United States v. Kithcart ( 1998 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    1998 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    1-12-1998
    United States v. Kithcart
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 97-1168
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    Recommended Citation
    "United States v. Kithcart" (1998). 1998 Decisions. Paper 7.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1998/7
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    Filed January 12, 1998
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 97-1168
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    JESSE KITHCART,
    Appellant
    ON APPEAL FROM THE
    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    (D.C. Crim. No. 96-00090-1)
    Argued: August 11, 1997
    Before: ALITO, LEWIS, and McKEE, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed January 12, 1998)
    David L. McColgin (Argued)
    Defender Association of
    Philadelphia
    Federal Court Division
    437 Chestnut Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Counsel for Appellant
    Howard L. Perzan (Argued)
    Suite 1250
    Office of United States
    Attorney
    615 Chestnut Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Counsel for Appellee
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ALITO, Circuit Judge:
    Jesse Kithcart appeals from a judgment in a criminal
    case. Kithcart pled guilty to one count of being a felon in
    possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C.S 922(g)(1),
    but he reserved his right to appeal the district court's
    decision on his motion to suppress the firearm in question.
    This appeal raises the question whether the officers had
    probable cause to arrest and search Kithcart. Because we
    conclude that they did not have probable cause, we reverse
    the district court's denial of the suppression motion on the
    grounds given, and we remand for further proceedings in
    accordance with this opinion.
    I.
    On July 25, 1995, Bensalem Township Police Officer
    Teresa Nelson was assigned to a radio patrol car on the
    evening shift. Over the course of an hour, Officer Nelson
    received three radio transmissions, each reporting an
    armed robbery. The first two robberies occurred at motels
    in Bensalem Township, and the last transmission
    concerned a robbery in neighboring Bristol Township. The
    final report -- which was received at approximately 10:43
    p.m. -- did not specify either the time or location of the
    Bristol robbery. Bristol is north of, and adjacent to,
    Bensalem Township.
    The alleged perpetrators of these robberies were
    described as "two black males in a black sports car." It was
    also reported that one of the perpetrators might have been
    wearing white clothes, and the vehicle was described as a
    "possible Z-28, possible Camaro."1
    At 10:53 p.m. -- approximately ten minutes after
    receiving the final radio transmission regarding the Bristol
    robbery -- Officer Nelson spotted a black Nissan 300ZX,
    which she described as a sports car, traveling south on
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. The Z-28 is a type of Camaro.
    2
    Route 13, approximately a mile or less from the boundary
    of Bristol Township. The vehicle was driven by an African-
    American male who appeared to be the only person in the
    car. Officer Nelson testified that since the time when she
    received the first radio transmission more than an hour
    earlier, this was the first occasion when she spotted either
    a black vehicle or a black male driving a car. Officer Nelson
    also testified that immediately after she pulled up behind
    the vehicle, which had stopped at a red light, the driver
    drove the Nissan through the red light. Officer Nelson then
    flashed her dome lights, and the Nissan pulled over to the
    side of the road. At this point, Officer Nelson saw two sets
    of arms raised toward the roof of the car, and she realized
    that there were two people in the car.
    Officer Nelson then called for backup and waited in her
    patrol car until Officers Christine Kellaher and Bill Williams
    arrived at the scene. Officer Williams found a gun in
    Kithcart's white nylon waist pouch, and Officer Kellaher
    found a gun under the driver's seat.
    In moving to suppress the evidence seized by the police,
    Kithcart contended among other things, that the police
    lacked reasonable suspicion for an investigatory stop
    pursuant to Delaware v. Prouse, 
    440 U.S. 648
     (1979), Terry
    v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968), and related cases. See App. 95a.
    Consistent with this argument, Kithcart argued that Officer
    Williams had discovered his gun during a "pat down" or
    "frisk" but that the standard for conducting a "frisk" under
    Terry had not been met. App. 97a. The government argued
    that the police were justified in stopping the car because
    the driver ran a red light. In addition, the government's
    brief argued as follows:
    [G]iven that Officers Nelson and Williams were
    confronted with two black males in a black sports car
    shortly after and in the vicinity of the reported
    robberies, and that the males had attempted to flee
    upon seeing Officer Nelson's car pull behind theirs, the
    totality of the circumstances established reasonable
    suspicion to support the pat-down of the defendant
    and his waist-pack. See Chimel v. California, 
    395 U.S. 752
    , 763 (1969) (lawful arrest creates a situation which
    justifies a contemporaneous search of arrestee and
    3
    immediate area, including area from within which
    arrestee might gain possession of a weapon); Terry v.
    Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     1968 (limited pat-down of a suspect's
    exterior clothing and protective sweep of area within
    immediate control are authorized during a lawful stop).
    App. 107a-108a.
    At the hearing on the motion, counsel for Kithcart,
    counsel for the government, and the court all referred to
    the government's latter argument as concerning the
    question of "probable cause" (see e.g., App. 27a, 28a, 54a,
    58a), and at the conclusion of the hearing,2 the district
    court orally ruled that the police had "probable cause . . .
    for the stop." App. 60a. The court relied on "the direction,
    the timing, the location of the vehicle, plus the fact it [was]
    a black sports car." App. 60a. The court noted the
    discrepancy between the radioed description of the
    perpetrators as two black males and Officer Nelson's initial
    belief that there was only one black male in the car, but the
    court held that the fact that Officer Nelson had not seen
    any other black men driving cars since she received the
    initial radio transmission heightened the probability that
    the driver of the vehicle had been involved in the robberies.
    Because the court concluded that the officers had probable
    cause, the court found it unnecessary to decide whether
    the alleged running of the red light provided an
    independent basis for Officer Nelson's stop and the
    subsequent actions of the officers.
    Following this ruling, Kithcart pled guilty, subject to the
    condition that he be allowed to challenge on appeal the
    district court's denial of his motion to suppress.
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. Officer Nelson testified at the hearing. Officers Kellaher and Williams
    did not testify. Officer Nelson's account of the traffic violation was
    disputed by the defense. Co-defendant Carl Green-- the driver of the car
    and a cooperating witness against Kithcart -- told the government that
    he had not driven through a red light prior to the stop by Officer Nelson.
    The district court did not resolve this issue, relying instead on its
    finding
    that there was probable cause to arrest and search based on the radio
    transmissions.
    4
    II.
    We turn first to the ground on which we understand the
    district court to have denied Kithcart's suppression motion,
    viz., that the officers had "probable cause" to arrest
    Kithcart and to search him incident to the arrest. When a
    warrantless search is made pursuant to an arrest, "[t]he
    constitutional validity of the search . . . must depend upon
    the constitutional validity of the . . . arrest." Beck v. Ohio,
    
    379 U.S. 89
    , 91 (1964).
    Whether that [warrantless] arrest was constitutionally
    valid depends in turn upon whether, at the moment
    the arrest was made, the officers had probable cause to
    make it -- whether at that moment the facts and
    circumstances within their knowledge and of which
    they had reasonably trustworthy information were
    sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing that
    the [suspect] had committed or was committing an
    offense.
    Id. See also Barna v. City of Perth Amboy, 
    42 F.3d 809
    , 819
    (3d Cir. 1994) (test for probable cause is objective test: did
    the police officer have a reasonable basis for believing that
    the suspect had committed or was committing a crime).
    Our review of a district court's determination that there was
    probable cause to effect a warrantless search is de novo.
    Ornelas v. United States, 
    116 S. Ct. 1657
    , 1659 (1996).
    Based on the standard set by the Supreme Court in
    Beck, the district court erred in concluding that there was
    probable cause to arrest and search Kithcart prior to the
    discovery of the guns. The mere fact that Kithcart is black
    and the perpetrators had been described as two black
    males is plainly insufficient. As we have previously noted,
    a description of " `two negro males' and two `black males'
    . . . without more . . . would not have been sufficient to
    provide probable cause to arrest [the suspect]." Edwards v.
    City of Philadelphia, 
    860 F.2d 568
    , 571 n.2 (3d Cir. 1988).
    Moreover, the match between the description of the
    perpetrators' car (a black sports car, "possible Z-28,
    possible Camaro)" and the vehicle in which Kithcart was
    spotted (a black Nissan 300ZX) was far from precise.
    Although the Camaro Z-28 and the Nissan 300ZX could be
    5
    considered "sports cars," there was no evidence offered at
    the suppression hearing that the shapes of the two cars
    were sufficiently similar so as to warrant an inference that
    a 300ZX could be mistaken for a Z-28.
