Jose SATURNINO-BOUDET, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*189 Sale & Kuehne, P.A. and Benedict P. Kuehne, Miami, for appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General and Joni Braunstein, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
Before NESBITT, GREEN and SHEVIN, JJ.
GREEN, Judge.
Appellant, Jose Saturnino-Boudet, appeals his conviction and sentence for drug trafficking charges. Boudet was convicted after he pled nolo contendere to the charges, but he specifically reserved his right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. We affirm the denial of this motion for the reasons which follow.
The salient facts are basically undisputed. In March 1989, the narcotics section of the Metro-Dade Police Department conducted а drug investigation at the South Dade home *190 of one William Daniels a/k/a "Pistol Pete". This investigation began when a package of narcotics mailed to Colorado was traced back to Daniels' residence. Two plain-clothed detectives, Richard Iturralde and Marsha Bales, went to Dаniels' residence in an unmarked vehicle to investigate the package. They approached Daniels as he was standing at his mailbox, identified themselves as police officers and informed him that they were conducting a narcotics investigation. Detectives Iturralde and Bales then оbtained Daniels' verbal consent to a search of his residence. At some point during the search, detective Iturralde exited Daniels' residence to place some items into his vehicle. While outside, Iturralde saw Boudet drive up and stop in front of Daniels' home. Iturralde asked Boudet whethеr he could assist Boudet with anything. Boudet inquired whether "Pete" was home. When Iturralde suddenly remembered that Daniels' nickname was "Pistol Pete", he responded yes. At this point Boudet parked his car and Iturralde approached him and identified himself as a police officer who was conducting a narcotics investigation. When Iturralde asked Boudet for identification, Boudet voluntarily exited his vehicle and left his driver's side door open.[1] Boudet produced his driver's license and after reviewing it, Iturralde started to return the license to Boudet. As Iturralde was doing this, detective Bales emerged from Daniеls' residence to relay some information privately to Iturralde. Apparently, Bales and Daniels had been watching Iturralde's encounter with Boudet from inside of the home. During the search of his home, Daniels had begun to cooperate with the police and told Bales that Boudet was his drug supрlier. Daniels further said that Boudet only came to his home to sell and deliver either cocaine or marijuana and that Boudet usually sold him drugs in "eights". Detective Bales relayed this information to detective Iturralde. Thereupon, Iturralde requested Boudet's consent to search his vehicle. Boudеt refused to give consent to a search of his car.[2] At or about that time, both detectives Iturralde and Bales made a visual observation of a closed shoe box located on the front passenger's floor in Boudet's car as well as a jar of inositol located in the passengеr's seat. Iturralde testified that in his experience as a narcotics detective, inositol, although a legal substance, was used primarily for "cutting" or diluting cocaine.
When Boudet declined to give his consent for a search of his car, Iturralde requested Boudet to accompany him inside of Daniels' residence. As Boudet sat down in the living room, he was read his Miranda rights[3] by another detective. Detective Bales telephoned for a police canine unit to come to the scene for the purpose of sniffing Boudet's car for the presence of drugs. Officer Jerry W. Hull of the canine unit arrived within approximately 30-40 minutes with a trained narcotics sniff dog. The dog was on a five foot leash and began to sniff outside of the left front of Boudet's car. As the dog passed the opened driver's door, the dog alerted to the positive presence of narcotics. Although leashed, the dog then aggressively leaped inside the front seat of Boudet's car and tore open the closed shoe box on the passenger's floorboard. The shoe box contained cocaine. The dog was then apparently removed from the car and ordered to continue thе search of the remainder of the car. The dog gave a second positive alert at the seam of the passenger's door. Detective Iturralde was informed of the two positive alerts by the dog as well as the presence of cocaine in Boudet's car.
Boudet unsuccessfully moved to suppress the cocaine in the court below. On this appeal, Boudet argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion where Boudet was effectively arrested without probable cause when the police ordered him into Daniels' home to await the arrival of the police canine unit. He further asserts that the *191 subsequent dog search of his car was not supported by probable cause and the state offered no exigent circumstances to justify the warrantless search.
