United States v. Osbourne

          United States Court of Appeals
                     For the First Circuit


No. 02-2003

                    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                            Appellee,

                                v.

                    WILLIAM MICHAEL OSBOURNE,

                      Defendant, Appellant.


         ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

       [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Chief Judge]


                             Before

                       Lynch, Circuit Judge,
                 Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
                    and Howard, Circuit Judge.



     Miriam Conrad, with whom the Federal Defender's Office was on
brief for appellant.
     Patrick M. Hamilton, Assistant U.S. Attorney, with whom
Michael J. Sullivan, United States Attorney, was on brief for
appellee.



                         April 16, 2003
            HOWARD,     Circuit     Judge.       Defendant-appellant         William

Michael    Osbourne     appeals     the   partial    denial       of   his   pretrial

suppression motion, arguing that a statement made by the district

court in the course of its extemporaneous oral ruling evinced both

a misunderstanding and material misapplication of Terry v. Ohio,

392 U.S. 1 (1968).       Specifically, Osbourne contends that the court

upheld a second pat-frisk of his person -- one that led to his

arrest for unlawful firearm possession -- only after mistakenly

concluding that, once there were legitimate grounds to pat-frisk

him, there was no limit to the number of pat-frisks that officers

on the scene were permitted to conduct.                     Our analysis of the

context in which the court made the statement convinces us that

Osbourne has read too much into it and that the court's ruling was

not based upon legal error.         We summarize the facts that lead us to

this conclusion.

            Late in the afternoon of September 18, 2001, Boston

Police Detective Robert Fratalia was driving in the Roxbury section

of   Boston   to   scout      out    locations      where     a    youth     violence

investigative team with which he was working would be executing

search warrants in the coming days. Federal agents Daniel Campbell

and Michael Oppenheim accompanied Fratalia.                       The contemplated

warrants were to target members of the Esmond Street gang, which

Fratalia    knew   to    be   involved      in   drug   trafficking,         firearms

offenses, and street violence with a rival gang.                        One of the


                                          -2-
residences to be searched was Osbourne's.     Fratalia had specific

knowledge that Osbourne was a member of the Esmond Street gang's

"inner circle" and a likely target in the on-going feud with the

rival gang.   Fratalia also had been told that Osbourne carried a 9-

millimeter firearm on his person at all times.

          As he was driving down Walnut Street, Fratalia noticed

Osbourne's parked car.    Fratalia then observed Osbourne himself

walking down the street with one Clifford Carr.         Although he

contested it below, Osbourne now concedes that, when Fratalia first

spotted him, Fratalia had grounds to reasonably suspect that

Osbourne was in unlawful possession of a firearm. Fratalia decided

to act on his suspicion by conducting a Terry stop of Osbourne.   He

alerted Campbell and Oppenheim to Osbourne's presence, pulled his

police vehicle alongside of Osbourne and Carr, let Campbell and

Oppenheim out, and parked the car diagonally across the sidewalk in

front of them. At the suppression hearing, Fratalia described what

happened next:

          Special Agent Campbell had gone towards ...
          Osbourne, Special Agent Oppenheim kind of
          stayed in back of Campbell closer to the
          curbing where it met the street. I got out of
          the vehicle and went immediately over to where
          Osbourne and Carr had been.     Special Agent
          Campbell did a quick pat-frisk of Mr. Osbourne
          and went right to Mr. Carr upon him seeing me
          being right next to him.

As Campbell began his pat-frisk of Carr, Fratalia conducted a pat-

frisk of Osbourne.   Almost immediately, Fratalia detected what he


                                 -3-
believed to be the handle of a gun in Osbourne's waistband.                      He

removed    the    item,   discovered    that   it   was   a   fully    loaded     9-

millimeter semi-automatic handgun, and arrested Osbourne.

