United States v. Fiseku

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

United States v. Fiseku

Opinion

17-1222-cr U.S. v. Fiseku

17-1222-cr U.S. v. Fiseku

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT ______________

August Term, 2017

(Argued: June 7, 2018 Decided: October 4, 2018)

Docket No. 17‐1222‐cr ______________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Appellee,

–v.–

BEKIM FISEKU,

Defendant‐Appellant,

SEFEDIN JAJAGA,

Defendant.* ______________

B e f o r e :

CABRANES, LYNCH, and CARNEY, Circuit Judges.

______________

Defendant‐appellant Bekim Fiseku appeals from a judgment entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Engelmayer, J.)

* The Clerk of Court is directed to amend the case caption to conform to the above.

convicting him of conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery. Fiseku entered a conditional guilty plea after the District Court denied in part his motion to suppress physical evidence recovered during an investigatory stop. On appeal, he principally challenges that suppression ruling, arguing that the officers who apprehended him acted unreasonably by restraining Fiseku in handcuffs, thereby effectuating a de facto arrest without probable cause in violation of the Fourth Amendment. We disagree. As the District Court correctly determined, this case presents unusual circumstances that justify the use of handcuffs during an investigatory stop. Fiseku further argues that defense counsel was constitutionally ineffective in failing to assert a particular argument contesting Fiseku’s status as a “career offender” under the United States Sentencing Guidelines. Following our usual practice, we decline to adjudicate Fiseku’s ineffective assistance claim in this appeal, without prejudice to its renewal in a collateral proceeding.

AFFIRMED. ______________

ROBERT ALLEN, Assistant United States Attorney (Won S. Shin, Assistant United States Attorney, on the brief), for Geoffrey S. Berman, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, New York, NY, for Appellee.

MARY ANN WIRTH, Bleakley Platt & Schmidt, LLP, White Plains, NY, for Defendant‐Appellant. ______________

SUSAN L. CARNEY, Circuit Judge:

Defendant‐appellant Bekim Fiseku entered a conditional plea of guilty to one

count of conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery after the United States District Court

for the Southern District of New York (Engelmayer, J.) denied in part his motion to

suppress evidence recovered during an investigatory stop. See United States v. Fiseku

(“Suppression Order”), No. 15 CR 384,

2015 WL 7871038

(S.D.N.Y. Dec. 3, 2015). On

appeal, Fiseku challenges that denial, and also asserts that defense counsel was

constitutionally ineffective in failing to make a particular argument contesting Fiseku’s

2

status as a “career offender” under the United States Sentencing Guidelines (the

“Guidelines”). As to the suppression ruling, we agree with the District Court that the

officers acted reasonably under the Fourth Amendment during the late‐night

investigatory stop, notwithstanding their decision to briefly restrain Fiseku and two

other individuals in handcuffs before the officers developed probable cause to arrest. As

to Fiseku’s ineffective assistance claim, in accordance with our usual practice, we

decline to address his argument on direct appeal, without prejudice to his renewal of

the claim in a collateral proceeding. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth more fully

below, we AFFIRM the District Court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND2

I. The investigatory stop

Fiseku and two other individuals were apprehended in the early hours of

September 20, 2014, in Bedford, New York, a rural town in Westchester County.

Sergeant Vincent Gruppuso of the Bedford Police Department was on duty that night,

patrolling the streets in a marked patrol car. At approximately 1:15 a.m., Gruppuso saw

a white Nissan Pathfinder stopped on a dirt pull‐off. Gruppuso pulled up to the vehicle

and had a short conversation with the driver, later identified as Sefedin Jajaga, who

appeared to be the only person in the car. Jajaga told Gruppuso that he lived in Staten

Island and was in Bedford that night visiting a friend. He was on the pull‐off, he

2 The account provided here is drawn from the documentary evidence and testimony adduced before the District Court in connection with Fiseku’s motion to suppress. Where the evidence was contested or ambiguous, we defer to the District Court’s findings of fact as set forth in its suppression ruling. Neither party has challenged those findings on appeal.

3

explained, because the Pathfinder was having transmission trouble, and he was waiting

for a friend who had agreed to bring a tow truck from Brooklyn.

