Court Opinion

ID: 9467918
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-05 01:59:37.425277+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:40:35.550684
License: Public Domain

POOLE, Circuit Judge,
concurring specially.
I concur in the reversal of the convictions of appellants Patterson, Martinson, and Flintoff, for the reasons stated in the majority opinion. I also concur in affirming appellant Oglesby’s conviction. However, I do not believe it is possible to justify the officers’ approach to Oglesby on a founded suspicion analysis. Oglesby had never been *635seen by the officers during this long investigation. The only “objective manifestations” that Oglesby was, or was about to be, involved in criminal activity were vague references to things that one of the officers heard, from a source unidentified to us, about the color of a car seen at another point during the stakeout, and the connection of someone with a band. Such tenuous assertions cannot form the basis for founded suspicion. Had Oglesby remained silent, I would hold that there was no basis for an investigatory stop and that his conviction should be reversed.
However, Oglesby did not remain silent; rather, immediately and voluntarily he told the officers that he had a gun. In these circumstances, justification of the officers’ approach to him becomes unnecessary. Even without prior reason to connect Ogles-by with any wrongdoing, once he had spontaneously confessed to possession of a concealed weapon, they were justified in taking it and in arresting him. I do not think that justice is served by stretching for founded suspicion, especially where the exercise is not necessary. Hence, I would affirm Oglesby’s conviction on these grounds.