United States v. Liu Yiu-Pong , 180 F.3d 957 ( 1999 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 98-4061
    ___________
    United States of America,                *
    *
    Appellant,                  *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                                 * District Court for the
    * Western District of Missouri.
    Yiu-Pong Liu,                            *
    *
    Appellee.                   *
    ___________
    Submitted: April 20, 1999
    Filed: June 10, 1999
    ___________
    Before BOWMAN,1 Chief Judge, FAGG, Circuit Judge, and BOGUE,2 District Judge.
    ___________
    BOWMAN, Chief Judge.
    The United States appeals from the order of the District Court approving without
    further analysis the Report and Recommendation of the Magistrate Judge to whom
    1
    The Honorable Pasco M. Bowman stepped down as Chief Judge of the United
    States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit at the close of business on April 23,
    1999. He has been succeeded by the Honorable Roger L. Wollman.
    2
    The Honorable Andrew W. Bogue, United States District Judge for the District
    of South Dakota, sitting by designation.
    pretrial motions had been referred, thereby sustaining Yiu-Pong Liu's motion to
    suppress evidence and statements as illegally obtained. We reverse.
    The facts of the case are essentially without dispute. On the morning of
    August 28, 1998, drug interdiction detectives Dan Wilson and George Barrios of the
    Kansas City, Missouri, Police Department boarded an Amtrak train en route from Los
    Angeles to Chicago at its regularly scheduled stop in Kansas City. As they made their
    way through the coach cars of the train, Barrios spotted a black suitcase in the
    overhead storage rack that appeared to be brand new, with a blank name tag and two
    luggage keys still attached to the handle of the bag. The suitcase fit the profile, Barrios
    believed, of a drug courier's bag. Barrios lifted the suitcase and found it unusually
    heavy. Leaving the bag in the overhead rack, he felt the exterior and identified a solid
    object that he thought was a bundle of illegal drugs. Barrios moved the bag to the seat
    just behind the seat where Liu appeared to be sleeping and he began asking passengers
    if the bag belonged to any of them. When no one claimed the suitcase, Barrios moved
    it to the aisle and woke Liu to ask if the bag belonged to him. Liu, appearing nervous,
    grabbed the handle of the bag and said that it was his. Barrios identified himself as a
    police officer and asked Liu if he understood. Liu said that he did. Barrios then asked
    again if the suitcase in fact belonged to Liu, or if his suitcase might not be a similar-
    looking bag still in the rack directly over his seat. Liu partially unzipped the bag that
    Barrios had placed in the aisle and pulled out a piece of clothing, took a pair of
    sunglasses out of a side pocket, and confirmed that the bag was his.
    At this point, Barrios asked Liu for permission to search the suitcase for
    narcotics, and he consented. As Barrios began to unzip the bag, Liu revoked his
    consent to search and zipped the bag back up. Barrios then asked Liu for his train
    ticket. At that, Liu walked past Barrios and off the train without responding to Barrios
    or attempting to take the bag with him. Barrios and Wilson permitted him to do so, but
    Barrios advised other members of the interdiction squad by radio that a suspect who
    had refused a search of his luggage was leaving the train. Wilson followed Liu off the
    -2-
    train, and heard him say he was looking for a woman. Liu began walking toward the
    terminal. His pace quickened and he largely ignored Wilson's attempts to have a
    conversation. He then turned as if to return to the train. But as another detective
    approached, Liu turned back toward the terminal and started to run. Wilson seized him
    and handcuffed him.
    In the meantime, Barrios took the bag to the common luggage area of the coach
    car and had a police dog sniff the suitcase for drugs. The dog alerted to the bag and
    Liu, already detained by Wilson, was arrested. In a conference room at the station, Liu
    consented to a search of his bag, which revealed a credit card embossing machine and
    magnetic decoding device (but no drugs). The detectives also found counterfeit credit
    cards that he had concealed in the waistband of his pants. He was charged in two
    counts with knowingly, and with intent to defraud, having control and custody of and
    possessing device-making equipment, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1029(a)(4), (c)(2).