    Nor is probable cause established by either the location
    or time of the stop. There was no evidence presented as to
    where in Bristol Township the final robbery occurred; nor
    was there evidence presented that the Bristol robbery
    occurred shortly before Officer Nelson stopped the car
    carrying Kithcart. Although the radio transmission
    regarding the Bristol robbery came approximately 10
    minutes before the vehicle was stopped, Officer Nelson
    testified that she did not recall that the radio transmission
    revealed when the Bristol robbery occurred, other than that
    it occurred that same evening. Compare Edwards, 860 F.2d
    at 571 n.2 (although the description "two negro males" was
    insufficient by itself to provide probable cause to arrest
    suspect, other evidence closely linking suspect to scene of
    reported crime was sufficient). In sum, we think that it is
    clear that the facts and circumstances within Officer
    Nelson's knowledge at the time she stopped the Nissan were
    insufficient to allow a prudent person to believe that the car
    and its occupants had committed or were committing an
    offense. In other words, armed with information that two
    black males driving a black sports car were believed to have
    committed three robberies in the area some relatively short
    time earlier, Officer Nelson could not justifiably arrest any
    African-American man who happened to drive by in any
    type of black sports car.
    III.
    The finding of no probable cause, however, does not end
    the inquiry. In Terry v. Ohio, supra, the Supreme Court
    held that law enforcement officers may stop and
    temporarily detain persons short of arrest without violating
    the Fourth Amendment. A Terry stop is justified when an
    officer has a reasonable suspicion that "criminal activity
    may be afoot." Id. at 30. The officer's suspicion must be
    based on articulable facts and not merely the officer's
    subjective good faith. Id. at 21. An officer may also conduct
    a "reasonable search for weapons for the protection of the
    6
    police officer, where he has reason to believe that he is
    dealing with an armed and dangerous individual . . .." Id.
    at 27. The test is "whether a reasonably prudent man in
    the circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his
    safety or that of others was in danger." Id. As noted, this
    question was briefed by the parties in the district court, but
    the district court did not base its decision on this ground.
    On remand, the district court should examine whether
    Officer Nelson had a reasonable suspicion sufficient to
    warrant an investigative stop. The court should consider
    both of the government's asserted grounds for the stop: (1)
    the alleged traffic infraction and (2) the information
    regarding the armed robbery suspects discussed in Section
    II, infra. The district court should also consider whether the
    events leading to the discovery of the weapon in Kithcart's
    pouch can be justified as a Terry "pat-down" We offer no
    opinion at this juncture on any of these questions.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district
    court erred in finding that Officer Nelson had probable
    cause to arrest and search Kithcart. We therefore reverse
    the denial of the suppression motion and remand for
    further proceedings to consider whether the officers had
    reasonable suspicion for an investigative stop and weapons
    search of Kithcart's person.
    7
    McKEE, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part, and concurring
    in part.
    I agree with the majority's conclusion that the
    prosecution did not establish that Officer Nelson had
    probable cause to arrest the defendant. However, the same
    testimony that requires us to reverse the district court's
    determination that the government had probable cause also
    establishes that Officer Nelson did not have reasonable
    suspicion to stop and detain the occupants of the car.
    Therefore, I disagree with the majority's decision to remand
    this matter so that the district court can determine if the
    stop was authorized under Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968).
    It clearly was not, and I would so rule as a matter of law.
    Thus, I dissent from that portion of the opinion that allows
    reconsideration under Terry on remand.
    I.
    Terry v. Ohio created a very limited exception to the
    general warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment to
    the United States Constitution. See 392 U.S. at 21.
    Although Terry allows an investigative stop, it still requires
    reasonable suspicion before the government can justify
    even this limited intrusion. "It is well established that an
    investigatory stop short of an arrest is valid based upon a
    reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot." United
    States v. Rickus, 
    737 F.2d 360
    , 365 (3d Cir. 1994)
    "Reasonable suspicion must be based upon `specific and
    articulable facts which, taken together with rational
    inferences from those facts reasonably warrant that
    intrusion.' " Id. (quoting Terry, 392 U.S. at 21).
    This record establishes only that three armed robberies
    had occurred -- two in Bensalem Township and one in
    Bristol -- sometime during the evening of July 25, 1995,
    and that two Black males in a black sports car that was
    probably a Camero Z28 were involved. Officer Nelson did
    not know which direction nor road the car was last reported
    traveling. Although the car in which the defendant was
    riding was a black sports car, it was not a Camero Z28.
