NE: Stopping car leaving house under surveillance for which SW was sought was reasonable just to gather information

Defendant’s car was leaving a house under surveillance as a place where a gun safe was known to have been taken after a burglary to break it open. A search warrant was being sought. The stop was a seizure, but it was reasonable under Brown and McArthur as in information gathering stop. State v. Sievers, 300 Neb. 26, 2018 Neb. LEXIS 92 (May 19, 2018):

Balancing Brown Factors

In balancing the Brown factors, on our de novo review, we find that Sievers was lawfully stopped. Officers sought to temporarily stop and question the driver of the truck for the purpose of investigating specific and known felonies, as well as the presence of narcotics and firearms. The grave public concern at issue heavily weighs in favor of the reasonableness of the stop.
The stop of Sievers to see if he had any information about the target residence or stolen property advanced the task force’s investigation. Police knew Sievers’ truck had just arrived at the target address and was parked in the driveway to the outbuilding, behind a primary residence, next to a vehicle owned by a suspected dealer of methamphetamine. After surveilling the scene without interruption for 20 to 30 minutes, the officers saw the truck moving from the residence. The officers were reasonable to conclude the driver of the truck had information to provide.

Finally, although the stop was an intrusion upon Sievers’ liberty, the initial stop was not unnecessarily prolonged and the interference is not enough to counterbalance the officers’ need to resolve grave and immediate threats to the public.

The critical mass of special law enforcement concerns presented in this case justifies the application of a rare exception to the rule against suspicionless searches and seizures. We do so only after ensuring that the officers’ conduct was narrow in scope and that Sievers’ privacy interests were not subject to arbitrary invasions at the unfettered discretion of officers in the field.

Although our reasoning differs from that of the district court, when all the factors are weighed, we conclude that the stop was reasonable under Brown.

See Volokh Conspiracy: Court Allows Suspicionless “Information Seeking” Stop of a Car Leaving a Home by Orin Kerr: “A wrong decision, I think.”

Agreed.

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