Gruppuso drove on, but as he later testified, the situation “seemed suspicious,”

particularly because he knew that a nearby house was vacant while awaiting sale,

making it a “prime target for . . . burglary.” App’x 126–27. He decided to circle back and

check on the vehicle. On his way back to the pull‐off, Gruppuso encountered the

Pathfinder driving on a nearby street, less than five minutes after the driver had

complained of transmission trouble. Gruppuso followed the Pathfinder to a “park‐n‐

ride” parking lot near the highway.

As he turned into the parking lot, Gruppuso saw the Pathfinder parked in the far

corner of the lot, which was ringed by trees. He parked nearby and now observed three

men in or near the Pathfinder: Jajaga sitting in the driver’s seat, a second individual

(later identified as a certain Hughes) sitting in the passenger seat, and a third (later

identified as Fiseku) walking around the rear of the vehicle. Because Gruppuso drove

into the parking lot only moments after the Pathfinder, there was not enough time for

anyone to enter that vehicle without Gruppuso noticing, unless someone was

“stand[ing] there ready to jump in the vehicle when it pulled in and stopped.”

App’x 158.

Gruppuso radioed from the parking lot at 1:25 a.m., asking for an additional unit

to join him, then got out of his car and approached the Pathfinder. Two officers soon

arrived in separate police cruisers. By that time, Gruppuso had already begun

interacting with Fiseku: after examining Fiseku’s driver’s license, Gruppuso patted him

down (finding no weapons or contraband), then placed him in handcuffs. Working

together, the three officers directed Jajaga and Hughes to exit the Pathfinder, then

patted them down and handcuffed them as well. Gruppuso testified at the suppression

4

hearing that the three men were handcuffed for officer safety. The officers did not draw

their guns, however, because “[t]here was no threat of deadly force at that time.”

App’x 170 (emphasis added).

The officers did not tell the men that they were under arrest, nor did they issue

Miranda warnings; rather, they explained that the men “were being detained” while the

officers investigated their suspicious activity. App’x 139. The men were then separated

for individual questioning, a “common interview tactic,” according to Gruppuso.

App’x 137. Jajaga and Hughes were each seated, separately, in the back seat of patrol

cars, while Fiseku remained standing outside.

Jajaga told Gruppuso that he had been able to get the Pathfinder started shortly

after their conversation on the dirt pull‐off. He then drove to the parking lot, he

explained, to pick up Fiseku and Hughes, who had driven there in a separate car; the

three men planned to travel together to a party in Waterbury, Connecticut. When

Gruppuso expressed skepticism, Jajaga offered a different reason for being in Bedford at

such a late hour: he had arranged a sexual encounter with a woman who lived there.

When asked for additional details, however, Jajaga claimed he did not know the

woman’s name or where she lived.

Hughes, like Jajaga, stated that the three men were en route to a party in

Connecticut in two separate cars. His account diverged at that point, however: whereas

Jajaga claimed that the three men intended to proceed from Bedford together in one car,

Hughes claimed they stopped in Bedford only to stretch their legs and smoke a

cigarette, after which the men got back into separate cars. Fiseku, too, mentioned a party

in Connecticut, but, contrary to both Jajaga’s and Hughes’s accounts, he claimed that all

three men had arrived in Bedford together in one car. When Gruppuso confronted

Fiseku with that inconsistency, Fiseku “stopped talking.” App’x 142.

5

After hearing all three accounts, Gruppuso returned to Jajaga and said he didn’t

believe Jajaga’s story. When asked “if there was anything in the vehicle that shouldn’t

be there,” Jajaga responded, “[N]o, you can look.”

Id.

The officers searched the vehicle

and found the following items: baseball caps and a sweatshirt bearing New York Police

Department insignia, a gold “repo/recovery agent” badge on a lanyard, a stun gun, a BB

gun “replicating” a Colt .45 pistol, a blank pistol “replicating” a .25 automatic,

flashlights, walkie talkies, gloves, a screw driver, and duct tape. Suppression Order,

2015  WL 7871038

, at *4.

The search was complete by 1:35 a.m., approximately ten minutes after

Gruppuso first arrived in the parking lot. At that point, concerned about a possible

home invasion, Gruppuso called in a request for additional units to help canvass the

area. The canvass did not reveal any criminal activity.

