Court Opinion

ID: 4387893
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-04-16 20:00:55.703945+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:50:42.899485
License: Public Domain

Case: 16-15690    Date Filed: 04/16/2019   Page: 1 of 88

                                                                       [PUBLISH]

              IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                       FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                         ________________________

                               No. 16-15690
                         ________________________

                     D.C. Docket No. 1:15-cr-20838-UU-1

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                                            Plaintiff-Appellee,
                                    versus

PAUL JOHNSON, JR.,

                                                          Defendant-Appellant.

                         ________________________

                  Appeal from the United States District Court
                      for the Southern District of Florida
                         _______________________

                                (April 16, 2019)

Before ED CARNES, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT, MARCUS, WILSON, WILLIAM
PRYOR, MARTIN, JORDAN, ROSENBAUM, JILL PRYOR, NEWSOM,
BRANCH, and GRANT, Circuit Judges.

WILLIAM PRYOR, Circuit Judge, delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
ED CARNES, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT, MARCUS, NEWSOM, BRANCH, and
GRANT, Circuit Judges, joined.

NEWSOM, Circuit Judge, filed a concurring opinion.
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BRANCH, Circuit Judge, filed a concurring opinion, in which GRANT, Circuit
Judge, joined.

JORDAN, Circuit Judge, filed a dissenting opinion.

ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge, filed a dissenting opinion.

JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge, filed a dissenting opinion, in which WILSON,
MARTIN, and JORDAN, Circuit Judges, joined.

WILLIAM PRYOR, Circuit Judge:

      This appeal requires us to decide whether a police officer violated the Fourth

Amendment when he removed a round of live ammunition and a holster from the

pocket of a suspect during a protective frisk, see Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).

At 4:00 a.m., the officer responded to a call about a burglary in progress in a high-

crime area. When the officer arrived at the scene, he saw Paul Johnson, who

matched the burglar’s description, standing in a dark alley. After detaining

Johnson, the officer frisked him and immediately recognized that he had a round of

ammunition in his pocket. The officer removed the ammunition and an empty

holster covering it. He then canvassed the area and found two pistols less than a

foot from where he first saw Johnson. After a grand jury indicted Johnson for

being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition in violation of 18 U.S.C.

§ 922(g)(1), he moved to suppress the pistols, ammunition, and holster, but the

district court denied his motion. A panel of this Court reversed. United States v.

Johnson, 885 F.3d 1313 (11th Cir.), reh’g en banc granted, op. vacated, 892 F.3d
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1155 (11th Cir. 2018). We then vacated that decision and ordered rehearing en

banc. We now affirm the denial of Johnson’s motion to suppress because the

officer was entitled to seize the ammunition to protect himself and others.

                                I. BACKGROUND

      We review the facts adduced at the evidentiary hearings because they are

critical to our resolution of this case. Dwight Williams, a police officer for the City

of Opa-Locka, Florida, sat alone in his patrol car when a call came over his radio

shortly after 4:00 a.m. on June 14, 2015. The call reported a burglary in progress at

a nearby multi-family duplex and described the burglar as a black male wearing a

white shirt. Officer Williams and another officer responded to the call. Officer

Williams knew from experience that responding to a burglary can be dangerous

because burglars are often armed.

      The officers arrived at the duplex and started to search for the suspected

burglar. Officer Williams saw Paul Johnson, a black male wearing a white shirt

standing near a fence in a dark alley at the back of the duplex. The officers asked

Johnson to come toward them where they could “see him a little better.” Johnson

complied, and as he walked toward them, another officer arrived on the scene. The

officers ordered Johnson to lie on the ground and handcuffed him. Officer

Williams then began frisking Johnson.

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      While patting down Johnson’s pocket, Officer Williams felt something

nylon covering “a small, round, hard object” that he immediately recognized as

ammunition. He reached into Johnson’s pocket and removed the round of

ammunition and an empty nylon holster. The round belonged to a .380 caliber gun.

Officer Williams was concerned; as he later testified, “the round that was in

[Johnson’s] pocket and the holster led [him] to believe that there [wa]s a weapon

that [the] round goes to and something goes into that holster.” Based on his

experience that burglaries often involve more than one perpetrator, he was also

concerned that there was “another person in an apartment [who] m[ight] come out

with something.”

      As Officer Williams searched the area for a gun, Johnson told the other

officers that he had been trying to wake up his girlfriend, who lived at the duplex,

by knocking loudly on her door. Johnson suggested that someone might have

thought he was trying to break in. The officers tried to confirm Johnson’s story, but

his girlfriend would not answer their knock at her door.

      Meanwhile, Officer Williams found a hole in the fence close to where

Johnson had been standing. Knowing that suspects “throw[]” away weapons “a lot

in Opa-Locka” when they encounter the police, Officer Williams drove around the

fence to see if a gun had been tossed on the other side. Sure enough, he found two

pistols, one .380 caliber and the other .40 caliber, less than a foot from where the

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officers had first seen Johnson. Officer Williams checked the serial numbers on the

pistols and determined that both had been reported as stolen.

      Johnson’s girlfriend eventually opened her door for the officers. She

confirmed that Johnson lived at the duplex with her and that he was trying to enter

their home. The officers then arrested Johnson.

      The officers took Johnson to the police station, where he waived his rights to

remain silent and to counsel, see Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).

Johnson confessed that he was holding the pistols for his brother and cousin, even

though he had previously been convicted of a felony. A grand jury later indicted

Johnson for being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition, 18 U.S.C.

§ 922(g)(1).

      Johnson moved to suppress the ammunition, the holster, and the pistols,

along with any statements resulting from the frisk. Johnson argued that Officer

Williams violated the Fourth Amendment by frisking him and by seizing the

ammunition and holster. A magistrate judge held two evidentiary hearings on the

motion.

      The officers who detained Johnson testified that Opa-Locka is a “high-crime

area” that receives a “high volume of calls” involving “bodily harm done to others”

and the use of firearms “in [multiple] aspects of the crimes from burglaries to

robberies to home invasions.” The officers testified that, in their experience,

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burglaries in Opa-Locka often involve more than one perpetrator. According to

Officer Williams, a reported burglary presents a dangerous situation for the

officers because, “when [the officers] arrive to the scene, [they] never know where

the potential [suspect] may be, . . . never know what [a suspect] has, [and] never

know if [they] have any lighting to see the potential [suspect].” Officer Williams

testified that the officers detained Johnson “because of the nature of the call and

the current conditions” at the scene and to “make sure that no one else was on the

premise with him.” After the hearings, the magistrate judge issued a report and

recommendation concluding that Officer Williams did not violate the Fourth

Amendment by frisking Johnson and removing the ammunition and holster from

his pocket.

      The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation

and denied Johnson’s motion to suppress. The district court ruled that the frisk was

constitutional at its inception because “Officer Williams had reasonable suspicion

to believe that his safety or the safety of others was in danger.” And it ruled that

the removal of the ammunition and holster “was a justified continuation of the

initial frisk.” The district court reasoned that “[a]n officer’s seizure of ammunition

following a lawful frisk when investigating a possible violent crime, particularly

when confronted with an unsecure scene, is sufficiently connected to officer safety

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not to run afoul of the Fourth Amendment.” Johnson pleaded guilty but reserved

his right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress.

      A panel of this Court reversed. Johnson, 885 F.3d at 1324. The panel agreed

that the frisk was constitutional at its inception because, “[c]onsidering the totality

of the facts, . . . Officer Williams reasonably believed that his safety, or the safety

of his fellow officers, was at risk.” Id. at 1322. But the panel concluded that the

removal of the ammunition and holster from Johnson’s pocket violated the Fourth

Amendment. Id. at 1322–24. It held “the presence of a single round of

ammunition—without facts supporting the presence, or reasonable expectation of

the presence, of a firearm—was insufficient to justify the seizure of the bullet and

the holster.” Id. at 1323–24.

      We vacated the panel’s opinion and ordered rehearing en banc. We

instructed the parties to address one issue: whether Officer Williams was entitled,

when he felt a round of ammunition in Johnson’s pocket during a Terry frisk, to

seize the ammunition and the holster.

                          II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

      We review the denial of a motion to suppress under a mixed standard of

review. United States v. Clay, 483 F.3d 739, 743 (11th Cir. 2007). We review the

district court’s findings of fact for clear error and review the application of law to

the facts de novo. United States v. Matchett, 802 F.3d 1185, 1191 (11th Cir. 2015).

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We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, as “the party

that prevailed in the district court.” Id. (citation and quotation marks omitted).

                                 III. DISCUSSION

      The Fourth Amendment guarantees “[t]he right of the people to be secure in

their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and

seizures.” U.S. Const. Amend. IV. “[R]easonableness is always the touchstone of

Fourth Amendment analysis,” Birchfield v. North Dakota, 136 S. Ct. 2160, 2186

(2016), because “what the Constitution forbids is not all searches and seizures, but

unreasonable searches and seizures,” Terry, 392 U.S. at 9 (quoting Elkins v. United

States, 364 U.S. 206, 222 (1960)).

      When an officer reasonably believes that a suspect threatens his safety or the

safety of others, he may search the suspect and seize concealed objects that he

reasonably believes may be weapons or other instruments of assault. See Terry,
392 U.S. at 27, 29. To frisk a suspect, an officer “conduct[s] a carefully limited

search of the outer clothing of [the suspect] . . . to discover weapons which might

be used to assault him.” Id. at 30. And if an officer “feels a concealed object that

he reasonably believes may be a weapon,” he may continue the search beyond the

outer clothing “by searching [the suspect’s] pocket” and removing the concealed

object. Clay, 483 F.3d at 743–44.

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      “The sole justification of the search [of a suspect] is the protection of the

police officer and others nearby,” Terry, 392 U.S. at 29, so a frisk must remain

“reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the [frisk] in the

first place,” id. at 20. A frisk “reasonably designed to discover guns, knives, clubs,

or other hidden instruments for the assault of the police officer” does not exceed its

permissible scope. Id. at 29.

      When we consider “the limitations which the Fourth Amendment places

upon a protective seizure and search for weapons[,] . . . [we consider] the concrete

factual circumstances of [the] individual case[].” Id. We ask “whether a reasonably

prudent man in the circumstances would be warranted in the belief that his safety

or that of others was in danger.” Id. at 27. In this inquiry, “the totality of the

circumstances—the whole picture—must be taken into account.” United States v.

Cortez, 449 U.S. 411, 417 (1981). “[This] process does not deal with hard

certainties, but with probabilities.” Id. at 418. Circumstances that we consider

include the time of day, the location of the scene, the lighting at the scene, the

number of officers, and the nature of the alleged crime. See United States v.

Griffin, 696 F.3d 1354, 1359–60 (11th Cir. 2012); see, e.g., United States v.

Moore, 817 F.2d 1105, 1108 (4th Cir. 1987) (“The hour was late, the street was

dark, the officer was alone, and the suspected crime was a burglary, a felony that

often involves the use of weapons.”). We must assess the totality of the

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circumstances, “not in terms of library analysis by scholars, but as understood by

those versed in the field of law enforcement.” Cortez, 449 U.S. at 418.

      Consider the “concrete factual circumstances” that Officer Williams

encountered. When Officer Williams received the call about a burglary in progress

at 4:00 a.m., he was patrolling a “high-crime area” that receives a “high volume of

calls” involving “bodily harm done to others” by guns. At the scene, Officer

Williams saw Johnson, who matched the burglar’s description, standing in a dark

alley. And the scene was not yet secure. See Griffin, 696 F.3d at 1359 (taking into

account that an officer “had not finished investigating the alleged attempted

theft”). Officer Williams knew both that burglars in Opa-Locka were often armed

and that they often worked with other perpetrators. When Officer Williams

immediately recognized the ammunition in Johnson’s pocket during the frisk, he

“neutralize[d] the threat of physical harm” by removing the ammunition from

Johnson’s pocket. Terry, 392 U.S. at 24.

      As an essential part of a lethal weapon, Johnson’s ammunition threatened

the safety of Officer Williams and others in this circumstance. Although Johnson

argues that his ammunition, by itself, posed no danger to the safety of Officer

Williams or others, his argument fails to appreciate the grave injury that could

have been caused by his ammunition if it had been loaded into a gun. Johnson

compares ammunition to “a pebble, marble, coin, gemstone, ball bearing, or rock

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of crack cocaine.” But even Johnson acknowledges a crucial difference between

those other objects and a round of live ammunition: the round of ammunition is

designed to become a deadly projectile. Ammunition is not a gun, but it is an

integral part of what makes a gun lethal.

      Examining Johnson’s ammunition also could have assisted Officer

Williams’s search for a .380 caliber gun that he had good reason to believe was in

the vicinity of the unsecure scene of a reported burglary in a high-crime area late at

night. When Officer Williams discovered ammunition in Johnson’s pocket, he had

reason to believe a gun was in the vicinity because “[c]ommon sense and logic

dictate that a bullet is often associated with a gun.” People v. Colyar, 996 N.E.2d
575, 585 (Ill. 2013). And Officer Williams’s removal of the ammunition could

have informed him of what caliber or type of gun might be nearby. True, he could

not use the frisk to gather evidence because a frisk must remain “[]related to the

sole justification of the search under Terry: the protection of the police officer and

others nearby.” Minnesota v. Dickerson, 508 U.S. 366, 378 (1993) (alterations

adopted) (citation and quotation marks omitted). But seizing the ammunition in

Johnson’s pocket did not “amount[] to the sort of evidentiary search that Terry

expressly refused to authorize”; in this circumstance, it instead amounted to the

sort of protective search that Terry permits because Officer Williams had to find

any gun to secure the scene and protect himself and others. Id. We reject Judge Jill

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Pryor’s suggestion that a safety measure within the scope of Terry’s rationale

becomes a “‘condemned’ evidentiary search[]” whenever it also provides the

officers with new information. Jill Pryor Dissenting Op. at 87 (quoting Dickerson,
508 U.S. at 378).

      That an officer may seize ammunition when it threatens the safety of officers

and others has long been the settled precedent in several jurisdictions. For

example, in United States v. Ward, the Eighth Circuit ruled that an officer who

believed that cylindrical objects in a suspect’s pocket were shotgun shells “was

justified in reaching into the pocket to retrieve them.” 23 F.3d 1303, 1306 (8th Cir.

1994). In Scott v. State, the Supreme Court of Nevada ruled that, after seizing a

gun, an officer may remove ammunition from a suspect’s pocket because “[i]t is

reasonable for an officer, as a precautionary measure, to retrieve and separate from

a suspect during the course of a Terry stop and frisk, either weapons or

ammunition or both.” 877 P.2d 503, 509 (Nev. 1994). In State v. Smith, the

Supreme Court of Arizona held that an officer reasonably seized “the contents of

Smith’s pockets which were bulging with shotgun ammunition.” 665 P.2d 995, 998

(Ariz. 1983) (en banc). And in Colyar, the Supreme Court of Illinois ruled that an

officer who saw ammunition in a car “could reasonably suspect the presence of a

gun, thus implicating officer safety,” and could seize the ammunition. 996 N.E.2d

at 585, 587. See also State v. Moton, 733 S.W.2d 449, 451 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986)

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(holding that officer’s seizure of 13 rounds of ammunition during a frisk was

lawful); People v. Lewis, 507 N.Y.S.2d 80, 81 (N.Y. App. Div. 1986) (holding that

officer responding to a call about armed robbery was entitled to seize ammunition

and a gun from a suspect who was driving a car that matched the description of the

robber’s car). Indeed, we are aware of no precedential opinion to the contrary in

any jurisdiction.

      Judge Jill Pryor suggests that “a couple of” federal-court decisions “cut

against” our holding, Jill Pryor Dissenting Op. at 82, but we are not persuaded. In

United States v. Miles, the Ninth Circuit held that an officer exceeded Terry’s

limits by shaking a small box of bullets in a suspect’s pocket because the contents

of the box were not immediately apparent to the officer. 247 F.3d 1009, 1015 (9th

Cir. 2001). By contrast, Officer Williams testified that, when he felt the object in

Johnson’s pocket, he “immediately thought it was ammunition.” And in United

States v. Lemons, the Eastern District of Wisconsin ruled that “ammunition alone

cannot be considered contraband”—an issue not presented by this appeal. 153 F.

Supp. 2d 948, 960 (E.D. Wis. 2001); see also id. at 957 (finding that the officer

who conducted the frisk “did not immediately recognize the items as bullets”).

Apart from describing ammunition as a “nonweapon[],” the district court did not

consider whether or in what circumstances an officer might be justified in seizing it

as a safety measure. Id. at 959. Nor can we overlook that the opinion of a district

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court is not precedential. Camreta v. Greene, 563 U.S. 692, 709 n.7 (2011) (“A

decision of a federal district court judge is not binding precedent . . . .” (citation

and internal quotation marks omitted)); accord Bryan A. Garner et al., The Law of

Judicial Precedent § 29, at 255 (2016).

      Johnson argues that, because the scope of a frisk is limited to a search for

weapons and ammunition is not a weapon, Officer Williams was not entitled to

remove the ammunition from his pocket. But Johnson reads Terry as if the central

question it posed were whether a given object qualifies as a “weapon” in the

abstract and not whether removing and securing the object is reasonably related to

“the protection of the police officer and others nearby,” 392 U.S. at 29. In Terry,

the Supreme Court contemplated that an officer could, of course, remove “guns,

knives, [and] clubs,” but it never limited a frisk to those specified weapons. Id.

Instead of creating a laundry list of particular objects that an officer may remove

during a frisk, the Supreme Court explained that “[t]hese limitations will have to

be developed in the concrete factual circumstances of individual cases.” Id. And

when applying Terry in individual cases, we have ruled that officers are entitled to

seize a variety of items that are not traditional weapons. See, e.g., Clay, 483 F.3d at

743 (holding that an officer lawfully seized a “long, thin object,” which turned out

to be the empty barrel of a ballpoint pen, because he thought it “might be a

screwdriver or something similar that could be used as a weapon”). After all, Terry

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explained that an officer can also remove “other hidden instruments for the assault

of the police officer.” 392 U.S. at 29; see also Sibron v. New York, 392 U.S. 40, 65

(1968) (Terry’s companion case also ruling that an officer may remove “concealed

objects which might be used as instruments of assault”).

      In considering a frisk’s proper scope, we cannot isolate Terry’s references to

“weapons” from the “sole justification” for the frisk: “the protection of the police

officer and others nearby.” 392 U.S. at 29. To be sure, the scope of a frisk must be

“carefully limited” to serve that justification, id. at 30, but it must not be so limited

that officers cannot take reasonable actions in furtherance of their own safety and

that of others. As the Terry Court made clear, we cannot “deny the officer the

power to take necessary measures . . . to neutralize the threat of physical harm.” Id.

at 24. In short, during a Terry frisk, an officer may remove ammunition from a

suspect when the removal is reasonably related to the protection of the officers and

others nearby. See id. at 19–20.

      Johnson argues that “the way to defuse the potential danger [posed by

ammunition] is to locate and seize the firearm that might be present,” but we

cannot, with hindsight, dictate best practices for police officers. “A creative judge

engaged in post hoc evaluation of police conduct can almost always imagine some

alternative means by which the objectives of the police might have been

accomplished.” United States v. Sharpe, 470 U.S. 675, 686–87 (1985). Instead of

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imagining other ways to defuse the danger posed by ammunition, we assess only

whether an officer acted reasonably in his circumstance. See id.

      Officer Williams acted reasonably when he seized the ammunition and

holster in Johnson’s pocket. He was entitled to “tak[e] steps to assure” himself that

the ammunition in Johnson’s pocket would not be loaded into “a weapon that

could . . . fatally be used against [him].” Maryland v. Buie, 494 U.S. 325, 333

(1990) (discussing the protection concerns that animate a Terry frisk). When

Officer Williams seized the ammunition and empty holster, he had every reason to

expect that a matching gun was nearby. Officer Williams even testified that the

ammunition in Johnson’s pocket “led [him] to believe that there [wa]s a weapon

that [the] round goes to and something goes into that holster.” And he explained

that suspects “throw[]” away weapons “a lot in Opa-Locka” when they encounter

the police. When Officer Williams found only a single round of ammunition in

Johnson’s pocket, he was left to fear where other ammunition may be, especially a

round already loaded into a gun’s chamber.

      That Johnson was handcuffed when he was frisked did not eliminate the

danger posed by the ammunition. The Supreme Court has rejected as “mistaken”

the argument that officers cannot reasonably fear for their safety when a suspect

“was effectively under [the officers’] control during the investigative stop and

could not get access to any weapons that might have been located [nearby].”

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Michigan v. Long, 463 U.S. 1032, 1051 (1983). Handcuffs do not always work,

and suspects have been known to reach for weapons even when handcuffed. See

United States v. Sanders, 994 F.2d 200, 209–10 (5th Cir. 1993) (rejecting the

argument “that, by handcuffing a suspect, the police instantly and completely

eliminate all risks that the suspect will . . . do them harm”).

      When Johnson was stopped and frisked, the officers had not found a gun on

the scene, did not know how many or what kind of guns might be on the scene, and

did not know whether others, who were not handcuffed, participated in the

burglary and were still lurking in the area. But the officers did know, based on their

experience, that burglaries in Opa-Locka often involve guns and often involve

more than one person. “In view of these facts, we cannot blind ourselves to the

need for law enforcement officers to protect themselves . . . .” Terry, 392 U.S. at

24.

      Although Johnson argues that Terry is inconsistent with the original

meaning of the Fourth Amendment and that we should apply it narrowly to “limit[]

the damage,” we must apply Supreme Court precedent neither narrowly nor

liberally—only faithfully. Johnson appeals to Justice Scalia’s expressed doubts

about Terry, see Dickerson, 508 U.S. at 382 (Scalia, J., concurring) (opining that

Terry did not discuss “the original state of the law” and instead represents “the

original-meaning-is-irrelevant, good-policy-is-constitutional-law school of

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jurisprudence”), though Justice Scalia also recognized that a frisk might have been

“considered permissible” when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted or might

otherwise be considered “reasonable” now, id. But when “a precedent of [the

Supreme] Court has direct application,” we must follow it. Rodriguez de Quijas v.

Shearson/Am. Express, Inc., 490 U.S. 477, 484 (1989).

      To be sure, in several areas, the Supreme Court has considered the original

meaning of the Fourth Amendment. See, e.g., Virginia v. Moore, 553 U.S. 164, 168

(2008) (original understanding of an officer’s authority to arrest a suspect); United

States v. Ramsey, 431 U.S. 606, 616 (1977) (original understanding of border

searches). And we have followed its approach in those areas. See, e.g., United

States v. Touset, 890 F.3d 1227, 1232 (11th Cir. 2018) (quoting Ramsey, 431 U.S.

at 616–17); United States v. Phillips, 834 F.3d 1176, 1179–80 (11th Cir. 2016)

(quoting Moore, 553 U.S. at 168). We also have determined the original meaning

of other constitutional provisions to resolve questions of first impression. See, e.g.,

United States v. Campbell, 743 F.3d 802, 810–11 (11th Cir. 2014) (original

understanding of “Felonies committed on the high Seas”); United States v.

Bellaizac-Hurtado, 700 F.3d 1245, 1249–51, 1254 (11th Cir. 2012) (original

understanding of “Offences against the Law of Nations”). But Terry—the

precedent that directly controls—explained that we must consider the need to

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protect officer safety when evaluating the scope of a frisk without mention of

original meaning. See Terry, 392 U.S. at 29.

      We cannot use originalism as a makeweight when applying that analytic

framework. Nor can we promise that Johnson would like the result if we did have

the authority to approximate originalist outcomes by selectively trimming binding

precedent around the edges. See, e.g., Collins v. Virginia, 138 S. Ct. 1663, 1676–77

(2018) (Thomas, J., concurring) (explaining that the law during the Founding

period did not exclude illegally seized evidence and indeed “sometimes reflected

the inverse of the exclusionary rule” because “that someone turned out to be guilty

could justify an illegal seizure”) (citing Gelston v. Hoyt, 3 Wheat. 246, 310 (1818)

(Story, J.); 2 William Hawkins, A Treatise of the Pleas of the Crown 77 (1721));

see also Janus v. AFSCME, 138 S. Ct. 2448, 2470 (2018) (rejecting the “halfway

originalism” of parties who appeal to the original meaning “only when it suits

them”). And we cannot use a halfway theory of judicial precedent to cut back on

Terry while faithfully adhering to the exclusionary rule. As an “inferior” court,

U.S. Const. Art. III, § 1, we have no such authority: “The only Court that can

properly cut back on Supreme Court decisions is the Supreme Court itself.” Prison

Legal News v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 890 F.3d 954, 966 (11th Cir. 2018)

(emphasis added).

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      Judges Rosenbaum and Jill Pryor, in dissent, level an attack against an

opinion that we have not issued. According to Judge Rosenbaum’s dissent, “we

hold that any ammunition may always be seized during a frisk,” Rosenbaum

Dissenting Op. at 46 (emphasis added), and so transform the totality-of-the-

circumstances test into a “brand new rule,” id. at 68. See also Jill Pryor Dissenting

Op. at 84–86. But we cannot decide whether Officer Williams was entitled to seize

an object for his protection without considering the nature of that object. By

discussing facts about ammunition, we do not create a categorical rule that

ammunition may always be seized. Indeed, our concurring colleagues understand

that we have not done so and write separately to explain that they prefer that we

would adopt such a categorical rule. Newsom Concurring Op. at 25; Branch

Concurring Op. at 37. And contrary to Judge Rosenbaum’s accusation, we create

no alternative holding, “stealth” or otherwise. Rosenbaum Dissenting Op. at 60;

see Garner et al., The Law of Judicial Precedent § 10, at 128–29 (“[I]t’s improper

for a later court to infer an alternative holding or rationale where none is

sufficiently expressed in the precedent.”).

      Judge Rosenbaum also accuses us of circumventing the adversarial process

by addressing an issue “that we did not ask the parties to address, that neither party

briefed, and that the government expressly declined to adopt at oral argument,”

Rosenbaum Dissenting Op. at 46, but even a cursory review of the en banc issue,

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briefs, and oral argument proves this assertion wrong. We asked the parties to

address one issue: “When he felt a round of ammunition in Paul Johnson Jr.’s

pocket during a Terry frisk, was Officer Dwight Williams entitled to seize the

ammunition and a nylon holster from Johnson’s pocket?” In his brief, Johnson

argued that Officer Williams was not entitled to seize the ammunition from his

pocket because “the bullet in this particular case posed no conceivable threat to

officer safety.” The government argued in its brief that “Officer Williams was

justified in retrieving the bullet because a reasonable officer under the

circumstances could conclude that the bullet [wa]s an instrument of assault that

could pose a danger to himself and other[s].” After oral argument, we now answer

that question in the affirmative. Notably, although she styles her opinion as a

“dissent,” Judge Rosenbaum refuses to answer the one question—she deems it

“non-en banc worthy”—that a majority of this Court voted to decide en banc.

Rosenbaum Dissenting Op. at 70. So, unlike Judge Rosenbaum, we answer the

very question the parties briefed and argued—nothing more and nothing less.

      “The language of a judicial decision must be interpreted with reference to

the circumstances of the particular case and the question under consideration.”

Garner et al., The Law of Judicial Precedent § 6, at 80. “As binding authority, [a]

judicial decision[] is inherently limited to the facts of the case then before the court

and the questions presented to the court in the light of those facts.” New Port

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Largo, Inc. v. Monroe Cty., 985 F.2d 1488, 1499 (11th Cir. 1993) (Edmondson, J.,

concurring in the judgment). As Chief Justice John Marshall explained long ago,

“[i]t is a maxim not to be disregarded, that general expressions, in every opinion,

are to be taken in connection with the case in which those expressions are used.”

Cohens v. Virginia, 19 U.S. 264, 399 (1821); see also Armour & Co. v. Wantock,

323 U.S. 126, 133 (1944) (“[W]ords of our opinions are to be read in the light of

the facts of the case under discussion.”).

      To be sure, the reasoning of our decision generates a principle of law, the

application of which extends beyond the factual circumstances of this appeal. That

result does not arise from an abandonment of the fact-bound inquiry prescribed by

Terry, but instead reflects how a totality-of-the-circumstances test works when

reviewing a stop and frisk. Correctly understood, the output of a totality-of-the-

circumstances inquiry is necessarily a conditional legal principle: by deciding that

particular circumstances mandate a particular result, a court adopts a principle that

if materially similar circumstances obtain, the same result must follow. In other

words, there is no either-or choice between formulating an abstract principle of law

and applying a totality-of-the-circumstances test. Applying the latter yields the

former, which is all that we have done to resolve this appeal. We have adopted the

principle that if an officer conducts a lawful Terry stop and frisk in materially

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similar circumstances, then that officer is entitled to seize ammunition from the

suspect.

      We have neither jettisoned Terry’s totality-of-the-circumstances approach in

favor of a categorical rule nor resolved a question that we did not ask the parties to

address. In resolving the question we posed, we necessarily adopt a principle with

potential application to future cases. But the principle is not universally applicable

because it is tethered to the concrete factual circumstances of Johnson’s stop and

frisk. And we cannot indulge our dissenting colleague’s call for an explanation of

how “courts will be able to reach any other conclusions in cases involving any

ammunition, regardless of any other circumstances,” Rosenbaum Dissenting Op. at

54, because “[w]e are not in the business of issuing advisory opinions . . . that

merely opine on ‘what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts.’”

Gagliardi v. TJCV Land Tr., 889 F.3d 728, 733 (11th Cir. 2018) (quoting Chafin v.

Chafin, 568 U.S. 165, 172 (2013)).

      Officer Williams’s frisk remained “reasonably related in scope to the

circumstances which justified the [frisk] in the first place.” Terry, 392 U.S. at 20.

Officer Williams encountered an unsecure scene, late at night, in a high-crime area,

while investigating a reported burglary. Officer Williams’s removal of the

ammunition and holster was reasonably related to the protection of the officers and

others. We hold that Officer Williams did not violate Johnson’s Fourth

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Amendment rights by removing the ammunition and holster from his pocket during

the frisk.

                              IV. CONCLUSION

       We AFFIRM Johnson’s judgment of conviction and sentence.

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NEWSOM, Circuit Judge, concurring:

      I agree that, in the “circumstances” that he confronted, the Fourth

Amendment permitted Officer Williams to seize the bullet that he felt in Johnson’s

pocket, see Majority Op. at 9–10, and I therefore join the Court’s opinion. I write

separately to clarify that if it were up to me, rather than tying that judgment to the

particular situation faced by the particular officer in this particular case, I would

simply hold, as a prophylactic matter, that if a policeman discovers a bullet during

the course of an otherwise-lawful Terry stop, he can seize it as a means of

“neutraliz[ing] the threat” to himself and others. Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 30

(1968).

      My concern with a fact-bound “totality-of-the-circumstances” approach is

simply stated: It can leave police officers guessing—and thus potentially hesitant,

and thus potentially vulnerable. The majority enumerates a variety of factors that

it says justified Officer Williams’s determination that seizing the bullet was

appropriate here: (1) it was 4:00 a.m.; (2) he was patrolling a “high-crime area”;

(3) he had answered a call about a potentially violent residential burglary; (4) he

encountered Johnson “in a dark alley”; and (5) “the scene was not yet secure.”

Majority Op. at 10. That all seems perfectly sensible to me. And more than just

sensible, given my understanding of Terry it also seems perfectly correct: In the

light of the particular situation that he faced—or the dark of it, as the case may

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be—Officer Williams reasonably concluded that there was a sufficient threat to his

(and others’) safety to warrant confiscating the bullet.

      In fairness, though, the dissent also has a totality-of-the-circumstances story

to tell. It highlights the following “combination of facts” known to Officer

Williams before he frisked Johnson: “(1) there had been no report or indication of

a weapon or an accomplice at the scene; (2) at least two other armed officers had

arrived at the scene; (3) Mr. Johnson had immediately, peacefully, and at gunpoint

complied with the officers’ commands; and (4) the officers had placed Mr. Johnson

on the ground and handcuffed him.” J. Pryor Dissenting Op. at 79–80 (footnote

call omitted). Speaking for myself, I find the dissent’s laundry list somewhat less

compelling than the majority’s—it seems clear to me, for instance, that a

handcuffed suspect can still threaten officer safety, see, e.g., United States v.

Sanders, 994 F.2d 200, 209–10 (5th Cir. 1993)—but I certainly can’t dismiss the

dissent’s assessment of the situation as ridiculous or groundless.

      So even in this case—and even now, more than three years after the fact,

from the cozy comfort of our respective judicial chambers—we’re having a

healthy, good-faith debate about whether the “totality of the circumstances”

warranted Officer Williams’s seizure of the bullet. And although I find that the

balance tips in Officer Williams’s—and thus the majority’s—favor, there are, I

must admit, decent arguments on both sides. What I worry about is the next

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case—and the one after that, and the one after that—which will inevitably involve

a different mix of variables. Let’s take, for instance, “time of day,” which the

majority emphasizes—Officer Williams responded to the call here in the wee

hours, around 4:00 a.m. Majority Op. at 9–10. What if, instead, he had

encountered Johnson in broad daylight in the middle of the afternoon? Same

result? How about “location of the scene”? Id. Opa-Locka is apparently a pretty

tough neighborhood—a “high-crime area.” Id. But what if we head 10 miles due

south, straight down FL-953, to Coral Gables? (For our Alabama readers, think

Mountain Brook or Vestavia Hills; for the Georgians, Milton or Sandy Springs.)

Seizure still permissible? Now consider a few of the factors that the dissent brings

to bear. By the time the bullet was seized, there were a total of three armed

officers on the scene. See J. Pryor Dissenting Op. at 77–78. But what if an officer

confronts a suspect alone? Still a Fourth Amendment violation? The dissent also

stresses that Johnson was handcuffed—and thus essentially incapable of retrieving

and deploying the stashed ammo. Id. Different result if the suspect isn’t yet

securely restrained at the time the officer feels the bullet?

      You get my point. Even we judges—with the luxury of time for study and

reflection—can’t say for certain how we would crunch those factors in future

cases. Where in the world does that leave responding officers? Policemen and

women are tasked with the often-unenviable task of protecting the public safety,

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and in so doing they must make split-second judgments about how best to secure a

scene or situation. I would rather not require them to work their way through a

multi-factor Fourth Amendment balancing analysis in order to determine whether

the decision to confiscate a bullet—a bullet!—will stand up to after-the-fact

judicial second-guessing. I would prefer—and I believe Supreme Court precedent

supports—a clear rule authorizing the seizure. The Court “repeatedly has

acknowledged,” in all manner of cases, “the difficulties created for courts, police,

and citizens by an ad hoc, case-by-case definition of Fourth Amendment standards

to be applied in differing factual circumstances.” Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S.
170, 181 (1984). Such totality-of-the-circumstances balancing, the Court has

stressed, “not only makes it difficult for the policeman to discern the scope of his

authority”—the thrust of my critique here—but “also creates a danger that

constitutional rights will be arbitrarily and inequitably enforced.” Id. at 181–82.1

1
  Cf., e.g., Georgia v. Randolph, 547 U.S. 103, 121 (2006) (“This is the line we draw, and we
think the formalism is justified.”); Atwater v. City of Lago Vista, 532 U.S. 318, 347 (2001)
(“Often enough, the Fourth Amendment has to be applied on the spur (and in the heat) of the
moment, and the object in implementing its command of reasonableness is to draw standards
sufficiently clear and simple to be applied with a fair prospect of surviving judicial second-
guessing months and years after an arrest or search is made.”); Dunaway v. New York, 442 U.S.
200, 213–14 (1979) (“A single, familiar standard is essential to guide police officers, who have
only limited time and expertise to reflect on and balance the social and individual interests
involved in the specific circumstances they confront.”); United States v. Robinson, 414 U.S. 218,
235 (1973) (“A police officer’s determination as to how and where to search the person of a
suspect whom he has arrested is necessarily a quick ad hoc judgment which the Fourth
Amendment does not require to be broken down in each instance into an analysis of each step in
the search.”).

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      Now I recognize, of course, that in Terry the Supreme Court excused itself

from “develop[ing] at length” the Fourth Amendment rules that govern the sorts of

searches at issue here, saying that they could instead be worked out in “the

concrete factual circumstances of individual cases.” 392 U.S. at 29. The Court,

though, didn’t leave everything in a state of totality-of-the-circumstances limbo.

Instead, in the very same paragraph, the Court both clarified an overarching

principle—namely, that protective searches must be justified by a concern for “the

protection of the police officer and others nearby”—and then identified an

illustrative list of items whose seizure would, as a per se matter, be deemed to

serve that purpose: “guns, knives, clubs, [and] other hidden instruments for the

assault of the police officer.” Id. To be clear, no one thinks that when an officer

conducting a Terry frisk identifies a “gun” he has to pause to brainstorm whether

the particular circumstances in which he finds himself warrant a seizure; he can

simply take it. Same for a “knife” or a “club”—take it. The question for me,

therefore—since I’m the one advocating a clear rule to guide officer conduct—is

whether a bullet fairly fits within Terry’s catch-all category, “other hidden

instruments for the assault of the police officer.” I think it does. An “instrument”

is an “object, device, or apparatus designed or used for a particular purpose or

task.” Oxford English Dictionary (online ed.) Simply as a matter of plain

language, it doesn’t seem to me too far a stretch to conclude that a bullet qualifies

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as an “object” that can be “used” to assault a police officer. And that seems to me

all the more true given Terry’s unmistakable focus on officer safety.

      So in the next “bullet case,” rather than asking—or worse, requiring the

responding officer to ask—whether the neighborhood is sufficiently scary, the hour

sufficiently late, the light sufficiently dim, and the suspect and scene sufficiently

secure, I would simply hold that the Fourth Amendment permits the protective

seizure.

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BRANCH, Circuit Judge, joined by GRANT, Circuit Judge, concurring:

      I join the majority opinion in full. The Fourth Amendment certainly

authorized Officer Williams to seize the ammunition from Paul Johnson, Jr.’s

pocket. I agree with Judge Newsom’s concurrence insofar as it recognizes that a

bullet falls within the list of items that Terry authorized an officer to seize during a

lawful frisk—“guns, knives, clubs, [and] other hidden instruments for the assault

of the police officer.” Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 29 (1968). I write separately to

clarify two points: (1) the totality of the circumstances analysis in Terry applies

only when the officer is determining whether (a) to stop and (b) then to frisk the

detained person; and (2) if the officer conducting the frisk complies with the scope

of the search permitted by Terry and feels what the officer reasonably believes is a

bullet, the officer may in all circumstances seize it.

      The Fourth Amendment guarantees “[t]he right of the people to be secure in

their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and

seizures.” U.S. Const. Amend. IV. The Fourth Amendment prohibits only

unreasonable searches and seizures. Terry, 392 U.S. at 9 (quoting Elkins v. United

States, 364 U.S. 206, 222 (1960)). An officer may stop an individual for

questioning upon reasonable suspicion that criminal activity “may be afoot.” Id. at

30. The reasonable suspicion inquiry which justifies a Terry stop must be assessed

by taking into account “the totality of the circumstances—the whole picture.”

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United States v. Cortez, 449 U.S. 411, 417 (1981). Once an officer makes a Terry

stop, if the officer also believes, based on the surrounding circumstances, that the

individual “is armed and presently dangerous to the officer or to others,” the

officer may conduct a search of the suspect’s outer clothing “to discover weapons

which might be used to assault him,” Terry, 392 U.S. at 30.

      The search must be limited in scope based on the sole justification of the

search—the protection of the police officer and others nearby—and therefore, must

be “reasonably designed to discover guns, knives, clubs, or other hidden

instruments for the assault of the police officer.” Id. at 29. If, during the pat down,

the officer “feels a concealed object that he reasonably believes may be a weapon,”

he may extend the search by reaching into the suspect’s pocket and removing the

object. United States v. Clay, 483 F.3d 739, 743–44 (11th Cir. 2007).

      The initiation of the stop and the initiation of the pat down are the only two

points in the encounter at which the officer’s reasonable belief must be assessed

based on the totality of the circumstances. See State v. Smith, 665 P.2d 995, 998

(Ariz. 1983) (finding that an officer was justified in conducting a pat down based

on the “circumstances,” and that “the police reasonably decided to inspect [and

seize] the contents of [the suspect’s] pockets which were bulging with shotgun

ammunition”). Once the officer is authorized to conduct the pat down, the only

questions are whether the limited scope of the pat down is proper under Terry and

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whether, during the lawful pat down, the officer “feels a concealed object that he

reasonably believes may be a weapon,” Clay, 483 F.3d at 743. See United States v.

Rochin, 662 F.3d 1272, 1273 (10th Cir. 2011) (“the [Fourth] Amendment’s ever-

present reasonableness requirement places strict limits on the scope or nature of the

frisk an officer may administer”). If he does not reasonably believe the object is a

weapon, he is not entitled to extend the search beyond the pat down of the

suspect’s outer clothing, for instance, by reaching into a pocket. Sibron v. New

York, 392 U.S. 40, 65 (1968) (holding that an officer who reached into a pocket

and found narcotics without first detecting a weapon exceeded the bounds of a

lawful Terry search). If he does reasonably believe the object is a weapon, he is

entitled to extend the search by “reach[ing] for and remov[ing]” the weapon.

Terry, 392 U.S. at 29–30.

      Determining whether the object the officer feels is a weapon does not

depend on the totality of the circumstances but on whether the officer reasonably

concludes based on feel that the object is a weapon. See Minnesota v. Dickerson,

508 U.S. 366, 376 (1993) (explaining that “[t]he very premise of Terry . . . is that

officers will be able to detect the presence of weapons through the sense of

touch”). Provided that the officer was justified in stopping the suspect and

conducting a pat down and provided that the pat down did not exceed the “scope of

a protected frisk,” the “one question” is “did [the officer] act unreasonably when

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he removed” the object. United States v. Holmes, 385 F.3d 786, 789–91 (D.C. Cir.

2004) (concluding that an officer acted reasonably in removing a “hard, square

object” from the suspect’s jacket pocket that turned out to be a scale).

      In the Terry frisk context, a bullet is an “instrument[] for the assault of the

police officer,” Terry, 392 U.S. at 29, that an officer may reasonably remove

pursuant to a pat down. As Judge Newsom points out, no one would question that

an officer conducting a Terry frisk may always remove a gun he discovers during

the search—regardless of the surrounding circumstances. See id. at 29–30; see

also Pennsylvania v. Mimms, 434 U.S. 106, 111–12 (1977) (concluding that an

officer who observed a bulge in a suspect’s jacket was authorized to conduct a

Terry pat down and seize the gun); United States v. White, 593 F.3d 1199, 1202

(11th Cir. 2010) (affirming the denial of a motion to suppress a gun found during a

Terry frisk pursuant to an authorized Terry stop and frisk). The same reasoning

applies to a bullet. Guns and bullets are of a piece; they go together. And one is

no use without the other. In a Terry frisk context, a bullet poses substantially the

same risk that a gun does—that it will be used as part of a dangerous combination

to assault the officer. An officer seizing a gun does not know whether that gun is

loaded, yet no one would dispute that the seizure of a gun is lawful even if it turns

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out that the gun is unloaded.1 Similarly, an officer seizing a bullet may not know

in a particular instance whether there is a gun nearby or if he missed a gun in the

frisk. Of course he would know that the bullet is not presently in a gun and must

first be loaded into a gun but the risk remains largely the same. Therefore, an

officer conducting a Terry frisk that is authorized by a reasonable belief that the

suspect is armed is entitled to seize a bullet to the same extent he is entitled to seize

a gun—regardless of the surrounding circumstances. It does not matter whether

the frisk occurs in daylight hours or at night; nor does it matter if it occurs in high

crime area or a relatively safe area of town. If an officer discovers a bullet during a

frisk lawful under Terry, the officer is entitled to seize the bullet as it is an

instrument of assault in all circumstances.

       One of the reasons we do not look to the surrounding circumstances in cases

concerning the weapons listed in Terry is that, aside from removing the object, no

precaution can eliminate the danger. For instance, the Supreme Court has rejected

the argument that a suspect who is effectively under the control of the officers

cannot gain access to weapons located nearby. Michigan v. Long, 463 U.S. 1032,

1051 (1983); see also United States v. Sanders, 994 F.2d 200, 209–10 (5th Cir.

1993) (rejecting the argument that “by handcuffing a suspect, the police instantly

1
  An unloaded gun, unlike most rounds of ammunition in civilian use, can nonetheless be used as
a weapon (i.e., a club) but certainly an officer seizing a gun is primarily doing so because its
intended purpose presents the gravest threat to the officer.

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and completely eliminate all risks that the suspect will . . . do them harm.”).

Further, even the presence of multiple officers does not eliminate, though it may

reduce, the risk that a suspect will obtain a gun and fire it at the officer.

      Moreover, a bullet is an instrument of assault because its only purpose is to

be used with a firearm. Like a gun, a bullet located during a Terry frisk poses an

inherent risk to the safety of the officer and others nearby, and the police officer

should not be required to assume such “unnecessary risks in the performance of

their duties.” Terry, 392 U.S. at 23. For those reasons, having found a bullet

pursuant to a Terry frisk, an officer is permitted to seize it in the same manner as

he would a gun.

      This is not to say that the Fourth Amendment provides no protection against

the unreasonable seizure of a bullet. But those protections come at the initiation of

the encounter when the officer must have reasonable suspicion of criminal activity

in order to initiate the stop and a reasonable belief that the individual is armed and

presently dangerous in order to conduct the pat down. Id. at 24, 30. It is also not

to say that the totality of the circumstances has no role in the Terry context, of

course it does, but that role is limited to the initiation of the stop and frisk. After

having made those determinations, an officer is authorized to remove a concealed

object that he reasonably believes is a weapon or other instrument of assault based

on the pat down. And because a bullet is an instrument of assault in the Terry

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context, it is reasonable under all circumstances for the officer to protect his safety

and that of others nearby by removing the bullet.

      Because I conclude that a bullet falls in to the category of “guns, knives,

clubs, or other hidden instruments for the assault of the police officer,” id. at 29,

and cannot logically be separated from a gun for Terry purposes, I would find that

anytime an officer conducts a lawful Terry frisk, the officer may seize any bullet

located during the frisk.

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JORDAN, Circuit Judge, dissenting.

      This appeal presents an interesting case study for originalism, a set of related

theories which (broadly speaking) call for constitutional provisions to be interpreted

in accord with their understanding and meaning at the time of enactment or in accord

with the intent of their framers. See, e.g., McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S.
742, 813-38 (2010) (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment);

Randy Barnett, The Original Meaning of the Commerce Clause, 68 U. Chi. L. Rev.

101, 105-08 (2001); Edwin Meese, III, Speech Before the American Bar Association

on July 9, 1985, in Steven Calabresi, Originalism: A Quarter-Century of Debate 53-

54 (2007); Antonin Scalia, A Matter of Interpretation 38 (1997); Robert H. Bork,

The Tempting of America: The Political Seduction of the Law 144 (1990); Raoul

Berger, Government by Judiciary: The Transformation of the Fourteenth

Amendment 363-73 (1977). I write separately to discuss the majority’s failure to

address, in any meaningful way, Mr. Johnson’s originalist argument for limiting the

reach of Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).

                                    *******

      A quarter century ago, Justice Scalia concluded that the “frisk” aspect of

Terry, 392 U.S. at 25-27—which allows the police to conduct pat-downs for

weapons based only on reasonable suspicion—could not be justified on originalist

grounds.   See Minnesota v. Dickerson, 508 U.S. 366, 381 (1993) (Scalia, J.,

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concurring) (finding “no English authority” and “no clear support at common law”

for physical searches of suspects absent probable cause).                    Some subsequent

scholarship appears to validate Justice Scalia’s view. See, e.g., Thomas K. Clancy,

The Fourth Amendment: Its History and Interpretation 40-41 (2d ed. 2014)

(asserting that in America and England during the period preceding the American

Revolution, “[w]arrantless searches and seizures were virtually nonexistent or at

least uncontroversial,” and “[o]nly one type of warrantless seizure may have been

common, that is, the arrest of a suspected felon”); Heather Winter, Resurrecting the

“Dead Hand” of the Common Law Rule of 1789: Why Terry v. Ohio is in Jeopardy,

42 Crim. L. Bull. 564, 565 (2006) (“The historical evidence reveals that Terry frisks

did not occur at common law and would have been viewed unfavorably by the

Constitution’s framers.”); George C. Thomas III, Time Travel, Hovercrafts, and the

Framers: James Madison Sees the Future and Rewrites the Fourth Amendment, 80

Notre Dame L. Rev. 1451, 1515 (2005) (concluding that Terry, insofar as it permits

a warrantless frisk on the street without probable cause, “would have baffled the

Framers”). 1

1
  Surveying Fourth Amendment law in the early 20th century, Justice Cardozo essentially came to
the same conclusion while serving on the New York Court of Appeals: “Search of the person is
unlawful when the seizure of the body is a trespass, and the purpose of the search is to discover
grounds as yet unknown for arrest or accusation[.] Search of the person becomes lawful when
grounds for arrest and accusation have been discovered, and the law is in the act of subjecting the
body of the accused to its physical dominion.” People v. Chiagles, 237 N.Y. 193, 197, 142 N.E.
583 (1923) (citation omitted).

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       Relying on Justice Scalia’s originalist position, Mr. Johnson argues that we

should construe Terry narrowly, and not extend it to allow the seizure and removal

of items that are neither weapons nor contraband. See Mr. Johnson’s En Banc Br.

at 18-23. But the majority barely acknowledges this argument, and declines to

address its merits. According to the majority, we are bound by Terry, and must

therefore ignore the original understanding of the Fourth Amendment. 2

       The majority is correct that Terry constitutes binding precedent, and that no

one on this court can wish it away. But accepting Terry does not require extending

its reach on an issue of first impression. Terry permitted pat-downs for weapons,

and only weapons. See Ybarra v. Illinois, 444 U.S. 85, 93-94 (1979) (“Nothing in

Terry can be understood to allow . . . any search whatever for anything but

weapons.”). By allowing officers to seize a stand-alone bullet from an unarmed

suspect who is in handcuffs and being held at gunpoint by several officers, the

majority expands Terry beyond its “narrow scope.” Dunaway v. New York, 442 U.S.
200, 210 (1979).3

2
 The majority is not alone in refusing to address the merits of Mr. Johnson’s originalist argument.
The government has chosen to proceed as if the argument were never made. See Govt.’s En Banc
Br. at 21-50. So have the concurring opinions.
3
  None of our sister circuits has expanded Terry this far. The majority cites United States v. Ward,
23 F.3d 1303 (8th Cir. 1994), for the proposition that “an officer may seize ammunition when it
threatens the safety of officers.” Maj. Op. at 12. But in Ward, unlike here, the pat-down uncovered
a sawed-off shotgun in addition to ammunition. See Ward, 23 F.3d at 1304. The majority also
cites cases from state courts for the same proposition, but in all of those cases there were facts
showing or suggesting that the suspect was armed or had a firearm nearby. See, e.g., Scott v. State,
877 P.2d 503, 504-05 (Nev. 1994) (police seized 12-gauge shotgun shells from defendant who had

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       There are ways to deal with a precedent whose pedigree is questionable. If

Terry rests on a shaky originalist foundation, something the majority does not

dispute, there is always the option of declining to broaden it—of “refus[ing] to

extend it one inch beyond its previous contours.” Richard Epstein, The Classical

Liberal Alternative to Progressive and Conservative Constitutionalism, 77 U. Chi.

L. Rev. 887, 903 (2010) (proposing a “proper” originalist response to the Supreme

Court’s New Deal jurisprudence). See also Bork, The Tempting of America 158-59

(arguing that even where questionable precedential decisions “cannot be overruled .

. . they can be confined to the subject areas they concern.”); Troxel v. Granville, 530
U.S. 57, 92 (2000) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“While I would not now overrule those

[erroneous] earlier cases . . . neither would I extend the theory upon which they

rested to this new context.”). Why not then stop where Terry and its progeny stop,

and prohibit, absent probable cause, the seizure of items which are neither weapons

nor contraband?

                                         *******

       The majority’s decision to sidestep Mr. Johnson’s originalist argument is

particularly perplexing given the Supreme Court’s instruction that “[i]n determining

whether a search or seizure is unreasonable, we begin with history,” and “look to the

been sitting in the rear seat of a vehicle which “contained firearms, including a loaded 12-gauge
shotgun on the floor of the rear seat”). There are no such facts here.

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statutes and common law of the founding era to determine the norms that the Fourth

Amendment was meant to preserve.” Virginia v. Moore, 553 U.S. 164, 168 (2008)

(emphasis added). The majority appears to believe that Terry is an exception to this

interpretive approach, and focuses instead on a pragmatic balancing of individual

privacy and officer safety. See Maj. Op. at 18-19 (asserting that in the Terry context

we “consider the need to protect officer safety” without regard to original meaning).4

       But this suggestion—that we consider history in some Fourth Amendment

cases, and not in others—is precisely the type of “halfway originalism” that the

majority purports to reject. See Maj. Op. at 19 (quoting Janus v. AFSCME, 138 S.

Ct. 2448, 2470 (2018)).           And this approach is difficult to square with our

consideration of history in analyzing the scope of various constitutional provisions

(including the Fourth Amendment itself). See, e.g., United States v. Gecas, 120 F.3d
1419, 1435-57 (11th Cir. 1997) (en banc) (Fifth Amendment privilege against self-

incrimination); Evans v. Stephens, 387 F.3d 1220, 1222-27 (11th Cir. 2004) (en

banc) (President’s power to “fill . . . Vacancies” under Art. II, § 2, cl. 3 of the

Constitution); United States v. Bellaizic-Hurtado, 700 F.3d 1245, 1249-51, 1254

4
 The majority’s framework leads to a question. If officer safety is the raison d'être of Terry, on
what rationale does the majority uphold the seizure of the nylon holster from Mr. Johnson’s
pocket? We are not told. Cf. United States v. Hirsch, 493 F.2d 465, 466 (5th Cir. 1971)
(suppressing firearm, holster and bullets seized during a 2:00 a.m. Terry frisk of a driver because,
despite his “standing around nervously and giving confused explanations for his presence in the
neighborhood,” the officers were not in fear for their safety and had no basis to believe the driver
was armed or dangerous).

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(11th Cir. 2012) (Congress’ authority to define “Offences against the Law of

Nations” under Art. I, § 8, cl. 10 of the Constitution); United States v. Touset, 890
F.3d 1227, 1232 (11th Cir. 2018) (Fourth Amendment).

        Defending its ahistorical approach, the majority warns Mr. Johnson that he

might not “like the result” if history were front and center. See Maj. Op. at 19. It

says that, under the original understanding of the Fourth Amendment, Mr. Johnson’s

motion to suppress would be doomed because courts would not be required to

exclude unlawfully obtained evidence. But this rhetorical challenge, though nicely

put, is an empty one. We are bound by directly controlling Supreme Court precedent

to recognize and apply the exclusionary rule—whatever its originalist pedigree—in

the context of Terry pat-downs. See, e.g., Terry, 392 U.S. at 12; Dickerson, 508 U.S.

at 372. No similar precedent compels the expansion of Terry to permit the seizure

of items that are neither weapons nor contraband under the circumstances present

here.

        The majority wants to make it seem that its holding results a priori from Terry

and its progeny. That is not so. Under similar circumstances other federal courts

have concluded that the seizure of ammunition from a suspect’s clothing exceeded

the scope of a Terry pat-down. See United States v. Miles, 247 F.3d 1009, 1015 (9th

Cir. 2001); United States v. Lemons, 153 F. Supp. 2d 948, 962 (E.D. Wisc. 2001).

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The majority may not like these cases, but they are no less relevant than the

authorities cited in its opinion.

                                        *******

      Originalism, we are told, is a preferable mode of constitutional interpretation

because it provides “an objective basis for judgment that does not merely reflect the

judge’s own ideological stance.” Michael W. McConnell, Active Liberty: A

Progressive Alternative to Textualism and Originalism?, 119 Harv. L. Rev. 2387,

2415 (2006). See also Antonin Scalia, Originalism: The Lesser Evil, 57 U. Cin. L.

Rev. 849, 863-64 (1989) (“[Originalism] establishes a historical criterion that is

conceptually quite separate from the preferences of the judge himself.”); Lillian R.

BeVier, The Integrity and Impersonality of Originalism, 18 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol’y

283, 291 (1996) (“The criteria of originalism constrain all the participants in the

game—including, most especially, the referees.”).            By choosing to avoid Mr.

Johnson’s originalist argument against the extension of Terry and its progeny, the

majority gives credence to those who have noted that originalism, when applied

selectively, can be just as subjective (and just as subject to manipulation) as other

competing theories of constitutional interpretation:

      [H]ot-and-cold originalism grants the [judge] the discretion to decide
      when pragmatic considerations, whatever they may be, allow a
      departure from originalist orthodoxy. And . . . this discretion dilutes
      originalism’s constraining power.

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J. Harvie Wilkinson, III, Cosmic Constitutional Theory 56 (2012). See also Frank

Cross, The Failed Promise of Originalism 188 (2013) (“[I]n realistic practice, all of

the justices pick and choose when to use originalism, and none are faithful acolytes

to the method.”).

      Some may view the majority’s holding as properly balancing the interest that

individuals have in privacy against the interest that officers have in safety. But the

majority’s balancing is of a 21st-century variety, without so much as a nod to history.

Time will tell whether originalism, in one of its various forms, will continue to make

ad hoc appearances in the opinions of this court.

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ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

       Today we hold that any ammunition may always be seized during a frisk when

the searching officer immediately identifies it as ammunition, regardless of any

surrounding circumstances. This is a new rule that we did not ask the parties to

address, that neither party briefed, and that the government expressly declined to

adopt at oral argument.

       Indeed, during oral argument, the Court asked the government, “Once you

feel the bullet, the officer can seize the bullet. Is that the government’s position?”

Recording of Oral Argument dated Oct. 24, 2018, at 38:58. And the government

responded without equivocation, “No, Your Honor.” Id. Then the government

explicitly stated, “We are not asking the Court to rule that a bullet in isolation in all

circumstances would be sufficient to reach in [to the pocket and seize]; we are asking

the Court to apply the facts-specific Fourth Amendment tests that this Court has

applied and other courts have applied . . . under the totality of the circumstances.”

Id. at 51:34.1

       Because we operate only “as arbiters of legal questions presented and argued

by the parties,” Nat’l Aeronautics & Space Admin. v. Nelson, 562 U.S. 134, 148 n.10

       1
         See also Majority Op. at 21 (describing Johnson as having argued in his brief that “Officer
Williams was not entitled to seize the ammunition from his pocket because ‘the bullet in this
particular case posed no conceivable threat to officer safety’” and the government as having
argued in its brief that “‘Officer Williams was justified in retrieving the bullet because a reasonable
officer under the circumstances could conclude that the bullet [wa]s an instrument of assault that
could pose a danger to himself and other[s].’”) (emphasis added).

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(2011) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted), once the government

disclaimed the per se rule at oral argument, we were left with only two permissible

options: apply a true totality-of-the-circumstances test or rehear the case, ask the

per se question to the parties and, if necessary, appointed counsel, and analyze the

arguments presented. Instead, the Majority Opinion takes a third route and adopts

the new per se rule on its own. That new rule may well be correct. Or it may not.

But if we wanted to consider such a rule, we should have asked the parties to brief

and argue it in this en banc proceeding, instead of asking them to brief and argue a

more discrete question. 2

       I organize my dissent from the Majority Opinion’s decision to issue a rule on

a question that was not before us, into three substantive parts. In Section I, I show

that, despite the Majority Opinion’s insistence to the contrary, the Majority Opinion

creates the new rule that ammunition is always seizable during a proper Terry frisk,

without consideration of the surrounding circumstances. In Section II, I recount the

       2
          Judge Newsom’s and Judge Branch’s opinions openly acknowledge that they endorse this
new per se rule. Without opining on the substance of the Newsom and Branch Opinions, but from
a judicial-procedure perspective only, I respectfully disagree that in these en banc proceedings, we
should adopt the new per se rule they advocate. Nevertheless, I don’t take issue with suggesting
new theories in non-majority opinions, as they can initiate thought and trigger development of the
law in future cases. I also applaud Judge Newsom’s and Judge Branch’s Opinions’ transparency
about their reasoning and consequences. In contrast, the Majority Opinion declines to
acknowledge that it adopts the same rule for which the Newsom and Branch Opinions advocate.
But that does not mean that the Majority Opinion does not so hold. As Section I of this dissent
demonstrates, the Majority Opinion necessarily sanctions this new rule as much as the Newsom
and Branch Opinions do. And because this new rule will always require the conclusion that the
seizure of ammunition was permissible in any given proper Terry frisk, regardless of the
surrounding circumstances, that is the only holding that matters today.

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many ways we could have avoided ruling on a question that was not before us, and

I note the consequences of engaging in such a review. And in Section III, I explain

that I do not opine on the question that actually was before us because the Majority

Opinion’s new rule makes that question moot.

                                              I.

      This section demonstrates that today’s Majority Opinion necessarily renders

ammunition always seizable in a proper Terry3 frisk. But before I get to that, I must

acknowledge an awkward fact:              the Majority Opinion insists that it has not

established such a new rule. So of course, any reader likely and understandably will

approach my dissent with some skepticism. In fact, my colleagues’ views gave me

serious pause—as they should have—that perhaps I had misread the Majority

Opinion. So I have spent a lot of time closely reviewing and re-reviewing the

Majority Opinion. But every reading has led me to the same conclusion: the

Majority Opinion necessarily establishes the new rule that ammunition is always

seizable in a Terry frisk. And district courts that must apply the lessons from the

Majority Opinion will not logically be able to ever reach the conclusion that

ammunition is not seizable in a permissible Terry frisk—no matter the

circumstances.

      3
          Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).

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      One other note to keep in mind while considering the practical holding of

today’s Majority Opinion: the Majority Opinion easily could have avoided creating

its new rule today that all ammunition is always seizable in a Terry frisk. All it

would have had to do is include one additional sentence limiting the broad principles

that otherwise necessarily flow from the Majority Opinion’s reasoning. But the

Majority Opinion has refused to do so. I hope readers will ask themselves why. In

the meantime, though, in Part A of this section, I describe the problematic aspects of

the Majority Opinion and explain the easy fix that would prevent us from issuing

our new rule today that ammunition is always seizable in a Terry frisk. In Part B, I

discuss the problems with a stealth holding like the one the Majority Opinion

necessarily produces today.

                                          A.

      The difficulties the Majority Opinion’s reasoning creates begin at the second

paragraph on page 10 of the Majority Opinion (beginning “As an essential part of a

lethal weapon . . .”) and continue through the top of page 12. They arise because, in

and of itself, the reasoning in question dictates today’s holding that Johnson’s bullet

was properly seized—without reference to any actual circumstances existing at the

time officers seized Johnson’s bullet. So that same reasoning that made Johnson’s

bullet seizable here necessarily requires the conclusion that ammunition is always

seizable during a proper Terry frisk. And under our prior-precedent rule, a holding

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that sneaks into our jurisprudence through the back door of reasoning is every bit as

binding as one that openly announces its presence as it enters through the front door.

Smith v. GTE Corp., 236 F.3d 1292, 1304 (11th Cir. 2001) (“The fact that the [prior

panel of the Court] did not explicitly say ‘there is no common and undivided interest

in a class claim for punitive damages’ does not undermine the clear reasoning and

result of that decision nor does it vitiate the resulting rule.”). So unfortunately, the

Majority Opinion’s refusal to expressly own its holding today that all ammunition is

always seizable during a permissible Terry frisk does not render the holding any less

binding.

      In particular, to justify its determination that the ammunition here was

seizable, the Majority Opinion reasons that when a bullet is present, so is a gun,

“because common sense and logic dictate that a bullet is often associated with a gun”

(the “bullet-means-gun” argument). Maj. Op. at 11 (citation, quotation marks, and

alteration omitted). The Majority Opinion then goes on to opine that knowing the

caliber of a bullet can be useful to determining the type of gun that might be present

at the scene. Id. For this reason, the Majority Opinion concludes, the bullet was

seizable since “Officer Williams had to find any gun to secure the scene and protect

himself and others.” Id. But there are two big problems with trying to glom this

rationale onto the totality-of-the-circumstances test.

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        First, as the Majority Opinion implicitly concedes, this reasoning is based on

hypothetical “facts.” See Maj. Op. at 11 (“Officer Williams’s removal of the

ammunition could have informed him of what caliber or type of gun might be

nearby.”) (emphasis added). Despite testifying at two separate evidentiary hearings,

neither Officer Williams nor any other law-enforcement officer ever said that he or

she sought to use or that he or she did in fact consult the caliber of the seized bullet

to ascertain what type of gun might be lying around.4 So it is simply not accurate to

        4
          Of course, it’s impossible to cite a part of the testimony that proves that no officer testified
that he or she actually consulted the caliber of the gun to assist in finding a weapon with a matching
caliber. So instead, I quote the part of Officer Williams’s testimony that comes closest. Yet even
the most careful review of that testimony reveals that it still does not support the idea that Officer
Williams actually consulted the caliber of the bullet and then used knowledge of the bullet’s caliber
to assist in finding a gun of that same caliber:
        Q:       After you found the ammunition and the holster, what did you do?
        A:       I then retrieved it and notified the officers in the area and asked him was
                 there any more weapons or anything near that this ammunition and this
                 holster goes to.
        Q:       What did the defendant say?
        A:       He said no.
        Q:       Finding a person at 5 in the morning with ammunition and a holster in their
                 pocket, what did you think to do next?
        A:       Canvas the area to see if the weapon was possibly thrown. We have that a
                 lot in Opa-Locka.
        Q:       Why would you be looking for weapons to have been thrown? Can you
                 explain that?
        A:       I was looking for the weapons to be thrown because the round that was in
                 his pocket and the holster led me to believe that there is a weapon that the
                 round goes to and something goes into that holster.
        Q:       So ultimately, Officer, what did you continue to do?
        A:       Officer Holborow then looked in the west side of the neighbor’s yard to see
                 if he had possibly thrown anything over there. I then walked towards the
                 back where I found a—to the back of the listed location where I found a
                 hole in the fence. I then got in my car and drove around the block to the
                 north side of that duplex across the fence where I found two pistols laying
                 near the hole.

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suggest that Officer Williams seized the bullet to somehow aid him in identifying

the “caliber or type of gun” for which he was looking. Id. Consequently, the

rationale that the ammunition was seizable so it could assist the officer in identifying

and then locating a strewn weapon literally bears no relationship to the actual

circumstances in Johnson’s case.

       Because it is divorced from the circumstances of this case, the bullet-means-

gun rationale cannot even arguably be viewed as part of any alleged totality-of-the-

circumstances rationale for seizing the bullet here. Rather, it supports adoption of a

per se rule. Instead of evaluating “the concrete factual circumstances that Officer

Williams encountered,” id. at 10, the Opinion “weighs” an abstract fact that, while

always true, was never actually considered here, under the guise of a circumstance-

dependent test.

       But a second problem also plagues the bullet-means-gun argument. By the

Majority Opinion’s reasoning, every piece of ammunition will always give rise to

the deduction that “a gun [is] in the vicinity,” and every officer will always have to

find any gun to secure the scene and protect himself and others. So if, as the Majority

Opinion asserts, a bullet means a gun is present, and knowing the caliber of the bullet

is important to “find[ing] any gun to secure the scene and protect [the officer] and

Rather, Officer Williams’s testimony shows only that he relied on the fact that he found a bullet
in general to conclude that a gun in general might be around.

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others,” in the absence of any limitation on these principles, the presence of a bullet

and the corresponding need to know the caliber of it to assist in identifying the gun

will always be sufficient, in and of themselves, to support seizure of the

ammunition—regardless of any circumstances of the particular Terry stop.

      Nor is the bullet-means-gun argument the only one the Majority Opinion

relies on that suffers from this problem. The Majority Opinion also justifies its

determination that the bullet here was seizable on the ground that ammunition

threatens the safety of officers and others because it is “an essential part of a lethal

weapon,” and “grave injury . . . could [] be[] caused by . . . ammunition if . . . loaded

into a gun” (the “intrinsic-danger” argument). Id. at 10. But what bullet is that not

true of?

      To be sure, the Majority Opinion mentions “Johnson’s ammunition” and “in

these circumstances” in discussing the intrinsic-danger argument. See id. But the

specified characteristics of ammunition on which the Majority Opinion actually

relies in this argument are not unique to Johnson’s single bullet. And even the most

thorough of reviews reveals no effort whatsoever by the Majority Opinion to relate

these general characteristics of all ammunition to the particular circumstances of

Johnson’s Terry frisk. As a result, the Majority Opinion’s camouflage cannot and

does not limit the reasoning wearing it.

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       Rather, these intrinsic-danger characteristics of Johnson’s ammunition are

always true of all ammunition. So under the intrinsic-danger rationale, in the

absence of any express limitation on the principle, all ammunition will always be

seizable because, intrinsically, it always “threatens the safety of officers and others.”

Id. at 12. And because ammunition is seizable when it “threatens the safety of

officers and others,” and all ammunition always threatens “the safety of officers and

others” under the intrinsic-danger rationale, all ammunition is always seizable

during a permissible Terry frisk, without regard to any other considerations.

       So all courts in this Circuit are now bound to uphold the seizure of ammunition

during a Terry frisk—whether the officer seizes the ammunition on a crowded street

in the highest-crime neighborhood just before dawn and while the suspect is wearing

bulky clothing and is unsecured, or whether the officer seizes the ammunition on a

sunny day at an empty beach while the suspect is secured and clad in nothing more

than a bikini. And it is pure sophistry to suggest that courts will be able to reach any

other conclusions in cases involving ammunition, regardless of any other

circumstances. Perhaps that is why the Majority Opinion does not even attempt to

explain how any other answer is possible.5

       5
         The Majority Opinion asserts it does not answer this question because “we are not in the
business of issuing advisory opinions . . . that merely opine on what the law would be upon a
hypothetical state of facts.” Majority Op. at 23 (citations and alterations omitted). I agree that we
cannot issue advisory opinions. But that’s not what this question calls for. Though it is certainly
hypothetical that the officers here relied on the caliber of the bullet to help them identify the type
of firearm for which they were looking—despite the Majority Opinion’s reliance on this

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        Nor is it any answer to this dilemma to simply note, as the Majority Opinion

does, that to determine whether an officer may properly seize an item during a Terry

frisk, we must “consider[] the nature of that object.” Id. at 20. Of course, that is

true.

        But significantly, the inquiry we must conduct about the nature of the item

under the totality-of-the-circumstances framework is whether the nature of the

seized item created a threat to the safety of officers and others under the particular

circumstances the officer encountered—not whether the nature of the item always

poses a threat to the safety of officers and others. The latter is a question we could

ask if we were deciding whether to scrap the totality-of-the-circumstances test as

applied to ammunition, as the Newsom and Branch Opinions openly advocate doing.

        In fact, the Branch Opinion—which expressly concludes that ammunition is

always seizable during a proper Terry frisk because “a bullet is an instrument for the

assault of the police officer,” Branch Op. at 34 (citation, internal quotation marks,

and alteration omitted)—relies on the very same intrinsic-danger reasoning as the

Majority Opinion to reach its conclusion. According to the Branch Opinion’s

reasoning, “aside from removing [ammunition], no precaution can eliminate the

supposition—there is nothing hypothetical about the general proposition that a bullet often means
a gun is in the vicinity or that knowing the caliber of ammunition can assist in finding a matching
firearm. Nor is there anything hypothetical about the general proposition that ammunition makes
guns lethal. And since the Majority Opinion refuses to limit its holding by saying these
characteristics about ammunition are not, alone or in combination only with each other,
determinative of whether ammunition may be seized, see infra at 56, no other facts matter.

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danger” ammunition poses, since a bullet’s “only purpose is to be used with a

firearm,” and “a bullet located during a Terry frisk poses an inherent risk to the safety

of the officers and the others nearby.” Branch Op. at 35-36. In other words, the

Branch Opinion employs the intrinsic-danger rationale to expressly hold what the

Majority Opinion implicitly (and necessarily) holds through the very same

reasoning.

      The Majority Opinion easily could have avoided this problem and could have

limited itself to holding only that the seizure of Johnson’s ammunition was

appropriate under the totality of the circumstances here, if it wanted to do so. All it

needed to do is simply state that the bullet-means-gun and intrinsic-danger

arguments, alone or in combination with only each other, are not enough, in and of

themselves, to warrant seizure of ammunition during a permissible Terry frisk. A

single sentence would do that trick. That’s it.

      In fact, I expressly invited the Majority Opinion to do just that. And by this

dissent, I renew my call.

      Tellingly, though, the Majority Opinion refuses to add any such language. We

should ask ourselves why. If the Majority Opinion believes that the bullet-means-

gun and intrinsic-danger arguments, alone or in combination with only each other,

are not enough to warrant seizure of ammunition during a Terry stop, why will it not

just say so?

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      Because the Majority Opinion refuses to limit its reasoning today, under our

prior-precedent rule, the Majority Opinion’s bullet-means-gun and intrinsic-danger

reasoning—which are applicable to all ammunition in all circumstances and not

limited to the facts of Johnson’s case—bind all courts in the Eleventh Circuit to rule

ammunition always seizable during a proper Terry frisk.

      Even the Branch Opinion implicitly recognizes as much. True, the Branch

Opinion states that it “join[s] the Majority Opinion in full.” But significantly, that

endorsement is qualified with two “clarif[ications]. Branch Opinion at 31. And

those “clarif[ications]” preclude the Branch Opinion’s analysis from supporting the

Majority Opinion’s totality-of-the-circumstances alternative holding. In particular,

the Branch Opinion necessarily qualifies its endorsement of the Majority Opinion

with the following two “clarif[ications]”: that “(1) the totality of the circumstances

analysis in Terry applies only when the officer is determining whether (a) to stop

and (b) then to frisk the detained person; and (2) if the officer conducting the frisk

complies with the scope of the search permitted by Terry and feels what the officer

reasonably believes is a bullet, the officer may in all circumstances seize it.” Id.

