This аction brought, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, arises out of the arrest and search of Appellee Ernest Conrad (“Conrad”) by Appellant Roger Davis (“Davis”), a Missouri State Highway Patrolman. The case previously was tried before a jury, with Conrad representing himself pro se. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Davis. During the trial, the district court denied Davis’s Motion for Verdict as a Matter of Law. This Court later revеrsed the jury’s verdict based on Conrad’s lack of counsel and remanded the ease for a new trial. Based on the testimony presented at the first trial, Davis moved for summary judgment, arguing that he was entitled to qualified immunity and that Conrad was estopped from raising his claims again in federal court. The district court denied Davis’s motion on the grounds *94 that the court’s previous denial of thе Motion for Verdict as a Matter of Law was the law of the case and denied the motion. Davis appeals the decision of the district court. We reverse and enter judgment in favor of Appellant.
I
Appellant Davis is a corporal in the Missouri State Highway Patrol. On the evening of December 24, 1988, Davis was working on Interstate 88 in Scott County, Missouri. Using his radar, Davis detected Conrad driving seventy-six miles per hour in a sixty-five mile per hour zone. Conrad was driving a Corvette with Mississippi license plates. The parties dispute whether Conrad was traveling with his stepfather as a passenger. According to trial testimony, each local judge in Missouri sets the policy for when bond must be accepted for speeding tickets. The Scott County judge had set a рolicy that drivers from out of state who are stopped for speeding must post bond. Davis was not authorized to accept bond because those duties rested exclusively with the local sheriff. Knowing that Conrad would have to post bond, Davis arrested Conrad for his speeding violation. Arrest is authorized for the offense of speeding in Missouri.
Davis contends that he askеd Conrad for permission to search the vehicle and that Conrad consented. Conrad maintains that he refused permission. Davis then searched Conrad and the vehicle. At the first trial, Davis testified that Conrad had a bulge in his right front pants pocket. A search of Conrad revealed $6,050 in cash. In searching the vehicle, Davis found $4,000 in cash in a wicker briefcase. Davis asked Conrаd where he got the money. According to Davis, Conrad told him that the money was rent money he collected for his uncle in St. Louis for six rental properties in Mississippi. 2
Conrad’s mother was also traveling with Conrad but drove in a separate vehicle. Conrad’s mother stopped her vehicle by Conrad’s when she realized that Conrad had been stopped. Upon observing the stopped vehicle, Davis approached Conrad’s mother and asked her about Conrad’s uncle. According to Davis, Conrad’s mother told Davis that Conrad’s uncle did not own any property in Mississippi. 3
According to Davis, he asked Conrad to drive his vehicle to the sheriff’s office. Conrad contends that Davis handcuffed him and placed him in his squad car and that his stepfather drove Conrad’s vehicle to the sheriffs office. While somewhat unclear from the parties’ submissions, it appears that Davis retained custody of Conrad’s possessions, including the money, during the trip to the sheriffs office.
Once at the sheriffs office, Conrad’s vehicle was driven to a car wash to get out of the rain. Davis asked Officer Greg Kenley to have a drug-sniffing dog searсh the interior of Conrad’s car. The dog found no contraband in the car. The officers then had the dog sniff the money. According to Davis, he placed the money in an envelope and placed the envelope in a small room used for the test. Davis testified at trial that Kenley told him that the dog “alerted” to the money indicating the presence of drugs. Conrad contends that he, along with his mother and stepfather, were in the room for the dog test and that the dog had no reaction to the money. Davis testified that Kenley conducted the canine test pursuant to police policy and that no one else was in the room with the dog.
Davis gave Conrad a ticket for speeding and a receipt for the money taken from him. Conrad later paid the speeding ticket. Davis turned the money over to the Drug Enforcement Agency (“DEA”) who later successfully initiated forfeiture proceedings.
This case originally went to trial in February 1994, resulting in a jury verdict for Davis. We reversed the verdict because the district court had not appointed counsel for Conrad. On remand, Davis moved the district court for summary judgmеnt. Relying *95 on the prior trial testimony, Davis contended that he was entitled to qualified immunity and that Conrad was collaterally estopped from bringing his claims. The district court denied Davis’s motion, believing that its previous denial of a Motion for a Verdict as a Matter of Law during the first trial precluded it from granting Davis’s motion. Davis appeals the decision of the district court and cоntends that he is entitled to summary judgment on two grounds: (1) that he is entitled to qualified immunity; and (2) that Conrad is collaterally estopped from bringing his claims.
II
Conrad does not address the district court’s decision regarding the law of the case doctrine, apparently conceding the appropriateness of review of that decision. The doctrine of the “law of the casе” is a discretionary tool permitting a district court to effectively manage the legal issues arising during litigation.
See Copeland v. Merrill Lynch & Co.,
However, even if the “law of the case” doctrine had precluded the district court from considering the merits of Davis’s motion, we have the authority to review the denial of that motion. As the Seventh Circuit has held, “[l]aw of the case ... does not block a suрerior court from examining the correctness of an earlier decision.”
Avitia v. Metropolitan Club of Chicago, Inc.,
Ill
This Court reviews
de novo
a lower court’s denial of summary judgment.
See Hardin v. Hussmann Corp.,
“[G]overnment officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Once a defense of qualified immunity is raised, a plaintiff must offer “particularized” allegations of unconstitutional or illegal conduct.
See Anderson v. Creighton,
Conrad argues that the circumstances of his arrest and the search of his vehicle and person were such that immunity is not available to Davis. First, Conrad contends that Davis’s actions in arresting Conrad were questionable. Conrad suggests that Davis’s decision to arrest Conrad was possibly race-related because speeding is a misdemeanor crime in Missouri and because under cross-examination by Conrad during his initial trial in federal court, Davis admitted thаt he did not recall following a similar course of action with a non-minority driver. However, Conrad does not explicitly argue that the stop and arrest were illegal or unconstitutional, nor does he provide any other evidence to suggest that the stop and arrest were pretextual or illegal.