II. Procedural history

On June 18, 2015, the Government filed a sealed indictment charging Fiseku and

Jajaga with one count of conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery, in violation of

18  U.S.C. § 1951

. In September 2015, Fiseku and Jajaga moved to suppress both the

physical evidence recovered from the vehicle and certain statements they made to the

officers during the stop, asserting arguments under both the Fourth and Fifth

Amendments. The District Court held a suppression hearing in October 2015, and then

invited supplemental briefing, followed by oral argument.

On December 3, 2015, the District Court entered an order granting in part and

denying in part the suppression motion. Suppression Order,

2015 WL 7871038

. The court

rejected defendants’ argument that the officers effectuated a de facto arrest without

probable cause in violation of the Fourth Amendment. See id. at *11. In the District

Court’s view, the officers’ conduct—including their use of handcuffs—was reasonable

6

in light of the circumstances of the late‐night investigatory stop in a remote area. See id.

Turning to defendants’ arguments under the Fifth Amendment, the court concluded

that defendants’ statements must be suppressed because the officers subjected

defendants to a custodial interrogation without providing Miranda warnings. See id. at

*14–15 (finding inapplicable the “public safety” exception to Miranda’s requirements);

see also Miranda v. Arizona,

384 U.S. 436, 444

(1966) (requiring suppression of statements

“stemming from custodial interrogation of the defendant unless [the prosecution]

demonstrates the use of procedural safeguards effective to secure the privilege against

self‐incrimination”). The court declined, however, to suppress the physical evidence

recovered from the vehicle, concluding that “Jajaga’s consent to search the vehicle was

voluntarily and freely given,” notwithstanding the lack of Miranda warnings.

Suppression Order,

2015 WL 7871038

, at *18.

In November 2016, Fiseku entered a conditional guilty plea to the single count of

conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery. At the change‐of‐plea hearing, he allocuted

that he conspired with others to rob a known narcotics trafficker in Bedford. Fiseku’s

plea agreement articulated the parties’ consensus that, in light of his status as a career

offender (as defined in Guidelines section 4B1.1), the applicable offense level would be

29, producing a stipulated advisory Guidelines sentencing range of 151 to 188 months’

imprisonment. Fiseku agreed not to appeal or collaterally attack any sentence that fell

within or below that stipulated Guidelines range, except that he reserved the right to

assert two specific types of challenges: (1) a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel,

whether on direct appeal or in a habeas proceeding; and (2) an appeal of the District

Court’s decision not to suppress the physical evidence recovered from the vehicle. The

agreement further provided that, should Fiseku successfully appeal the suppression

ruling, the Government would not oppose a motion to withdraw his plea.

7

Fiseku appeared for sentencing on April 12, 2017. The District Court adopted the

Guidelines calculation in the plea agreement (including Fiseku’s designation as a career

offender) and sentenced him, principally, to 108 months’ imprisonment. Fiseku timely

appealed.

DISCUSSION

In this appeal, Fiseku argues that the investigatory stop ripened into a de facto

arrest when Officer Gruppuso restrained him in handcuffs, and therefore, that the

Fourth Amendment compels suppression of the physical evidence recovered from the

Pathfinder during that stop. We disagree, and so affirm the District Court’s decision

declining to suppress that evidence. Fiseku additionally asserts a claim of ineffective

assistance of counsel, arguing that defense counsel was ineffective in failing to make

certain arguments challenging the Government’s proposed Guidelines calculation. We

decline to reach this argument on direct appeal, without prejudice to its renewal in a

future collateral proceeding where the record may be more fully developed.

I. Fiseku’s Fourth Amendment challenge

Fiseku maintains that the officers’ use of handcuffs caused the investigatory

detention to ripen into a de facto arrest without probable cause in violation of the

Fourth Amendment. He contends, therefore, that the District Court erred in declining to

suppress the physical evidence recovered during the investigatory stop as fruit of the

poisonous tree.3 See Utah v. Strieff,

136 S. Ct. 2056, 2061

(2016). In appeals from denied

3 Under the so‐called “exclusionary rule,” trial courts must generally “exclude evidence obtained by unconstitutional police conduct.” Utah v. Strieff,

136 S. Ct. 2056, 2059

(2016). The Supreme Court has recognized “several exceptions” to that rule, see

id. at 2061

, but the Government has not argued that any exception applies in this instance. Rather, the Government