(emphasis added). In other words, the Branch Opinion expressly disavows the idea

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that the totality-of-the-circumstances test governs—or even applies in any way to—

the question of whether ammunition may be seized during a permissible Terry frisk.6

       So the Branch Opinion’s “clarif[ication]”—that the totality-of-the-

circumstances analysis does not govern whether ammunition is seizable during a

permissible Terry frisk because ammunition is always seizable during a permissible

Terry frisk, regardless of the circumstances—cannot peacefully coexist with the

Majority Opinion’s claimed sole holding—that Johnson’s ammunition was properly

seized under an analysis of the totality of the circumstances existing after the frisk

had already been properly embarked upon and at the time Williams recognized a

bullet was in Johnson’s pocket. Either the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis

governs whether ammunition is seizable during a permissible Terry frisk, or it

doesn’t. And if it does, ammunition cannot then always be seizable during a proper

Terry frisk. Otherwise, employing the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis to

ascertain whether seizure of ammunition is allowed during a given permissible Terry

frisk would be an utter waste of time.

       6
          See also id. at 32 (“The initiation of the stop and the initiation of the pat down are the
only two points in the encounter at which the officer’s reasonable belief must be assessed based
on the totality of the circumstances.”); 35 (“If an officer discovers a bullet during a frisk lawful
under Terry, the officer is entitled to seize the bullet as it is an instrument of assault in all
circumstances.”) (emphasis added); 36-37 (“[H]aving found a bullet pursuant to a Terry frisk, an
officer is permitted to seize it in the same manner as he would a gun.”), (“[I]t is reasonable under
all circumstances for the officer to protect his safety and that of others nearby by removing the
bullet.”) (emphasis added); 37 (“[A]nytime an officer conducts a lawful Terry frisk, the officer
may seize any bullet located during the frisk.”).

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      Rather, if a totality-of-the-circumstances analysis governs, that necessarily

means that in at least some circumstances, ammunition will not be seizable. So the

Branch Opinion’s “clarif[ication]” of the Majority Opinion that ammunition is

always seizable during a proper Terry frisk is not a “clarif[ication]” at all. Instead,

it is necessarily an acknowledgment of the Branch Opinion’s understanding that the

Majority Opinion renders ammunition always seizable during a proper Terry frisk,

without regard to the totality-of-the-circumstances test.

      What’s more, two of the seven judges in the Majority signed the Branch

Opinion, which endorses only the ammunition-is-always-seizable theory and

necessarily repudiates the applicability of the totality-of-the-circumstances test to

determining whether ammunition is seizable during a permissible Terry frisk. And

since the Majority Opinion has two holdings, including that ammunition is always

seizable during a proper Terry frisk, the only rationale receiving seven votes today

is the Branch Opinion’s rationale. It makes no difference that the Branch Opinion

states that it “join[s] the majority opinion in full” because the Branch Opinion’s

“clarif[ication]” of the Majority Opinion necessarily means the Branch Opinion’s

concurrence in the Majority Opinion is qualified to endorse only the ammunition-is-

always-seizable theory.

      Plus, even if we could overlook the fact that the Branch Opinion’s

“clarif[ications]” of the Majority Opinion necessarily qualify its concurrence in the

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Majority Opinion to supporting only the ammunition-is-always-seizable holding, the

Majority Opinion would have two alternative holdings: the narrow one it trumpets—

that the bullet here was seizable under the totality of the circumstances—and the

broad one it declines to expressly acknowledge—that all ammunition is always

seizable in a Terry frisk.

      And under those circumstances, make no mistake: as a practical matter, the

Majority Opinion’s stealth holding that ammunition is always seizable in a Terry

frisk is the only holding that counts, regardless of whether the Majority Opinion

openly admits that. Though alternative holdings are equally binding if they receive

the support of a majority of judges considering the issue, see Bravo v. United States,

532 F.3d 1154, 1162 (11th Cir. 2008), the ammunition-is-always-seizable holding

necessarily will devour the totality-of-the-circumstances holding in every case. So

if the two holdings produce different answers to the question of whether ammunition

is seizable in a Terry frisk in any given case, the holding that the ammunition is

always seizable will always demand the overall conclusion that the ammunition is

seizable. See United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897 (1984) (fruit of impermissible

search admissible where officers reasonably believed in good faith that the search

was valid).

      The Majority Opinion has no answer to this problem. Instead, it invokes

everyone from Chief Justice John Marshall to Bryan Garner for the truism that

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judicial decisions are limited to the facts of the case before the court. See Majority

Op. at 21-22. But that does not respond to the problem here.

      Indeed, Garner’s The Law of Judicial Precedent, which the Majority Opinion

relies on, see Maj. Op. at 21, explains that while a court decides only the case before

it, “the rationale that carries the force of precedent is that without which the judgment

in the case could not have been given, and not the reasoning articulated by the court,”

Bryan A. Garner, et al., The Law of Judicial Precedent, § 6, at 83 (2016) (citation

and internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, our prior-precedent rule

dictates an opinion’s holding.

      Yet the Majority Opinion fails to account in any way for the prior-precedent

rule, which today requires the conclusion that all ammunition is always seizable

during a permissible Terry frisk. In fact, the Majority Opinion does not even

mention the prior-precedent rule.

      So in sum, the bullet-means-gun and intrinsic-danger rationales apply to all

ammunition, regardless of any surrounding factual circumstances, and we have

declared today that each of these rationales requires the conclusion that ammunition

represents a threat to the safety of officers or others. Since a threat to the safety of

officers or others always justifies the seizure of an item during a permissible Terry

frisk, in the absence of limiting principles, under our prior-precedent rule, the bullet-

means-gun and intrinsic-danger rationales necessarily require all courts in this

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Circuit to now rule valid the seizure of ammunition during a proper Terry frisk,

without consideration of any surrounding circumstances.

         The new rule we adopt may or may not ultimately be the right answer. But

we should at least be forthright about what we are holding and about the

consequences of today’s decision. And we should ask for and consider the parties’

positions in the process.

                                            B.

         A reader may wonder what difference it makes whether we openly announce

our holding that ammunition is always seizable if the holding is nonetheless

ascertainable from our reasoning today? In my view, a lot.

         It matters because we are a United States Court, and forthrightness is our stock

in trade. We have a duty to be open and honest with Johnson, officers, members of

the public, and federal courts about the practical legal consequences of our decision

today.

         It matters because officers and members of the public who have not had reason

to think about the practical legal consequences of the Majority Opinion’s reasoning

may be under the misimpression after today that ammunition is not always seizable

in a Terry frisk. As a result, officers may (now unnecessarily) spend time weighing

how dark it is or how much crime has been committed in a given locale before

deciding whether to seize ammunition, potentially imperiling their safety if the

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Majority Opinion’s rationale rendering all ammunition seizable is correct. And it

matters to the privacy rights of the public who may (now mistakenly) believe that

officers are not entitled to seize ammunition from their pockets in some scenarios.

      It matters because now busy courts in this Circuit will have to waste their time

going through the motions of applying the totality-of-the-circumstances test to

determine whether ammunition is seizable in a Terry frisk, only to ultimately have

to hold in every single case that it is, regardless of the outcome of the totality-of-the-

circumstances analysis.

      It matters because if Johnson wishes to seek certiorari on the question of

whether ammunition is, in fact, always seizable under Terry or whether instead

ammunition is seizable only if the totality of the circumstances warrants it, he will

have to spend several pages of his petition just proving that the Majority Opinion

establishes this rule.

      It matters because if members of the public knew we were going to consider

announcing a rule that ammunition is always seizable in a Terry frisk, some—such

as advocacy organizations for civil rights, law-enforcement officers, and gun

enthusiasts, as well as criminal-defense-attorney organizations—may have wished

to have filed amicus curiae briefs to assist us in evaluating the legal advisability of

that position.

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      And it matters because if, outside the strictures of our adversarial system, we

are going to adopt a new rule no party advocated for, we have a duty to plainly state

that that is what we are doing. And then we have a duty to explain why that

extraordinary measure is necessary. If we can’t, we should not adopt a new rule in

this way.

                                          II.

      Perhaps the Majority Opinion does not expressly acknowledge its

ammunition-is-always-seizable holding because we never asked the parties to brief

the question it answers, neither party argued the ammunition-is-always-seizable

position that the Majority Opinion’s new rule adopts today, and the government

expressly disavowed it during oral argument. In other words, we never subjected

today’s new rule to the adversarial process.

      Had we done so, we could have had more confidence in the Court’s new rule.

As Justice Gorsuch has explained, “[N]ormally . . . the crucible of adversarial testing

is crucial to sound judicial decisionmaking. We rely on it to yield insights (or reveal

pitfalls) we cannot muster guided only by our own lights.” Sessions v. Dimaya, 138
S. Ct. 1204, 1232-33 (2018) (Gorsuch, J., concurring in part and concurring in the

judgment) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see also Greenlaw v.

United States, 554 U.S. 237, 244 (2008) (“[W]e normally decide only questions

presented by the parties. Counsel almost always know a great deal more about their

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cases than we do, and this must be particularly true of counsel for the United States,

the richest, most powerful, and best represented litigant to appear before us.”)

(citation and quotation marks omitted); Maslenjak v. United States, 137 S. Ct. 1918,

1931-32 (Gorsuch, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (joined by

Thomas, J.).

      Not only that, but “[t]he premise of our adversarial system is that appellate

courts do not sit as self-directed boards of legal inquiry and research, but essentially

as arbiters of legal questions presented and argued by the parties before them.”

Nelson, 562 U.S. at 148 n.10 (2011) (quoting Carducci v. Regan, 714 F.2d 171, 177

(D.C. Cir. 1983) (opinion for the court by Scalia, J.)). And the “doctrine of judicial

self-restraint requires us to exercise the utmost care whenever we . . . break new

ground . . . .” Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 125 (1992).

      This is especially true when we decide on the scope of a constitutional right.

See, e.g., Nelson, 562 U.S. at 148 n.10 (“In this case, petitioners did not ask us to

hold that there is no constitutional right to informational privacy, and respondents .

. . thus understandably refrained from addressing that issue in detail. It is undesirable

for us to decide a matter of this importance in a case in which we do not have the

benefit of briefing by the parties . . . .”). And that is the case even more so when we

determine the scope of a constitutional right while sitting en banc on rehearing.

Indeed, “[a]n en banc . . . rehearing is not favored and ordinarily will not be ordered

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unless . . . the proceeding involves a question of exceptional importance.” Fed. R.

App. P. 35(a)(2). When a case “involves a question of exceptional importance,”

employing the powerful adversarial-testing tool is even more crucial to ensure we

reach the best possible answer under the law. But we did not do that here.

      We could have. In fact, it was entirely within our control to do so.

      We are the ones who decide the question the parties must address for en banc

rehearing. So we could have asked the parties to brief whether an officer may always

seize ammunition when that officer immediately recognizes it during a Terry frisk

or whether instead we must always apply Terry’s totality-of-the-circumstances

analysis to determine whether the seizure of ammunition is reasonable under the

specific facts of a particular situation. But we did not ask that question.

      Left to their own devices, the parties argued over application of Terry’s

totality-of-the-circumstances test to the specific facts of this case—that is, whether

Officer Williams’s seizure of the single bullet was reasonable in light of the

particular factual scenario that arose here. When we saw that neither party’s briefing

advocated for—or even addressed—a rule that would allow officers to always seize

ammunition upon immediately recognizing it during a Terry frisk, we could have

given the parties a supplemental-briefing instruction requiring them to comment on

the issue. But we did not do that.

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       We also could have appointed counsel to argue the position that no party chose

to take: that an officer may always seize ammunition upon immediately recognizing

it during a Terry frisk. To be sure, we have embraced the appointed-counsel

procedure in the past when no party has adopted a particular side of a given issue.

See, e.g., McCarthan v. Dir. of Goodwill Indus.-Suncoast, Inc., 851 F.3d 1076, 1079

(11th Cir. 2017) (en banc) (listing court-appointed amicus curiae). But we did not

appoint counsel here.

       And even after oral en banc arguments, when it became clear a majority of

this Court decided that it was considering affirming on the basis of today’s new rule,

it was not too late to solicit the parties’ opinions and appoint counsel if necessary.

We reserve time in our annual schedule for at least three en banc sessions every year.

Sometimes we use them all; sometimes we don’t. But they are always available. So

we easily could have reset the case for a new en banc rehearing to occur in January—

just three months after the first one.7 Then we could have directed the parties to

brief the question the Court decides without their input (or approval) today. If no

one took today’s Majority’s position, we could have appointed counsel to brief it.

But we did not do that, either.

       7
          Or if we thought the issue just couldn’t wait three months, we could have done what we
did this past summer, when we added an en banc argument that we heard at a time that was not
previously on our annual schedule. See, e.g., Ovalles v. United States, 905 F.3d 1231 (11th Cir.
2018) (en banc) (argued July 9, 2018).

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       Yet now, without the benefit of briefing on this rule by any party before the

Court—or even a decision from the district court here mentioning this rule—and

over the government’s disavowal at oral argument of the rule we adopt, we embrace

a brand new rule. And this rule isn’t new to just us. This rule is new to federal

appellate jurisprudence: in the fifty years since the Supreme Court issued Terry, no

other Circuit has adopted or expressly rejected this rule.8 In fact, no other Circuit

has even considered the precise question of whether an officer may always seize

ammunition when that officer immediately recognizes it during a Terry frisk, or

whether instead we must always apply Terry’s totality-of-the-circumstances analysis

to determine whether the seizure of ammunition is reasonable under the specific facts

of a particular situation.9 That makes subjecting the new rule to adversarial testing

even more critical.

       8
           The Majority Opinion cites United States v. Ward, 23 F.3d 1303, 1306 (8th Cir. 1994),
for the proposition that “an officer may seize ammunition when it threatens the safety of officers
and others.” See Majority. Op. at 12. I agree with this general proposition, but whether
ammunition threatens the safety of officers and others has, until now, been assessed in light of the
totality of the circumstances. And in Ward, the Eighth Circuit upheld the seizure of shotgun shells
seized from a suspect’s pocket based on the fact that, under the circumstances of that case, they
were contraband—not based on the idea that ammunition is always seizable because it is
ammunition. See Ward, 23 F.3d at 1306 (citing Minnesota v. Dickerson, 508 U.S. 366 (1993), for
the proposition that “contraband may be seized during a Terry stop”).
         9
           Of the five state jurisdictions the Majority Opinion cites, see Majority. Op. at 12-13, only
Nevada has issued a holding consistent with the Majority’s conclusion today that ammunition is
always seizable. In Scott v. State, 877 P.2d 503, 509 (Nev. 1994), Nevada’s Supreme Court upheld
the retrieval of ammunition from the suspect’s pocket and noted that “it is reasonable for an officer,
as a precautionary measure, to retrieve and separate from a suspect during the course of a Terry
stop and frisk, either weapons or ammunition or both.” In doing so, it offered no analysis of how
Terry fits into the picture or of anything beyond Scott’s single statement quoted above and in the
Majority Opinion. Instead, it relied on Ward, State v. Smith, 665 P.2d 995, 998 (Ariz. 1983) (en

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       But instead, the Majority has skipped the adversarial testing and on its own

created the rule we adopt today. I think adversarial testing is a pretty important part

of our judicial process—and we easily could have done it here. My colleagues offer

no reason for why it is appropriate to avoid adversarial testing in this case, and I am

not aware of one, either. So I cannot join my colleagues in announcing the Court’s

new rule.

