16‐87‐cr
United States v. Jones
1
2 In the
3 United States Court of Appeals
4 For the Second Circuit
5 ________
6
7 AUGUST TERM, 2017
8
9 ARGUED: AUGUST 15, 2017
10 DECIDED: JUNE 19, 2018
11
12 No. 16‐87‐cr
13
14 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
15 Appellee,
16
17 v.
18
19 RASHAUD JONES,
20 Defendant‐Appellant,
21
22 CHARLES TYSON, MADELAINE RIVERA,
23 Defendants.1
24 ________
25
26 Appeal from the United States District Court
27 for the District of Connecticut.
28 No. 3:13‐cr‐2‐1 – Michael P. Shea, District Judge.
29 ________
30
31 Before: WALKER, CABRANES, and RAGGI, Circuit Judges.
32 ________
33
1 The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to amend the caption as above.
2 16‐87‐cr
1 Defendant‐Appellant Rashaud Jones appeals, following a jury
2 trial in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut
3 (Michael P. Shea, J.), from his conviction for conspiracy to possess
4 with intent to distribute cocaine base, possession with intent to
5 distribute various quantities of cocaine base and cocaine, possession
6 of a firearm in furtherance of a narcotics trafficking crime, and
7 unlawful possession of a firearm and ammunition by a convicted
8 felon.
9 On appeal, Jones argues that we should vacate his conviction
10 because the district court erred by: (1) denying a motion to suppress
11 evidence seized from a warrantless search of a car used by him;
12 (2) denying his motion to suppress evidence seized from his
13 apartment; (3) permitting a witness to testify regarding her
14 drug‐trafficking activities with Jones prior to the period charged in
15 the indictment; (4) instructing the jury about inferences that they
16 could make if they found that Jones was the sole occupant of the car;
17 and (5) applying a two‐level Sentencing Guidelines enhancement for
18 obstruction of justice.
19 Rejecting each of Jones’s arguments, we AFFIRM his conviction
20 and sentence. In this opinion we discuss why the district court did not
21 err in refusing to suppress evidence seized from a car parked in the
22 common parking lot of a multi‐family building where the vehicle
23 search was warrantless but supported by probable cause. The
3 16‐87‐cr
1 remaining arguments are resolved by a summary order issued
2 simultaneously with this opinion.
3 ________
4 GEOFFREY M. STONE, Assistant United States
5 Attorney (Marc H. Silverman, Assistant United
6 States Attorney, on the brief), for John H. Durham,
7 United States Attorney for the District of
8 Connecticut, New Haven, CT, for Appellee.
9
10 NORMAN A. PATTIS & BRITTANY B. PAZ, Pattis &
11 Smith, LLC, New Haven, CT, for
12 Defendant‐Appellant.
13 ________
14 JOHN M. WALKER, JR., Circuit Judge:
15 Defendant‐Appellant Rashaud Jones appeals, following a jury
16 trial in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut
17 (Michael P. Shea, J.), from his conviction for conspiracy to possess
18 with intent to distribute cocaine base, possession with intent to
19 distribute various quantities of cocaine base and cocaine, possession
20 of a firearm in furtherance of a narcotics trafficking crime, and
21 unlawful possession of a firearm and ammunition by a convicted
22 felon.
23 On appeal, Jones argues that we should vacate his conviction
24 because the district court erred by: (1) denying a motion to suppress
25 evidence seized from a warrantless search of a car used by him;
26 (2) denying his motion to suppress evidence seized from his
4 16‐87‐cr
1 apartment; (3) permitting a witness to testify regarding her
2 drug‐trafficking activities with Jones prior to the period charged in
3 the indictment; (4) instructing the jury about inferences that they
4 could make if they found that Jones was the sole occupant of the car;
5 and (5) applying a two‐level Sentencing Guidelines enhancement for
6 obstruction of justice.
7 Rejecting each of Jones’s arguments, we AFFIRM his conviction
8 and sentence. In this opinion we discuss why the district court did not
9 err in refusing to suppress evidence seized from a car parked in the
10 common parking lot of a multi‐family building where the vehicle
11 search was warrantless but supported by probable cause. The
12 remaining arguments are resolved by a summary order issued
13 simultaneously with this opinion.
