PER CURIAM:
Appellant Delmond Cunningham appeals his conviction following a conditional guilty plea to being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). He now challenges the district court's denial of his motion to suppress the firearm, as well as the district court's partial denial of his motion to suppress statements he made to a police officer while in custody. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
On September 21, 2009, Corporal David Johnston with the Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Department was attempting to serve several outstanding arrest warrants and a domestic violence protection order on Cunningham. He happened to encounter Cunningham at a gas station in Charlotte, North Carolina, and observed Cunningham begin to pump gas into a pickup truck that was parked in front of Corporal Johnston's patrol car. Based on Corporal Johnston's earlier conversations with acquaintances of Cunningham, he expected Cunningham to be armed. Corporal Johnston was also aware of Cunningham's criminal history, which included gun charges and gun-related offenses.
When Corporal Johnston approached Cunningham and attempted to talk to him, Cunningham fled on foot. Corporal Johnston gave chase and caught up with him about 25 yards away from the gas station. A physical struggle ensued. Corporal Johnston used a taser to subdue Cunningham during the struggle and, with the assistance of additional responding officers, handcuffed Cunningham and took him into custody. Both Cunningham and Corporal Johnston sustained minor injuries and were treated at the scene.
Corporal Johnston then returned with Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Deputy John Forrest to the pickup truck, which was still parked at the gas pump. Corporal Johnston approached the driver's side of the truck. He testified that he looked into the driver's side window and observed a black .45 caliber pistol sitting in plain view on the bench seat of the truck. Corporal Johnston then entered the truck and seized the firearm. Deputy Forrest approached the passenger's side of the truck but did not see the firearm until Corporal Johnston retrieved it. However, it was his understanding that the firearm was found on the bench seat between the passenger's side and driver's side of the truck. He also recalled that there was a middle console that had been folded down onto the bench seat.
Meanwhile, back at the scene of the arrest, Cunningham began to complain of chest pains, and Deputy Forrest was asked to transport him to the emergency room at a nearby hospital. It is undisputed that Cunningham was not read his
Prior to entering his conditional guilty plea, Cunningham moved to suppress the firearm seized by Corporal Johnston at the scene and the statements he made to Deputy Forrest at the hospital. The district court denied the motion to suppress the firearm based upon the plain-view exception to the warrant requirement and, in the alternative, on the basis that Cunningham abandoned the truck when he ran and the firearm would have been inevitably discovered when the truck was moved and inventoried. The truck was not registered to Cunningham.
The district court granted in part and denied in part the motion to suppress the statements. Although finding that Deputy Forrest did not actually intend to elicit an incriminating response when he initiated the conversation with Cunningham, the court held that Deputy Forrest's comment constituted custodial interrogation because it was reasonably likely to elicit such an incriminating response. Thus, the district court suppressed Cunningham's initial response explaining why he did not return to the truck. However, with regard to Cunningham's follow-up questions — as to whether he would be charged with possessing the gun — the district court held that they "were not [made] in response to any form of statement or question or comment," and the court declined to suppress them. J.A. 190.
In considering the denial of a motion to suppress, we review the district court's legal determinations
"The Fourth Amendment protects `[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.'"
In this case, Cunningham argues only that the district court clearly erred in crediting Corporal Johnston's testimony that he observed the .45 caliber firearm in plain view through the driver's side window before entering the vehicle and, therefore, that the court erred in denying his motion to suppress the firearm. We disagree.
In the post-arrest affidavit, Corporal Johnston stated that the firearm was located "on [the] front passenger seat in plain view." J.A. 194. According to a report prepared by an ATF agent several months after the seizure, Corporal Johnston "went back to the truck Mr. Cunningham was at and looked in the window" and "[b]etween the driver's seat and the center console, in plain view, was a loaded .45 caliber pistol." J.A. 195.
At the evidentiary hearing, Corporal Johnston testified, consistent with the earlier reports, that he observed the firearm in plain view through the truck window before entering the vehicle. His testimony varied slightly as to the exact location of the firearm on the bench seat; for example, he described the area variously as "between the passenger and driver's seat in plain view," J.A. 67, "right past the driver's seat in between — where you buckle your seat at" or "[t]o the right of the driver's seat . . . [n]ext to the buckle." J.A. 71. On cross-examination, Corporal Johnston testified that the seat was "one long seat" or a "running seat" and that "[i]f it's past the buckle, [he] consider[ed] that the passenger seat." J.A. 103. Corporal Johnston did not recall a center console and did not recall telling the ATF agent that there was a center console.
Deputy Forrest testified that he did not see the firearm on the seat from the passenger's side but did recall that the center console had been folded down onto the seat when he entered the vehicle. It was his understanding that the firearm was located between the passenger's side and the driver's side of the truck seat.
Cunningham argues that the district court clearly erred in crediting Corporal Johnston's testimony and denying the motion to suppress on "plain view" grounds because Corporal Johnston's testimony was inconsistent with his earlier statements and Deputy Forrest's testimony regarding precisely
J.A. 183-84. The district court went on to find that Corporal Johnston was "highly credible" and that, while there were "modest inconsistencies," J.A. 186, Corporal Johnston "stood firm" on "cross-examination on those allegedly prior inconsistent statements . . . as to the weapon being on the other side of the buckle." J.A. 187. Further explaining his credibility determination, the district court noted:
J.A. 187.
We hold that the district court did not clearly err in crediting Corporal Johnston's testimony that he observed the firearm on the seat of the truck in plain view before opening the driver's side door, providing probable cause to conduct the warrantless search and seize the loaded firearm. The district court clearly considered all of the evidence when rendering its credibility determination, including Corporal Johnston's prior statements and Deputy Forrest's testimony. Furthermore, Corporal Johnston's prior statements are consistent with his testimony that he observed the firearm in plain view through the driver's side window before entering the vehicle, and the alleged inconsistencies pertain only to what one might call the area of the seat where the firearm was observed and whether there was a center console folded down at the time. Such minor discrepancies do not so undermine his testimony that we would upset the district court's comprehensive credibility determination. Cunningham's argument that Corporal Johnston's testimony was internally inconsistent or implausible on its face is devoid of evidentiary support and clearly without merit.
It is well established that persons subjected to custodial interrogation are entitled to the safeguards prescribed by
It is undisputed that Cunningham was in custody and that
Thus, the only issue before us is whether Cunningham's follow-up questions, as to whether he would be charged with the firearm because he was a convicted felon, were also required to be suppressed because they too were made in response to Deputy Forrest's initial statement, or whether the follow-up questions amounted to a spontaneous admission that falls outside of the protection of
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court's order denying Cunningham's motion to suppress the firearm. We reverse the district court's order denying Cunningham's motion to suppress the follow-up questions he asked of Deputy Forrest at the hospital, and remand for further proceedings. We dispense with oral argument because the facts and legal contentions are adequately presented in the materials before the court and argument would not aid the decisional process.