Gun owners’ guide to the 4th Amendment: Seizures

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated … – 4th Amendment

One of the most common interactions between law-abiding gun owners and law enforcement occurs when  a citizen, unfamiliar with the practice, sees someone openly carrying a firearm in a store, or a park, or just walking down the street.  In many cases, they call the police to report what the media has lead them to believe must be a crime.

This usually results in a law enforcement officer approaching the person who is openly carrying their firearm to “ask them a few questions.”  This is what we call a law enforcement “stop”.  But not all stops rise to the level of a seizure subject to 4th Amendment protection.

The modern era of 4th Amendment jurisprudence started in 1968 with the landmark ruling in Terry v. Ohio.  Under Terry, a seizure occurs “[o]nly when [an] officer, by means of physical force or show of authority, has in some way restrained the liberty of a citizen.”

After Terry, there are three broad categories of allowable “stops”, only one of which is not considered a seizure of the person.  These are consensual stops, Terry Stops, and detentions which amount to arrest.

Consensual Stops

A consensual stop is one in which law enforcement approaches a citizen and initiates a conversation but the citizen is free to leave at any time.  This is the only of the three allowable stops which is not a seizure of the person for 4th Amendment purposes.

A perfect example of a consensual stop is this encounter between an open carrier and officer Evans of the Blacksburg, Virginia police department.  The officer asked his questions and, when the open carrier chose not to answer, identified himself and told the open carrier he was free to go.  The officer was knowledgable and professional.  I cannot commend him enough.

But not all officers are as professional and ethical as Officer Evans.  While claiming that a suspect is “free to leave at any time“, they often use interrogative techniques that make it difficult for a reasonable person to know whether they are actually free to leave.

This concept of an objective ‘reasonable person’ test first surfaced in the 1980 case of U.S. v. Mendenhall where the court articulated the rule that “a person has been ‘seized’ within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment only if, in view of all of the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.”

An important additional note from Mendenhall was found in the footnotes where the court stated that even if the officer had already decided to detain a person should they decide to leave, this does not factor into the analysis unless the officer has made this known to the person being ‘stopped’.  If the officer has made this known to the person being stopped then it will trigger the second “show of authority” prong from the Terry analysis, potentially making the encounter a ‘seizure’ for 4th Amendment purposes.

While the holding in Mendenhall sounds like a bright-line rule, the courts have continued to allow law enforcement significant latitude in this regard.  A recent example of this comes to us from Pima Arizona where an officer tells the open carriers that they are free to leave but when they attempt to leave, they are chased down and detained.

Take note of the discussion on the video of whether ID is required when stopped by police.  We will discuss that in a future segment of this column.

After Mendenhall, the next important seizure case occurred in 1991 with Florida v. Bostick.  Bostick involved officers boarding a bus at a bus stop and asking passengers if they would consent to a search of their luggage.  The twist in Bostick was the fact that the encounter occurred in a bus.  The defendant argued that, because he did not want to leave the bus and be left behind and thus “did not believe he was free to leave”, he was ‘seized’ without probable cause or even reasonable suspicion.

The court in Bostick stated that the “free to leave” language from the rule must be read in context.  They noted that, when an encounter occurs in an area where the citizen wishes to remain such as a bus, airplance, etc, the rule should be interpreted as whether they “would feel free to decline the officers’ request or otherwise terminate the encounter.”

There was also a second important 4th Amendment seizure case decided in 1991.  In the case of California v. Hodari the court refined the two prong test from Terry which required that, in  order for a seizure to occur, there must be either physical force or a show of authority.  Under Hodari, a mere show of authority is not sufficient to establish a seizure.  The suspect must also submit to that show of authority.

Terry Stops

A Terry Stop, named aptly enough for the aforementioned case of Terry v. Ohio, is a ‘seizure’ of the person (there is also a ‘search’ component to Terry which I will address in a future article but here we are focused on ‘seizures’).  According to the court, it is justified when “swift action based upon on-the-spot observations of the officer on the beat is required.”  No warrant is required for a Terry Stop, nor is there a requirement for probable cause such as would be a prerequisite for obtaining a warrant.  Rather, a Terry Stop requires only “reasonable suspicion that criminal activity may be afoot.”  If the officer wishes to search or “frisk” the person he is seizing, they must also have reasonable suspicion that they “may be armed and presently dangerous” but this is not required to simply seize the person.