14 BACKGROUND
15 Jones challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to
16 suppress evidence seized from a warrantless search of a car. The
17 search occurred in December 2012, following months of investigation
18 into Jones’s drug‐trafficking activities.
19 A U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Task Force handles a
20 variety of narcotics investigations in Hartford, Connecticut. For years,
21 Officer James Campbell has been a member of that Task Force. Years
22 prior to the events at issue in this case, Officer Campbell had arrested
23 Jones for possession and sale of crack cocaine.
5 16‐87‐cr
1 In November 2011 and August 2012, the Hartford Police
2 Department received anonymous tips identifying Jones as a drug
3 dealer and indicating that weapons may be involved in his activities.
4 This information was conveyed to Officer Campbell, who, along with
5 other investigators, began conducting daily surveillance of Jones from
6 August through November 2012.
7 During their surveillance, officers observed Jones routinely
8 meeting with individuals on Evergreen Avenue in Hartford,
9 including Tyrone Upshaw, Charles Tyson, and Madelaine Rivera. On
10 September 6, 2012, officers saw Upshaw violate motor vehicle laws as
11 he drove away from Evergreen Avenue. Officers stopped the car and
12 obtained Upshaw’s consent to search, during which they recovered
13 marijuana and several items connected to Jones. Specifically, officers
14 uncovered a set of keys to a car that were labeled “Buck,” a known
15 alias of Jones; a money gram identifying “Rashad Jones”; and a
16 dentist receipt that listed Jones’s address as 232 Westland Street.
17 During the course of the investigation, the officers took several
18 steps to confirm that Jones lived at 232 Westland Street. For example,
19 Officer Campbell checked the Hartford Police Department computer
20 system and Lexis Nexis for information related to Jones, both of which
21 indicated that his most recent address was 232 Westland Street,
22 second floor. In addition, during a November 26, 2012 motor vehicle
6 16‐87‐cr
1 stop, several weeks before the events at issue in this case, Jones
2 identified his address as 232 Westland Street.
3 On December 18, 2012, at approximately 8:15 a.m., officers
4 observed Jones driving a Dodge Magnum to 232 Westland Street,
5 where he pulled into a shared driveway and parked the vehicle
6 behind the building. The driveway is accessible to various tenants of
7 232 Westland Street, a three‐story, multi‐family apartment building,
8 and to the tenants of another multi‐family building next door.
9 At approximately 9:20 a.m., Tyson and Rivera arrived in a
10 green Infiniti and pulled into the same rear lot of 232 Westland Street.
11 Less than an hour later, Tyson and Rivera left in the Infiniti. Officers
12 stopped them and, with their consent, searched the car and recovered
13 crack cocaine. Tyson told the officers that he had obtained the crack
14 from Jones on the third floor of 232 Westland Street, that he did so
15 several times a week, and that Jones still had narcotics at that address.
16 During this conversation, Rivera received two incoming calls from
17 Jones, but did not answer them. The officers arrested Tyson and
18 Rivera.
19 At approximately 10:30 a.m., the officers observed Jones leave
20 232 Westland Street as a passenger in a Chevy Tahoe. The officers
21 stopped the Tahoe, arrested Jones, recovered approximately $4,000
22 from his person, and brought him back to 232 Westland Street. With
7 16‐87‐cr
1 consent from the registered owner of the Tahoe, officers searched the
2 vehicle and recovered an additional $4,400.
3 Meanwhile, at 232 Westland Street, officers observed a tow
4 truck at the very end of the shared driveway removing the Dodge
5 Magnum. The officers called the towing company and learned that
6 someone named “Buck” had requested that the vehicle be towed to
7 his mechanic because the struts were bad. The officers instructed the
8 tow‐truck operator to return the car to the rear lot of 232 Westland
9 Street, where it had previously been parked.
10 Officer Campbell then knocked on the door of the second‐floor
11 apartment of 232 Westland Street, and, receiving no response, left and
12 obtained a search warrant for both the second‐ and third‐floor
13 apartments. The subsequent search of the second‐floor apartment
14 yielded crack cocaine, marijuana, paraphernalia, and ammunition.