8

suppression motions, we review factual determinations for clear error, but we review

de novo conclusions of law and “[m]ixed questions of law and fact,” including the

ultimate determination of “whether the admitted or established facts satisfy the relevant

statutory or constitutional standard.” United States v. Alexander,

888 F.3d 628, 631

(2d

Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks omitted). We agree with the District Court’s

conclusion that the unusual circumstances of Fiseku’s apprehension justified the brief

use of handcuffs in this instance. We accordingly affirm the District Court’s decision not

to suppress the physical evidence under the Fourth Amendment.4

A. Legal standard: Investigatory stops and de facto arrests

The Fourth Amendment defines a right to be free from “unreasonable searches

and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. Courts assess “reasonableness” in this context by

“balancing the particular need to search or seize against the privacy interests invaded

by such action.” United States v. Bailey,

743 F.3d 322, 331

(2d Cir. 2014).

While an arrest must generally be supported by probable cause, “an officer may

conduct a brief investigatory detention”—also referred to as a “Terry stop”—“as long as

the officer has reasonable suspicion that the person to be detained is committing or has

committed a criminal offense.” United States v. Compton,

830 F.3d 55, 61

(2d Cir. 2016)

(emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Terry v. Ohio,

392 U.S. 1

(1968). Even a properly initiated investigatory stop, however, may “ripen into a de

contends that the officers acted reasonably under the Fourth Amendment during the investigatory stop such that the exclusionary rule does not come into play.

4 Fiseku also purports to challenge the District Court’s conclusion that Jajaga’s consent to search the Pathfinder was voluntarily given. But because Fiseku’s argument amounts to a single paragraph bereft of any citation to applicable legal authority, we deem the point abandoned. See United States v. Botti,

711 F.3d 299, 313

(2d Cir. 2013) (“It is a settled appellate rule that issues adverted to in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort at developed argumentation, are deemed waived.”).

9

facto arrest that must be based on probable cause.” Compton,

830 F.3d at 64

. When a

court considers a claim of de facto arrest, the following facts are “generally deemed

relevant”:

(1) the length of time involved in the stop; (2) its public or private setting; (3) the number of participating law enforcement officers; (4) the risk of danger presented by the person stopped; and (5) the display or use of physical force against the person stopped, including firearms, handcuffs, and leg irons.

United States v. Newton,

369 F.3d 659, 674

(2d Cir. 2004). As we cautioned in Newton, “No

one of these factors is determinative. But to satisfy the reasonableness standard, officers

conducting stops on less than probable cause must employ the least intrusive means

reasonably available to effect their legitimate investigative purposes.”

Id.

(citation and

internal quotation marks omitted).

The Supreme Court has emphasized that “[i]t is the [Government’s] burden to

demonstrate that the seizure it seeks to justify on the basis of a reasonable suspicion

was sufficiently limited in scope and duration to satisfy the conditions of an

investigative seizure.” Florida v. Royer,

460 U.S. 491, 500

(1983). We apply “an objective

standard” in assessing the Government’s asserted justification, asking whether “the

facts available to the officer at the moment of the seizure or the search ‘warrant a

[person] of reasonable caution in the belief’ that the action taken was appropriate[.]”

Terry, 392 U.S. at 21–22 (quoting Carroll v. United States,

267 U.S. 132, 162

(1925)).

B. The investigatory stop in this case

On appeal, the parties appear to agree to two propositions: first, that Officer

Gruppuso had reasonable suspicion sufficient to justify initiating a Terry stop, and

second, that he did not have probable cause to arrest Fiseku until he discovered the

suspicious equipment inside the Pathfinder. Fiseku urges us to conclude that the

10

investigatory stop ripened into a de facto arrest unsupported by probable cause when,

shortly after initiating the Terry stop and patting him down, Gruppuso handcuffed him.

On de novo review, we conclude that this case presents “unusual circumstances” under

which an officer may handcuff a suspect without “transform[ing] a Terry stop into an

arrest.” Grice v. McVeigh,

873 F.3d 162, 168

(2d Cir. 2017).

