of Leatherman’s affidavit to
establish probable cause that Silvar was involved in marijuana trafficking. Nor
does he challenge the sufficiency of the evidence that Silvar lived at 713 S.
Norwood. What he challenges is the existence of probable cause to believe that
Silvar’s home would contain drugs, drug paraphernalia, drug-sale proceeds, or
other evidence of an offense. He argues that the affidavit does not establish that
Silvar ever received the proceeds from the buys, does not establish that he was a
“Mister Big” supplier (rather than a mere courier), and does not point to any
illegal drug activity at 713 S. Norwood itself. We disagree.
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“[P]robable cause to issue a search warrant . . . exists when the supporting
affidavit sets forth sufficient facts that would lead a prudent person to believe that
a search of the described premises would uncover contraband or evidence of a
crime.” United States v. Rowland, 145 F.3d 1194, 1204 (10th Cir. 1998). The
magistrate presented with a warrant application must make a “practical,
common-sense decision based on the totality of the circumstances as set forth in
the affidavit.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). We “afford . . . great
deference” to the issuing magistrate’s probable-cause determination unless there
is “no substantial basis for concluding that probable cause existed.” United States
v. Danhauer, 229 F.3d 1002, 1006 (10th Cir. 2000) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
By that standard, the affidavit was sufficient. The informant’s statements,
corroborated by what Leatherman heard in the telephone conversations and
Silvar’s presence at the buys, were sufficient evidence that Silvar was a drug
supplier. And we think it merely common sense that a drug supplier will keep
evidence of his crimes at his home. In United States v. Sparks, 291 F.3d 683,
689–90 (10th Cir. 2002), we said that when police officers have probable cause to
believe that a suspect is involved in drug distribution, there is also probable cause
to believe that additional evidence of drug-trafficking crimes (such as drug
paraphernalia or sales records) will be found in his residence. A leading treatise
notes our decision in Sparks as among those in which courts have not required
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particular facts to support the inference that a drug trafficker keeps his supply at
his residence. See 2 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 3.7(d), at 421–22
n.170 (4th ed. 2004); cf. id. at 421–22 (“[I]t is commonly held that this gap can be
filled merely on the basis of the affiant-officer’s experience that drug dealers
ordinarily keep their supply, records and monetary profits at home.”) (footnote
omitted). Accordingly, the search warrant was supported by probable cause.
Mr. Sanchez relies on United States v. Nolan, 199 F.3d 1180 (10th Cir.
1999), contending that we held the search-warrant affidavit in that case
inadequate “because it made no reference to the defendant conducting any of his
drug activities from the house.” Aplt. Br. at 19. But that is a misreading of our
opinion. True, we raised the question whether probable cause to search the
residence of a person suspected of drug trafficking may rest on “observations of
illegal activity outside of the home . . . even in the absence of an allegation that
any illegal activity occurred in the home itself.” Nolan, 199 F.3d at 1183
(internal quotation marks omitted). We did not, however, answer this question.
Rather, we left the answer for another day, affirming the use of the seized
evidence at trial under the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule. See id.
at 1184. Sparks, upon which we rely, answered the question three years later.
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II. EXECUTION OF THE WARRANT
A. The Events
Corporal Dale Francetic of the Tulsa Police Department began conducting
surveillance of 713 S. Norwood shortly before 6 p.m. on February 23, 2007.
Initially, no vehicles were present. Within a few minutes, however, Silvar, the
alleged supplier, arrived in the white pickup truck that officers had seen him
driving when they observed the informant’s marijuana purchases. Silvar backed
the truck, whose cargo bed carried some boxes, into the driveway of the
residence. Mr. Sanchez then arrived in a red Chevrolet pickup truck. Officers
had seen this truck outside Silvar’s residence while conducting surveillance on at
least one prior occasion, but had not seen Mr. Sanchez himself. Soon afterwards
a man later identified as David Saldivar arrived in a white Ford Mustang.
Francetic drove by the house. Seeing no one in the front yard or in the vehicles,
he assumed that the men were inside the house.
