Opinions of the United
2004 Decisions States Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit
3-17-2004
USA v. Sinkler
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential
Docket No. 03-1912
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NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
No. 03-1912
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
v.
FREDDIE SINKLER, JR.,
Appellant
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
(D.C. Criminal No. 01-cr-00071)
District Judge: Honorable Yvette Kane
Argued February 23, 2004
Before: RENDELL, BARRY and ROSENN, Circuit Judges.
(Filed March 17, 2004)
Sanford A. Krevsky, Esq. [ARGUED]
KREVSKY & ROSEN
1101 North Front Street
Harrisburg, PA 17102
Counsel for Appellant
Christy H. Fawcett, Esq. [ARGUED]
OFFICE OF THE U.S. ATTORNEY
Federal Building
228 Walnut Street
P.O. Box 11754
Harrisburg, PA 17108
Counsel for Appellee
OPINION OF THE COURT
RENDELL, Circuit Judge.
After engaging in a high-speed chase with Harrisburg police officers on January 7,
2001, Freddie Sinkler, Jr., was arrested and charged with possession with intent to
distribute cocaine. The cocaine was discovered, along with marijuana, cash, and drug
paraphernalia, in a backpack near the location where Sinkler’s car had flipped over,
ending his flight from the authorities. The United States District Court for the Middle
District of Pennsylvania denied a motion to suppress the contents of the backpack, and
Sinkler subsequently entered a guilty plea to the drug charge pursuant to an agreement
that preserved his right to appeal the suppression ruling. He was finally sentenced on
February 19, 2003, to 212 months in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release.
Sinkler now appeals, challenging only the denial of his motion to suppress the
narcotics. Because we are unable to discern the factual underpinnings of several of the
District Court’s conclusions, and because we cannot resolve the questions presented here
ourselves on the record as it stands before us, we will vacate the District Court’s order
and remand to the District Court for further proceedings regarding the issues we explore
below.1
1
The District Court had jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3231, and we have jurisdiction
over the appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a).
2
I. BACKGROUND
Sinkler initiated the high-speed chase at approximately 2 a.m. on January 7, 2001,
when officers patrolling Harrisburg approached him in their car. At the time, Sinkler was
driving a green Jeep Grand Cherokee with a ski rack on top, which matched the
description of a car thought to be driven by Clifford Bradley, a suspected felon who had a
history of fleeing from the police. Officers followed Sinkler’s Jeep and soon learned,
based on the registration number, that the car was registered to Sinkler. 2 One officer, who
later testified at the suppression hearing in this case, stated that he had personal
knowledge of Sinkler from a prior encounter with him, and was aware that Sinkler’s
driver’s license had been suspended. To ascertain who was driving the Jeep, the officers
pulled up on its passenger side, but could only discern that the driver was an African-
American man who was alone and speaking on a cell phone.
The basic description of the car and its driver matched that of Bradley, so the
officers attempted to initiate a stop. When they turned on their lights, the Jeep sped away.
An extended high-speed chase ensued, involving multiple patrol cars and covering a
significant distance. The officers testified that during the chase, the driver of the Jeep
made several attempts to swerve into the police cars that were pursuing him. The chase
2
As the District Court noted, apparently the car was actually registered to Sinkler’s
father, who shares the same name and address as Sinkler.
3
ended when Sinkler lost control of the Jeep on I-81 North, where the vehicle collided
with a police van, went into a spin, and came to rest turned over onto its driver’s side. As
it spun and turned over, the officers saw objects flying from the Jeep and landing on the
highway median.
Sinkler was arrested immediately. Contemporaneously with the arrest, officers on
the scene seized and searched a backpack that was found approximately fifteen feet from
the car, resting in smooth, undisturbed snow. The officers discovered cocaine, marijuana,
cash, and drug paraphernalia inside the backpack. Sinkler was subsequently charged with
possession with intent to distribute cocaine. He sought to have the contents of the
backpack suppressed on the grounds that he was illegally stopped prior to the chase,
rendering his arrest unlawful and the contents of the backpack “fruits of a poisonous tree”
under Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471 (1963). He also asserted in passing that
no physical evidence linked him to the backpack.