Furthermore, even if Conrad presented evidence that Davis’s stated reasons for stopping Conrad were pretextual, such evidence would not invalidate the stop and arrest. Conrad does not dispute the fact that he was speeding. As the Supreme Court recently held in
Whren v. United States,
— U.S. -, ——,
Conrad has not presentеd any evidence that his arrest was inappropriate or unconstitutional. Trial testimony demonstrated that Conrad was arrested pursuant to state law and local policy regarding the posting of bond. By paying his speeding ticket, Conrad admitted that he violated the law. Conrad’s bald assertions of racist motivations on the part of Davis do not render his conduct unсonstitutional. The Supreme Court rejected “the principle that ulterior motives can invalidate police conduct that is justifiable on the basis of probable cause to believe that a violation of the law has occurred.”
Whren,
— U.S. at --,
Regardless of whether Conrad gave his cоnsent for the search, Davis had the authority to search Conrad and his vehicle pursuant to Conrad’s lawful arrest.
See New York v. Belton,
The authority to search the person incident to a lawful custodial arrest, while based upon the need to disarm and tо discover evidence, does not depend on what a court may later decide was the probability in a particular arrest situation that weapons or evidence would in fact be found upon the person of the suspect. A custodial arrest of a suspect based on probable cause is a reasonable intrusion under the Fourth Amendment; that intrusion bеing lawful, a search incident to the arrest requires no additional justification.
United States v. Robinson,
Conrad argues that even if Davis was justified in arresting him and searching his vehicle, Davis was not authorized to hold his money and subject it to a canine sniff. While it is somewhat unclear as to the exact point in time at which Davis was to have “seized” Conrad’s money, 4 it is clear that Davis had assumed control ovеr the money for purposes of the canine sniff. Conrad argues that there is nothing illegal about carrying cash and that nothing else would have given Davis *97 sufficient cause to detain Conrad’s money for further testing. Conrad cites to Davis’s trial testimony and argues that Davis did not suspect Conrad of fitting a drug courier profile and did not discover any other weapons or contrabаnd which would have justified a seizure.
Pursuant to the lawful arrest, Davis had legal control over both Conrad and his possessions. This case is unlike the cases cited by Conrad. Each of the cited cases focuses on whether circumstances would justify an initial investigative stop and search.
See United States v. Sokolow,
However, the circumstances of this casé also indicate that Davis had a reasonable suspicion that the funds were the product of illegal drug activity. As we stated in United States v. Jones,
Police officers may briefly detain luggage for a dog-sniff search without violating the Fourth Amendment ... if there is rеasonable suspicion supported by articulable, objective facts that the luggage contains drugs____ We decide whether reasonable suspicion existed based on the totality of the circumstances.
Conrad argues that Davis did not believe that Conrad fit a drug courier profile. Conrad contends that there was no evidence at trial that Davis relied on his past drug interdiction training or other sorts of reliable indicia that would suggest drug activity. Without such evidence, Conrad argues that there was no objective basis for believing that Conrad was involved with drugs and therefore, that the seizure of Conrad’s money was unconstitutional. As we stated in
United States v. Jones,
“[bjecause we decidе whether reasonable suspicion justifies a detention based on all the objective facts, we are not limited by the detaining officer’s subjective opinions.”
IV
We have recently stated that a “judicial determination that ... seized property was connected with a drug transaction” is not nеcessary before transferring property to the DEA for forfeiture proceedings.
Madewell v. Downs,
Conrad does not argue with the proposition that a positivе canine test for drugs would establish probable cause for seizing property and transferring it to the DEA. Instead, Conrad argued at trial and continues to suggest in this appeal, that the drug dog did not “alert” to the money. Conrad does not, however, challenge Davis’s assertion that Officer Kenley told him that the dog had alerted to the money. Based on information told to him by a fellоw officer, it was reasonable for Davis to believe that the money was tainted by drugs and should be transferred to the DEA for forfeiture proceedings.
V
Appellant Davis stopped Appellee Conrad for violating state traffic laws. In accordance with state and local law, Davis arrested Conrad and conducted a search pursuant to that arrest. Bаsed on the circumstances of Conrad’s stop and the inconsistent answers to Davis’s questions, Davis had reasonable suspicion that the money discovered as part of the search was involved in illegal drug activity. Davis did not violate Conrad’s constitutional rights by subjecting the money taken from him to a canine sniff. Once Officer Kenley told Davis that the drug dog had alerted to the money, Davis acted appropriately in transferring the funds to the DEA for forfeiture proceedings. Davis’s actions were reasonable and he is therefore entitled to qualified immunity for the stop, arrest, and search of Appellee Conrad.
Because we hold that Davis is entitled to qualified immunity, the Court does not address Davis’s contention that Conrad is collaterаlly estopped from bringing his claims. The judgment of the district court is reversed. The case is remanded to the district court with directions that judgment be entered for the' defendant.
Notes
. Conrad testified at trial that he received the money from rental property he owned and through the sale of a van. He testified that he intended to lend the money to his uncle.
. At trial, Conrad's mother testifiеd that Conrad’s uncle did own five houses in Mississippi and that Conrad did not own any property.
. It was disputed at trial whether Davis gave Conrad his money to hold while they traveled to the sheriffs office or kept it with him in the squad car.
. While the trial testimony of both Conrad and his mother conflicted with Davis’s version of these stories, Conrad's explanation for the money was still in conflict with that of his mother.