    Liu filed a motion to suppress evidence and statements as illegally obtained.3 The
    motion was sustained in November 1998. The government appeals.
    The Magistrate Judge recommended suppression of the evidence, concluding that
    Barrios had conducted an unconstitutional search of the bag by feeling it as he did
    without reasonable suspicion and that Liu was seized, when he "attempted to avoid"
    the detectives, without reasonable suspicion or probable cause, that is, illegally. Report
    3
    Neither the Magistrate Judge in the Report and Recommendation nor the parties
    in their briefs separately analyzed the law applicable to the statements that were the
    subject of the suppression motion, or even identified what those statements were. As
    far as we can tell from the record, Liu made the statements at issue after he had been
    arrested and read his rights, after his luggage had been opened and searched with his
    consent, and after the counterfeiting devices had been found. We therefore understand
    Liu's argument to be that both the statements and the evidence should be suppressed
    on the same basis: as "fruit of the poisonous tree." The analysis that follows therefore
    applies to the statements as well as to the evidence.
    -3-
    and Recommendation at 11. The court also rejected the contention that Liu forfeited
    his right to challenge a search of his bag by abandoning it.
    We take up the abandonment issue first because our resolution of the question
    could make it unnecessary for us to decide the other issues on appeal. See United
    States v. Washington, 
    146 F.3d 536
    , 537 (8th Cir. 1998). If Liu abandoned his bag,
    then the evidence obtained from the subsequent consensual search of the bag and the
    statements he made are not "fruit of the poisonous tree" but are admissible at trial. We
    review the District Court's factual finding regarding abandonment for clear error. We
    will affirm the court's decision that Liu did not abandon the suitcase unless the finding
    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." United States v. Tugwell, 
    125 F.3d 600
    , 602
    (8th Cir. 1997) (citations to quoted cases omitted), cert. denied, 
    118 S. Ct. 721
    (1998).
    When a person abandons his luggage, his expectation of privacy in the property
    is so eroded that he no longer has standing to challenge a search of the luggage on
    Fourth Amendment grounds. See 
    id. In determining
    whether property has been
    abandoned for Fourth Amendment purposes, the court must look to the totality of the
    circumstances, noting in particular two factors: whether the suspect denied ownership
    of the property and whether he physically relinquished the property. See United States
    v. Landry, 
    154 F.3d 897
    , 899 (8th Cir. 1998), cert. denied, 
    119 S. Ct. 836
    (1999).
    Further, "[w]hether an abandonment has occurred is determined on the basis of the
    objective facts available to the investigating officers, not on the basis of the owner's
    subjective intent." 
    Tugwell, 125 F.3d at 602
    .
    It is without dispute that Liu never verbally denied ownership of his bag; indeed,
    he affirmed his ownership more than once. But he nevertheless may have abandoned
    the bag by physical relinquishment, even while claiming ownership, since a verbal
    disclaimer of ownership is not required for a finding of abandonment. See, e.g.,
    -4-
    California v. Hodari D., 
    499 U.S. 621
    , 624 (1991) (noting that drugs discarded by
    defendant while running from officer would be considered abandoned, if defendant at
    the time of abandonment was not seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment);
    
    Landry, 154 F.3d at 899
    (holding that district court's finding of abandonment was not
    clearly erroneous where defendant placed paper bag on the ground behind wheel of
    garbage dumpster and walked to pay phone fifty feet away). We conclude that the
    District Court clearly erred when it considered the facts relating to physical
    relinquishment and found that Liu did not abandon the bag.
    The court noted three circumstances that it considered in reaching its decision.
    First, the court said, Liu "was not free to take his bag with him when he exited the
    train." Report and Recommendation at 12. While this may be true, the detectives
    never told him as much, and he never made the slightest attempt to take the bag. As
    far as Barrios and Wilson knew, Liu believed he could leave with the bag, but he
    walked off without making any effort to take it, leaving it in a public place. That the
    detectives may not have allowed him to take the bag, had he tried, is beside the point;
    it simply has nothing to do with the behavior Liu displayed to the detectives.