The District Court denied his motion in a memorandum and order filed on July 27,
2001. The Court concluded that the officers had reasonable suspicion that the suspected
felon might be driving Sinkler’s car, based on the information available to them at the
time they first approached the car, and they were authorized to conduct an investigatory
stop under Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968). Further, the Court concluded that even if
reasonable suspicion had been absent, there was no Fourth Amendment violation when
the officers approached Sinkler, due to the fact that he fled and did not submit to their
4
authority. In other words, based on California v. Hodari D., 499 U.S. 621 (1991), no
seizure of Sinkler actually occurred until the conclusion of the chase. The Court next
stated, in conclusory fashion and with no stated evidentiary basis, that the seizure of the
backpack was valid because Sinkler had “abandoned” it. And finally, the Court
concluded that, even absent abandonment, the officers were justified in seizing the
backpack as part of a search incident to the lawful arrest of Sinkler, as the backpack was
found in “the areas adjacent to [Sinkler’s] arrest.”
II. DISCUSSION
Based on the District Court’s opinion and the parties’ arguments on appeal, we
have identified four separate arguments or issues before us for consideration: 1) was
Sinkler illegally stopped or seized before or during the chase, rendering the backpack’s
contents fruits of a poisonous tree?; 2) did Sinkler abandon the backpack?; 3) could the
backpack be legally searched incident to Sinkler’s arrest?; and 4) could the search of the
backpack be deemed part of a valid inventory search?3 Our standard of review on each of
3
At oral argument, Sinkler’s counsel renewed an argument made at the District Court
level, namely, that there was insufficient proof that the backpack in fact belonged to
Sinkler. However, this issue was not pressed in Sinkler’s brief, and we think it is actually
not properly before us on appeal of the issues related to the suppression determination.
After losing the suppression motion, Sinkler pled guilty but reserved the right to argue on
appeal that the evidence should have been suppressed. The argument regarding
ownership of the backpack is not really one that impacts suppression – although
ownership of an item can become an issue if the government argues that the defendant
lacks standing to bring a Fourth Amendment challenge – but, as made here by Sinkler, it
5
these issues requires us to look at the District Court’s conclusions of law de novo, and to
review its findings of fact for clear error. United States v. Coggins, 986 F.2d 651, 654
(3d Cir. 1993). On appeal, Sinkler reiterates his initial challenges, while the government
contends that the District Court properly held that the search was valid based on
abandonment, incident to arrest, and as an inventory search.4 We will discuss each of the
four issues in turn.
A. The Stop and Seizure of Sinkler
We dispose of the first issue relatively easily. Sinkler points to two relevant
moments in time when he contends an illegal stop or seizure of him occurred: the initial
approach of the police car prior to the chase, which he characterizes as a stop, and the
instant when his car struck a police van to end the chase, which he characterizes as a
seizure. It is well-established that police officers may conduct warrantless stops of
suspects where they have reasonable suspicion, based on specific articulable facts, that
“criminal activity may be afoot.” Terry, 392 U.S. at 30. A Terry stop is likewise
appropriate where officers have reasonable suspicion to believe that a person they
is an argument as to sufficiency of the evidence of guilt. As such, it would appear to be
subsumed within his guilty plea, and not really a suppression issue at all. In any event,
we do not consider this issue of ownership to be properly presented for our review.
4
After oral argument, it is unclear whether the Government has “abandoned” the
abandonment argument, which is barely mentioned in its brief, or whether it will continue
to pursue this issue on remand. We also note that the Government only referred to the
possibility of invoking the inventory search issue in a short footnote near the end of its
brief. However, the District Court will be free to address these issues if the parties
choose to explore them on remand.
6
encounter was involved in a completed felony. United States v. Hensley, 469 U.S. 221,
229 (1985). It is also clearly established that a suspect is only seized, for Fourth
Amendment purposes, where there has been an application of physical force, or a show of
authority to which the suspect submits.5 Hodari D., 499 U.S. at 626.
Regarding the initial unsuccessful attempt by the officers to conduct an
investigatory stop, we find this case to be squarely governed by Hodari D. There, the
suspect fled upon noticing an unmarked police car approaching his group of companions
on the street, prior to any stop or contact by the police. Id. at 622-23. The Supreme Court
determined that he was neither stopped nor seized when the officers approached and
pursued him, but rather was only actually seized when he was tackled by an officer to end
the chase. Id. at 629. The officers here approached the Jeep and flashed their lights,
intending to conduct a Terry stop. No stop occurred, as Sinkler immediately sped away.
Rather than submitting to their show of authority, Sinkler fled, just like the suspect in
Hodari D. In fact, Sinkler admits in his brief that “he did not submit to authority at the
stop light.” Thus, we agree with the District Court that no illegal stop or seizure of
Sinkler occurred prior to the chase.6
5
Once such physical force or show of authority is found, the inquiry then turns to
whether a reasonable person in the suspect’s position would feel free to leave; if not, then
a seizure has occurred. United States v. Mendenhall, 446 U.S. 544, 554 (1980). This
second stage of the seizure inquiry is not relevant to our analysis of this case.