If it isn’t the same as probable cause then what is reasonable suspicion?  According to the court in  Alabama v. White, reasonable suspicion is  “considerably less than proof of wrongdoing by a preponderance of the evidence.”  So what does that mean in real life?  Unfortunately, it is a low-bar indeed.  Reportedly, a common saying amongst law enforcement circles is that “Reasonable suspicion is what my nightstick says it is.”

The requirement of reasonable suspicion from Terry is known today as reasonable and articulable suspicion or RAS.  And if an officer has RAS that criminal activity may be afoot and that the persons with whom he is dealing may be armed and presently dangerous, then the seizure is considered justified at its inception.  One can easily understand why this broad rule has been repeatedly refined since Terry.

In Illinois v. Wardlow, the court tackled the question of whether running from identified police officers (or marked police cars) in a high crime area gives rise to RAS.  The court held that it generally does despite a rousing dissent from Justice Stevens in which he noted that minority citizens rightly and reasonably fear police encounters even absent criminal activity.  The court stated that this is not a per-se rule but depends upon a number of factors beyond simple flight in a high-crime neighborhood.  These include:

  • Furtive movements
  • Time of day
  • Number of people
  • Number of police
  • Whether police were in uniform
  • Direction and speed of flight

In Florida v. Royer, the court held that a Terry Stop, valid at its inception, does not cross the line into a detention that amounts to arrest when there is good reason to move a suspect some distance from the original encounter within the same building or general area.

In Pennsylvania v. Mimms, the court held that during a valid traffic stop, officers may order a driver out of the vehicle even if the stop is based upon the flimsiest of violations.  And in Maryland v. Wilson, the court held that the same rule applies to passengers.  Brendlin v. California clarified that in a traffic stop, both the driver and any passengers are seized and thus all have standing to challenge the constitutionality of the seizure.

Detention That Amounts to Arrest

A detention that amounts to an arrest cannot be based upon the lower standard of “reasonable suspicion.”  It must be based upon probable cause that a crime has been committed and that the accused committed that crime.  And what is probable cause?  It is “facts and circumstances sufficient for a reasonable person to believe that crime is more likely than not.”

The courts have articulated a number of situations where detainment exceeds the “on the street exigency” of Terry and  rises to the level of an effective arrest.

In  Hayes v. Florida, the court held that a suspect being taken against their will to the police station for fingerprinting or other investigative purposes, regardless of how brief the detention, would cross the line between a Terry Stop and an arrest.  However, they also noted that fingerprinting at the scene of a Terry Stop is not necessarily violative of the 4th Amendment.

In United States v. Sharpe, the court articulated a two prong test to determine whether a given detention crosses the line between a Terry Stop and an arrest.  Those prongs are:

  1. Whether the officers’ actions were justified at the inception by reasonable suspicion
  2. Whether the officers’ actions were reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first place

The Sharpe court also added a “bolt-on” concerning the length of the detention.  This bolt-on third prong also requires that the officers “diligently pursue a means of investigation that [is] likely to confirm or dispel their suspicions quickly.”

If any of these factors are not satisfied then the detention amounts to an arrest and probable cause is required.  If the office did not have probable cause then the seizure may be challenged.

In Summary

If you find yourself in an encounter with law enforcement, you should know that you always have the right to refuse consent to any request.  If a reasonable person would not feel free to politely decline the officers’ requests and terminate the encounter (as seen in the first video above), then you have been ‘seized’ and thus are entitled to 4th Amendment protection.  The key question is “Am I free to leave?” and if the answer is anything other than “No” then do so.  If it is “No”, then lawyer up, do not resist other than to state that you do not consent to any search or detainment, and keep the video camera running if you are in a jurisdiction where such recording is legal.

UPDATE:  The next chapter of the “Gun Owners Guide to the 4th Amendment” has been published.    It covers Stop and Frisk.

DISCLAIMER:  Nothing contained herein should be construed as legal advice nor does it give rise to an attorney-client relationship.  For legal advice, you should contact a member of your state’s Bar association.