    The court also relied on the fact that Wilson heard Liu say he was looking for a
    woman as he left the train, noting that a "reasonable inference" is that he was planning
    to return. 
    Id. We fail
    to see how leaving the train to look for a woman gives rise to an
    inference that he was planning to return; it seems just as likely that he intended to make
    his escape with the woman's assistance, if indeed such a woman existed. But
    reasonableness aside, it was clear error for the court to find that Wilson inferred that
    Liu intended to return to the train when it is apparent from Wilson's testimony (with no
    indication that the court found his testimony not credible) that he inferred quite the
    contrary based on the objective facts available to him: Liu was fleeing the premises.
    See Transcript of Suppression Hearing at 38 (Testimony of Dan Wilson) ("[T]here was
    a reasonable suspicion at that point because of his actions on the train when Detective
    Barrios was talking to him, and I observed this, and he just up and left his bag and
    -5-
    walked off and said he was looking for a woman. That was suspicious to me and that's
    why I followed him."). The inference suggested by the Magistrate Judge goes to Liu's
    subjective intent, whatever it may have been, and is not an objective fact known to the
    detectives; thus it is not relevant to the inquiry.
    Finally, the court stated that "[t]he officers prevented defendant from returning
    to the train (and his luggage) when they seized and handcuffed him." Report and
    Recommendation at 12. This is a clearly erroneous finding. Liu had already walked
    away from the bag and, when he was seized, he had started to run – not in the direction
    of the train, but away from it. Such behavior is not indicative of an intent to return.
    Because Liu was running away from the train when seized and was not stopped as he
    was trying to make his way back to his luggage, it follows that the seizure did not
    prevent him from returning to the train and his luggage. "[I]n light of the entire record,
    we are left with a firm and definite conviction that a mistake has been made." 
    Tugwell, 125 F.3d at 602
    (citation to quoted cases omitted).
    Further, the court in its abandonment analysis failed to note other objective facts
    known to the detectives and so did not consider the totality of the circumstances. For
    example, Liu had claimed ownership of a suitcase that fit the profile (determined by
    visual examination alone) of the sort of bag often used by drug couriers. He gave his
    consent for Barrios to search the suitcase, but then revoked it as the search began.
    When Barrios asked to see Liu's ticket, he walked off the train without responding and
    without even attempting to take the suspicious bag. Further, from his first encounter
    with the detectives he appeared unusually nervous. These are among the relevant
    objective facts known to the detectives who determined that Liu had abandoned the
    bag, and all such facts should have been considered by the District Court. See 
    Landry, 154 F.3d at 899
    ("[W]hether [defendant] intended to retrieve the bag, leave the bag for
    another person, or abandon the bag is not relevant to the issue of whether the objective
    facts available to the officers support a finding that [defendant] abandoned the bag.").
    -6-
    We conclude that the court's finding that the bag was not abandoned is unsupported by
    substantial evidence and therefore is clear error.
    Liu argues that his failure to take the bag when he left the train was not an
    abandonment within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment because it was not
    voluntary, that is, it "resulted from a Fourth Amendment violation by manipulating a
    bag in a manner to determine the contents without visual inspection." Brief of Appellee
    at 11. It is true that "abandonment cannot be the product of unlawful police conduct."
    United States v. Segars, 
    31 F.3d 655
    , 658 (8th Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 1099
    (1995). We need not reach the question of whether Barrios's "manipulation" of the bag
    was unconstitutional, however. For even if the abandonment followed an unlawful
    search, it was not an involuntary abandonment if it "was a voluntary act of will that
    independently legitimated the subsequent search." 
    Washington, 146 F.3d at 537
    . Liu's
    detention on the train was consensual, and he was permitted to leave the train when he
    wanted to. He was not seized until he began to run, having already left the bag behind.
    His abandonment was not "tainted in the constitutional sense" notwithstanding that
    Barrios asked him about the bag and Wilson followed him off the train. 