6
Before discussing Hodari D. and finding that Sinkler did not initially submit to the
officers’ show of authority, the District Court determined that the officers had reasonable
suspicion to stop Sinkler prior to the chase. Because we conclude that no stop or seizure
7
As to the collision that ended the chase, Sinkler contends that he was stopped and
seized by the application of physical force when his Jeep struck the police van. He points
to language from Hodari D. and Brower v. County of Inyo, 489 U.S. 593 (1989), to
support his contention that the collision constituted a seizure for Fourth Amendment
purposes. In both of those cases, the Supreme Court discussed what types of police
behavior result in a seizure of the suspect. In Brower, the Court held that a seizure
occurred where police officers placed a tractor-trailer across a highway in order to stop a
fleeing suspect by causing him to crash into it. 489 U.S. at 598-99. Then in Hodari D.,
the Court noted that the “laying on of hands or application of physical force to restrain
movement” is readily classified as a seizure. 499 U.S. at 626. Relying on these cases,
Sinkler contends that the police, using a van involved in the pursuit, applied force and
effectively seized Sinkler illegally at the conclusion of the chase.
However, Sinkler’s argument related to the collision fails for two reasons. First,
the District Court made a finding that the police van accidentally struck the Jeep when
Sinkler lost control after making a u-turn. Given the testimony of the officers at the
suppression hearing supporting this determination, such a finding is not clearly erroneous.
In light of the finding that the collision was unintentional, this case is distinguished from
Brower, where the Court emphasized that a seizure “requires an intentional acquisition of
occurred when the officers first approached Sinkler in his Jeep, we need not decide
whether the facts here gave rise to reasonable suspicion justifying a stop at that time.
8
physical control.” 489 U.S. at 595-96 (emphasis added). A roadblock constructed with
the express purpose of causing a suspect to collide with it presents a very different
situation from an accidental crash where the suspect suddenly loses control of his vehicle.
See id. (addressing and distinguishing accidental collisions when parties to a chase lose
control of their vehicles). Since we will uphold the District Court’s finding that the
collision here was accidental, we cannot find a seizure based upon Brower as Sinkler
urges.
The second fatal flaw in Sinkler’s argument related to the conclusion of the chase
is the fact that by the time of the crash, even if a seizure had occurred when the cars
collided, the police officers quite clearly had probable cause to arrest Sinkler for a
multitude of traffic violations, as well as assault of a police officer, based on his actions
during the chase itself. Further, “unprovoked flight upon noticing the police” is a factor
that is also significant in determining whether reasonable suspicion or probable cause
exist in a situation encountered by the police. Cf. Illinois v. Wardlow, 528 U.S. 119, 124
(2000) (describing “headlong flight” as “the consummate act of evasion,” and something
that is reasonably suggestive of wrongdoing, in a case involving a Terry stop). Thus,
when Sinkler was ultimately seized and arrested following the chase, that seizure was
justified based on his flight coupled with the observations of the police officers during
their pursuit of him. We therefore conclude that the District Court was correct in holding
that Sinkler was not subjected to any illegal stop or seizure before, during, or after the
9
chase. The issues that remain involve alternative methods of attacking the subsequent
search of the backpack found near Sinkler’s Jeep.
B. Abandonment
Despite the fact that neither party raised the issue of abandonment below, the
District Court, sua sponte, concluded that Sinkler abandoned the backpack, and that it was
therefore properly seized by the police after the chase. The District Court reached this
conclusion after discussing Hodari D., where a police officer saw the defendant toss away
a rock of crack cocaine while the officer was chasing him. 499 U.S. at 623. However,
the District Court’s memorandum provides no discussion of the reasoning leading the
Court to the conclusion that the backpack was abandoned in this case. Abandonment
requires some type of a showing that the defendant intended to relinquish possession and
control of the object in question. See Black’s Law Dictionary 2 (6th ed. 1990) (defining
“abandoned property” as “property over which the owner has given up dominion and
control with no intention of recovering it”); cf. Abel v. United States, 362 U.S. 217, 240-
41 (1960) (finding that a suspect had abandoned items that he left behind in a hotel trash
can when he checked out of his room). Here, there is no evidence as to how the backpack
came to leave the car – whether by being tossed out or by being ejected by the force of the
crash. Additionally, the Government, by implication in its brief and by admission at oral
10
argument, may well have abandoned its argument that Sinkler abandoned the backpack.7
The record here does not appear to include evidence from which we could
conclude that Sinkler intended to abandon the backpack, and that it did not simply fly
from the car during the crash.8 Because the parties did not raise or explore this issue at
the suppression hearing, we find it necessary to remand so that the Court can give further
7
In response to questions from the Court at oral argument, the Government was unable
to point to any direct or circumstantial evidence showing that Sinkler threw the backpack
out of the Jeep or intended to abandon it. Although counsel for the Government stopped
short of admitting that she was “abandoning” the abandonment argument altogether, she
admitted that her primary focus was on the search incident to arrest and inventory search
issues.