At about 7 p.m. Leatherman, leading eight other officers, approached the
house on foot to serve the search warrant. (Francetic remained parked a block
away to intercept anyone who might flee the scene.) Silvar, Mr. Sanchez, and
Saldivar were standing in the driveway behind Silvar’s truck, apparently
unloading the boxes. Leatherman announced that the officers were with the Tulsa
Police Department and that they had a search warrant. He ordered the men to get
on the ground. Mr. Sanchez and Saldivar ran. Mr. Sanchez covered only a short
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distance before he was caught, handcuffed, and searched. Officers seized from
his pockets $2,036 in cash, a cell phone, and a set of keys. They later determined
that one of the keys opened the house’s front door and that the cell phone
contained an image of Mr. Sanchez holding a firearm similar to one found in the
house. The search of the house yielded, among other items, about $5,000 in cash,
430 grams of marijuana (some of it packaged for sale), an unloaded .45-caliber
machine-gun pistol, a loaded .38-caliber revolver, boxes of ammunition for both
weapons, digital scales on which marijuana residue was present, and boxes of
plastic baggies. At 8 p.m., after the officers had completed the search,
Mr. Sanchez was formally arrested for possession of marijuana with intent to
distribute, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, failure to
have a tax stamp for the marijuana, and resisting arrest.
B. Discussion
Mr. Sanchez’s sole challenge to the execution of the warrant is to the
search of his person when he was apprehended after fleeing. In our view, the
search was valid as incident to an arrest that could be justified for the Oklahoma
offense of obstructing an officer. To reach that conclusion we must examine (1)
the officers’ authority to detain Mr. Sanchez as they approached the house to
execute the warrant; (2) whether Mr. Sanchez’s flight constituted obstructing an
officer, in violation of Oklahoma law; and (3) whether the search of Mr. Sanchez
can be justified as a search incident to arrest even though (a) the formal arrest
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occurred about an hour after the search and (b) Mr. Sanchez was formally arrested
for offenses other than obstructing an officer. We discuss these issues in turn.
1. Authority to Detain Mr. Sanchez
The leading case on the authority of police officers to detain persons while
executing a search warrant is the Supreme Court’s opinion in Michigan v.
Summers, 452 U.S. 692 (1981). In Summers the defendant was descending the
front steps of a house when officers arrived to execute a search warrant. See id.
at 693. The officers detained him during their search. After finding narcotics and
then determining that he owned the house, they arrested him. See id. at 693 n.1.
A search of defendant’s person incident to that arrest yielded heroin, which he
sought to suppress. See id. at 694.
The Supreme Court held that the officers had the authority to detain
Mr. Summers as they searched the house, regardless of the absence of any
specific information about Mr. Summers personally. Several considerations led to
this conclusion. One was the protection afforded by the search warrant itself:
[The warrant] provides an objective justification for the detention. A
judicial officer has determined that police have probable cause to
believe that someone in the home is committing a crime. Thus a
neutral magistrate rather than an officer in the field has made the
critical determination that the police should be given a special
authorization to thrust themselves into the privacy of a home. The
connection of an occupant to that home gives the police officer an
easily identifiable and certain basis for determining that suspicion of
criminal activity justifies a detention of that occupant.
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Id. at 703–04 (footnote omitted). In addition, the detention of an occupant of the
premises that is implicitly authorized by the search warrant, “although admittedly
a significant restraint on his liberty, [is] surely less intrusive than the search
itself.” Id. at 701. Not only would most occupants wish to remain to observe the
search, but the officers are unlikely to exploit the detention to gain information
“because the information the officers seek normally will be obtained through the
search and not through the detention.” Id. And the stigma of the detention is
unlikely to add much to the stigma created by the search itself. See id. at 702.