    Id. "The existence
    of police pursuit or investigation at the time of abandonment does not of itself
    render the abandonment involuntary." 
    Segars, 31 F.3d at 658
    (quoting United States
    v. Jones, 
    707 F.2d 1169
    , 1172 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    464 U.S. 859
    (1983)). We
    conclude, as did this Court in similar circumstances in Washington, that Liu's
    abandonment of his bag (and with such abandonment his forfeiture of any Fourth
    Amendment rights he had to challenge a subsequent search of the bag) was "a voluntary
    decision of his own free will." 
    Washington, 146 F.3d at 538
    .
    In sum, we hold that the District Court clearly erred in finding that Liu did not
    voluntarily abandon his bag. We therefore need not and do not reach the question of
    the constitutionality of the exterior "manipulation" of the bag or of the seizure of Liu
    after he began to run away from the train. The judgment of the District Court
    -7-
    sustaining the motion to suppress is reversed and the case is remanded for further
    proceedings.
    BOGUE, District Judge, dissenting.
    The majority avoids ruling on whether the manipulation of Liu’s bag amounted
    to a warrantless search. The majority does so based on its conclusion that an
    investigating officer viewing this series of events would believe that Liu intended to
    abandon his property, and that the District Court’s opposite conclusion was
    “unsupported by substantial evidence.” United States v. Tugwell, 
    125 F.3d 600
    , 602
    (8th Cir. 1997) (citations omitted), cert. denied, – U.S. –, 
    118 S. Ct. 721
    , 
    139 L. Ed. 2d 661
    (1998). The majority relies on Washington for the proposition that a voluntary
    abandonment of one’s property can render one ineligible to complain about an earlier
    purported search. See United States v. Washington, 
    146 F.3d 536
    (8th Cir. 1998).
    Based on this holding, the majority defers any analysis of the legality of the initial
    encounter in which Detective Barrios lifted Liu’s bag, felt it, removed it from the
    overhead compartment, placed it on the seat beside Liu, felt it again, and then placed
    it on the aisle floor.
    Evidence seized as a direct product of a Fourth Amendment violation must be
    suppressed. Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 484, 
    83 S. Ct. 407
    , 415, 
    9 L. Ed. 2d 441
    (1963). The “fruit of the poisonous” tree doctrine, however, is not an
    absolute one, for if the evidence in question is sufficiently attenuated from the primary
    taint of the illegal search, the evidence may still be admissible. Taylor v. Alabama, 
    457 U.S. 687
    , 691, 
    102 S. Ct. 2664
    , 2267, 
    73 L. Ed. 2d 314
    (1982). An intervening act, for
    example, may sufficiently disconnect the taint (illegality) from the fruit (evidence). See,
    e.g., United States v. Nooks, 
    446 F.2d 1283
    , 1288 (5th Cir. 1971) (disregarding the
    illegality of the defendant’s initial arrest when he subsequently fled at 115 m.p.h. and
    fired three shots directly at the sheriff, justifying a search of his automobile’s trunk
    -8-
    which revealed a box of money and two co-defendants), cert. denied, 
    404 U.S. 945
    , 
    92 S. Ct. 299
    , 
    30 L. Ed. 2d 261
    (1971).
    Abandonment may in some cases qualify as such an intervening act. In
    Washington, when the defendant expressly denied ownership of his luggage, he “made
    a voluntary decision of his own free will: He had not been informed that he was a
    target, nor did the officers seize him prior to his first denial of ownership of the bag.”
    
    Washington, 146 F.3d at 538
    . Once Mr. Washington’s property was abandoned, the
    subsequent search/seizure of it impinged no privacy interest. 
    Id. at 537,
    citing United
    States v. Sanders, 
    130 F.3d 1316
    , 1317-18 (8th Cir. 1997); see also 
    Tugwell, 125 F.3d at 602
    . Because Mr. Washington’s unequivocal abandonment was unrelated to the
    officer’s previous manipulation of his bag, this Court had no occasion to analyze its
    “grave doubts about the constitutional propriety” about the warrantless manipulation
    of the bag. 