8
The District Court analogized this case to Hodari D. and concluded that Sinkler, like
Hodari, had abandoned the contraband at the end of the chase. However, the reason for
this conclusion is not obvious to us. It is true that police may search an item that has been
abandoned by a suspect, as the suspect retains no reasonable expectation of privacy in
something that he abandons. See Hodari D., 499 U.S. at 629 (upholding the seizure of
drugs that were tossed away by a defendant while he ran from police); Abel v. United
States, 362 U.S. 217, 240-41 (1960) (upholding the seizure of abandoned items that were
left by the defendant in a hotel trash can after the defendant had checked out of the hotel);
Hester v. United States, 265 U.S. 57, 58 (1924) (upholding the seizure of items that were
abandoned by defendants who were fleeing from officers who were pursuing defendants
without a warrant).
However, these cases all rest on the implication that some finding of intent on the
part of the defendant to abandon the property is required before a court may conclude that
the defendant has sacrificed his expectation of privacy with respect to the property
involved. Not everything that is situated beyond the defendant’s person and the area that
he occupies or owns is automatically deemed “abandoned” for Fourth Amendment
purposes. Here, if Sinkler in fact threw the backpack out of the Jeep’s window during or
after the collision, this case would become identical to Hodari D. and the seizure of the
backpack could be upheld under the abandonment doctrine. But if the Government
cannot prove directly or circumstantially that Sinkler intended to toss the backpack away,
it seems just as likely that the impact of the collision caused the backpack to fly from the
Jeep. If that is the case, it would be troubling to find that Sinkler somehow “abandoned”
it and gave up his Fourth Amendment rights with respect to its contents.
11
consideration to this point.
C. Search Incident to Arrest
The District Court also concluded that the backpack was properly seized during a
valid search incident to Sinkler’s arrest, although the Government did not actually invoke
this exception to the warrant requirement and Sinkler did not have an opportunity to
respond to it below. Again, the District Court reached this conclusion in summary
fashion, without discussing the law related to searches incident to arrest or how the facts
supported a finding that the search of the backpack could be justified on this basis.
Our review of the record does not convince us that the Court could conclude that
the search of the backpack was proper because it was incident to Sinkler’s arrest. There
was no testimony indicating that Sinkler was removed from the car and arrested within
reach of the backpack, which would provide the legal justification for permitting a search
on this basis.9 Again, because the parties did not raise or explore this issue before the
9
The District Court simply concluded that, because Sinkler’s arrest was lawful, the
police could properly seize the backpack during a search of “the areas adjacent to his
arrest.” However, we think the issue of whether the backpack would properly be the
subject of a search incident to Sinkler’s arrest is substantially more complicated than that.
We base this view on an examination of the case law related to searches incident to arrest,
none of which the District Court referenced in its memorandum. The Supreme Court has
confronted the issue of the proper scope of a search incident to an arrest on several
occasions. For purposes of this case, it is relevant to note that, in connection with a
lawful arrest, the police are justified in searching “the arrestee’s person and the area
‘within his immediate control’ – construing that phrase to mean the area from within
which he might gain possession of a weapon or destructible evidence.” Chimel v.
California, 395 U.S. 752, 763 (1969) (striking down a search of portions of a house
beyond the “area into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or
12
District Court, and because the conclusion reached by the District Court is not clearly
proper on this record, we are compelled to remand so that the record, and the parties’
arguments, can be developed more fully on this point as well.
D. Inventory Search
Presumably in response to the District Court’s resort to the doctrines of
abandonment and search incident to arrest, the Government added a mere footnote in its
evidentiary items”). As we have stated in the past, such a search is subject to geographic
and temporal limitations. United States v. Myers, 308 F.3d 251, 266-67 (3d Cir. 2002)
(examining this doctrine and its development, and noting that we should not assume that
the defendant was “an acrobat” or “a Houdini”).
