CA7: Refusal to remove hands and then keeping one side of body away from officer was RS

Defendant’s repeated refusals to keep both hands out of his pockets and turning to keep one side away from the officer was reasonable suspicion he was armed. United States v. Mays, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 6552 (7th Cir. April 11, 2016):

Finally, when Officer Lepsky and Mr. Mays were only an arm’s length apart, Mr. Mays, after repeatedly rebuffing the officer’s requests to stop walking, abruptly stopped moving forward but “continued to move in a circular motion” as he turned his body around toward the officer. It was at that point that Officer Lepsky seized Mr. Mays by reaching out and grabbing his shoulder.

Based on the totality of the circumstances known to Officer Lepsky at that moment, it was reasonable for the officer to infer that Mr. Mays had a weapon in his right hand and was rounding to use physical force. It was reasonable to suspect that the man who was turning toward him in such a fashion was not merely having a change of heart and acquiescing in the officer’s request for a consensual interview. Rather, the officer had an articulable reason to believe that the man before him was armed and a danger to his safety. The seizure was therefore permissible under the Fourth Amendment.

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