When, at approximately 1:25 a.m., Gruppuso followed the white Pathfinder into

the dark parking lot surrounded by trees, he had reason to believe that Jajaga had lied

about why he was in rural Bedford so late at night. It was highly improbable that Jajaga

had managed to get the vehicle started mere moments after telling Gruppuso that he

was stranded with a broken transmission and was waiting for a friend to arrive from

distant Brooklyn with a tow truck. Gruppuso’s suspicions were reasonably heightened

when he saw that the Pathfinder now had a passenger (Hughes), and that a third man

(Fiseku)—also not earlier present—was walking around the side of the vehicle. During

the conversation on the dirt pull‐off, Gruppuso had believed that Jajaga was the

vehicle’s only occupant. Given those observations, and given that Gruppuso arrived in

the parking lot mere moments after the Pathfinder, Gruppuso might reasonably have

inferred either that the additional two men had been hiding in the vehicle during the

conversation on the pull‐off, or that they had been waiting in the parking lot for Jajaga

to arrive. In either event, and in this setting, a reasonably cautious officer in Gruppuso’s

position would have objective grounds to suspect that the three men were about to

commit a crime, or that they had recently done so. Moreover, the officer would

recognize how little he knew in this quickly evolving situation, where both the degree

of suspicion and the number of suspects had grown substantially in the space of ten

minutes.

11

Gruppuso radioed for assistance, but given the late hour and the remote location,

he could not be sure how many units would respond, or how long it would take them

to arrive. In fact, two units responded within minutes, but by that time, Gruppuso had

already begun interacting with Fiseku. A pat‐down did not reveal any weapons or

contraband on Fiseku’s person, but the Supreme Court has “expressly recognized” that

“suspects may injure police officers and others by virtue of their access to weapons, even

though they may not themselves be armed.” Michigan v. Long,

463 U.S. 1032, 1048

(1983)

(emphasis added). The Long Court explained further that “investigative detentions

involving suspects in vehicles are especially fraught with danger to police officers.”

Id.  at 1047

. When Gruppuso restrained Fiseku in handcuffs, two additional suspects (Jajaga

and Hughes) remained seated in the Pathfinder, where weapons may have lain within

reach. Moreover, in the dark, tree‐lined parking lot, Gruppuso could not feasibly

conduct a protective perimeter sweep to check for secreted weapons or additional

associates while monitoring three suspects, whom the District Court described as

“muscular men.” App’x 185.

We generally view handcuff use as a “hallmark of a formal arrest.” Newton,

369  F.3d at 676

. At the same time, we have long recognized that, “regardless of whether

probable cause to arrest exists,” a “law enforcement agent, faced with the possibility of

danger, has a right to take reasonable steps to protect himself.” United States v.

Alexander,

907 F.2d 269, 272

(2d Cir. 1990). Recognizing the tension between these

competing principles, we have explained that the Fourth Amendment occasionally will

permit handcuff usage during a Terry stop when the “police have a reasonable basis to

think that the person detained poses a present physical threat and that handcuffing is

12

the least intrusive means to protect against that threat.”5 Bailey,

743 F.3d at 340

(emphasis added). To that end, we have previously found that officers acted reasonably

in using handcuffs when they acted based on reliable information that a suspect was

armed and possibly dangerous. See, e.g., Grice,

873 F.3d at 168

(The officer “received a

report . . . of an individual matching [the suspect’s] description bending down by the

[train] tracks with a remote control device,” and so “had reason to believe” that the

suspect “might use an electronic device to set off an explosive on the tracks.”); Newton,

369 F.3d at 675

(Officers visited an apartment “to investigate a report that [the suspect]

illegally possessed a firearm and had recently threatened to kill his mother and her

husband.”); United States v. Vargas,

369 F.3d 98, 102

(2d Cir. 2004) (“[T]he officers had

reliable information that [the suspect] was carrying a weapon,” and he “demonstrated

his unwillingness to cooperate . . . by fleeing . . . when originally approached and

continuing to struggle . . . following the stop.”).

