United States v. Alethea Evans ( 2009 )


Menu:
  •                           RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 09a0341p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    Plaintiff-Appellee, -
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    -
    -
    -
    No. 07-2565
    v.
    ,
    >
    -
    Defendant-Appellant. -
    ALETHEA EVANS,
    -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
    No. 07-50210—Avern Cohn, District Judge.
    Argued: June 12, 2009
    Decided and Filed: September 22, 2009
    *
    Before: SUTTON and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges; LIOI, District Judge.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Todd Shanker, FEDERAL DEFENDER OFFICE, Detroit, Michigan, for
    Appellant. Kathleen Moro Nesi, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES ATTORNEY,
    Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Todd Shanker, FEDERAL DEFENDER
    OFFICE, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellant. Kathleen Moro Nesi, ASSISTANT UNITED
    STATES ATTORNEY, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge. Defendant Alethea Evans appeals the district court’s
    order affirming her conviction for threatening to assault a federal law enforcement
    officer in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 115(a)(1)(B). Evans claims that the Federal Protective
    Service (“FPS”) officers who conducted an investigative stop of her vehicle violated her
    *
    The Honorable Sara Lioi, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Ohio, sitting
    by designation.
    1
    No. 07-2565        United States v. Alethea Evans                                  Page 2
    Fourth Amendment rights by exceeding their jurisdictional authority under 40 U.S.C.
    § 1315. We disagree and affirm. In doing so, we hold that the FPS officers reasonably
    exercised their investigative and protective authority pursuant to § 1315 when they left
    federal property to surveil Evans’s vehicle. We further hold that Evans’s conduct,
    specifically, her tailgating of the FPS officers’ marked police vehicle and her visible
    hand gestures, which simulated the firing of a gun, provided the FPS officers with
    probable cause to arrest her, regardless of her presence on non-federal property.
    I.
    The evidence adduced at trial established the following: On February 13, 2006,
    Veronica Cartwright and Qualette Pasha were in the Detroit Social Security
    Administration (“SSA”) building. Dennis Cleveland, a security guard, observed Pasha
    using her cell phone in the SSA lobby. Cleveland asked her to end her call because
    cellular phone use is prohibited in the SSA building. He “waited a few minutes” and
    observed Pasha still using her cell phone. He approached her a second time and asked
    her to hang up. However, instead of ending her call, she activated the cell’s speaker
    phone and continued to talk, which “every[one] heard.” Cleveland left the lobby and
    contacted Federal Protective Services for assistance. When Cleveland returned to the
    lobby, Pasha “had got into it with somebody else . . . .”
    FPS Officers Kerwin Smith and Warren King received a radio dispatch reporting
    a “disturbance” at the SSA office. When they arrived, Cleveland pointed out Pasha and
    Cartwright to Officer Smith. Officers Smith and King escorted the women outside and
    asked them to leave the property. Officer Smith characterized Pasha’s and Cartwright’s
    behavior as “very disorderly” and testified that when the women were outside the
    building, “[t]hey continued to talk on the telephone, telling people to come up to the
    Social Security office. They were . . . still being loud and belligerent, and they were []
    cussing . . . .”
    Cleveland testified that when he stepped outside to check on the situation, he
    observed one of the women “with the cell phone [] turned [on to] speaker . . . playing
    music – and [she] was just dancing in front of the two federal police officers.” Officer
    No. 07-2565         United States v. Alethea Evans                                    Page 3
    Smith did not take any official action at that time, however, because “they were young
    girls” and he “figured that they were just trying to show off[,] ” deciding that “it wasn’t
    worth sending them through the problems of coming to court [and] paying [] serious
    fines.” Officer Smith knew that “someone was coming to [pick them up],” and he and
    King waited with the women “[t]o ensure that they did get off the property and that they
    didn’t cause any more problems inside of the building.”
    A short time later, defendant Alethea Evans arrived at the scene in “an older
    model [] burgundy Lincoln” automobile to transport Pasha and Cartwright. As Evans
    pulled up to the SSA building, she caused another vehicle “to stop and pull over to avoid
    being hit.” She made “a U-turn” and pulled her car into the SSA parking lot, “blocking
    the driveway of the [SSA] office.” Instead of leaving the property, Evans exited the
    vehicle and walked into the SSA office while Pasha and Cartwright waited in her car.
