United States v. Acie Evans , 781 F.3d 433 ( 2015 )


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  •                   United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 14-1669
    ___________________________
    United States of America
    lllllllllllllllllllll Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    Acie A. Evans
    lllllllllllllllllllll Defendant - Appellant
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Western District of Missouri - Kansas City
    ____________
    Submitted: November 14, 2014
    Filed: March 23, 2015
    ____________
    Before BYE, SHEPHERD, and KELLY, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    SHEPHERD, Circuit Judge.
    Acie Evans entered a conditional guilty plea to being a felon in possession of
    a firearm in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1) and was sentenced to 180 months
    imprisonment. Evans now appeals the district court’s1 denial of his motion to
    1
    The Honorable Dean Whipple, United States District Judge for the Western
    District of Missouri, adopting the report and recommendations of the Honorable
    Robert E. Larsen, United States Magistrate Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
    suppress. In particular, Evans argues that the court erred in denying his motion to
    suppress a firearm recovered during an inventory search of his vehicle and later
    incriminating statements because police officers unlawfully towed his vehicle and
    conducted the inventory search with an investigatory motive. We affirm.
    I.
    On the morning of September 4, 2012, Kansas City, Missouri police officers
    responded to a call of a rape in progress at a residence. After arriving and beginning
    an investigation, one officer observed a tan four-door car leave an apartment complex
    roughly 1,000 feet away from the residence. The car stopped at a stop sign about half
    a block from the residence and remained idle for 30 to 45 seconds, even though no
    other traffic was at the intersection. Meanwhile, crime scene investigators at the scene
    recovered a Missouri identification card on the ground by the window that the
    assailant had broken into to gain access to the residence. The identification card bore
    the name Acie Evans and contained a photograph of an African-American male.
    Officers then observed the same tan four-door car drive by the crime scene, traveling
    at a speed of less than five miles per hour. One officer identified the driver as the
    same man whose photograph appeared on the identification card. The officer
    memorized the license plate number, and another officer ran the plate through the
    department’s system, revealing the car was registered to a Bobby Evans. Because the
    last name on the registration matched the photograph on the identification card and
    the officer identified the driver as the man pictured on the identification card, officers
    decided to follow the car into the nearby apartment complex.
    Arriving at the complex, the officers observed the car parked in front of one of
    the apartment buildings. The officers believed the driver had gone into that building,
    and went to speak with the apartment manager to determine if anyone named Evans
    was leasing a unit. The apartment manager indicated that no one by the name of
    Evans had leased any units but that an Acie Evans was listed as an emergency contact
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    for one of the lessees. The apartment manager also remembered having shown an
    apartment to a man by the name Acie Evans before leasing it to its current occupant.
    While one officer spoke with the apartment manager, another entered the four-unit
    apartment building officers believed the driver had entered. Noticing that the door to
    one unit was partially open, the officer knocked on the door, and a man resembling
    the driver answered the door. The officer asked if he had any identification, and
    accompanied the man to his bedroom where he produced a Kansas identification card
    identifying him as Acie Evans. The officer conducted a computer check for
    outstanding warrants and discovered that Evans’s license had been suspended. He
    then arrested Evans for driving without a license.
    The officer informed other officers at the scene that he had arrested Evans and
    asked what should be done with Evans’s vehicle. By this time, news crews were
    arriving at the location and the apartment manager wanted them to leave the private
    property. Officers informed the apartment manager that they believed they had a
    suspect in custody for the nearby rape and that Evans told the officers he resided in
    the unit, but the mother of his child had rented that apartment for him because an
    involuntary manslaughter conviction would have prevented him from renting the
    apartment on his own. The apartment manager informed the officers that she wanted
    both Evans and his vehicle removed from the property.
    The officers decided to tow Evans’s vehicle because of the apartment manager’s
    request and the fact that Evans was under arrest and no other responsible party was
    on the scene to take custody of the vehicle. Although officers never asked Evans if
    there was someone else to take the vehicle, he offered that the mother of his child
    would be arriving within five to ten minutes. Five to ten minutes had already elapsed,
    and the officers decided they could wait no longer for someone to arrive to take the
    vehicle. Pursuant to the Kansas City Police Department Towing Policy, officers
    towed the vehicle to the police station and conducted an inventory search of the
    vehicle. During the search, officers recovered a loaded Jennings .380 caliber pistol
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    from the center console of the vehicle. During later questioning about the firearm,
    Evans made incriminating statements regarding his ownership of the weapon.
    Evans was charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1). Evans filed a motion to suppress the firearm and his subsequent
    incriminating statements, alleging that the inventory search of his vehicle was
    unlawful because the police officers did not follow the department’s towing policy
    when deciding to tow his vehicle and because the officers carried out the search with
    an investigatory motive. The district court denied the motion to suppress, finding that
    the decision to tow the vehicle was lawfully based on the department’s towing policy
    and that the officers did not have an investigatory motive in carrying out the search
    because they did not expect to find any evidence relating to the rape they had initially
    been called to investigate. Evans entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving the right
    to appeal the suppression ruling, and the district court sentenced him to 180 months
    imprisonment. Evans now appeals the denial of his motion to suppress.
    II.
    Evans asserts that the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress was in
    error because the officers unlawfully towed the vehicle from the apartment complex,
    rendering the inventory search invalid, and that, even if they lawfully towed the
    vehicle, the inventory search remained invalid because the officers conducted it with
    an investigatory motive. When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we
    review a district court’s factual findings for clear error and legal conclusions de novo.