In this case, Fiseku asserts that Gruppuso acted unreasonably and based on

suspicion alone: Gruppuso had neither received reports of, nor directly observed,

conduct suggesting that the occupants of the Pathfinder had engaged in criminal

activity, or that any of them carried a weapon or otherwise presented a physical threat

5 Officer Gruppuso testified at the suppression hearing that it is not “unusual” for him to use handcuffs during investigatory stops. App’x 138. In determining whether police conduct is consistent with the Fourth Amendment, we assess the circumstances objectively, and not according to the subjective motivations of police officers, see Whren v. United States,

517 U.S. 806,  813

(1996), let alone what an officer’s practice might be in other circumstances. Accordingly, the only question before us is whether Gruppuso acted reasonably under the circumstances of Fiseku’s apprehension. We have emphasized that “[h]andcuffing is ordinarily not incident to a Terry stop, and tends to show that a stop has ripened into an arrest.” Grice,

873 F.3d at 167

. Several of our sister circuits have similarly cautioned that the use of handcuffs in Terry stops is not “a matter of routine.” United States v. Acosta‐Colon,

157 F.3d 9, 18

(1st Cir. 1998); see also Ramos v. City of Chicago,

716 F.3d 1013, 1018

(7th Cir. 2013).

13

or risk of flight. In Fiseku’s view, his apprehension closely resembles the investigatory

stop in United States v. Bailey,

743 F.3d 322

(2d Cir. 2014), in which this Court found the

use of handcuffs to be unreasonable. We find this comparison inapt.

In Bailey, two detectives were surveilling an apartment in which, according to a

reliable informant, a man armed with a handgun was selling drugs. Two men, each of

whom matched the drug dealer’s general description, emerged from the apartment and

got into a car. The detectives followed the car for approximately one mile, then directed

the men to pull over in a fire station parking lot and exit the vehicle. A pat‐down

revealed no weapons. In response to the detectives’ questions, one of the men claimed

to live at the surveilled apartment. The detectives handcuffed the men and detained

them while the police searched the apartment pursuant to a warrant that had been

issued earlier that same day. On appeal, we found a Fourth Amendment violation in the

handcuffing, concluding that the record evinced no “physical threat” or other factor

that would justify handcuffing the two men.

Id. at 340

. We cautioned, however, that in a

future case, “the government may be able to point to circumstances supporting a

reasonable basis to think that even an unarmed person poses a present physical threat

or flight risk warranting handcuffing.”

Id.

We find persuasive the District Court’s thorough discussion here of material

differences between the circumstances of Fiseku’s apprehension and the stop in Bailey.

See Suppression Order,

2015 WL 7871038

, at *9–10. In Bailey, the detectives selected when

and where to conduct the investigatory stop, and apprehended the two men with the

legitimate, limited purpose of confirming whether either of the car’s occupants might be

a resident of the apartment under surveillance. The detectives might have suspected

that one or both men had committed a crime at some point in the past, but the record

did not suggest any ongoing or imminent criminal activity. Here, by contrast, Gruppuso

14

stumbled upon a suspicious scenario in the middle of the night in a remote, wooded

location where three suspects had, it appeared, arranged to meet. His goal was not

simply to identify the men, but to confirm or rebut his suspicion that they had

committed, or were poised to commit, a home invasion or some other crime. The

likelihood of ongoing or imminent criminal activity heightened the risk that one or

more suspects might be armed and that they might attempt to fight or flee. Gruppuso

made quick decisions about how best to protect both himself and the public, acting in

the face of uncertainty about how many associates might be present, what sort of

criminal activity they might be involved in, or whether any of them might have access

to a weapon.6

Gruppuso made the cautious choice to restrain Fiseku in handcuffs at the outset

of the investigatory stop so he could safely turn his attention to the two suspects in the

vehicle and the two newly arrived police cruisers. Under these circumstances,

“handcuffing was a less intimidating—and less dangerous—means of ensuring [officer]

safety . . . than holding [Fiseku] at gunpoint.” Newton,

369 F.3d at 675

. Given the

“swiftly developing situation” in which Gruppuso found himself, we heed the Supreme

Court’s warning not to “indulge in unrealistic second‐guessing.” United States v. Sharpe,

470 U.S. 675, 686

(1985). As the Sharpe Court explained, “The question is not simply

whether some other alternative was available, but whether the police acted unreasonably

in failing to recognize or to pursue it.”

Id. at 687

(emphasis added). Here, although

6 We have previously cautioned that “suspecting a person of having committed a burglary cannot, in and of itself, provide police with grounds to subject that person to an extremely intrusive Terry stop.” Oliveira v. Mayer,

23 F.3d 642

, 647 n.1 (2d Cir. 1994). Here, however, our review of “the facts available to [Gruppuso] at the moment of the seizure or the search,” Terry, 392 U.S. at 21–22, confirms that he acted on the basis of more than mere suspicion of wrongdoing.

