United States v. Howard Eugene McCully Jr.

NATHANIEL R. JONES, Circuit Judge,

concurring.

I write separately to express my continued misgivings over this circuit’s decision in United States v. Ferguson, 8 F.3d 385 (6th Cir.1993) (en banc), as the instant case indicates the extent to which Ferguson strips *713citizens of their Fourth Amendment protections by allowing police officers to search for illegal contraband when they have neither probable cause nor reasonable suspicion to do so.

The facts of this case- are as follows. On August 20,1991, Officer Terry Bykerk of the Grand Rapids, Michigan police department sat in an unmarked van conducting surveillance of a house in the middle of a block on a residential street. Bykerk was watching the house because the police believed it was a location from which illegal drugs were sold.

At the end of the day, Bykerk saw McCully’s brown Toyota travel past his van and stop in the middle of the street near the watched house. A woman came from one side of the street and stood at the passenger side of the car, talking to McCully. During this exchange, Bykerk claims to have seen McCully making “motions to either the floor on the passenger side, such as bending over ... or reaching toward the glove box.” J.A. at 79. After about one minute, a man approached the driver’s side of the ear and began talking to McCully.

At this point, Bykerk radioed backup police in the area to inform them of a traffic violation. Although it is undisputed that the Toyota was stopped illegally, the ear was not blocking any traffic as it sat in a middle lane of the four-lane residential street.

Officers Richard Prince and Bert Webster were the first to respond to Bykerk’s call. As they approached in their police cruiser, McCully began to drive away, so Prince turned on the cruiser’s overhead lights. McCully pulled over to the curb, got out of his ear, and began walking toward the officers.

Prince left his cruiser and asked McCully for his license and registration. McCully offered his license but said the registration was inside his car. Walking with Prince to the passenger side of the car, McCully reached through the open window and removed his registration from the glove compartment. As McCully was retrieving the registration, Webster, who had walked to the driver’s side of the car, nodded his head to Prince, signaling that McCully should be placed under arrest. Webster later testified that he had observed a baggie near the gear shift that contained a leafy green material that looked like marijuana. As Prince instructed McCully to place his hands behind his back, McCully begin to struggle, but was soon subdued with the help of five additional officers who had arrived on the scene. These officers had arrived in response to Bykerk’s original call reporting the traffic violation; Webster and Prince did not call for backups.

Webster informed Prince that he had observed marijuana in the car. Based upon that information, Prince searched MeCully’s person incident to his arrest. Prince found a baggie of crack cocaine in McCully’s shirt pocket, as well as a folded napkin with some marijuana residue. In addition to the baggie with marijuana, a search of the car revealed a black leather pouch containing a loaded gun and a baggie of cocaine.

There is much objective evidence before us that Bykerk and the other officers chose to use the traffic violation as a pretext to stop McCully and search for drugs. First, By-kerk testified that he radioed for police backups because he saw a driver stopping to talk to people on a residential street, an event which occurs on streets everywhere every day. Though this action appears to violate the letter of the Grand Rapids traffic code, the government has offered no evidence that the ordinance is routinely — or even occasionally — enforced against a driver who stops for a minute or two on a road where he is not blocking traffic. It is suspicious that By-kerk, who was assigned to a unit that investigates the illegal drug trade, and who was watching for drug activity at a particular house, claims that he took the time to report a car stopped in the street in the absence of a desire to check the driver for contraband. Bykerk radioed the violation after the car was stopped for only two minutes, and a total of seven officers responded to Bykerk’s call. This response seems to be an excessive reaction if the officers were interested only in issuing a citation to a driver stopped briefly on an empty street. Additional support for the conclusion that the stop was merely pre-textual is offered by the fact that after the *714arrival of the backups, Officer Webster, seeing a baggie of marijuana in the car, simply nodded to Officer Prince, who arrested MeCully immediately, not knowing anything about what Webster had seen.

Were the test in this circuit whether a reasonable officer would have made the stop in the absence of an invalid purpose, see United States v. Ferguson, 989 F.2d 202, 204 (6th Cir.), vacated, 8 F.3d 385 (6th Cir.1993); United States v. Mans, 999 F.2d 966, 968 (6th Cir.1993), it seems obvious that a district court would have a serious job to do in the instant case, evaluating the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses. However, in light of the en banc decision in Ferguson, there is no longer a difficult question here, for Ferguson only permits the district court to inquire as to whether Officer Bykerk had probable cause to believe that MeCully was committing a traffic offense, regardless of how uncommon enforcement of that offense might be or what unusual activities occur.

In my view, our decision in this case and others show how, under Ferguson, minor traffic violations can be used to stop and search most any driver, guilty or innocent, who the police have a mere hunch is involved in illegal activity. In United States v. Barnes, 1994 WL 75932,1994 U.S.App. LEXIS 4358 (6th Cir. Mar. 8, 1994), a Tennessee officer stopped a motorist and searched his vehicle, allegedly on the ground that he was violating a Tennessee statute requiring drivers to maintain a reasonable distance from the car in front of them. The court expressed concern that “the subjective rule of reason in Tennessee on following too closely” could allow a pretextual stop. Id. at *3, 1994 U.S.App. LEXIS 4358, at *10. Also, in Harvey v. United States, 16 F.3d 109 (6th Cir.1994), we upheld a search even though the officer admitted that he stopped the vehicle because the occupants were African-Americans whom he thought were more likely to be transporting drugs because of their race. I find these cases and the instant case to be unfortunate examples of the extent to which Ferguson has eliminated a Fourth Amendment protection in this circuit, and I hope that other officers, in their zeal to make arrests, do not take the cue from our abandonment of review to perform ever more stop-and-searches using minor traffic violations as pretexts.

On the basis of Ferguson, I must vote to affirm McCully’s conviction. However, I continue to believe that our decision in that case represents an abdication of our duty to provide citizens the security to travel without unreasonable police stops and searches, as guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment.