Appellant entered a conditional plea of guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana. His arrest and conviction arose from the stop and search of a car in which he was a passenger. He argues that the trial court erred in denying his pre-plea motion to suppress the marijuana which the police recovered when they searched him because the search preceded his arrest, and also because the search exceeded the scope of a lawful frisk under
Terry v. Ohio,
I
Appellant Millet was charged in a one-count information with possession of marijuana, a controlled substance. He filed a
The evidence at the suppression hearing established that on December 1, 2007, shortly after 3:30 a.m., Officers Patrick Collier and Caline Roberts of the United States Capitol Police were on routine patrol in the Capitol Hill area. As they drove along Louisiana Avenue near the foot of Capitol Hill, headed toward Constitution Avenue, they saw a four-door Acura sedan traveling west on Constitution Avenue with only one headlight. The officers pursued the car and, after going a short distance, pulled it over to the curb. Officer Collier approached the car from the driver’s side, and Officer Roberts approached from the passenger side. Officer Collier asked the driver, Dwayne Fountain, to produce his driver’s license and registration. As they were talking, the officer noticed that Mr. Fountain’s “actions were very slow ... almost sluggish,” that his eyes were bloodshot, and that his speech “was slow and very low ... in volume.... ” Officer Collier also smelled the odor of “burning marijuana” coming from the car. At the same time, both officers noticed a bulge “around the size of a fist” in the right “waistband area” of the front seat passenger, appellant Millet, under the hooded sweatshirt that he was wearing. Since “the left side of his person did not have that bulge,” Officer Roberts concluded that the bulge was “out of the ordinary.”
The officers then returned briefly to their patrol car to check the driver’s credentials, and also to discuss their safety concerns about the bulge they had seen near Millet’s waist. When they returned to the stopped Acura, Officer Collier asked Mr. Fountain, the driver, to get out of the car and accompany him to the curb, and he complied. Then, suspecting that Fountain might have been driving while impaired, the officer asked him if he was under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Mr. Fountain admitted “that he had smoked some marijuana about an hour ago.” Officer Collier administered a field sobriety test, and when Mr. Fountain failed it, the officer placed him under arrest for driving under the influence.
Officer Roberts then asked Mr. Millet to step out of the car and proceeded to search the car incident to Fountain’s arrest. By that time, a third officer had arrived and stood near Millet as Officer Roberts searched the car. While performing the search, Officer Roberts also detected the smell of burning marijuana, and on the floor of the back seat she found a clear plastic bag containing a green leafy substance which she believed to be marijuana.
Officer Collier asked Mr. Fountain if the bag was his, and he replied that it was not. The officer then told Millet and Fountain that they would both be charged in connection with the marijuana found in the bag, at which point Mr. Fountain said, “Okay, I’ll be straight with you, it’s his,” and pointed to Mr. Millet, adding that “he’s the one who brought it into the vehicle.” At that point, Officer Roberts frisked Millet’s waist area “to make sure that he had no weapons on him,” and from his waistband she removed a plastic ziplock bag containing a green leafy substance that looked and smelled like marijuana. She thereupon placed Millet under arrest. Officer Roberts testified that when she touched the bulge, she heard a crunching sound and knew that it was not a weapon.
On the basis of this evidence, the court ruled that Mr. Fountain’s statements, the smell of marijuana emanating from the car, and the recovery of a bag of what the officers believed to be marijuana supported the inference that “at 3:30 in the morning ... if marijuana was smoked an hour earlier, it’s very likely, and I find
Millet thereafter waived his right to a trial and entered a conditional plea of guilty to possession of marijuana, reserving in writing his right to appeal the denial of the motion to suppress, but nothing more. 2
II
“Our review of a trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress is limited.”
Joseph v. United States,
Millet offers two reasons to support his argument that the police violated his Fourth Amendment rights when they searched him. First, he maintains that the search cannot be justified as incident to his arrest because he had not yet been arrested at the time the search took place, and because the officers did not intend to arrest him at the time of the search. Second, he contends that the search exceeded the scope of a permissible Terry stop because, once Officer Roberts realized that the bulge beneath Millet’s sweatshirt was not a weapon, further intrusion to remove the item was impermissible.
A search incident to arrest may precede the actual arrest if probable cause exists, independent of the search, to justify the arrest, and if the arrest follows “quickly on the heels” of the search.
Ball v. United States,
Although mere proximity to contraband is insufficient in itself to sustain a conviction for possession of that contraband,
see In re R.G.,
We find no error in the trial court’s determination of probable cause. The evidence showed that in searching the car incident to the driver’s arrest, Officer Roberts smelled the odor of burning marijuana and recovered a plastic bag from the floor of the back seat — within reach of the front seat passenger (Millet), as the court found — containing a green leafy substance which appeared to be marijuana. Officer Collier had also detected the same smell coming from the car when he first approached it immediately after it was stopped. The driver had already admitted that he had smoked marijuana about an hour earlier, and when he was confronted with the bag of suspected marijuana which Officer Roberts recovered from the back seat, he said that the bag belonged to Millet and that Millet had brought it into the car. These facts gave Officer Roberts probable cause to arrest Millet.
We have said that “[a] defendant’s close proximity to drugs in plain view is certainly probative in determining not only whether he knew of the drugs and had the ability to exert control over them, but also whether he had the necessary intent to control (individually or with others) their use or destiny.”
Rivas v. United States,
Nor was Millet’s arrest unlawful merely because there might have been a question whether the marijuana belonged to him or the driver.
Perkins,
We hold, accordingly, that the trial court did not err in refusing to suppress the marijuana. 6
Ill
Millet also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction for possession of marijuana. This appeal, however, comes to us not from a judgment entered after a trial, at which a claim of insufficiency might have been preserved, but after a conditional guilty plea as authorized by Rule 11(a)(2). Millet pleaded guilty to possession of a controlled substance following an extended colloquy with the trial court. At that proceeding he executed a written plea agreement, supra note 2, which said nothing about sufficiency of the evidence; on the contrary, it reserved only Millet’s “right to appeal the adverse ruling on his motion to suppress.”
“A defendant who enters a guilty plea ordinarily waives all non-jurisdictional defects in the proceedings below on appeal.... Failure to specify a particular pretrial issue in the written plea agreement will preclude raising that issue on appeal.”
Collins v. United States,
Millet’s written plea agreement preserved his right to seek appellate review of only the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress. The agreement did not preserve for appeal a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence that he possessed the marijuana. Indeed, that would be legally impossible, since the rule authorizing conditional guilty pleas,
supra
note
IV
The judgment of the trial court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Super. Ct.Crim. R. 11(a)(2) provides:
With the approval of the Court and the consent of the government, a defendant may enter a plea of guilty or nolo contende-re, reserving in writing the right, on appeal from the judgment, to review of the adverse determination of any specified pretrial motion. A defendant who prevails on appeal shall be allowed to withdraw the plea.
. A handwritten sentence at the bottom of the printed waiver form states:
The defendant & United States agree to the entry of a guilty plea to the information while the defendant preserves the right to appeal the adverse ruling on his motion to suppress.
Immediately below this statement are the signatures of both appellant and his counsel, followed by the word “APPROVED” (in capital letters, printed on the form), along with the date (handwritten) and the signatures of the prosecutor and the judge.
. "Even though a suspect has not formally been placed under arrest, a search of his person can be justified as incident to an arrest if an arrest is made immediately after the search, and if,
at the time of the search,
there was probable cause to arrest.”
Brown,
150 U.S.App. D.C. at 114,
.
See United States v. Adell,
. We noted in
Minnick
that “[t]his court has repeatedly found probable cause to search an automobile based, at least in part, on an officer's recognition of the smell of drugs.”
. Millet's contention that Officer Roberts searched him illegally because she did not intend to arrest him at that time is without merit. The validity of the search depended not on the officer’s subjective motivations, but rather on whether there were objective facts establishing probable cause to believe that Millet had committed or was committing a crime.
See, e.g., Whren v. United States,