Finally, the need for detention is compelling:
Most obvious is the legitimate law enforcement interest in preventing
flight in the event that incriminating evidence is found. Less
obvious, but sometimes of greater importance, is the interest in
minimizing the risk of harm to the officers. . . . The risk of harm to
both the police and the occupants is minimized if the officers
routinely exercise unquestioned command of the situation. Finally,
the orderly completion of the search may be facilitated if the
occupants of the premises are present. Their self-interest may induce
them to open locked doors or locked containers to avoid the use of
force that is not only damaging to property but may also delay the
completion of the task at hand.
Id. at 702–03 (citation omitted).
These considerations justify detention as a matter of course. Weighing
them is not to be a case-by-case process. Rather, the rule adopted in Summers
“does not depend upon such an ad hoc determination, because the officer is not
required to evaluate either the quantum of proof justifying detention or the extent
of the intrusion to be imposed by the seizure.” Id. at 705 n.19.
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The issue arose again in Muehler v. Mena, 544 U.S. 93 (2005), which
elaborated on the Summers doctrine. In Muehler the police obtained a warrant to
search what was believed to be the house of a gang member who had participated
in a recent drive-by shooting. See id. at 95. The warrant authorized officers to
search for deadly weapons and evidence of gang membership, among other items.
See id. at 95–96. When the warrant was executed, Mena, one of the house’s
occupants, was awakened at gunpoint by SWAT-team officers and handcuffed.
See id. at 96. The officers also detained three other persons they encountered in
trailers in the property’s back yard. See id. at 107 (Stevens, J., concurring).
Mena and the other detainees were moved to a converted garage, where they were
held in handcuffs for the duration of the search. See id. at 96 (majority opinion).
Mena sued the officers who oversaw the warrant’s execution under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983, claiming that she had been “detained for an unreasonable time and in an
unreasonable manner” (that is, in handcuffs), in violation of her Fourth
Amendment rights. Id. at 96 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The Court held that the detentions were reasonable. See id. at 99. The
Court relied on the holding in Summers “that officers executing a search warrant
for contraband have the authority ‘to detain the occupants of the premises while a
proper search is conducted.’” Id. at 98 (quoting Summers, 452 U.S. at 705). It
summarized Summers’s reasoning as follows:
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Such detentions are appropriate . . . because the character of the
additional intrusion caused by detention is slight and because the
justifications for detention are substantial. . . . [T]he detention of an
occupant is “surely less intrusive than the search itself,” and the
presence of a warrant assures that a neutral magistrate has
determined that probable cause exists to search the home. Against
this incremental intrusion, . . . three legitimate law enforcement
interests . . . provide substantial justification for detaining an
occupant: “preventing flight in the event that incriminating evidence
is found”; “minimizing the risk of harm to the officers”; and
facilitating “the orderly completion of the search,” as detainees’
“self-interest may induce them to open locked doors or locked
containers to avoid the use of force.”
Id. (citations omitted) (quoting Summers, 452 U.S. at 701–03). (We note that the
third justification apparently is not a critical one, because Mena and the other
three detainees were held in the garage during the search and she was never asked
to assist in opening cabinets and dressers that the officers forced open. See id. at
107 n.5 (Stevens, J., concurring)). The Court emphasized that the authority to
detain is not dependent on specific information in the particular case. “An
officer’s authority to detain incident to a search is categorical; it does not depend
on the ‘quantum of proof justifying detention or the extent of the intrusion to be
imposed by the seizure.’” Id. at 98 (majority opinion) (quoting Summers, 452
U.S. at 705 n.19).
Some language in the two opinions could be read to support the view that
officers can detain only residents of the premises to be searched. In particular,
Summers observes that “because the detention in this case was in [Summers’s]
own residence, it could add only minimally to the public stigma associated with
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the search itself.” 452 U.S. at 702. But this relative-stigma calculus could not
have been essential to the holding. To begin with, the Court uses the term
occupant rather than resident to describe those who can be detained. Muehler
states Summers’s holding as authorizing officers “‘to detain the occupants of the
premises.’” Muehler, 544 U.S. at 98 (quoting Summers, 452 U.S. at 701). In
common speech, an occupant could be anyone present on the premises, such as a
visitor or even a salesperson. An “occupant” of an automobile need not be an
owner or renter of the vehicle. See Oxford English Dictionary 681 (2d ed. 1989)
(“Occupant, n.1-a. [a] person . . . who occupies, resides in, or is at the time in (a
place); . . . . (emphasis added)). More importantly, the Court does not explain
how officers are to determine whether a person on the premises is a resident.