            On October 17, 2001, a grand jury indicted Osbourne for

being a felon in unlawful possession of a firearm, in violation of

18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) (2000). On February 27, 2002, Osbourne filed

a written motion to suppress evidence of the gun (as having been

seized in violation of Terry) and certain statements he made to the

officers following his arrest (as having been elicited in violation

of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)).              Insofar as Osbourne

sought suppression of the firearm, his motion argued only that

Fratalia lacked grounds for a reasonable suspicion that Osbourne

was armed and dangerous when Fratalia first saw him walking down

the street with Carr.         On March 20, 2002, the government filed a

written opposition to Osbourne's motion, contending that the pat-

frisk leading to the discovery of the firearm was authorized under

Terry because Fratalia reasonably suspected that Osbourne was

unlawfully armed when he initially spotted Osbourne and Carr.

Attached    to    the   government's    submission    was,     inter    alia,     an

affidavit      from     Fratalia   acknowledging     that     "Campbell      [had]

cursorily pat-frisked Osbourne before moving over to Clifford Carr"

and   before     Fratalia   conducted    the   pat-frisk      that    led   to   the

discovery of the firearm.          It was thus uncontested from the outset

that Fratalia was the second officer to pat-frisk Osbourne.


                                        -4-
          From   April   3   to   April   5,   2002,   the   district   court

conducted a hearing on Osbourne's motion.              Consistent with his

written motion, Osbourne sought during the hearing only to develop

grounds for arguing that Fratalia lacked a basis to reasonably

suspect Osbourne of being unlawfully armed and dangerous when he

first spotted him on the street. Consequently, the lion's share of

the parties' closing arguments focused on the reliability of the

data giving rise to Fratalia's suspicion prior to the stop.               But

just before concluding (and after the government had completed its

presentation), Osbourne's counsel introduced an entirely new line

of argument:

                 [L]et me actually go back because I
          skipped a very crucial point, if I may.

                 The   testimony   was  that   Detective
          Fratalia   let   Agent  Campbell   and   Agent
          Oppenheim out of the car, and Agent Campbell
          frisked Mr. Osborne ... first ....      So the
          question, and I think it is a significant
          question in this case, is what justified the
          second frisk. And I would suggest that that
          second frisk is not a legitimate frisk under
          Terry.   Certainly not in the absence of any
          evidence that the first frisk was not
          thorough; not in the absence of any evidence
          that Agent Campbell -- excuse me, that during
          the time between frisk number one and frisk
          number two Mr. Osbourne did anything that
          would suggest that he may have gained access
          to a weapon that was missed the first time.
          So, frisk number two I would suggest isn't a
          Terry frisk at all. It's a search. And it
          requires probable cause.

                 Now, that is consistent in terms of it
          being a protective frisk, even if it's a
          frisk, that rationale evaporates if ... one of

                                    -5-
          those officers has already done a protective
          frisk and has not found anything.

          Immediately   after   Osbourne's   counsel    concluded,   the

district court issued an oral ruling denying Osbourne's motion

insofar as it sought to suppress evidence of the firearm as having

been obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment.           The court

first found facts consistent with the rendition we have just

provided and concluded that Fratalia had grounds to reasonably

suspect Osbourne of being unlawfully armed and dangerous when the

episode began.    As we have already stated, Osbourne does not

challenge this ruling on appeal.       The court then addressed and

rejected Osbourne's argument that Fratalia's pat-frisk was unlawful

because it followed Campbell's and was unaccompanied by evidence

that Campbell's was incomplete or inadequate.          In doing so, the

court stated:

                 In   the   event,   and   this   is   an
          interesting wrinkle, it was not [Fratalia] who
          first pat-frisked Mr. Osbourne but it was Mr.
          Campbell, Officer Campbell, a younger officer,1
          and not part of Fratalia's Boston Police
          force.     Now, Fratalia was watching the
          situation.    So he knew that Campbell had
          already touched, and characterized it as a pat
          frisk and I accept that.