    According to Officer Smith’s testimony, Evans was acting “belligerent” and
    making hostile comments regarding whoever instructed Pasha to stop using her cell
    phone. Neither Smith nor King spoke directly with Evans, but Smith testified that he
    overheard her make vociferous statements, such as “I’m going to find out who . . . told
    you you couldn’t stand here,” and “[l]et me see who it is that’s telling you that you can’t
    come into the Social Security office and talk on the phone.” Officer Smith stated that
    her comments were disconcerting because he “took it as somewhat of a – a threat on the
    person or the security guard who was sitting inside the – the office, that maybe at a later
    date, that this person may come back to – to cause some kind of harm or disturbance[,]”
    and that he believed that “[s]he made some type of indication that, you know, she was
    going to return . . . to find out who this was that told . . . the other two girls [that they]
    could not use the telephone.” Evans stayed inside the SSA office for “a minute to two
    minutes” and then returned to her car. Cleveland testified that while inside the SSA
    office, Evans requested “a printout of her social security number.”
    A few minutes later, Evans left the SSA building and drove away. Smith
    recorded Evans’s license plate number “[f]or further investigation . . . in case there was
    something that should happen, again, to either the guard or to the property of the Social
    No. 07-2565           United States v. Alethea Evans                                           Page 4
    Security Office.” Officer King also provided Evans’s license plate number to his
    dispatcher, testifying that it was standard procedure to “run” an individual’s license plate
    number while investigating an incident.
    Officers Smith and King decided to follow Evans’s car “to keep an eye on [it]
    until [they] received some type of response from [] dispatch.” After leaving SSA
    property, they watched her vehicle for one-half mile until they received a negative report
    from their dispatcher. At that point, they traveled past Evans’s vehicle, “made a right
    [turn onto] Curtis [Street],” and basically considered the incident “over.”
    However, “[a]pproximately four to five blocks from the SSA office,” Evans
    maneuvered her car behind the officers’ FPS vehicle and began “tailgating” their marked
    police car. According to Officer Smith’s and King’s testimony, the women inside the
    car were reaching underneath their seats and making visible hand gestures in the
    direction of the FPS vehicle, their thumbs and index fingers raised, “as if they were
    pointing a gun.” Smith testified “[t]o me, it looked like – as if they were indicating that
    they had a weapon.” King offered similar testimony, stating that as he “looked out the
    back window . . . [and] noticed that both of them were sitting there showing a gun
    motion . . . as if they had guns . . . hey – to me, [] this is a threat . . . [t]hey were right on
    our bumper.”
    Officer Smith activated the patrol car’s emergency lights and stopped Evans’s
    vehicle. When Smith and King approached Evans, she made various obscene remarks
    and refused to lower her car window or produce her driver’s license or registration.1 She
    informed Smith and King that she would not comply with their instructions because they
    were not “real” police officers, despite their full-dress uniform, FPS vehicle (which
    displayed the word “police” in six different locations), and badges.
    Officer King radioed the City of Detroit Police Department for assistance.
    Several Detroit police officers arrived at the scene and informed Evans that Smith and
    1
    According to Officer Smith’s testimony, Evans’s stated “f--k you. You ain’t nobody. You ain’t
    sh-t. Get the f--k out of here[.]” In addition, Evans informed the officers that she was going to “call
    Kwame’s office[.]” At the time of the incident, Kwame Kilpatrick was the Mayor of the City of Detroit.
