D.Mass.: Length of detention on RS was justified by defendant’s actions, so it wasn’t unreasonable

The officer had reasonable suspicion to detain the defendant for “ATM skimming,” but he did not have sufficient evidence to frisk him. Defendant’s own curious and false answers about what he was doing could be checked out, and that made the 3-4 hour detention before his arrest reasonable. United States v. Pascu, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 88071 (D. Mass. June 26, 2012):

Pascu nevertheless argues that the duration of the stop was unreasonable. Pascu was first stopped sometime after 2 p.m., and was formally arrested by all accounts some three or four hours later. From the testimony of the officers, it appears that all of the time between the beginning of the encounter and the formal arrest was reasonably necessary to the developing investigation related to the initial Terry stop. Officer Allen needed time to assess what was going on when he first stopped Pascu and started speaking to him. As Pascu gave answers about what he was doing there and whom he was meeting, Officer Allen had reason to believe that Pascu’s answers were not truthful and were evasive. When other officers arrived, Officer Allen had to get them up to speed about what was happening and they began searching for the satchel and sunglasses that had been reported by the caller.

Detectives who later arrived had to call bank security to get confirmation that the ATM appeared tampered with and to get surveillance photographs to determine whether Pascu was the individual who had installed the “skimmer” device and pinhole camera on the ATM. Detective O’Connor needed time to view the photographs and to cross-reference addresses found in the Chrysler with other ATMs in the region. Finally, because the detectives were unable to remove the “skimmer” from the ATM, they had to wait until Special Agent Seidel arrived and removed it. All of these investigative steps were “reasonably responsive to the circumstances justifying the stop in the first place as augmented by information gleaned by the officer[s] during the stop.” Chaney, 647 F.3d at 409 (quotation and citation omitted). Pascu’s lawful Terry detention did not become a de facto arrest because of its duration.

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