(Could the officers in this case have anticipated that Mr. Sanchez would be
carrying a key to the front door?) Surely the officers are not bound to credit the
person’s representations on the matter. And the Court strongly indicates that
specific facts implicating the occupant are not necessary; the authority to detain
“does not depend on the ‘quantum of proof justifying the detention.’” Muehler,
544 U.S. at 98 (quoting Summers, 452 U.S. at 705 n.19). We therefore conclude
that the authority to detain relates to all persons present on the premises. See
United States v. Pace, 898 F.2d 1218, 1238–39 (7th Cir. 1990) (law-enforcement
interests set out in Summers justified detention of guests present in condominium
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when officers executed search warrant, despite the fact that detainees were not
residents of the condominium).
Thus, Summers and Muehler convince us that the officers executing the
search warrant had the authority to detain Mr. Sanchez. He argues that his
situation is different from those in Summers and Muehler because there was no
direct evidence that he had been in the home to be searched. But that distinction,
in our view, is not compelling. As in the Supreme Court cases, the principal
protection afforded Mr. Sanchez is that the warrant was supported by a neutral
magistrate’s determination of probable cause. Also, the officers had no more
cause than in those cases to extend or exploit the detention. And the requisite
justifications supporting detention were present here: Detention was necessary to
prevent flight and minimize danger. The occasion called for the “routine[]
exercise [of] unquestioned command of the situation.” Summers, 452 U.S. at 703.
Although Mr. Sanchez may not have been inside the home, he was on the
premises to be searched (which included the home’s curtilage). He was clearly
not just a passerby; he and Saldivar were with Silvar, the home’s owner, by
Silvar’s truck in the home’s driveway, apparently unloading boxes. In the
Summers/Muehler context we see no principled reason to distinguish a visitor in
the home from one engaged with the owner in the area immediately surrounding
the home. Other circuits have likewise permitted the detention of a person whom
officers had not seen enter or leave the home where a search warrant was being
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executed, but whose presence at the scene raised a concern about interference
with the search. See, e.g., United States v. Jennings, 544 F.3d 815, 818–19 (7th
Cir. 2008) (upholding under Summers the detention of defendant who drove up to
building to be searched and parked within SWAT team’s security perimeter
moments before search began, because officers were “reasonably concerned for
their own and for [defendant]’s safety, as well as for any activity that might
compromise the search,” even though defendant “never stepped onto the property
being searched”); United States v. Bohannon, 225 F.3d 615, 616–17 (6th Cir.
2000) (detention of nonresident who arrived at trailer as officers were wrapping
up search was lawful under Summers, even though nonresident was detained
outside trailer itself; Summers’s officer-safety rationale applies when any person
seeks entry to a place being searched); Baker v. Monroe Twp., 50 F.3d 1186,
1191–92 (3d Cir. 1995) (relatives of resident of apartment searched in DEA raid
were lawfully detained immediately outside the apartment as they arrived for
dinner).
Finally, because officers had the right to detain Mr. Sanchez during their
search, they had the right to order him to get down. Such an order is a reasonable
means of effecting Summers’s aims of preventing flight and minimizing the risk
of harm by the “officers routinely exercis[ing] unquestioned command of the
situation.” 452 U.S. at 703; see Burchett v. Kiefer, 310 F.3d 937, 943–44 (6th
Cir. 2002) (person who approached—but did not set foot on—premises being
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searched was properly ordered to get on the ground, and officers had right to
apprehend and detain him when he fled rather than comply with their order).