    Rather, the defendant was traveling in a Nissan Model
    300ZX. As the majority correctly notes, the record contains
    8
    no evidence that these two cars are so similar that they can
    easily be confused with each other or that Officer Nelson
    believed the Nissan to be a Camero. Officer Nelson's focus
    was not on a particular model sports car. Instead, it was on
    the color of the sports car and the race of its occupants.
    The car that Officer Nelson stopped was not only a
    different make and model than the one most likely involved
    with the armed robberies, but the number of occupants it
    contained appeared to be inconsistent with the radio
    broadcast as well. The majority points out that it was only
    after Officer Nelson initiated the stop and saw a second pair
    of hands go into the air that she realized that the car did
    in fact contain two males.1 At the suppression hearing,
    Officer Nelson was asked, "from the time you pulled directly
    behind the vehicle and the time you pulled the vehicle over,
    you thought initially that there was one black male in that
    vehicle?" She answered: "Correct." App. 47a. Therefore,
    disregarding the allegation of a traffic violation, Officer
    Nelson stopped this car solely because it was a black sports
    car driven by an African American male near Bristol
    Township shortly after she learned that two African
    American males had committed a series of armed robberies
    in that area. Based on this record, the majority correctly
    concludes that "Officer Nelson could not justifiably arrest
    any African American man who happened to drive by in any
    type of black sports car." Majority Op. at 6. However, the
    majority then allows the government an opportunity to
    establish that Officer Nelson's stop was appropriate under
    Terry v. Ohio, rather than following the obvious extension of
    its own logic. Just as this record fails to establish that
    Officer Nelson had probable cause to arrest any Black male
    who happened to drive by in a black sports car, it also fails
    to establish reasonable suspicion to justify stopping any
    and all such cars that happened to contain a Black male.
    See Terry, 392 U.S. at 30.
    The majority states "on remand the district court should
    examine whether Officer Nelson had a reasonable suspicion
    sufficient to warrant an investigative stop." Majority Op. at
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. I do not mean to suggest that Officer Nelson would have been justified
    in stopping this Nissan even if she had seen the passenger.
    9
    7. However, it is clear that she did not. "In determining
    whether a stop is justified, the court must view the
    circumstances surrounding the stop in their entirety, giving
    due weight to the experience of the officers." Rickus, 737
    F2d at 365. The district court explained the discrepancy
    between the radio broadcast of two Black males and Officer
    Nelson's observation of a different model black sports car
    containing only one Black male as follows:
    Now, the issue of one black male versus two black
    males. She testified that she had not seen cars driven
    by other black males for the time she had been looking,
    and she sees a black sports car driven by one black
    male. I do believe its still supported by probable cause
    that there is another black male in the car, or that
    perhaps they had split up or whatever.
    But even so, I think the probable cause is heightened
    by the fact that she had not seen a lot of cars driven
    by black males in this area. . . .
    App. at 60a.
    However, there is nothing on this record to suggest that
    the perpetrators "had split up" following the robbery, or
    that someone other than the driver was in the car when
    Officer Nelson stopped it. Unsupported conjecture of this
    type would allow a stop of a car containing any number of
    Black males as one could always speculate that the car
    stopped and perpetrators got in or out of the car. This
    speculation renders the radio information regarding the
    number of suspects irrelevant and allows police officers to
    stop any Black person riding in any car that is"similar" to
    one involved in a crime even where, as here, that car does
    not match the likely description that has been broadcast on
    police radio. Conclusions based upon possibilities, no
    matter how remote or speculative, are inconsistent with the
    need to justify an investigative stop with reasonable
    suspicion based upon specific and articulable facts.
    Accordingly, any attempt to justify the instant stop under
    Terry would elevate speculation and conjecture to the level
    of articulable facts.
    [T]he types of articulable facts that can provide
    reasonable suspicion cannot include `circumstances
    10
    [which] describe a very large category of presumably
    innocent travelers, who would be subject to virtually
    random seizures' were the circumstances accepted as
    reasons for the investigation.
    Karnes v. Skrutski, 
    62 F.3d 485
    , 492 (3d Cir. 1995)
    (quoting Reid v. Georgia, 
    448 U.S. 438
     (1980)). That is what
    happened here. Absent a traffic violation, Officer Nelson's
    stop is little more than a random stop of an African
    American male in a black sports car.
    II.