                                                III.

       Instead of asking the parties to address whether ammunition is always seizable

in a Terry frisk, without regard to the particular circumstances, we asked the parties

to brief and argue whether the bullet here was reasonably seized under Terry’s

totality-of-the-circumstances framework.10 So the Majority’s decision making all

banc), People v. Lewis, 123 A.D.2d 716 (N.Y. App. Div. 1986), and State v. Moton, 733 S.W.2d
449, 451 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986). But the courts in each of those cases upheld the seizure of the
ammunition based on the totality of the particular circumstances—not on the fact that what was
seized was ammunition. The same is true of the other state-court case the Majority Opinion cites,
People v. Colyar, 996 N.E.2d 575 (Ill. 2013).
        10
           In my view, as argued, this is not an en-banc-worthy issue. While it is certainly a good
thing to provide clarity to police officers doing their jobs, the question we asked necessarily turns
on the specific facts of the given case. So no answer can give broad instruction to officers trying
to ascertain when it is appropriate to seize ammunition in the course of a Terry frisk. As a result,
as the issue has been argued here, this case does not raise a question of “exceptional importance,”
Fed. R. App. P. 35(a)(2), as that term of art is understood. See Bostock v. Clayton Cty. Bd. of
Comm’rs, 894 F.3d 1335, 1336 n.1 (11th Cir. 2018) (Rosenbaum, J., dissenting from the denial of
rehearing en banc); see also Mendoza v. Borden, Inc., 195 F.3d 1238, 1269 n.12 (Tjoflat, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part) (opining that a hostile-work-environment sexual-
harassment case was not en banc-worthy because it “was a rather routine decision that rested on
an extremely fact-intensive review”). And based on the Majority Opinion’s new rule that all
ammunition is always seizable in a Terry frisk, regardless of the circumstances—a rule that moots
the totality-of-the-circumstances test when it comes to ammunition—the Majority Opinion
apparently agrees that the question as framed was not, in and of itself, en-banc worthy.

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ammunition seizable under all conditions, without regard to the totality-of-the-

circumstances test poses a dilemma: I can either (1) substantively analyze and opine

on the advisability of a rule that we did not ask the parties to brief, that that they did

not argue, and that the government expressly disavowed—and in an en banc case,

no less; or (2) analyze how the totality-of-the-circumstances test applies to the

ammunition here in light of the particular circumstances adduced through the

evidentiary hearings—the (non-en banc worthy) question we did ask the parties to

brief and they did argue—even though in this Circuit, as a result of the Majority

Opinion’s new rule, that test has now become forever moot as it relates to

ammunition.

      An important consequence arises from choosing which question to answer:

the question reviewed limits the universe of answers we can reach.

      For example, the first question—whether ammunition is always seizable in a

proper Terry frisk when the officer identifies ammunition—assumes that it may be

possible under Terry for all ammunition as a class to be ruled seizable, without

regard to any circumstances. As a result, the universe of potential answers to that

question includes the conclusion that all ammunition as a class is seizable under

Terry, without regard to any circumstances.

      But that answer is not possible in the universe defined by the second

question—whether the totality of the circumstances here made it permissible for

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Officer Williams to seize the bullet from Johnson’s pocket at the time he so

identified it. The second question, which requires application of the totality-of-the-

circumstances framework, necessarily anticipates that items subject to it will not be

seizable under at least some circumstances. Indeed, if a certain type of item subject

to the totality-of-the-circumstances test were always seizable based solely on the

nature of the item itself, the particular circumstances under which it was seized

would never matter, and the test would be meaningless as applied to that type of

item. So under the second question—the only one we asked the parties to answer—

if a certain type of item (such as ammunition) is subject to the totality-of-the-

circumstances test, it must not be seizable in at least some circumstances.

      The Majority’s answer in this case—which creates the rule that ammunition

is always seizable, regardless of the circumstances—does not fall within the universe

of possible answers we ourselves created for this en banc proceeding when we asked

the parties to brief the totality-of-the-circumstances question. That brings me back

to my dilemma: I can substantively analyze a question that was never at issue in

these en banc proceedings, or I can apply a now-meaningless test (as it relates to

ammunition) that is not capable of coming to the Majority Opinion’s ultimate

answer—that ammunition is always seizable.

      For the reasons I have explained in Section II, I am uncomfortable with the

first course of action. I therefore respectfully decline to participate in it.

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       As for the second, since the Majority Opinion effectively banishes the totality-

of-the-circumstances test (when it comes to ammunition) to the Eleventh Circuit’s

attic, applying that now-defunct test to the particular circumstances surrounding the

seizure of the single bullet here is an exercise that can serve no practical purpose. It

cannot determine the outcome of this case, and it cannot even arguably make points

that future courts considering motions to suppress ammunition seized in Terry frisks

might find helpful, since the test no longer matters as it pertains to ammunition.

       The Majority Opinion criticizes this dissent for “refus[ing] to answer the one

question [posed to the parties] that a majority of this Court voted to decide en

banc.”11 Maj. Op. at 21. But notably, the question we asked the parties to brief and

they in fact briefed sought resolution of the case by applying the totality-of-the-

circumstances test to the specific facts here. Though the Majority Opinion claims to

“answer the very question the parties briefed and argued,” id., as I have explained,

see supra at Section I, the Majority Opinion’s alternative ammunition-is-always-

seizable holding—the only one that matters since it extinguishes the vitality of the

       11
           The Majority Opinion further seems to imply that I do not answer because I “deem[] [the
question of whether the bullet was properly seized under the totality-of-the-circumstances
framework] non-en-banc worthy.” Id. at 21. Not so. True, I do fully believe that the issue we
asked the parties to brief and argue is not en-banc worthy by the standard Rule 35(a)(2) imposes—
and even more so as Circuit Courts have construed this standard. See supra at 69 n.10. But that
has nothing to do with why I do not apply the totality-of-the-circumstances test today. Rather, as
I have explained, I respectfully decline to apply the totality-of-the-circumstances test because in
this Circuit, it is now a relic as applied to ammunition, so nothing I write on that test’s application
to these facts can possibly be useful.

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totality-of-the-circumstances test as applied to ammunition in this Circuit—applies

the totality-of-the-circumstances test no more than this dissent does.

       Charades may be fun at parties, but not in judicial opinions where officer

safety and privacy rights hang in the balance. I therefore respectfully decline to

engage in that activity. 12

                                               IV.

       Today we issue a new rule we did not ask the parties to brief, they did not

brief, and the government expressly disavowed. And we do this even though we

could have obtained the parties’ input on the question we decide today. I respectfully

decline to participate in that activity. The parties’ testing of the issues we decide is

and should be the engine that drives our adversarial system.

       12
            I understand and respect my colleagues’ Dissents, which have chosen to apply or
otherwise comment on the test we asked the parties to brief, even though the Majority Opinion
today moots it. Judges Jill Pryor and Jordan were on the original panel that understandably applied
the totality-of-the-circumstances test, and it makes sense why they would want to explain the
reasons supporting that panel’s decision. I, however, was not a part of that panel and have not
previously applied the totality-of-the-circumstances test to the particular facts of the case before
us. And I see little reason under the circumstances to apply that test to the single bullet here for
the first time now that the test effectively has no meaning in this Circuit when it comes to
ammunition.

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JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge, joined by WILSON, MARTIN, and JORDAN,
Circuit Judges, dissenting.

       A beat cop’s job isn’t easy, and it comes with substantial personal risk. Our

law must provide police officers with sufficient discretion, and room for mistakes,

that they can keep themselves safe. But officer safety is not the only interest at

play here. The people whom officers police and protect have a Fourth Amendment

right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. This case stands at the

crossroads of these two very compelling interests. It’s a crossroads where courts

often find themselves. For more than half a century, the Supreme Court, faced

with resolving the tension between these two interests, has adhered to the principle

that after conducting an investigatory stop of a person “a law enforcement officer,

for his own protection and safety, may conduct a patdown to find weapons that he

reasonably believes or suspects are then in the possession of the person he has

accosted.” Ybarra v. Illinois, 444 U.S. 85, 93 (1979) (emphasis added) (explaining

the rule announced in Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968)).1 It has equally held fast

       1
          The only other item besides weapons that the Fourth Amendment permits a police
officer to seize during a Terry stop and frisk is “contraband” detected by plain feel, if the officer
is acting within the bounds of Terry at the moment the officer develops probable cause to believe
contraband is present. Minnesota v. Dickerson, 508 U.S. 366, 374-76 (1993). Neither the
government nor the majority believes that the freestanding bullet was contraband in this case,
and I agree.
          Mr. Johnson previously had been convicted of a felony, so he could not lawfully possess
a gun or ammunition. But his prior felony conviction did not justify seizure of a single bullet
found in Mr. Johnson’s pocket as contraband because at the time the officers seized the bullet,
the officers had no information that Mr. Johnson was a convicted felon. They therefore had no
probable cause to believe that a single bullet would be contraband in Mr. Johnson’s possession.

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to the corresponding principle that the permissible scope of a Terry frisk is

“narrow,” and “[n]othing in Terry can be understood to allow . . . any search

whatever for anything but weapons.” Id. at 93-94 (internal quotation marks

omitted); see United States v. Valerio, 718 F.3d 1321, 1324 (11th Cir. 2013)

(characterizing Terry as a “narrow exception to the probable cause requirement”

that typically applies when an individual’s Fourth Amendment rights are

implicated).

       In this case, police officers lawfully stopped Paul Johnson, Jr., placed him

on the ground, handcuffed him, and held him at gunpoint while one officer frisked

him. During the frisk, Officer Dwight Williams felt a single bullet and a nylon

holster in Mr. Johnson’s front pants pocket and then reached into the pocket to

seize these items. The seizure of the bullet and holster was unlawful under Terry.

In holding otherwise, the majority has unjustifiably broadened the scope of Terry’s

narrow exception, tipping the balance too far in favor of law enforcement’s desire

to collect evidence and against the Fourth Amendment rights of the people they

police. I respectfully dissent.

See id. at 375-76; United States v. Blom, 242 F.3d 799, 808 (8th Cir. 2001) (“reject[ing] [any]
suggestion that a police officer with no knowledge of a citizen’s criminal history may
constitutionally seize firearms or ammunition without a warrant, so long as the citizen turns out
to be, in hindsight, a convicted felon”).

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        My dissent proceeds in three parts. First, I explain why, under the totality of

the circumstances in this case, the officers were not permitted to seize the bullet

and holster from Mr. Johnson’s pocket. Second, I explain why the majority’s

decision effectively—and wrongly, I say—creates a categorical rule that a

freestanding bullet may be seized under Terry. Third, I explain my view that the

majority opinion permits Terry frisks to be used for evidence gathering—

something the Supreme Court expressly has forbidden.

   I.      The Totality of the Circumstances Requires Suppression of the
           Bullet and Holster.

        The Fourth Amendment protects people “against unreasonable searches and

seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV (emphasis added). Interpreting that foundational

principle, the Supreme Court has affirmed that “[t]he reasonableness of a search

depends on the totality of the circumstances, including the nature and purpose of

the search and the extent to which the search intrudes upon reasonable privacy

expectations.” Grady v. North Carolina, 135 S. Ct. 1368, 1371 (2015). In the

context of a stop and frisk, “in justifying the particular intrusion the police officer

must be able to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with

rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion.” Terry, 392
U.S. at 21.

        A Terry frisk “must . . . be confined in scope to an intrusion reasonably

designed to discover guns, knives, clubs, or other hidden instruments for the

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assault of [a] police officer” or “others nearby.” Id. at 29. That is because

safety—of officers on the scene and the public at large—is the bedrock of Terry,

the only valid purpose for a Terry frisk. Id. To determine whether a frisk was

reasonable in its scope, we consider the totality of the circumstances. United

States v. Cortez, 449 U.S. 411, 417 (1981).

      Here are the circumstances of the frisk of Mr. Johnson. In the early morning

hours in Opa-Locka, Florida—a high-crime area—the local police department

received a 911 call about a possible burglary in progress at a four-unit home. The

911 caller reported that a “person [was] trying to get through the window of [a]

neighbor’s house,” and the dispatcher relayed to the police that the suspect was a

black male wearing a white shirt. Doc. 22 at 6, 19.2 Two officers, both of whom

received the description of the person in question, arrived on the scene. There,

they saw Mr. Johnson, a black male in a white shirt, coming from the back of the

building where the reported incident had taken place. The officers drew their

weapons, pointed them at Mr. Johnson, and ordered him to approach with his

hands up. Mr. Johnson immediately complied. At this point, a third officer

arrived. Officer Williams, who was one of the first two officers on the scene, told

Mr. Johnson that he was being detained until the officers could “figure things out.”

Id. at 33. Another officer ordered Mr. Johnson to the ground near the parking area

      2
          Doc. # refers to the numbered entry on the district court’s docket.

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at the front of the building, Mr. Johnson immediately complied, and then Officer

Williams handcuffed him while the other officers trained their weapons on him.

Officer Williams then frisked Mr. Johnson. To recap: during the frisk, Mr.

Johnson was handcuffed, lying on the ground, and surrounded by three armed

officers.

      Officer Williams felt in Mr. Johnson’s front pants pocket “a nylon piece of

material; and then, underneath it, a round, hard-like, oval-shaped object, which led

[him] to believe it was ammunition.” Doc. 30 at 6. He reached into Mr. Johnson’s

pocket and removed a black nylon pistol holster and a single round of .380 caliber

ammunition. When asked whether there were any “weapons or anything near that

this ammunition and this holster goes to,” Mr. Johnson said no. Doc. 22 at 10.

The officers began sweeping the area for weapons that might have been thrown.

At that point a fourth officer arrived and saw Mr. Johnson handcuffed on the

ground, the bullet and holster lying next to him, and another officer standing over

Mr. Johnson with his gun drawn. Officer Williams walked toward the back of the

building, found a hole in the fence separating that property and the property behind

it, and then found two firearms lying near the hole on the other side of the fence.

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       Viewed in their totality, the circumstances of this case require suppression of

the bullet 3 because no officer reasonably could have believed that a single bullet—

without any accompanying indication or reasonable expectation of the presence of

a firearm Mr. Johnson could access—posed a present safety threat.4 I view as

critical the combination of facts that before Officer Williams felt the bullet in Mr.