2. Mr. Sanchez’s Flight as Obstruction of an Officer
When officers ordered Mr. Sanchez to get down, he fled. We now consider
whether his flight violated Oklahoma’s statute prohibiting obstruction of an
officer, thereby providing grounds for an arrest and, more importantly, a search
incident to arrest.
Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 21, § 540 states that “[e]very person who willfully
delays or obstructs any public officer in the discharge or attempt to discharge any
duty of his office, is guilty of a misdemeanor.” The Oklahoma courts have
interpreted the statute in a common-sense manner. For example, in Trent v. State,
777 P.2d 401 (Okla. Crim. App. 1989), the court considered the conduct of a
passenger after a traffic stop for driving under the influence. The passenger
refused to leave the scene and engaged in “loud and angry” verbal harassment of
the officer. Id. at 402–03. The court held that this conduct violated the statute
because the passenger’s actions prevented the officer from removing the driver’s
vehicle from the road and timely testing the driver’s blood-alcohol level. See id.
at 403. And in Marsh v. State, 761 P.2d 915, 916 (Okla. Crim. App. 1988), the
court held that a false statement to an officer had impeded the officer’s
investigation of a child’s death and thus constituted obstruction.
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Mr. Sanchez’s flight unquestionably impeded the officers executing the
search warrant. Rather than conducting the search, they needed to chase and
apprehend him. Various courts, interpreting statutes similar to Okla. Stat. Ann.
tit. 21, § 540, have held that flight can constitute obstruction of an officer.
“[F]light, or attempted flight, after a command to halt constitutes obstruction of
an officer.” In re E.G., 648 S.E.2d 699, 701 (Ga. Ct. App. 2007) (internal
quotation marks omitted); see United States v. Gonzalez, 71 F.3d 819, 826–27
(11th Cir. 1996) (defendant’s flight from agents gave them probable cause to
arrest him for violating 18 U.S.C. § 111(a)(1), which prohibits “forcibly
assault[ing], resist[ing], oppos[ing], imped[ing], intimidat[ing], or interfer[ing]
with” any federal officer); People v. Allen, 167 Cal. Rptr. 502, 505 (Cal. Ct. App.
1980) (officer had probable cause to arrest defendant for obstruction because
defendant, knowing that the officer wanted to talk with him, ran and attempted to
hide). Mr. Sanchez suggests that the officers should simply have let him go and
proceeded to execute the search warrant. But we have already noted the
compelling law-enforcement and safety considerations that justify detention in
these circumstances.
Mr. Sanchez argues that his flight did not violate Oklahoma law because
the statute requires “a belligerent act directed at an officer individually.” Reply
Br. at 11. He relies on language in Knoff v. State, 192 P. 596 (Okla. Crim. App.
1920), that obstructing an officer “does not mean to oppose or impede the process
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with which the officer is [concerned], or to defeat its execution, but [rather] that
the officer himself shall be obstructed.” Id. at 597. The holding in Knoff,
however, is unremarkable. The defendant was charged with obstructing a
constable “from levying on a certain amount of cotton,” id. at 596 (internal
quotation marks omitted), and the court reversed the conviction because the
constable testified that “he had accomplished the purpose of levying” before the
defendant engaged in the allegedly obstructing conduct, id. at 597. In any event,
to the extent that language in Knoff could be read to support a requirement that
belligerence or the like is required for obstruction, that requirement is not now
good law in Oklahoma. Knoff’s language relied on Ratcliff v. State, 158 P. 293
(Okla. Crim. App. 1916) (no violation of the statute because defendant did not
know that the cow he retrieved had been taken by an officer through execution);
and Trent explicitly overruled Ratcliff insofar as it indicated that obstruction
requires the use of physical force, Trent, 777 P.2d at 402. The view of
obstruction taken in Trent and Marsh clearly encompasses Mr. Sanchez’s flight.
3. Search Incident to Arrest
a. Timing of Arrest
The government contends that the search of Mr. Sanchez was a lawful
search incident to arrest. There is no dispute that Mr. Sanchez was arrested, and
we have already held that there was probable cause to arrest him before he was
searched. The difficulty is that the Supreme Court has said that a search incident
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to arrest must be “substantially contemporaneous” with the arrest, Shipley v.