    Although I agree that it would normally be important to
    determine if the car that was stopped went through a red
    light, I question the propriety of allowing that inquiry in
    this case. At the beginning of the suppression hearing, an
    issue arose as to Officer Nelson's credibility. The prosecutor
    stated that he was going to call Officer Nelson, and that she
    was going to testify that the driver of the car in which
    defendant was riding disregarded a red light when she
    pulled up behind the car. The prosecutor also informed the
    district court that Carl Green, the driver of that car, had
    already entered a guilty plea in front of a different judge. As
    part of his plea agreement, Green had agreed to "cooperate,
    and provide truthful testimony" in the government's
    prosecution of Kithcart. App. at 13a. Although Green's
    testimony apparently implicated Green in the armed
    robberies, the government stipulated that if he were called
    to testify at Kithcart's suppression hearing, Green would
    testify that he did not go through the red light when Officer
    Nelson pulled up behind his car.
    Essentially the bottom line is, that Carl Green, if called
    to testify at this hearing, would say that it was his
    recollection that he did not go through a red light
    immediately prior to being stopped by Officer Nelson.
    And I discussed this matter with [defense counsel] and
    he felt that if the government would enter into a
    stipulation that it would be Mr. Green's testimony, that
    there would be no need to have Mr. Green as a witness
    in the hearing and that Police Officer Nelson's
    11
    testimony would be the only evidence the government
    would put forward.
    App. at 22a.
    However, the district court was justifiably concerned
    about making a credibility determination that required it to
    judge the live testimony of Officer Nelson against
    contradicting testimony that was to be admitted by way of
    stipulation. The court told defense counsel:
    I guess the problem I have is that you want me to
    assess credibility, and you want me to do it in a
    vacuum. In other words, assess this police officer's
    credibility compared to nothing, compared to the fact
    that Mr. Green wouldn't be testifying, but that he
    would say. And yet for the purpose of credibility, that
    makes it very difficult, are you certain this is the way
    you want me to proceed?
    App. at 25a.
    The government responded that its position was that
    Officer Nelson had reasonable suspicion when she pulled
    up behind Green's car, but that the government's argument
    was two prong. The government argued that the car was
    stopped for a traffic violation but, regardless of the alleged
    violation, Officer Nelson still had reasonable suspicion to
    stop the car based upon the radio transmissions she
    received regarding armed robberies in a neighboring
    township. App. at 26a. The prosecutor stated "even if your
    Honor were to discount . . . Officer Nelson's testimony
    [about the traffic violation] in its entirety, there was still
    reasonable suspicion" to stop the car. App. at 26a. No
    doubt out of a desire to adjudicate this case fairly and
    expeditiously, the district court agreed to hear Green's
    testimony outside the presence of the jury during the
    course of his trial testimony and to reserve any issue of
    credibility until that point. This would have allowed the
    trial to proceed while still affording both sides a fair
    opportunity to litigate the credibility issues that related to
    the suppression motion. The court then reemphasized:"I
    would be very reluctant to make a decision without hearing
    from [Green]." The trial judge told the prosecutor, "I believe
    the ball is in your court." App. at 29a. Almost immediately
    12
    thereafter, the government called Officer Nelson to testify
    about the circumstances leading up to the arrest of the
    defendant. However, at the conclusion of Officer Nelson's
    testimony the district court upheld the arrest based upon
    its belief that Officer Nelson's testimony established
    probable cause regardless of any traffic violation, and the
    defendant entered his conditional guilty plea immediately
    thereafter. Accordingly, the matter never proceeded to trial,
    and the district court never had an opportunity to hear
    Green's testimony and make a finding of fact about the
    alleged traffic violation.
    Officer Nelson would clearly have been justified in
    stopping Green's car to enforce the traffic laws if Green
    drove through a red light. See United States v. Moorefield,
    
    111 F.3d 10
    , 12 (3d. Cir. 1997) ("It is well-established that
    a traffic stop is lawful under the Fourth Amendment where
    a police officer observes a violation of the sate traffic
    regulations."). The police would also have been justified in
    ordering Green and Kithcart out of the car if that is what
    happened. See Pennsylvania v. Mimms, 
    434 U.S. 106
    , 111
    (1977) (concluding that ordering a driver out of the car after
    a traffic violation is a justifiable, de minimis intrusion).