    No. 07-2565              United States v. Alethea Evans                                              Page 5
    King were federal law enforcement officers. At that point, Evans provided Officer
    Smith with her driver’s license and vehicle registration. With this information in-hand,
    Officer Smith contacted dispatch, who ran Evans’s information through the Law
    Enforcement Information Network (“LEIN”). The dispatcher reported to Officer Smith
    that there was an outstanding warrant for Evans’s arrest issued by the City of Detroit.2
    The FPS officers took Evans into custody. While Smith and King were
    transporting Evans to the McNamara Federal Building “for processing,” they received
    an additional report from their dispatcher concerning an unserved personal protection
    order against an individual with the same name as defendant. According to Smith, at
    some point during the transfer, he “asked [Evans] [if] she kn[ew] that she had a . . .
    personal protection order issued against her.” Officer Smith testified that when he asked
    Evans this question, he was attempting to ascertain whether she was the same person
    named in the order. Evans responded “Yeah, that’s me. That’s the same bitch-ass
    mother-f--ker who – who tried to lock me up the last time, and I was going – I was going
    to kill his ass just like I’m going to do to you and your mama” (hereinafter referred to
    as the “verbal threat”). According to Smith, Evans’s response “indicated . . . that [the
    personal protection order] was [obtained by] a police officer who had [previously]
    arrested her.” According to Smith’s police report, he then asked Evans “[are you]
    threatening me,” and Evans responded “‘you’ll see.’”3 Shortly thereafter, Officers Smith
    and King arrived at the federal building, processed Evans, and turned her over to the
    Detroit police.
    2
    It was later determined (one week before trial) that the outstanding warrant was a state
    misdemeanor warrant for assault and battery and malicious destruction of property under $200. Officer
    Smith testified that when he received a positive LEIN check, he was trained to “. . . arrest that person, and
    if it [is] our warrant, I would process them; if it [is] another agency’s warrant, we would detain that person
    and take them into our custody until they came and took them and processed them themselves.”
    3
    The second half of their exchange was not developed at trial.
    No. 07-2565            United States v. Alethea Evans                                               Page 6
    II.
    As a result of the SSA incident, Evans was charged with two federal violations:
    “failure to comply with directions of a police officer,” pursuant to 41 C.F.R.
    § 102-74.390, and threatening to assault a federal law enforcement officer, under
    18 U.S.C. § 115(a)(1)(B).             She entered a plea of not guilty at her subsequent
    arraignment.
    Evans filed several pretrial motions, arguing that Smith and King lacked
    jurisdiction to conduct an investigative stop of her vehicle on non-federal property. The
    magistrate judge conducted a one-day bench trial on October 30, 2006, reserving her
    rulings on the pretrial motions until the close of evidence. At the conclusion of the trial,
    the magistrate judge denied Evans’s motions to dismiss the indictment and to suppress
    evidence, convicted her of threatening to assault a federal law enforcement officer in
    violation of 18 U.S.C. § 115(a)(1)(B), but acquitted her for failing to comply with the
    directions of a federal law enforcement officer under 41 C.F.R. § 102-74.390, noting that
    “the C.F.R.” ticket “[was] limited to federal property.” Evans appealed the judgment to
    the district court.
    The district court affirmed. In so ruling, the district court ruled that the officers
    were conducting an investigation that began on federal property, which was “‘necessary
    to protect the property and persons on the property.’”4 The district court further held
    that Evans’s actions before her arrest, specifically, “‘tailgating’ the police car and
    making hand gestures that suggested pointing a gun at the officers, [was] sufficient to
    4
    The district court noted in its opinion that it would “rely” on the evidentiary record developed
    by the magistrate judge because it was not required to conduct a new trial or evidentiary hearing, citing
    United States v. Raddatz, 
    447 U.S. 667
    , 673-76 (1980). According to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure
    58(g)(2)(D), the district court judge is required to apply the same standard of review to the magistrate
    judge’s decision as this court would apply to a decision that originated from a district court judge. “The
    defendant is not entitled to a trial de novo by a district judge. The scope of the appeal is the same as in
    an appeal to the court of appeals from a judgment entered by a district judge.” Fed. R. Crim. P.
    58(g)(2)(D). Thus, the district court properly reviewed the magistrate judge’s legal determinations de novo
    and her factual findings for clear error. See United States v. Ali, 
    557 F.3d 715
    , 720 (6th Cir. 2009) (“we
    review de novo the district court’s denial of [a] motion to dismiss the indictment”); United States v. Blair,
    
    524 F.3d 740
    , 747 (6th Cir. 2008) (when reviewing the district court’s decision regarding a motion to
    suppress, we review its factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo).