15

Gruppuso might have chosen to proceed without using physical restraints, we conclude

that he did not act unreasonably when he placed Fiseku in handcuffs shortly after

initiating the investigatory stop.

Having concluded that the initial application of handcuffs was reasonable, we

next consider whether the continued use of handcuffs became unreasonable at some

point thereafter. We conclude that it did not. In the space of ten minutes, the three

officers patted down and handcuffed the three suspects, separated them, questioned

each of them at least once, then searched the Pathfinder and discovered highly

suspicious equipment inside, at which point (as Fiseku concedes) they had probable

cause to effectuate an arrest. As the District Court explained, the record does not

suggest “that the officers were at all dilatory in questioning the three men.” Suppression

Order,

2015 WL 7871038

, at *11; see also, e.g., Grice,

873 F.3d at 168

(“[T]hirty‐three

minutes was not an unreasonable interval to keep the handcuffs on while officers and a

dog searched the tracks for a potential bomb.”). Further, if handcuffs were reasonable

when three officers were questioning three suspects in this remote area late at night,

then handcuffs remained reasonable when one or more of those officers turned his

attention away from the suspects in order to briefly search a vehicle. See, e.g., United

States v. Hurst,

228 F.3d 751

, 758 n.3 (6th Cir. 2000) (“[W]here defendant was reasonably

suspected of having just burglarized a home and might reasonably have been deemed

armed and dangerous, the officers’ attempt to use handcuffs as a precautionary

measure to secure their safety during the vehicle search was not unreasonable or

otherwise improper.”).

For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that Officer Gruppuso and his

colleagues did not violate Fiseku’s Fourth Amendment rights by restraining him in

handcuffs during the initial ten minutes of the investigatory detention before probable

16

cause was established. We accordingly affirm the District Court’s decision not to

suppress the physical evidence recovered during the officers’ search of the Pathfinder.

II. Fiseku’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel

Fiseku’s second argument on appeal is that he received ineffective assistance of

counsel in connection with his sentencing. He contends in particular that defense

counsel should have challenged his classification as a “career offender” under section

4B1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines on the grounds that his crime of conviction

(conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery) does not meet the definition of a “crime of

violence” set forth in Guidelines section 4B1.2.

We are “generally reluctant to address ineffectiveness claims on direct review,” a

stage at which “the constitutional sufficiency of counsel’s performance is usually unripe

for seasoned retrospection.” United States v. Rivernider,

828 F.3d 91, 106

(2d Cir. 2016)

(internal quotation marks omitted). That reluctance is particularly appropriate in this

instance. We note, first, that the legal issue underlying Fiseku’s ineffective assistance

claim presents an interpretive question about the Guidelines that this Circuit has yet to

address.7 Moreover, the record on appeal is silent as to defense counsel’s conversations

with Fiseku and strategic calculations regarding Fiseku’s plea agreement (in which the

parties stipulated to Fiseku’s status as a career offender) and sentencing submissions (in

connection with which defense counsel did, in fact, argue against a “career offender”

7 In a recent decision, we determined that conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery meets the definition of a “crime of violence” in the Armed Career Criminal Act,

18 U.S.C. § 924

(c)(3)(A). United States v. Barrett, — F.3d —, No. 14‐2641‐CR,

2018 WL 4288566

, at *1 (2d Cir. Sept. 10, 2018). That provision is worded identically to the “force clause” provision in section 4B1.2(a)(1) of the Guidelines, and so Barrett offers persuasive authority that Fiseku’s crime of conviction similarly meets the Guidelines definition of a “crime of violence.” United States v. Walker,

595  F.3d 441

, 443 n.1 (2d Cir. 2010). We have not officially so held, however, and we need not do so in this appeal.

17

designation, albeit on different grounds than those Fiseku describes in his

ineffectiveness claim). Given these legal and factual uncertainties, “we decline to review

defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on the record now before us.”

United States v. Morris,

350 F.3d 32, 39

(2d Cir. 2003). Our decision here does not

foreclose Fiseku from asserting an identical claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in

a future motion under

28 U.S.C. § 2255

, should he so desire.

CONCLUSION

Given the unusual circumstances of this case, we are unable to conclude that the

officers acted unreasonably in restraining Fiseku and his associates in handcuffs as they

did. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the District Court.

18

Reference

Status
Published