Defendants Terry Roberts and Aubrey Pitts were tried before a jury on an indictment which charges them, as well as co-defendant Stanley Davis, with trafficking in cocaine. At trial, Deputy William Brad Todd of the Camden County Sheriff’s Department testified that he stopped a rental van traveling north on Interstate Highway 95 at about 2:00 in the morning on April 21, 1994. Deputy Todd explained that he stopped the van because its driver failed to lower the vehicle’s headlights in response to oncoming traffic. Deputy Todd testified that co-defendant Davis was driving the van; that defendant Roberts was in the front passenger seat and defendant Pitts was seated behind defendant Roberts. Deputy Todd testified the suspects appeared unusually tense; that co-defendant Davis and defendant Roberts gave conflicting versions of their travel itinerary and that he asked co-defendant Davis and defendant Pitts (because they were listed as *310 authorized drivers on the van’s rental agreement) for their consent to search the vehicle. 1 Deputy Todd testified that defendant Pitts refused to give his consent so he decided to conduct a “free air search” outside the van employing the services of his canine patrol partner, “Pedro.” Deputy Todd explained that Pedro is a “German Shepherd” with acute senses for detecting the presence of “marijuana, hash [and] cocaine.”
Deputy Todd testified that he searched the van’s interior after Pedro “alerted” outside the van’s “sliding door” and that he found over five pounds of suspected cocaine stashed behind “the [interior] rear quarter panel.” A crime laboratory chemist confirmed that this substance was 73.1 percent pure cocaine. Co-defendant Davis testified that he and defendants, along with another accomplice, purchased the cocaine in Miami, Florida; that he and defendants were on their way back to Georgia with the contraband when Deputy Todd stopped them and that he and defendants went to Miami for the sole purpose of purchasing cocaine. Co-defendant Davis admitted that he was pleading guilty and testifying against defendants in exchange for the promise of lighter punishment.
The jury found defendants guilty of trafficking in cocaine. Defendants Roberts and Pitts later filed a joint notice of appeal. Held:
1. Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, arguing that co-defendant Davis’s testimony was not sufficiently corroborated. We disagree. “ ‘Slight evidence of a defendant’s identity and participation from an extraneous source is all that is required to corroborate the accomplice’s testimony and thus support the verdict. (Cit.) The necessary corroboration may be by circumstantial evidence. (Cit.)’
Harris v. State,
2. Defendants contend the trial court erred in denying their joint motion to suppress, arguing that Deputy Todd went beyond the permissible scope of a routine traffic investigation by questioning the van’s passenger (defendant Roberts) about his travel itinerary and then conducting a “free air search” using Pedro, the drug-sniffing dog. Specifically, defendants assert that Deputy Todd’s investigation was no different from the traffic stop in
Smith v. State,
The case sub judice is distinguishable from
Smith v. State,
The trial court did not err in denying defendants’ joint motion to suppress.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Co-defendant Davis informed Deputy Todd that the suspects had been vacationing for a “couple of days” at Daytona Beach, and defendant Roberts responded that the suspects had been in Miami, Florida, for a week.