    However, the record does not allow a court to determine
    what happened after the car was stopped. The prosecutor
    apparently thought that the gun that was seized from
    Kithcart would automatically be admitted if he established
    the legality of the initial stop. However, the traffic violation
    would not necessarily allow the prosecution to admit the
    gun into evidence merely because it justified the traffic
    stop. This record is devoid of evidence to support a
    conclusion that any search of Kithcart's person after the
    stop was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
    The prosecution informed the district court that the only
    evidence it planned to present during the suppression
    hearing was Officer Nelson's testimony. The following
    exchange occurred during that testimony:
    Q. Did any officer recover a gun from the defendant,
    Jesse Kithcart?
    A. Yes.
    Q. Who was that?
    13
    A. That was Officer Bill Williams.
    * * *
    Q. I was given [by Officer Williams] a 32 revolver and
    I was given a white nylon pouch.
    Q. Have you spoken to Officer Williams about where
    they recovered the gun from Mr. Kithcart?
    A. Yes.
    Q. What did Officer Williams say?
    A. Officer Williams stated to me that the gun was
    recovered from the nylon pouch.
    Q. And where was the nylon pouch?
    A. It was on Mr. Kithcart's waist.
    App. at 40a-41a. The prosecution never planned to call
    Officer Williams, or any other witness, (other than Carl
    Green) and there is nothing to suggest that additional
    testimony was unavailable. Officer Nelson neither searched
    the car nor the seized weapon in question. She may have
    seen other officers conduct the search and/or seize the
    gun, but that was not her testimony. There is nothing on
    this record to inform the suppression court whether
    Kithcart's gun was discovered during a pat down search or
    whether it was in plain view - though inside the pouch. The
    fact finder must guess about how the gun was seized and
    any basis for the reasonable suspicion that may have been
    necessary to justify the seizure.2
    I appreciate that any police officer approaching this car
    would be apprehensive. That is true whether or not the
    driver had gone through a red light. Indeed, the normal
    experience of a police officer would dictate caution in
    approaching any stopped car whether or not the officer
    believed the car to contain armed suspects. "The Supreme
    Court has repeatedly recognized that traffic stops are
    dangerous encounters that result in assaults and murders
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. There were several police officers on the scene, and it is unclear
    whether Officer Williams seized the gun from Kithcart, or if he merely
    received it from another officer and gave it to Officer Nelson.
    14
    of police officers." Moorefield. 111 F.3d at 13. (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted). However, although
    the exigencies and dangers that are endemic to any such
    confrontation are part of the analysis of whether the
    resulting intrusion is "reasonable" under the Fourth
    Amendment, they do not remove all of the protection
    afforded under it. Accordingly, a police officer can conduct
    a pat down search of the occupants of a stopped car"where
    the officer is `able to point to specific and articulable facts
    which, taken together with rational inferences from those
    facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion.' " Id. (quoting
    Terry, 392 U.S. at 27). The reasonable inferences that arise
    from the circumstances of a traffic stop are such that it
    does not require a "leap of faith" to conclude that the
    instant seizure was justified if there was a traffic violation.
    However, the interests protected by the Fourth Amendment
    are too important to allow Officer Nelson's testimony to
    bridge the void in this record. The prosecutor here made no
    effort to have an appropriate witness articulate the
    circumstances surrounding the seizure of the gun.
    Accordingly, I am reluctant to assume that the government
    should now be allowed to produce a witness on remand
    that it should have, and could have, called during the
    initial suppression hearing.
    I would leave it to the trial court's discretion to decide
    whether the prosecutor should be allowed to produce the
    testimony that I think is needed to bridge the interstices in
    this transcript. That court will be in the best position to
    determine whether or not the government should be
    allowed a second the bite of the Terry apple by producing
    testimony beyond that which is necessary to rule upon the
    issue of the alleged traffic violation. If there was no traffic
    violation, Officer Nelson was not justified in stopping the
    car in which Kithcart was riding. If the suppression court
    concludes that there was a traffic violation, then it should
    determine the propriety of allowing testimony regarding the
    circumstances of the seizure after considering any
    explanation as to why that testimony was not produced
    initially.
    I do not think it is asking too much to expect attorneys
    to attempt to meet their burdens of proof when issues are
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    first litigated. A court should not have to connect the dots
    of inferences scattered as far apart as the ones on this
    record to construct a picture of what occurred during the
    stop. Accordingly, although I join the majority opinion
    insofar as it reverses the order of the district court, I must,
    however, respectfully dissent from the remainder of my
    colleagues' opinion.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
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