CA3: Cuffing and taking def in on RS for a show-up was not a de facto arrest

Removing defendant on reasonable suspicion from a high crime area to the police station for a show-up and further identification was not unreasonable. It did not become a de facto arrest. United States v. Carter, 2024 U.S. App. LEXIS 1155 (3d Cir. Jan. 18, 2024):

Here, the officers’ actions-handcuffing Carter, placing him in a police car, and transporting him to the police station for identification-did not transform the Terry stop into a de facto arrest. It was reasonable to handcuff Carter during the Terry stop out of concern for the safety of themselves and others based on (1) the officers’ suspicion that Carter had recently committed two armed robberies, and (2) Carter’s behavior as the officers approached him in the store (taking his hand from the store counter and putting it into his pocket, while attempting to turn away from Officer Rosa). Indeed, handcuffing Carter “while … conducting an investigation [did not] automatically transform [this] otherwise-valid Terry stop into a full-blown arrest.” United States v. Johnson, 592 F.3d 442, 448 (3d Cir. 2010).

Placing Carter in the police car and transporting him to the police station to confirm his identity also did not result in a de facto arrest. It was reasonable for the officers to place Carter in the car while running the MDT search in a high-crime area, given their experience that bystanders there may disrupt their investigative activity. When the MDT search came back with no results, it was reasonable to suspect that Carter provided a fake name, and to transport him to the police station to confirm his identity. …

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