    Washington, 146 F.3d at 537
    .
    The degree of Wong Sun attenuation between the evidence and challenged
    government action turns on several factors, including the temporal distance between the
    taint and the fruit, an intervening event (such as the independent act of abandonment
    in Washington) which dissipates or purges the taint, and the seriousness of the fourth
    amendment violation. Dunaway v. New York, 
    442 U.S. 200
    , 219, 
    99 S. Ct. 2248
    ,
    2259, 
    60 L. Ed. 2d 824
    (1979); United States v. Ceccolini, 
    435 U.S. 268
    , 274-75, 98 S.
    Ct. 1054, 1059, 
    55 L. Ed. 2d 268
    (1978); Brown v. Illinois, 
    422 U.S. 590
    , 604-05 95 S.
    Ct. 2254, 2261-62, 
    45 L. Ed. 2d 416
    (1975); United States v. McGill, 
    125 F.3d 642
    , 644
    (8th Cir. 1997); see also Josephine R. Potuto, “A Practitioner’s Primer to the Fourth
    Amendment,” 70 Neb. L.Rev. 412, 441 (1991). The Supreme Court has declared that
    “particularly, the purpose and flagrancy of the official misconduct” is to be considered
    in a court’s inquiry into the causal connection between the evidence and the challenged
    search. 
    Dunaway, 442 U.S. at 218
    , 99 S. Ct. at 2259 (considering the connection
    -9-
    between an illegal arrest and subsequent confession), quoting 
    Brown, 422 U.S. at 605
    ,
    95 S. Ct. at 2262 (emphasis supplied).4 Here, this was not done.
    In the present case, Liu left his seat, ostensibly to meet a female acquaintance
    on the railway platform, and a Kansas City Police Officer followed close on his heels,
    badgering him with questions. These questions were undoubtedly triggered by
    suspicions about the possible contents of Liu’s bag, suspicions directly linked to the
    challenged government action of touching his bag to discern its contents.5 As Liu
    disembarked and looked around, he explained to Officer Wilson that he was looking
    for a woman.6 Officer Wilson doggedly followed close behind. When plainclothes
    4
    The “attenuation inquiry” is employed in cases where the defendant consents
    to a search following an illegal arrest, and it also applies to cases of abandonment
    following an illegal search or seizure. See, e.g., United States v. King, 
    990 F.2d 1552
    ,
    1563-65 (10th Cir. 1993); United States v. Berd, 
    634 F.2d 979
    , 986-87 (5th Cir. 1981).
    King also notes that review of this inquiry is for clear error. 
    King, 990 F.2d at 1564
    .
    5
    Cf. Wong 
    Sun, 571 U.S. at 488
    , 83 S. Ct. at 417 (phrasing the question as
    whether the evidence was “‘come at by exploitation of that illegality’”) (citation
    omitted).
    6
    It is unclear from the record whether the destination point of Liu’s train ticket
    (assuming he had one) was the station where he got off the train. Obviously, if Liu
    disembarked at his journey’s endpoint, his decision to leave his bag behind points
    toward an intent to abandon. If his train ticket gave him passage to a further point, on
    the other hand, his hurried pace could be more objectively perceived as a rush to find
    the woman before the train re-boarded. The fact that this evidence is not in the record,
    in my opinion, does not allow us to pay any less deference to the Magistrate’s findings.
    I am especially troubled by the majority’s rejection as irrelevant the fact that Liu
    stated that he was disembarking to meet with someone. When Liu began to walk away
    from the officers, they might have believed that he was trying to escape from an
    uncomfortable encounter with law enforcement and abandon his bag to their scrutiny.
    The reasonableness of this belief would have been eroded to some extent when Liu
    explained that his intent was otherwise. Criminal minds will often concoct excuses
    which officers may reasonably find unbelievable, but this fact also underscores the
    -10-
    Officer Quinlan, who did not identify himself as a police officer, moved to intercept
    Liu, Liu attempted to run but was immediately grabbed, handcuffed, and “seized” for
    purposes of the Fourth Amendment.