    No. 07-2565            United States v. Alethea Evans                                                 Page 7
    sustain her conviction under § 115(a)(1)(B).” United States v. Evans, No. 07-50210,
    
    2007 WL 4456327
    at *3 (E.D. Mich. Dec. 14, 2007) (unpublished).5
    Evans timely appeals.
    III.
    Evans asserts three arguments on appeal: (1) the FPS officers were not acting
    within the scope of their jurisdictional authority under 40 U.S.C. § 1315 when they
    surveilled and seized Evans on non-federal property; (2) the FPS officers exceeded their
    jurisdictional authority under 40 U.S.C. § 1315 when they arrested Evans pursuant to a
    state misdemeanor warrant; and (3) the district court erred when it affirmed the
    magistrate judge’s denial of Evans’s motion to suppress her “verbal threat.”
    We address each argument in turn.
    A.
    Section 1315, Chapter 40 of the Unites States Code enumerates the duties and
    powers of Federal Protective Service officers:
    (a) In general. To the extent provided for by transfers made pursuant to
    the Homeland Security Act of 2002, the Secretary of Homeland Security
    (in this section referred to as the “Secretary”) shall protect the buildings,
    grounds, and property that are owned, occupied, or secured by the
    Federal Government (including any agency, instrumentality, or wholly
    owned or mixed-ownership corporation thereof) and the persons on the
    property.
    5
    Evans challenged the legal sufficiency of the 18 U.S.C. § 115 violation insofar as § 115(a)(1)(B)
    requires the government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant made the threat for the
    specific purpose of interfering with the performance of official duties or of retaliating for the performance
    of such duties. See United States v. Veach, 
    455 F.3d 628
    , 633 (6th Cir. 2006). As the district court noted
    in its opinion:
    On appeal, Evans does not dispute that she threatened a Federal law enforcement
    officer. However, she says that the FPS officers exceeded the statutory authority
    conferred on them by 40 U.S.C. § 1315(b) when they conducted an investigative stop
    of her vehicle and arrested her on an outstanding state court warrant. Evans goes on to
    argue that, as a consequence, the officers were not engaged in “official duties” under 18
    U.S.C. § 115(a)(1) and that the indictment against her for violation of § 115(a)(1) should
    be dismissed.
    (Footnote omitted.) Evans does not challenge this ruling on appeal.
    No. 07-2565         United States v. Alethea Evans                         Page 8
    (b) Officers and agents.
    (1) Designation. The Secretary may designate employees
    of the Department of Homeland Security, including
    employees transferred to the Department from the Office
    of the Federal Protective Service of the General Services
    Administration pursuant to the Homeland Security Act of
    2002, as officers and agents for duty in connection with
    the protection of property owned or occupied by the
    Federal Government and persons on the property,
    including duty in areas outside the property to the extent
    necessary to protect the property and persons on the
    property.
    (2) Powers. While engaged in the performance of official
    duties, an officer or agent designated under this
    subsection may –
    (A) enforce Federal laws and regulations
    for the protection of persons and property;
    (B) carry firearms;
    (C) make arrests without a warrant for any
    offense against the United States
    committed in the presence of the officer
    or agent or for any felony cognizable
    under the laws of the United States if the
    officer or agent has reasonable grounds to
    believe that the person to be arrested has
    committed or is committing a felony;
    (D) serve warrants and subpoenas issued
    under the authority of the United States;
    (E) conduct investigations, on and off the
    property in question, of offenses that may
    have been committed against property
    owned or occupied by the Federal
    Government or persons on the property;
    and
    (F) carry out such other activities for the
    promotion of homeland security as the
    Secretary may prescribe.
    40 U.S.C. § 1315.
    No. 07-2565         United States v. Alethea Evans                                    Page 9
    Section 115(a)(1)(B), Chapter 18 of the Unites States Code provides, in pertinent
    part:
    (a)(1) Whoever –
    (B) threatens to assault, kidnap, or murder, a United States official, a
    United States judge, a Federal law enforcement officer, or an official
    whose killing would be a crime under such section,
    with intent to impede, intimidate, or interfere with such official, judge,
    or law enforcement officer while engaged in the performance of official
    duties, or with intent to retaliate against such official, judge, or law
    enforcement officer on account of the performance of official duties,
    shall be punished . . .