                 And so the question is what justified
          Detective Fratalia from doing it himself?
          Well, it seems to me it was a rapidly evolving
          situation, and with two individuals, as
          Fratalia approached, Campbell moved over to


     1
      All agree that this comment was mistaken and that there was
no evidence that Campbell was younger than Fratalia.

                                 -6-
           Carr, it's not clear that Oppenheim was doing
           anything but surveilling the scene, I think it
           was good police work. I don't think there's a
           limitation on the number of people who can
           pat-frisk you.     And I think for his own
           safety, I don't think fear need enter into it,
           I think for his own safety and those of the
           other officers Detective Fratalia, under the
           same standard, reasonable suspicion, though at
           that time there was not probable cause, could
           pat-frisk Mr. Osbourne, and then the weapon
           was discovered. That's the Fourth Amendment
           analysis. (Emphasis supplied).

           Construing the underlined text as reflecting a belief on

the district court's part that the "police may frisk a suspect as

many times as they wish, assuming a lawful basis for the first

frisk," Appellant's Br. at 9, Osbourne argues that the remark

represents an erroneous distillation and application of Terry that

undermines the court's suppression ruling. If we shared Osbourne's

understanding of the statement, we would be inclined to agree.

While many areas of Fourth Amendment doctrine are characterized by

specific   bright    line   principles     designed       for   straightforward

application by law enforcement officers, see Atwater v. City of

Lago, 532 U.S. 318, 347 (2001), "reasonableness" in the context of

a Terry stop is given content by balancing the need for the

encroachment against its nature case by case and in light of all

the attendant circumstances, id. at 347 n.16; id. at 366 (O'Connor,

J., dissenting); United States v. Sokolow, 490 U.S. 1, 7-8 (1989);

United   States     v.   Chhien,   266   F.3d   1,    6    (1st   Cir.   2001).

Consequently, a one-size-fits-all rule such as the one Osbourne has


                                     -7-
inferred from the court's statement would be unusual, if not an

anathema, in the context of Terry.      But we do not understand the

court's comment to reflect such an underlying perspective.

          Rather, we regard the district court's "there is no

limitation" comment to be a rejection of what it understood to be

Osbourne's own suggestion of an applicable categorical rule:        that

a second pat-frisk is per se unreasonable in the absence of

evidence that the first frisk was cursory or that the subject of

the frisk had an opportunity to arm himself in the interim.       And in

our view, the court was entirely correct to reject this suggestion.

Cf. Sokolow, 490 U.S. at 7-8 (rejecting a specific two-part rule

designed by a court of appeals to assess the reasonableness of

Terry stops of suspected drug couriers).      We can envision myriad

factual contexts in which courts could be called upon to assess the

reasonableness   of   multiple   pat-frisks   of   a   single   suspect.

Especially given the absence of record evidence concerning the

effectiveness of pat-frisks, our adoption of Osbourne's rigid

formulation would unduly cabin the reasonableness inquiry to be

conducted in such cases every bit as much as the rule he says the

court applied.   See id.

          In the end, the reasonableness of a second or subsequent

pat-frisk conducted pursuant to Terry is to be determined under a

standard that takes account of the fact that "context is vital."

United States v. Cook, 277 F.3d 82, 85 (1st Cir. 2002).              The


                                  -8-
standard is familiar:           "A police officer may frisk a suspect --

that is, search the suspect's person for weapons -- on reasonable

suspicion   that    the       suspect   is   armed   and   dangerous."        United

States v. Scott, 270 F.3d 30, 41 (1st Cir. 2001), cert. denied, 535

U.S. 1007 (2002).         Here, the context in which Fratalia frisked

Osbourne led the district court to conclude that Fratalia still

entertained    such       a     reasonable     suspicion     as     to    Osbourne,

notwithstanding Campbell's "quick" (to use Fratalia's description)

initial frisk of him.          We agree with the court's conclusion.            This

was not a case involving an unknown suspect; Fratalia had specific

information that Osbourne was "always" armed with a semi-automatic

weapon and was a member of a violent street gang.                 Moreover, as the

court   observed,     Fratalia      encountered      Osbourne      in    "a   rapidly

evolving situation" in which the investigating officers needed to

keep tabs on not one suspect but two.                Under the circumstances,

Fratalia reasonably declined to regard the frisk conducted by

Campbell as conclusive on the question whether Osbourne was armed

and dangerous.

            Accordingly, we affirm the court's partial denial of

Osbourne's motion to suppress.




                                         -9-