    United States v. Harris, 
    747 F.3d 1013
    , 1016 (8th Cir. 2014).
    Evans first argues that the inventory search was invalid because the officers did
    not make the decision to tow his vehicle pursuant to the police department’s towing
    policy. Police officers are entitled to use their discretion in deciding to impound a
    vehicle, provided that their decisions are based on standard criteria and not upon
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    suspected criminal activity. Colorado v. Bertine, 
    479 U.S. 367
    , 375 (1987). Here, the
    officers’ decision to impound Evans’s vehicle was based upon the Kansas City Police
    Department Towing Policy. The department’s towing policy, in relevant part,
    provides:
    [I]n the officer’s discretion, vehicles may be towed when: . . . []Any
    vehicle is parked on private property or upon an area developed as an off-
    street parking facility without the consent of the owner, lessee or person
    in charge of any such property or facility, and upon complaint to the
    police department by the owner, lessee or person in charge of such
    property or facility, and a summons has been presented to the owner or
    operator or affixed to the vehicle.
    App. 16.
    The district court found the decision to tow was consistent with the
    department’s towing policy because Evans’s vehicle was parked on private property,
    he was under arrest, and the apartment manager requested that the authorities remove
    the vehicle from the property. Evans asserts that this finding was in error because the
    district court erroneously found that the apartment manager requested that the vehicle
    be removed from the property. This argument is based on allegedly contradictory
    statements by the apartment manager. The manager’s initial post-incident written
    statement to police describing the events includes no reference to her request to have
    Evans’s vehicle removed from the property. In an interview with defense counsel
    about six weeks after the incident, the manager indicated that she had not requested
    that the police officers remove Evans’s vehicle. She later testified that she understood
    defense counsel to have been generally questioning her about whether the defendant
    drove a car when she answered no to their question. And, in a later police interview,
    she indicated that she believed she had requested that the officers remove Evans’s
    vehicle from the apartment complex because she “want[ed] his vehicle and [] him
    gone.” At the suppression hearing she testified that she specifically asked officers to
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    remove the vehicle from the property, and one of the responding officer’s testimony
    corroborated this account.
    After reviewing the evidence, we conclude that the district court’s
    determination that the manager requested the vehicle be moved was not clearly
    erroneous. See United States v. Sanders, 
    130 F.3d 1316
    , 1317 (8th Cir. 1997)
    (explaining that our court should find clear error if the finding of the district court is
    “‘unsupported by substantial evidence, based on an erroneous interpretation of
    applicable law, or, in light of the entire record, we are left with a firm and definite
    conviction that a mistake has been made’” (quoting United States v. Ruiz, 
    935 F.2d 982
    , 984 (8th Cir. 1991))). Although the apartment manager did not mention her
    request that the vehicle be towed in her initial post-incident statement to police, her
    statement did not deny that she had made such a request, and she clarified in a
    subsequent police interview that she had requested that the vehicle be moved. She
    also provided testimony explaining her contradictory statement to defense counsel.
    The district court was permitted to credit this testimony. See Anderson v. City of
    Bessemer City, N.C., 
    470 U.S. 564
    , 575 (1985) (affording trial judges great deference
    in making credibility determinations because they are in the best position to assess a
    witness’s testimony for credibility). Evans’s vehicle was parked on private property
    without the consent of the apartment manager, and although the officers did not
    present him with a summons, they had arrested him for driving without a valid license.
    We therefore believe that the officers removed Evans’s vehicle pursuant to the police
    department’s towing policy, and the decision to tow the vehicle and conduct an
    inventory search was thus lawful.
    Evans next argues that the inventory search was invalid because officers
    conducted it with an investigatory motive. If an impoundment is otherwise valid, an
    investigatory motive does not prevent police from towing a vehicle and conducting
    an inventory search. United States v. Garner, 
    181 F.3d 988
    , 991-92 (8th Cir. 1999).
    An investigatory motive does not render an inventory search invalid unless that
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    motive is the officers’ sole motivation in carrying out the search. United States v.
    Marshall, 
    986 F.2d 1171
    , 1176 (8th Cir. 1993). Departing from standardized
    procedures for conducting an inventory search is evidence that helps prove the search
    was a pretext and that the officers’ sole motive in carrying out the search was
    investigatory. See United States v. Rowland, 
    341 F.3d 774
    , 780-82 (8th Cir. 2003).
    But, officers may be alert for the presence of incriminating evidence during an
    inventory search. Marshall, 
    986 F.2d at 1176
    .
    The district court, in adopting the magistrate judge’s report and
    recommendations, specifically found that no evidence indicated the officers expected
    to find any evidence tying Evans to the rape by conducting an inventory search of his
    vehicle. Nothing in the record indicates that this factual finding constitutes clear error,
    and we will not disturb the district court’s finding. Further, even if the district court
    had found the officers to have acted with an investigatory motive, no evidence
    indicates that it was their sole motive in carrying out the search. The officers followed
    the standardized procedure for conducting an inventory search and Evans provided no
    evidence showing the officers’ inventory search was a pretext for further investigating
    the rape claim. Because we do not believe the officers acted with an investigatory
    motive that would render the inventory search invalid, Evans’s subsequent
    incriminating statements need not be excluded as fruit of the poisonous tree. The
    district court did not err in denying Evans’s motion to suppress.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of Evans’s
    motion to suppress.
    ______________________________
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