We disagree with Boudet's first contention that his 30-40 minute detention by the police to await the arrival of the police canine unit was the de facto equivalent of an arrest without probable cause. As both parties correctly recognize on this appeal, there are three levels of encounters between the police and citizenry. The first and least intrusive lеvel is commonly referred to as the "consensual encounter." Florida v. Royer,
The second level of a police encounter involves the Terry stop[4] or the temporary investigative "stop and frisk". A Terry stop is permissible if the detention is temporary and reasonable under the circumstances and only if the police officer has a wellfounded suspicion that the individual dеtained has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a crime. E.g., Terry,
The third and final level of a police encounter is that of the formal arrest. This *192 encounter is the most intrusive invasion of personal privacy аnd consequently requires a greater evidentiary showing in order to be reasonable, to wit, probable cause to believe that the person arrested has committed a crime. E.g., Henry v. United States,
It cannot be disputed in the case before us that Boudet's initial encounter with the police wherein Boudet inquired about Daniels' whereabouts and detective Iturralde requested him to produce identification was nothing more than a consensual encounter. Boudet, without questiоn, was free to leave at that time. Boudet argues, however, that this otherwise lawful police encounter quickly escalated into a de facto arrest without probable cause when he was detained for 30-40 minutes to await the arrival of the canine unit. We disagree.
Based upon our de novo review of the evidence presented below,[6] we conclude that the police had founded suspicion to believe that Boudet was involved in the narcotics trade based upon the information received from Daniels and their personal observation of the presence of a known cocaine cutting substance and closed shoe box in Boudet's car. Accord Rogers v. State,
The United States Supreme Court has acknowledged the difficulty in drawing a distinction between an investigative detention and a de facto arrest. United States v. Sharpe,
Where, however, the detained individual is physically removed from the scene and involuntarily transported to the police station for questioning and/or investigation, the courts have had little difficulty in construing such a detention to be a de facto arrest requiring either probable cause or prior judicial authorization. E.g., Hayes v. Florida,
We believe that the police in the instant case detained Boudet no longer than was reasonably necessary under the circumstances for them to dispel their founded suspicion that Boudet was involved in illegal narcotics activity. Since Boudet remained at the scene at all times during this investigation and was never transported away by the police, we do not agree with Boudet's contention that he was de facto arrested on less than probable cause.
We also do not agree with Boudet's final contention that the search of his car was not supported by probable cause. We conclude that the police's founded suspicion later ripened into probable cause for Boudet's arrest and the search of this car once the narcotic-sniffing dog alerted to the presence of cocaine therein. The United States Supreme Court has held that the use of a narcotics sniff dog constitutes neither a search nor a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Place,
[O]nce the defendant was legаlly stopped, the use of a sniff dog was not an unconstitutional search under the Fourth Amendment. A sniff dog's "alert" can constitute probable cause to conduct a search. Once probable cause existed to search the vehicle, no warrant was needed to authorize the seаrch. Just as no police officer need close his eyes to contraband in plain view, no police officer armed with a sniff dog need ignore the olfactory essence of illegality.
State v. Orozco,
For these reasons, we find that the trial court properly denied Boudet's motion to suppress the evidence and we affirm.
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] It is not entirely сlear from the record how wide the door was left open. One of the state's witnesses indicated that the door was left partially opened; another testified that it was left slightly ajar, approximately six to eight inches.
[2] Iturralde testified that he informed Boudet of his right to decline consent since Iturralde did not have a search warrant.
[3] See Miranda v. Arizona,
[4] See Terry v. Ohio,
[5] It has been observed by the First, Second, Fourth and Fifth Districts that Florida's search and seizure jurisprudence, at least as it pertains to traffic stops, has been substantially altered by Whren v. United States, ___ U.S. ___,
[6] See Ornelas v. United States, ___ U.S. ___,