    Clearly, Liu’s actions, whether or not they must be read as communicating an
    objective intent to abandon his bag back on the train, were not the same “voluntary
    decision of . . . free will” as that of Mr. Washington’s uncoerced verbal relinquishment.
    
    Washington, 146 F.3d at 538
    . Moreover, the circumstances giving rise to Liu’s
    “abandonment” were not unconnected from the challenged search. Thus, more analysis
    is required into whether the initial manipulation of Liu’s bag was “sufficiently
    attenuated” from his actions which the Court today construes as effecting an
    abandonment.
    Part of this inquiry should require an examination of the “flagrancy of the official
    misconduct.” 
    Dunaway, supra
    . Instead, the majority avoids weighing the “flagrancy”
    – along with the potential illegality – of the manipulation of Liu’s bag, and shoehorns
    the Magistrate’s unchallenged findings into the approach taken in Washington, where
    the defendant freely abandoned his property in circumstances unrelated to the
    challenged manipulation. Washington turned on its own facts, it did not establish a
    talismanic rule that an illegal search is retroactively “cured” whenever the defendant
    subsequently panics and abandons his or her property.7
    deference due to a trial court’s credibility assessments which are essentially beyond the
    scope this Court’s review on appeal.
    7
    Washington relied on United States v. McGill, 
    125 F.3d 642
    (8th Cir. 1997),
    cert. denied, – U.S. –, 
    118 S. Ct. 1108
    , 
    140 L. Ed. 2d 161
    (1998) and United States v.
    Thomas, 
    83 F.3d 259
    (8th Cir. 1996), neither of which assist us in the present case.
    Both involved consent to a search which was determined “sufficiently an act of free
    will to render the search valid.” 
    Washington, 146 F.3d at 538
    . Neither case involved
    an abandonment arising out of a challenged search. Consent and abandonment are
    similar, but not identical issues.
    -11-
    I dissent in order to raise a serious question about the majority’s failure to
    adequately assess whether we can in fact detour around the challenged search and the
    related question of whether there is a reasonable expectation of privacy that luggage
    placed directly overhead on a public train will not be touched, pressed, felt, and
    removed in the manner in which it occurred here. In my view, we should carefully
    assess the degree of connection between the challenged search and the act of
    abandonment. Given the proximity and relatedness between the two in this case, it
    becomes necessary to examine the legality of the officer’s touching and feeling of the
    defendant’s bag. Because this bears on whether we can bypass the search issue
    altogether, it is a critical piece of the puzzle. In order to resolve whether Liu’s
    subsequent act of abandonment was an intervening circumstance which insulates the
    state’s manipulation of his bag from Fourth Amendment attack, we should first assess
    the legality (and “flagrancy”) of that manipulation. Omitting this inquiry places the
    proverbial cart before the proverbial horse.
    Under the facts of this case, I would follow this suggested analysis down the
    following path. First, I would conduct a reasonable expectation of privacy inquiry and
    conclude that Detective Barrios’s manipulation of Liu’s bag was clearly
    unconstitutional. See United States v. Nicholson, 
    144 F.3d 632
    , 639 (10th Cir. 1998);
    United States v. Most, 
    876 F.2d 191
    , 195 (D.C. Cir. 1989); compare United States v.
    Gault, 
    92 F.3d 990
    , 992 (10th Cir. 1996) (concluding that officer’s kicking and lifting of a bag
    left protruding five inches into the aisle on a train did not constitute a search). Next, even
    assuming that Liu’s subsequent actions clearly evidenced an abandonment, I would
    conclude that such acts, arising from a flagrant violation of the Fourth Amendment,
    cannot be construed as voluntary acts of will that independently legitimized the search.
    See 
    Washington, 146 F.3d at 537
    . Therefore, I would affirm the District Court’s order
    suppressing the illegally obtained evidence and statements, and for this reason, I
    respectfully dissent.
    -12-
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
    -13-