California, 395 U.S. 818, 819 (1969) (per curiam) (internal quotation marks
omitted), and the magistrate judge, whose findings were adopted by the district
court, assumed that Mr. Sanchez had been searched immediately upon being
apprehended after fleeing, which he estimated to be about an hour before the
formal arrest.
The government argues that the search and arrest were “substantially
contemporaneous” despite the one-hour gap. It notes our statement in United
States v. Torres-Castro, 470 F.3d 992 (10th Cir. 2006), that “courts have found
that a search may be incident to an arrest in cases where the search and arrest
were separated by times ranging from five to sixty minutes.” Id. at 998. In the
two cases that we cited in support of that statement, United States v. McLaughlin,
170 F.3d 889 (9th Cir. 1999), and United States v. Hrasky, 453 F.3d 1099 (8th
Cir. 2006), the search was conducted after the arrest; but a search incident to
arrest can also precede the arrest if probable cause for the arrest preceded the
search (rather than being justified by the fruits of the search). See Rawlings v.
Kentucky, 448 U.S. 98, 111 (1980).
An hour would seem to be at the outer limits of “substantially
contemporaneous,” if not beyond. In the context of this case, however, the
government’s argument is an attractive one. The hour delay resulted from the
officers’ pursuing their primary mission—executing the search warrant. To delay
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the formal announcement of an arrest while that effort is underway strikes us as
eminently reasonable: the sooner the search is completed, the sooner the
intrusion from the search will end; and the formality of the arrest accomplishes
little when the person to be arrested is already being detained.
Nevertheless, we do not rely on the contention that two events an hour
apart may be “substantially contemporaneous.” Rather, we note that for search-
incident-to-arrest purposes we may deem the arrest to have occurred before the
formal announcement to a suspect that he is under arrest. To be sure, it appears
that there can be no search incident to arrest unless the suspect is at some point
formally placed under arrest. Cf. Knowles v. Iowa, 525 U.S. 113 (1998) (there is
no right to search incident to a traffic citation, even if officers could have
lawfully arrested the defendant rather than issuing a citation); United States v.
Ward, 682 F.2d 876, 880 (10th Cir. 1982) (search of defendant not justified as
incident to arrest; defendant was not arrested, even though there was probable
cause to believe that he was committing an offense). But the arrest itself, for
constitutional purposes, may be said to have occurred well before that formality.
Particularly instructive in this regard is Sibron v. New York, 392 U.S. 40
(1968). The Supreme Court upheld the search of one Peters as incident to an
arrest. It summarized the relevant facts as follows:
Officer Samuel Lasky of the New York City Police Department . . .
was at home in his apartment . . . at about 1 p.m. on July 10, 1964.
He . . . heard a noise at his door. . . . [W]hen he . . . looked through
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the peephole into the hall, Officer Lasky saw “two men tiptoeing out
of the alcove toward the stairway.”. . . Believing that he had
happened upon the two men in the course of an attempted burglary,
Officer Lasky opened his door, entered the hallway and slammed the
door loudly behind him. This precipitated a flight down the stairs on
the part of the two men, and Officer Lasky gave chase. . . . [H]e
apprehended Peters between the fourth and fifth floors. . . . Officer
Lasky patted Peters down for weapons, and discovered a hard object
in his pocket. He stated at the hearing that the object did not feel
like a gun, but that it might have been a knife. He removed the
object from Peters’ pocket. It was an opaque plastic envelope,
containing burglar’s tools.
Id. at 48–49 (footnotes omitted). The Court held that the arrest occurred when the
officer seized Peters:
[I]t is clear that the arrest had, for purposes of constitutional
justification, already taken place before the search commenced.
When the policeman grabbed Peters by the collar, he abruptly
“seized” him and curtailed his freedom of movement on the basis of
probable cause to believe that he was engaged in criminal activity.