    18 U.S.C. § 115(a)(1)(B).
    B.
    Whether a seizure is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment is a question of
    law that we review de novo. United States v. Jones, 
    562 F.3d 768
    , 772 (6th Cir. 2009).
    When reviewing the district court’s decision regarding a motion to suppress, we review
    its factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo. United States v.
    Blair, 
    524 F.3d 740
    , 747 (6th Cir. 2008). We are required to view the evidence in the
    light most likely to support the decision of the district court. United States v. Alexander,
    
    540 F.3d 494
    , 500 (6th Cir. 2008).
    Evans argues that the FPS officers’ alleged lack of “jurisdiction” violated the
    Fourth Amendment’s guarantee that government officials may not subject citizens to
    searches or seizures without proper authorization. More specifically, she argues that
    “[t]he concept of reasonableness embodied in the Fourth Amendment logically
    presupposes an exercise of lawful authority by a police officer[,]” United States v.
    Foster, 
    566 F. Supp. 1403
    , 1412 (D.C. D.C. 1983), and that when “a law enforcement
    official acts beyond his or her jurisdiction, the resulting deprivation of liberty is just as
    unreasonable as an arrest without probable cause.” 
    Id. While we
    agree that our inquiry is governed by the Fourth Amendment, Evans’s
    argument regarding the presumptive unreasonableness of a seizure without proper
    No. 07-2565        United States v. Alethea Evans                                 Page 10
    jurisdiction is too broad. Indeed, “an officer can act incorrectly with regard to his
    jurisdiction just as he can act incorrectly with regard to any other factor involved in the
    exercise of his authority.” Pasiewicz v. Lake County Forest Preserve Dist., 
    270 F.3d 520
    , 527 (7th Cir. 2001). We need not decide this issue, however, because we conclude
    that Officers Smith and King reasonably exercised their investigative and protective
    authority pursuant to 40 U.S.C. § 1315 when they left federal property to surveil Evans’s
    vehicle.
    In affirming the magistrate judge’s rulings, the district court ruled:
    40 U.S.C. § 1315(b)(1) charges FPS officers with “protection of property
    owned or occupied by the Federal Government and persons on the
    property, including duty in areas outside the property to the extent
    necessary to protect the property and persons on the property.”
    Subsection 1315(b)(2) provides that:
    [w]hile engaged in the performance of official duties, an
    officer or agent designated under this subsection may . . .
    enforce Federal laws and regulations for the protection of
    persons and property . . . make arrests without a warrant
    for any offense against the United States committed in the
    presence of the officer or agent . . . [and] conduct
    investigations, on and off the property in question, of
    offenses that may have been committed against property
    owned or occupied by the Federal Government or persons
    on the property.
    The statute thus expressly empowers FPS officers to conduct
    investigations and make arrests outside of federal property when
    “necessary to protect the property and persons on the property.”
    Here, the record indicates Smith observed the initial disturbance at the
    SSA office and Evans’ hostile comments when she arrived on the scene.
    He interpreted Evans’ conduct “as somewhat of a–a threat on the person
    or the security guard who was sitting inside the–the office, that maybe at
    a later date, that this person may come back to–to cause some kind of
    harm or disturbance.” Smith therefore determined to monitor Evans,
    Cartwright, and Pasha in an effort to avoid any further disruption at the
    SSA office. In short order, Evans purposefully began to harass the
    officers by “tailgating” their patrol car, making threatening gestures, and
    refusing to cooperate after the officers initiated an investigative stop.
    In monitoring what they reasonably believed to be an ongoing threat to
    the orderly functioning of the SSA office, the FPS officers were
    No. 07-2565         United States v. Alethea Evans                                   Page 11
    operating within the protective and investigative roles prescribed by the
    statute.
    We agree. Although the FPS officers did not speak directly with Evans, Officer
    Smith testified that he heard her make vociferous statements expressing her desire to
    locate the person who told Pasha that she couldn’t use her cell phone. Officer Smith
    testified that her comments were disconcerting because he “took it as somewhat of a []
    threat on the . . . security guard who was sitting inside the [] office, that maybe at a later
    date, that [she] may come back to . . . cause some kind of harm or disturbance.”