Where, as here, a defendant is arrested in his vehicle, the Court has made clear that
a contemporaneous search incident to his arrest may include the entire passenger
compartment of the car, as well as “the contents of any containers found within the
passenger compartment.” New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454, 460 (1981). However,
these “car” cases are not automatically controlling here. We are unaware of any cases
binding on us that extend the scope of a search incident to the arrest of a defendant in his
vehicle to include items found beyond the passenger compartment of that vehicle. The
Government relies on a Seventh Circuit case, United States v. Richardson, 121 F.3d 1051
(7th Cir. 1997), to support a search of the backpack based on the fact that it was likely
within Sinkler’s reach just prior to his arrest, but we find that case to be distinguishable.
In Richardson, the seizure occurred upon an inventory search of the vehicle’s contents, on
the scene and contemporaneously with the defendant’s arrest. Id. at 1053-54.
Additionally, the container at issue there was discovered in the passenger compartment of
the vehicle, id. at 1053, a location that is clearly within the scope described by the
Supreme Court in Belton.
Finally, we have binding precedent in our own circuit that appears to squarely
reject the Government’s theory that the search should include items to which Sinkler may
have had access prior to his arrest. See Myers, 308 F.3d at 253, 267 (striking down the
search of a bag that officers observed in the defendant’s hand just prior to his arrest, but
that he dropped a few feet away from the spot where he was ultimately handcuffed, where
the defendant was immediately pinned to the ground with his arms behind his back and
the officers waited a short time before searching the bag).
13
brief on appeal noting that the seizure of the bag was also part of a valid inventory search.
Counsel for the Government pursued this issue at oral argument as well. But, again, the
issue was not referenced by the parties or the District Court, the Government does not
expand on it here, and Sinkler has not responded to it. Further, the record contains no
evidence related to the Harrisburg Police Department’s policy regarding inventory
searches, and the police officers who testified at the suppression hearing did not
characterize the search of the backpack as part of an inventory search.10
As the record is not developed at all on this issue, the parties should be given an
opportunity to explore whether the backpack was (or would have been) found through an
10
It is unclear whether the Government takes the position that the police were actually
performing an inventory search of the Jeep’s contents at the time the backpack was
seized, or that the backpack would have inevitably been taken in and searched when the
Jeep was impounded and its inventory was catalogued. It is well-established that police
departments can conduct inventory searches of vehicles that they impound, and that such
searches can involve the opening of containers found inside the vehicle. Florida v. Wells,
495 U.S. 1, 3-4 (1990). While the backpack here, if it is somehow properly linked to the
Jeep or to Sinkler, may have been seized as part of an inventory search, we cannot
determine whether such a search would have inevitably led to the discovery of the
backpack’s contents. See Nix v. Williams, 467 U.S. 431 (1984) (discussing the doctrine
of inevitable discovery); United States v. Vasquez de Reyes, 149 F.3d 192 (3d Cir. 1998)
(same). None of the testimony from the suppression hearing indicates that the officers
were conducting an inventory search on the scene. Additionally, none of the officers
testified as to whether and how the Harrisburg Police Department conducts inventory
searches. On remand, the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the
backpack would have inevitably been the subject of an inventory search will rest with the
Government. Vasquez de Reyes, 149 F.3d at 195. The Government, of course, will also
bear the burden of proving all relevant exceptions to the warrant requirement and any
other grounds for a permissible search that may apply here, including the abandonment of
the backpack, as well as its status with respect to the scope of a search incident to
Sinkler’s arrest.
14
inventory search conducted pursuant to this police department’s routine procedures.
III. CONCLUSION
While we conclude that Sinkler was not illegally stopped or seized, and that
probable cause existed to arrest him following the chase, we are left with several
unresolvable arguments as to why the search of the backpack may have been permissible
without a warrant. 11 Upon examining the District Court’s memorandum and the record
submitted to us on appeal, we remain unable to discern the basis for conclusions the
District Court reached involving Sinkler’s “abandonment” of the backpack, and the
search incident to Sinkler’s arrest. If neither of these arguments prevails, the
Government’s contention that it was a valid inventory search will need to be developed.
Accordingly, we will VACATE the order of the District Court denying Sinkler’s motion
to suppress evidence, and we will REMAND to the District Court for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
11
As we conclude, we note that we are troubled by the cursory manner in which the
District Court treated many of these issues, perhaps misguided by the failure of counsel
for both parties to recognize and explore with precision several of the key issues below.
In a case where the defendant is facing nearly eighteen years in prison, as in any other
criminal case, care must be taken that the reasoning and conclusions are sufficiently
thorough and well-crafted.
15
16