At that point he had the authority to search Peters, and the incident
search was obviously justified by the need to seize weapons and
other things which might be used to assault an officer or effect an
escape, as well as by the need to prevent the destruction of evidence
of the crime.
Id. at 67 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The Court was not
concerned with how long after that seizure it was before the officers formally
informed Peters of his arrest. Cf. id. at 77 (Harlan, J., concurring) (in this
context, “the prosecution must be able to date the arrest as early as it chooses
following the development of probable cause.”); 3 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and
Seizure § 5.1(a), at 12–13 (same). We can infer that in the very similar situation
in this case, the arrest of Mr. Sanchez was initiated (for purposes of the search-
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incident-to-arrest doctrine) when the officers apprehended him after his flight.
The search of Mr. Sanchez was promptly after his arrest, and can readily be
characterized as “substantially contemporaneous.” Accordingly, the search of
Mr. Sanchez was a lawful search incident to arrest.
b. Stated Grounds for Arrest
It is irrelevant that Mr. Sanchez was arrested for, among other things,
resisting arrest rather than obstruction of an officer. “[T]he legitimate basis for
an arrest is purely an objective standard and can be for any crime, not merely that
for which the defendant is ultimately charged.” Torres-Castro, 470 F.3d at 998;
see also Devenpeck v. Alford, 543 U.S. 146, 154–55 (2004) (“Those are lawfully
arrested whom the facts known to the arresting officers give probable cause to
arrest.”). Indeed, “[w]hether or not the officer intended to actually arrest the
defendant at the time of the search [incident to that arrest] is immaterial” to our
inquiry. United States v. Anchondo, 156 F.3d 1043, 1045 (10th Cir. 1998). Thus,
it does not matter that the stated grounds for Mr. Sanchez’s formal arrest did not
include obstruction of an officer. See United States v. Lugo, 170 F.3d 996, 1000,
1003 (10th Cir. 1999) (probable cause to arrest defendant, and thus authority to
search his vehicle’s passenger compartment incident to arrest, arose from
speeding violation and failure to produce a driver’s license, but defendant was
ultimately arrested only for possession of drugs found during search).
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III. CONDUCT OF SUPPRESSION HEARING
Finally, Mr. Sanchez challenges the district court’s procedural rulings at
the pretrial hearing on his motion to suppress. The evidence at the suppression
hearing consisted of the search warrant, Officer Leatherman’s report, and
Leatherman’s testimony.
Mr. Sanchez contends that the district court’s ruling on his motion to
suppress “relied too much on the hearsay of Corporal Francetic and others
contained in the police report.” Aplt. Br. at 17. But, as Mr. Sanchez
acknowledges, the law is clear that hearsay evidence is admissible at suppression
hearings. See United States v. Miramonted, 365 F.3d 902, 904 (10th Cir. 2004).
Mr. Sanchez argues that the report was unreliable because Leatherman’s
suppression-hearing testimony contradicted the report’s contents “in several
critical matters.” Aplt. Br. at 15. We disagree. The report’s statement that
Mr. Sanchez, Silvar, and Saldivar were carrying boxes into 713 S. Norwood when
the police arrived is not inconsistent with Leatherman’s testimony that he never
saw Mr. Sanchez enter the house, because the report did not purport to rely only
on observations by Leatherman, as opposed to other officers. And the report’s
listing of the four offenses for which Mr. Sanchez was arrested is not contradicted
by Leatherman’s testimony that Mr. Sanchez was arrested for marijuana and
weapons offenses, because Leatherman’s testimony did not purport to give an
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exhaustive list of the bases for Mr. Sanchez’s arrest. The district court could
properly have found that the report was reliable.
We likewise reject Mr. Sanchez’s argument that the government’s use of
Leatherman’s report was improper because Mr. Sanchez “had subpoenaed the
actual witnesses and evidence for the hearing and not had his subpoena honored.”
Aplt. Br. at 13–14. Our review of the record indicates that his subpoena was
honored and that Mr. Sanchez was not denied the opportunity to question any
witnesses or to introduce any evidence.
IV. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
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