    Under 40 U.S.C. § 1315(b)(1), Officers Smith and King are authorized to protect
    persons on property owned or occupied by the Federal Government, “including . . . areas
    outside the property to the extent necessary to protect the property and persons on the
    property.” Moreover, section 1315(b)(2)(E) empowers FPS officers to “conduct
    investigations, on and off the property in question, of offenses that may have been
    committed against property owned or occupied by the Federal Government or persons
    on the property.” 40 U.S.C. § 1315(b)(2)(E). Officer Smith testified that he decided to
    surveil Evans’s vehicle “to keep an eye on [it] until [they] received some type of
    response from [] dispatch” because he suspected that she might return.
    The FPS officers followed Evans for “maybe half a mile,” until they received a
    negative report from dispatch. Once they received the report, they “traveled past the
    vehicle,” and considered the incident “over.”            Their decision to abandon the
    investigation once they received the negative report supports the magistrate judge’s and
    district court’s rulings that the officers were reasonably exercising their investigative and
    protective authority under § 1315. In addition, and for the same reasons, we conclude
    that Officers Smith and King were performing “official duties” under § 1315(b)(1) and
    § 1315(b)(2)(e) when Evans began to tailgate the FPS officers’ police vehicle.
    No. 07-2565         United States v. Alethea Evans                                      Page 12
    C.
    Next, Evans asserts that the FPS officers exceeded their jurisdictional authority
    under 40 U.S.C. § 1315 when they stopped her vehicle on non-federal property and
    arrested her pursuant to a state misdemeanor warrant. Again, we disagree.
    FPS officers have the authority, “[w]hile engaged in the performance of official
    duties” to “make arrests without a warrant for any offense against the United States
    committed in the presence of the officer or agent . . .” 40 U.S.C. § 1315(b)(2)(C).
    According to both Smith’s and King’s testimony, the women in the vehicle reached
    underneath their seats and made handgun gestures in the direction of the police car, their
    thumbs and index fingers raised, “as if they were pointing a gun.” Smith testified that
    “[t]o me, it looked like – as if they were indicating that they had a weapon.” King
    offered similar testimony, stating that as he “looked out the back window . . . [and]
    noticed that both of them were sitting there showing a gun motion . . . . as if they had
    guns . . . hey – to me, [] this is a threat . . . . [t]hey were right on our bumper.”
    Thus, not only did FPS Officers Smith and King have authority to conduct an
    investigative stop of Evans’s vehicle, they had probable cause to arrest her for
    threatening to assault a federal law enforcement officer in violation of 18 U.S.C.
    § 115(a)(1)(B). “If an officer has probable cause to believe that an individual has
    committed even a very minor criminal offense in his presence, he may, without violating
    the Fourth Amendment, arrest the offender.” Atwater v. City of Lago Vista, 
    532 U.S. 318
    , 354 (2001). Probable cause requires officers to “show more than mere suspicion”
    but “does not require that they possess evidence sufficient to establish a prima facie case
    at trial, much less evidence to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States
    v. Strickland, 
    144 F.3d 412
    , 416 (6th Cir. 1998).
    The magistrate judge applied this reasoning in her ruling:
    It makes no difference whether or not [the threat] occurs on federal
    property. It’s the threat against the federal law enforcement officer. The
    [] statute requires that:
    No. 07-2565           United States v. Alethea Evans                                          Page 13
    whoever with intent to impede, intimidate, or interfere
    with such official law enforcement officer while engaged
    in the performance of official duties or with intent to
    retaliate against such official law enforcement officer on
    account of the performance of official duties, shall be
    punished.
    There is no question based on this testimony here that the defendant did
    commit such an act. All of her efforts in driving up on the bumper of the
    marked police vehicle with uniformed police officers inside was directed
    to impede, intimidate, interfere, or retaliate on account of the
    performance of their official duties. There is no mistaking that they were
    federal police officers, and I think that had the circumstances been the
    way they were, she arguably could have been charged under state law
    with assault with a deadly weapon, using the vehicle as a weapon. She
    was not, and I believe that the Federal Protective Services officers tried
    to extend her every courtesy in this regard by issuing only the violation
    notices.