Johnson’s pocket, (1) there had been no report or indication of a weapon or an

accomplice at the scene;5 (2) at least two other armed officers had arrived at the

scene; (3) Mr. Johnson had immediately, peacefully, and at gunpoint complied

with the officers’ commands; and (4) the officers had placed Mr. Johnson on the

       3
          Given the evidence in this case—including testimony that Officer Williams realized
during the frisk that Mr. Johnson had a bullet in his pocket and that Opa-Locka officers always
canvass the area where a person suspected of possessing weapons is detained—it seems to me
that the firearms inevitably would have been discovered by law enforcement, thereby dooming
Mr. Johnson’s request for suppression. See Utah v. Strieff, 136 S. Ct. 2056, 2061 (2016) (“[T]he
inevitable discovery doctrine allows for the admission of evidence that would have been
discovered even without the unconstitutional source.”); United States v. Lemons, 153 F. Supp. 2d
948, 965-67 (E.D. Wisc. 2001) (applying the inevitable discovery doctrine to deny suppression
of a firearm found after an unconstitutional seizure of bullets under circumstances similar to
those in this case). But the government did not press this theory in the district court, choosing
instead to argue only that Officer Williams’s seizure of the bullet and holster from Mr. Johnson’s
pocket (before any firearms were discovered) was within the scope of Officer Williams’s Terry
frisk. So we must decide this case based on whether the seizure of the bullet and holster came
within the permissible scope of a Terry frisk.
       4
         Neither the officers nor the majority attempts to justify the removal of the nylon holster,
an item Officer Williams never suspected was a weapon or contraband. See Jordan Dissenting
Op. at 42 n.4.
       5
         True, the officers testified that in their experience armed burglaries in the area often
were committed by more than one person. They did not, however, testify that most of the
burglaries they encountered were armed—just that some were. At any rate, the officers’ general
experience was belied by the facts confronting them: a 911 call reporting one individual with no
mention of a weapon and, at the scene, a single individual who appeared—and was confirmed—
to be unarmed.

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ground and handcuffed him. See, e.g., United States v. Miles, 247 F.3d 1009,

1011, 1015 (9th Cir. 2001) (reversing the district court and ordering suppression of

a box of ammunition removed from a defendant’s pocket during a Terry frisk,

reasoning: “Having already used significant force to secure the scene for safety

purposes [including handcuffing the suspect and having him kneel down], the

officers cannot leverage the safety rationale into a justification for a full-scale

search [of the suspect’s pocket].”); United States v. Reid, 351 F. Supp. 714, 718

(E.D.N.Y. 1972) (“With the weaponry in the hands of the agents trained on the

suspects, a slapjack could hardly have been a threat to the arresting agents.”).

      The majority opinion relies on other circumstances, including the time of

day and accompanying darkness and the location of the incident in a high-crime

area. Maj. Op. at 10; see Newsom Concurring Op. at 25. Those facts, which the

officers knew at the moment they initiated the stop, undoubtedly are “relevant

contextual considerations” for the officers’ decisions to stop, frisk, and seize a

bullet from Mr. Johnson. Illinois v. Wardlow, 528 U.S. 119, 124 (2000). The

same is true of the fact that Mr. Johnson matched the vague description given by

the 911 caller. But by the time Officer Williams reached his hand into Mr.

Johnson’s pocket, he had much more specific information than he did when the

officers initiated the stop and frisk. Officer Williams found no firearm or other

weapon on Mr. Johnson’s person. And, critically, Mr. Johnson was completely

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restrained and fully compliant, and the officers had neither obtained any

information about nor observed any other person on the scene, much less a

suspected accomplice. So at the time of the bullet’s seizure, the general contextual

considerations upon which the majority opinion relies provided little if any support

for a “rational inference[]” that a single bullet in Mr. Johnson’s pocket would pose

a danger. See Terry, 392 U.S. at 21, 27.

       For the bullet to amount to a threat, Mr. Johnson, lying on the ground with

his hands handcuffed behind his back, would have had to escape his handcuffs like

Houdini, retrieve the bullet from the front pocket of his pants, escape from custody

with guns trained on him, and find a matching gun to use the bullet. Or, under the

majority opinion’s accomplice theory, Maj. Op. at 17, under the same conditions

Mr. Johnson would have had to escape the handcuffs, retrieve the bullet, and then

throw the single bullet—in the dark—to an accomplice waiting with a matching

unloaded gun or receive a gun from a hidden and unreported accomplice and load

the gun with the single bullet. None of these scenarios is plausible, much less

reasonable. Neither supports a “rational inference[]” that the single bullet had to

be seized for safety purposes. 6 See Terry, 392 U.S. at 21, 27.

       6
          Although it is immaterial to our reasonable suspicion analysis—an objective inquiry—
the officers in this case worried so little about the bullet after seizing it that they left it on the
ground near Mr. Johnson. If a bullet, in and of itself, creates a safety concern, leaving it on the
ground near a handcuffed suspect makes the situation no safer than leaving the bullet in his
pocket.

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      The majority opinion cites cases from other jurisdictions for the proposition

that Terry authorizes officers to seize ammunition during a frisk. See Maj. Op. at

12-13. But in all of these cases, unlike here, the facts established or at least

strongly suggested the immediate presence or possession of a firearm. In most, the

officers directly observed a gun before or during the frisk. See, e.g., United States

v. Ward, 23 F.3d 1303, 1304-06 (8th Cir. 1994) (frisk by a single officer of a

“jumpy” and “nervous” suspect uncovered both a sawed-off shotgun and shotgun

shells); State v. Smith, 665 P.2d 995, 996-98 (Ariz. 1983) (officers observed that

the suspect, who matched the description of a person seen threatening people with

a sawed-off shotgun, had such a shotgun in his car); Scott v. State, 877 P.2d 503,

505 (Nev. 1994) (frisk took place after a firearm was observed in the suspect’s

car); see also State v. Moton, 733 S.W.2d 449, 450-51 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986) (single

police officer responding to a domestic violence call performed frisk after hearing

suspect threaten to commit murder and seeing him toss aside a metallic object).

These cases might provide glancing support for the majority opinion’s holding, but

they are too different on the relevant facts to be persuasive in Mr. Johnson’s case.

      Perhaps realizing that these cases do not convincingly support its decision,

the majority says that it is “aware of no precedential opinion to the contrary in any

jurisdiction.” Maj. Op. at 13. In fact, though, there are at least a couple of federal

cases that cut against the majority’s holding. See Miles, 247 F.3d at 1014-15

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(ordering suppression of a box of ammunition found in a suspect’s jacket pocket

during a Terry frisk, even though the suspect met the description of a person who

had fired a gun, because “[w]hile the officer may have been patting down for a

weapon, he had reached the outer limits of his patdown authority when it was clear

that the object was a small box and could not possibly be a weapon. . . . At that

point, the officer’s further manipulation of the box was impermissible.”); United

States v. Lemons, 153 F. Supp. 2d 948, 951, 959-62 (E.D. Wisc. 2001) (ordering

suppression of 12 rounds of ammunition found in a sock in a suspect’s pocket

during a Terry frisk, even though a witness had said the suspect was in possession

of a gun, because: “Sterling immediately knew upon patting Lemons down that

the items in Lemons’s pocket were not a weapon [and] did not immediately

identify them as bullets until he squeezed[;] [thus] he went beyond the scope of a

Terry pat-down search.”). Although these cases differ from this one in that the

officers suspected but were not positive that the items felt in the frisk were

ammunition, the courts readily concluded that the items were not weapons and

could not be further manipulated or seized as such. I find them compelling,

particularly given Miles’s similarities to this case—the late hour, a high-crime area,

a report of a crime, and a handcuffed suspect—and its differences, too—fewer

officers present, officers outnumbered by nearby observers, the report of a violent

crime and a firearm at the scene, and the firearm ultimately found six feet from

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where the officers first spotted Mr. Miles. Miles, 247 F.3d at 1010-13. There, as

should be the case here, the Ninth Circuit determined that “[h]aving already used

significant force to secure the scene for safety purposes, the officers cannot

leverage the safety rationale into a justification for a full-scale search.” Id. at

1015. 7

   II.       A Bullet Is Neither a Weapon Nor a Hidden Instrument for the
             Assault of an Officer, so Officers Cannot Categorically Seize One.

         To repeat, because it’s critically important, Terry is intended to be a “narrow

exception” to the requirement that an officer have probable cause to search a

person or seize his property. Valerio, 718 F.3d at 1324. In concluding that Officer

Williams was entitled to seize a single bullet from Mr. Johnson’s pocket under the

circumstances of this case, the majority opinion effectively creates a categorical

rule permitting officers to seize a freestanding bullet even absent reasonable cause

to believe officer or bystander safety is at risk. 8

         7
         Though the majority opinion correctly notes that handcuffs are not always secure, Maj.
Op. at 17, it’s a bridge too far to say that it’s reasonable for officers to assume in every case that
a handcuffed suspect is unsecured. And, in any event, plenty of additional facts in this case
indicated the officers’ safety and the scene’s security: three officers were present, their weapons
were drawn and trained on Mr. Johnson, Mr. Johnson was completely compliant throughout the
encounter, the officers perceived no other individuals in the area, and no firearm was ever
reported or observed before or during the frisk. When the guns ultimately were found, they were
found beyond Mr. Johnson’s reach. If Miles was a difficult case, this is an easier one.
         8
         To be clear, a decision that hewed closely to Terry would not prevent officers from
seizing bullets or prosecutors from initiating prosecutions such as the one initiated here under
18 U.S.C. § 922(g). They could do both provided they had probable cause for the seizure. See 4
Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 9.6(c) (5th ed.
Oct. 2018 update) (“Assuming the object discovered in the pat-down does not feel like a weapon,

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       The majority opinion reasons that a bullet may be seized during a Terry frisk

because it is an “essential part of a lethal weapon” and “an integral part of what

makes a gun lethal.” Maj. Op. at 10, 11. But Terry was careful to carve out an

exception for weapons, not parts of weapons—no matter how integral to the

weapon those parts might be. 392 U.S. at 24 (“[I]t would appear to be clearly

unreasonable to deny the officer the power to take necessary measures to

determine whether the person is in fact carrying a weapon and to neutralize the

threat of physical harm.” (emphasis added)); id. at 27 (“[T]here must be a narrowly

drawn authority to permit a reasonable search for weapons for the protection of the

police officer.” (emphasis added)). And a freestanding bullet is neither a weapon

nor lethal. As Judge Rosenbaum points out in her dissent, if a bullet always

suggests a gun, then it is difficult to see when a bullet would be off limits to

seizure. Rosenbaum Dissenting Op. at 52-53. Further, the proposition that

regardless of the surrounding circumstances a bullet necessarily suggests a gun,

Maj. Op. at 11, such that seizure of a bullet is warranted, contradicts Terry’s

mandate that an officer have “specific and articulable” facts rendering reasonable

his belief that the bullet could get into a gun to threaten the safety of police officers

this only means that a further search may not be justified under a Terry analysis. There remains
the possibility that the feel of the object, together with other suspicious circumstances, will
amount to probable cause that the object is contraband or some other item subject to seizure, in
which case there may be a further search based upon that probable cause.”).

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or others. Terry, 392 U.S. at 21. The majority opinion has no satisfactory

explanation for why it was reasonable for the officers here to believe they were in

danger when Mr. Johnson was handcuffed on the ground with multiple officers

pointing their weapons at him and no firearm was found on Mr. Johnson or within

“those areas to which [Mr. Johnson] would generally have immediate control.”

Michigan v. Long, 463 U.S. 1032, 1050-51 (1983).

      Judge Branch in her concurrence expressly advocates for a categorical rule

that officers are entitled to seize a freestanding bullet in the name of officer safety.

She argues that just as we consider a gun without a bullet to be a weapon under

Terry, we should consider a bullet without a gun “an instrument of assault in all

circumstances.” Branch Concurrence at 35. I am not persuaded. First, Terry

expressly allows the seizure of guns, but we’re having this discussion because it

does not expressly allow seizure of a freestanding bullet. Terry, 392 U.S. at 29.

Second, an officer who feels a bullet in a suspect’s pocket can discern different

facts than an officer who feels a gun. The former can readily observe that the

bullet is not loaded into a gun, but the latter cannot readily observe that the gun has

not been loaded with one or more bullets. Terry’s requirement that a seizure be

based on specific and articulable facts takes into account that some circumstances

may counsel against seizure. Thoroughly frisking a person and finding what feels

like a freestanding bullet but no gun may be one of those circumstances. And

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third, from the standpoint of safety—the sine qua non of Terry—it makes sense

that we don’t require officers to rely on the possibility that a gun in a person’s

pocket is not loaded. Although Judge Branch is entirely correct that a bullet has no

use except as part of an instrument of assault, it doesn’t follow that a freestanding

bullet is “an instrument of assault in all circumstances.” Such a bright line rule

runs afoul of the particularized analysis Terry requires and of the principles

animating Terry’s narrow exception. See Grady, 135 S. Ct. at 1371 (“The

reasonableness of a search depends on the totality of the circumstances . . . .”);

Cortez, 449 U.S. at 417 (“[T]he totality of the circumstances—the whole picture—

must be taken into account.”).

   III.   The Majority Opinion Permits Terry Frisks to Be Used to Gather
          Evidence, Contrary to the Supreme Court’s Clear Directive.

      Make no mistake: the majority opinion’s conclusion that a single

freestanding bullet could be used as a weapon is a significant extension of Terry,

one unwarranted under Terry’s safety rationale. That is not all. The Supreme

Court has “condemned” evidentiary searches conducted under the guise of Terry,

Minnesota v. Dickerson, 508 U.S. 366, 378 (1993), and yet that is exactly what the

majority opinion countenances today. Instead of considering the bullet to be a

safety threat, Officer Williams left it on the ground near Mr. Johnson. He testified

that he used the seizure of the bullet to search the area for a gun that the bullet

“goes to,” Doc. 22 at 10; in other words, he used the frisk to initiate the precise sort

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of search that Terry forbids. Rather than running from this fact, the majority relies

on it—explaining that removing and examining the bullet in Mr. Johnson’s pocket

might have expedited the officers’ search for a .380 caliber gun in the vicinity.

Maj. Op. at 11. The Supreme Court “has been sensitive to the danger that officers

will enlarge a specific authorization . . . into the equivalent of a general warrant to

rummage and seize at will.” Dickerson, 508 U.S. at 378 (alteration adopted)

(internal quotation marks omitted). Unfortunately, the majority opinion is not

sensitive to that danger today.

                                     *      *     *

      The panel correctly held that the seizure of a bullet and holster from the

pocket of Mr. Johnson—who was compliant with officers’ commands, on the

ground, handcuffed behind his back, and held at gunpoint by several officers—

constituted an unreasonable seizure under Terry and its progeny. See United States

v. Johnson, 885 F.3d 1313, 1323-24 (11th Cir. 2018). With respect, I dissent from

the majority opinion’s contrary holding.

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