15 Officer Campbell then went to the Dodge Magnum that had been
16 returned to the back lot by the towing company. At the suppression
17 hearing, he testified that, because the windows were tinted, he
18 walked up to the vehicle, put his head on the rear hatch window, and
19 looked inside. App. 160; Gov’t App. 8–10, 13. He saw an open paper
20 bag sitting inside a black Zales bag and, within the open paper bag,
21 what looked like one box with a second box on top of it. App. 160;
22 Gov’t App. 9. He recognized the bottom box as Lawman ammunition,
23 which has a distinct logo. The officers then conducted a warrantless
8 16‐87‐cr
1 search of the Dodge Magnum and recovered crack cocaine, powder
2 cocaine, a digital scale, firearms, and ammunition.
3 Jones was charged with seven drug trafficking and firearms
4 offenses, including conspiring to distribute and possess with intent to
5 distribute cocaine from approximately December 2011 through
6 December 2012. Prior to trial, Jones unsuccessfully moved to suppress
7 the evidence recovered from the Dodge Magnum.
8 On March 2, 2015, a jury convicted Jones of all seven counts.
9 Following a sentencing hearing on January 5, 2016, the district court
10 sentenced Jones to 211 months’ imprisonment, followed by 5 years of
11 supervised release. Jones timely appealed both his conviction and
12 sentence.
13 DISCUSSION
14 On appeal, Jones argues that the district court erred by
15 admitting evidence seized from the warrantless search of the Dodge
16 Magnum because, in these circumstances, the automobile exception
17 to the warrant requirement does not apply. Specifically, Jones argues
18 that: (1) the officers lacked probable cause to search the vehicle; (2) he
19 had an enhanced expectation of privacy in the Dodge Magnum
20 because it was parked in a residential lot; and (3) there were no
21 exigent circumstances justifying the search of the Dodge Magnum
22 before obtaining a warrant. We discuss each argument in turn.
9 16‐87‐cr
1 On appeal from a suppression ruling, we review factual
2 findings for clear error, and questions of law de novo. United States v.
3 Faux, 828 F.3d 130, 134 (2d Cir. 2016). The district court’s ultimate
4 determination of whether probable cause existed and whether the
5 automobile exception applied are both reviewed de novo. United States
6 v. Gagnon, 373 F.3d 230, 235 (2d Cir. 2004).
7 I. The Automobile Exception to the Warrant
8 Requirement
9 Although the Fourth Amendment generally requires police to
10 obtain a warrant before conducting a search, there is a
11 well‐established exception for vehicle searches. Maryland v. Dyson,
12 527 U.S. 465, 466 (1999) (per curiam). “If a car is readily mobile and
13 probable cause exists to believe it contains contraband, the Fourth
14 Amendment . . . permits police to search the vehicle without more.”
15 Id. at 467. “The Supreme Court has relied on two rationales to explain
16 the reasonableness of a warrantless search” under this exception: (1) a
17 vehicle’s “inherent mobility” and (2) a citizen’s reduced expectations
18 of privacy in the contents of that vehicle. United States v. Navas, 597
19 F.3d 492, 497 (2d Cir. 2010).
20 Jones does not dispute that the Dodge Magnum was inherently
21 mobile. His remaining arguments that the automobile exception does
22 not apply are unpersuasive. We hold that the officers had probable
23 cause to search the Dodge Magnum and that the automobile
10 16‐87‐cr
1 exception applies because Jones had no heightened expectation of
2 privacy in a vehicle parked in a multi‐family parking lot. The district
3 court therefore did not err in admitting evidence recovered from the
4 vehicle search.