    The gesture of reaching under the seat by herself and the passenger and
    then coming up with gestures indicating guns is clearly a threat on the
    officers for the action that they had undertaken in asking her and her
    friends to leave the Social Security office.
    Specifically, the “facts and circumstances within [Smith’s and King’s]
    knowledge . . . were sufficient to warrant a prudent” person to conclude that Evans was
    committing an offense against the United States. Beck v. Ohio, 
    379 U.S. 89
    , 91 (1964).
    Section 115(a)(1)(B) prohibits any person from threatening to assault a federal law
    enforcement officer with intent to interfere or retaliate against that officer “on account
    of the performance of [his] official duties.” 18 U.S.C. § 115(a)(1)(B). As the district
    court and magistrate judge recognized, Evans’s conduct, her tailgating of the FPS
    officers’ marked police vehicle, and her visible hand gestures, which simulated the firing
    of a gun, provided the FPS officers with probable cause to arrest her, regardless of her
    presence on non-federal property.6
    In addition, it is irrelevant that Officers Smith and King arrested Evans on the
    basis of the state misdemeanor warrant:
    6
    In addition, Evans’s motion to suppress her “verbal threat” against Officer Smith is arguably
    futile given this demonstrable conduct. Specifically, Evans’s arguments on appeal presuppose that her
    verbal threat was the only evidence sufficient to obtain her conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 115(a)(1)(B).
    No. 07-2565        United States v. Alethea Evans                                 Page 14
    That is to say, [Smith’s] subjective reason for making the arrest need not
    be the criminal offense as to which the known facts provide probable
    cause. As we have repeatedly explained, “the fact that the officer does
    not have the state of mind which is hypothecated by the reasons which
    provide the legal justification for the officer’s action does not invalidate
    the action taken as long as the circumstances, viewed objectively, justify
    that action.”
    Devenpeck v. Alford, 
    543 U.S. 146
    , 153 (2004) (citing Whren v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 806
    , 813 (1996)). Thus, the FPS officers acted reasonably and within their authority
    when they stopped Evans’s vehicle and subsequently arrested her.
    D.
    Finally, Evans argues that the district court erred in affirming the magistrate
    judge’s denial of her motion to suppress the “verbal threat” against Officer Smith. As
    previously noted, even if the magistrate judge had suppressed this statement, Evans’s
    non-verbal conduct provided the magistrate judge with sufficient evidence to convict her
    of violating 18 U.S.C. § 115(a)(1)(B). Nonetheless, we hold that Evans’s response to
    Officer Smith’s question, specifically, “[y]eah, that’s me. That’s the same bitch-ass
    mother-f--ker who – who tried to lock me up the last time, and I was going – I was going
    to kill his ass just like I’m going to do to you and your mama” was spontaneously
    volunteered and unresponsive to his question.
    Miranda forbids the prosecution from using statements made by a defendant
    during a custodial interrogation unless the defendant had first been advised of her
    constitutional rights. Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 478-79 (1966). Evans claims
    that Officer Smith was interrogating her when he asked her about the personal protection
    order. “[T]he term ‘interrogation’ under Miranda refers not only to express questioning,
    but also to any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally
    attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to
    elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.” Rhode Island v. Innis, 
    446 U.S. 291
    ,
    301 (1980) (footnotes omitted). The parties agree that Evans was in custody when she
    made the statement.
    No. 07-2565        United States v. Alethea Evans                                Page 15
    According to Officer Smith’s testimony, he asked Evans if she was “the person
    who had a personal protection order issued against her.” Thus, he was attempting to
    ascertain whether she was the same individual named in the protection order. In
    addition, the substance of his question concerned a purely civil matter. Evans’s response
    was neither expected nor compelled by Officer Smith’s question. On the contrary, it was
    spontaneously volunteered in a deliberate attempt to threaten him – a new and distinct
    crime. In this regard, no individual has a constitutional right to be warned of his rights
    before he commits a crime. United States v. Castro, 
    723 F.2d 1527
    (11th Cir. 1984).
    Thus, the district court properly affirmed the magistrate judge’s ruling denying the
    motion to suppress.
    IV.
    For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.