About John Pierce

Monachus Lex is written by Virginia attorney John Pierce. John is a life-long gun rights advocate, an NRA certified instructor and co-founder of the nationwide gun rights group OpenCarry.org.

He has an undergraduate degree in Computer Information Systems, an MBA from George Mason University and is a 2012 Honors Graduate of Hamline University School of Law in St. Paul, MN.

Professionally, John is a member of the American Bar Association Second Amendment Civil Rights Litigation Subcommittee and his writings have been published by the ABA Civil Rights Litigation Committee and the ABA Minority Trial Lawyer Committee.

In addition, his open carry advocacy has been featured on Nightline and The Daily Show With Jon Stewart.
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16 Responses to Gun owners’ guide to the 4th Amendment: Seizures

  1. Nelson_Muntz says:

    perfectly explained. thank you, i’ll save the link to this article to educate others.

  2. BambiB says:

    Too bad the guys in the second video were such dicks. While I fully understand the importance of individual rights in what has largely become a police state, the recording indicates to me that if these two “yutes” were to truthfully answer the question, “What are you doing out here?”, they would have to say, “Trying to provoke the police.”

    Unfortunately, when there are legitimate cases of police abusing their authority, they often get lumped in with cases like this one. The whining, wheedling voice of the camera holder made ME want to break his arm. I think the cops showed considerable restraint.

    • John Pierce says:

      Bambi,

      I do not know the people in the second video so I am basing my response on the same information you saw there. However, in the video they say that the one guy was stopped for a traffic infraction and they were standing beside the road talking about the stop and stargazing when the new officers arrived.

      As for the officer showing restraint because of the voice of the camera holder, I hope you are joking. Allowing officers leeway when those they apprehend are “dicks” (or black, or hispanic, etc) destroys everything we are as a constitution based nation.

      John

      • Neal says:

        The second video was my friend and I. I was recording this video. We were only there as my friend moments before this, had gotten pulled over for speeding down River rd. We left when we asked if we were free to leave and that is when officer Hensen came up to me and ‘detained’ me for not identifying myself, which I ended up doing so at that moment.

        We in no way provoked the cops, yeah my friend got a little high pitched and a little sassy if you will, we never tried to provoke them.

        • John Pierce says:

          Neal,

          Thanks for taking the time to comment and thanks for sharing your experience! I cannot believe the department supported the officer’s actions. 🙁

          John

          • Neal says:

            No problem, I saw it was linked from youtube so i decided to check it out.
            It is unfortunate that they did support their actions but it happens…

    • Jack says:

      “…if these two “yutes” were to truthfully answer the question, “What are you doing out here?”, they would have to say, “Trying to provoke the police.”

      I don’t think that is true. It seems from the video that they wouldn’t have been there at all if the earlier police (before the video) had not stopped them.

    • Jack says:

      “Unfortunately, when there are legitimate cases of police abusing their authority, they often get lumped in with cases like this one.”

      Sorry, meant to mention this part as well. They *SHOULD* get lumped in with cases like this one. Whether or not the people making the video were dicks, the police did abuse their authority.

      They had no authority to demand identification. Additionally, they told the people they were free to leave, and then used the act of leaving to then seize them.

      Dicks or not.. the police were most definitely the first ones to lead this down an ugly path.

    • Mars says:

      BambiB, my thoughts exactly. That was a blatant example of two punks doing more than “stargazing” as they claimed. They wasted the officers’ time and efforts.

  3. HooDoo says:

    The constitutional rights you speak of no longer exist in many locales across the land. In many cases you will simply be arrested on another charge, which you are not in any way, guilty of. That is the system today and the law enforcement of today.

    Us and them in it’s final stages, and you don’t have the magic badge and they don’t care what rights you are supposed to have. They’ve decided you’re the enemy.

  4. Jack says:

    The video from Pima makes me ill.

    • Augstin Lara says:

      You think it makes YOU sick? I LIVE in Pima County! And the Tucson Police are far worse than the Sheriffs here.

  5. Mars says:

    In general, I am no fan of LEO, however I have to commend Officer Evans in the first video. In fact, he was so great I almost had the impression that the video was staged. Of course it wasn’t. I wish all officers were as professional as he. You have to admit, it was an awkward situation for him. I plan to write a complimentary letter to the Blacksburg PD.

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