5 A. Probable Cause
6 The officers had probable cause to search the Dodge Magnum.
7 Probable cause exists “where the facts and circumstances within . . .
8 [the officers’] knowledge and of which they had reasonably
9 trustworthy information [are] sufficient in themselves to warrant a
10 man of reasonable caution in the belief that evidence of a crime will
11 be found in the place to be searched.” United States v. Gaskin, 364 F.3d
12 438, 456 (2d Cir. 2004) (alterations in original) (internal quotation
13 marks omitted) (quoting Brinegar v. United States, 338 U.S. 160, 175–76
14 (1949)).
15 At the suppression hearing, Officer Campbell was questioned
16 about his search of the Dodge Magnum. He testified that he observed
17 a box of ammunition in the car when he peered through the car’s rear
18 window. The district court credited this testimony. Assuming that the
19 district court did not commit clear error in crediting this testimony,
20 this evidence was sufficient to establish probable cause to search the
21 car. Officer Campbell was aware that Jones was a convicted felon who
22 could not legally possess ammunition. Therefore, Officer Campbell’s
23 observation of ammunition in the car provided probable cause that
11 16‐87‐cr
1 the Dodge Magnum contained evidence of the crime of possession of
2 ammunition by a felon.
3 Yet we cannot definitively say that this conclusion was correct
4 because we do not have before us the evidence that was introduced
5 in the district court. The parties have included in the record on appeal
6 Officer Campbell’s testimony, but they have not included a
7 photograph of the Dodge Magnum showing its tinted windows or a
8 photograph of the ammunition box that Officer Campbell allegedly
9 observed in the car.
10 We need not, however, rely on Officer Campbell’s observation.
11 Even excluding it, there was sufficient evidence for the district court
12 to conclude that the officers had probable cause. By the time Officer
13 Campbell searched the car, the officers had observed Jones driving
14 the Dodge Magnum alone to 232 Westland Street, had recovered
15 crack cocaine from the car that Tyson and Rivera were driving after
16 they left 232 Westland Street, had been told by Tyson that he obtained
17 this crack from Jones at 232 Westland Street, and had arrested Jones,
18 who had $4,000 in cash in his possession. Officers had also observed
19 a tow truck attempting to remove the Dodge Magnum from
20 232 Westland Street at Jones’s request. The officers seized the car and
21 then searched 232 Westland Street where they recovered crack,
22 marijuana, ammunition, and other evidence from Jones’s
23 second‐floor apartment. It was only at that point, after collecting other
12 16‐87‐cr
1 evidence of Jones’s involvement in drug trafficking, that the officers
2 searched the Dodge Magnum.
3 Based on this record, we conclude that the district court did not
4 err in finding that the officers had probable cause to believe that the
5 Dodge Magnum contained evidence of a crime.
6 B. Expectation of Privacy
7 One rationale for the automobile exception is that a citizen
8 possesses a reduced expectation of privacy in the contents of his car,
9 particularly in light of “the pervasive regulation of vehicles capable
10 of traveling on the public highways.” California v. Carney, 471 U.S. 386,
11 392 (1985). This rationale applies “forcefully” when an officer
12 observes the vehicle “being used for transportation.” Navas, 597 F.3d
13 at 500–01. Jones argues that he had a heightened expectation of
14 privacy in the Dodge Magnum because he parked the car in a lot
15 within his home’s curtilage.
16 After oral argument in this case, the Supreme Court granted a
17 writ of certiorari in Collins v. Virginia to address the issue of whether
18 the automobile exception applies to a vehicle parked in a private
19 driveway and within the curtilage of a home. See 138 S. Ct. 53 (2017)
20 (mem.); United States v. Jones, No. 16‐87, Dkt. No. 107 (2d Cir. Oct. 2,
21 2017) (a letter from the government regarding the grant). The
22 Supreme Court recently decided Collins, holding that the automobile
23 exception does not permit “a police officer, uninvited and without a
13 16‐87‐cr
1 warrant, to enter the curtilage of a home in order to search a vehicle
2 parked therein.” 138 S. Ct. 1663, 1668 (2018). That decision, however,
3 has no effect on Jones’s appeal, which fails because the driveway in
4 which Jones’s vehicle was parked was the shared driveway of tenants
5 in two multi‐family buildings and was not within the curtilage of
6 Jones’s private home.
7 We hold that Jones had no legitimate expectation of privacy in
8 the rear parking lot, where he initially parked the car and to which it
9 was returned by the towing company. First, the lot was not within the
10 curtilage of Jones’s home. The lot was a common area accessible to
11 other tenants of 232 Westland Street and to tenants of a multi‐family
12 building next door, and therefore Jones could not reasonably expect
13 that it should be treated as part of his private home. See, e.g., United
14 States v. Dunn, 480 U.S. 294, 300 (1987); United States v. Alexander, 888
15 F.3d 628, 632 (2d Cir. 2018) (“[T]he central question . . . [is] whether
16 the area in question harbors the intimate activity associated with the
17 sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of life.”) (internal
18 quotation marks omitted); cf. Collins, 138 S. Ct. at 1673 n.3 (explaining
19 that the driveway was “private, not public, property, and the [vehicle]
20 was parked in the portion of the driveway beyond where a neighbor
21 would venture”).
22 Second, the lot was a common area of which Jones had no
23 exclusive control. Jones argues that tenants have a legitimate privacy
14 16‐87‐cr
1 interest in such common areas, and cites to several cases in which
2 courts have held that there was an unlawful, warrantless search
3 where a police dog sniffed an individual’s apartment door while in a
4 common hallway. Those cases, however, concern whether a resident
5 has “a legitimate expectation that the contents of [the] closed
6 apartment would remain private,” United States v. Thomas, 757 F.2d
7 1359, 1367 (2d Cir. 1985). They do not address whether an individual
8 has a legitimate expectation of privacy in the hallway itself.
9 Our precedents establish that because an individual has no
10 power to exclude another from a common area, a defendant has no
11 legitimate expectation of privacy in a “common area [that is]
12 accessible to the other tenants in the multi‐family apartment
13 building.” United States v. Fields, 113 F.3d 313, 321 (2d Cir. 1997). In
14 United States v. Holland, 755 F.2d 253, 255 (2d Cir. 1985), we held that
15 because they are not “subject to his exclusive control . . . it is the
16 established law of this Circuit that the common halls and lobbies of
17 multi‐tenant buildings are not within an individual tenant’s zone of
18 privacy even though they are guarded by locked doors.” See also
19 United States v. Hoover, 152 F. App’x 75, 77 (2d Cir. 2005) (summary
20 order) (holding that “[d]efendant ha[d] no reasonable expectation of
21 privacy from others viewing his van when parked in a multi‐user
22 parking lot”). Here, because the parking lot was not subject to Jones’s
15 16‐87‐cr
1 exclusive control and was not within the curtilage of his home, he did
2 not have a legitimate expectation of privacy when he parked there.2
3 C. Exigency
4 Jones finally argues that there were no exigent circumstances
5 requiring a warrantless search of the Dodge Magnum, because all of
6 the relevant suspects were in custody and investigators had secured
7 the area. But “the automobile exception does not have a separate
8 exigency requirement.” Dyson, 527 U.S. at 466–67 (explaining that the
9 automobile exception simply requires that a car be readily mobile and
10 that probable cause exists to believe it contains contraband). Jones’s
11 arguments to the contrary are misplaced.
12 CONCLUSION
13 For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s
14 denial of Jones’s motion to suppress evidence recovered from the
15 search of the Dodge Magnum. For the reasons stated in this opinion
2 The government also argues that Jones did not have a legitimate
expectation of privacy because (1) he had entrusted his vehicle to a third
party when he enlisted a towing company to tow it to his mechanic; and
(2) the Dodge Magnum has a rear window and the trunk’s contents,
including the box of ammunition, were exposed. While these arguments
may have force, we need not address them in light of our probable cause
determination and our holding that the automobile exception applies to the
search of a vehicle parked in a shared parking area. Further, we do not
address the second argument because we do not have photographs of the
car or its contents, and the government concedes that the windows were
tinted.
16 16‐87‐cr
1 and in the summary order issued simultaneously with this opinion,
2 we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court in all respects.