Stаte agents arrested the defendant, Alaine DeCarlo Fields, in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, while he was travelling aboard a bus. Agents boarded the bus, explained that they were attempting to stem the flow of illicit drugs and firearms, and then asked passengers if they would consent to a randоm search of their baggage. In Fields’ bag, agents discovered half a kilogram of cocaine. Fields now challenges the lawfulness of the agents’ search. Constrained by precedent, we affirm.
FACTS
On April 24, 1989, the Broward County, Florida Sheriff’s Office assigned Detectives Ramon Callazо and Peter Stephens to the Ft. Lauderdale bus terminal as part of that office’s narcotics interdiction program. Under this program, the sheriff’s department attempts to identify and arrest drug couriers by monitoring buses (and other forms of public transportation) heading north from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. The sheriff’s office trains its detectives to follow certain procedures when approaching and addressing passengers. For example, the sheriff’s office instructs its detectives to secure the permission of the driver to board the bus, to introduсe themselves as narcotics officers to various passengers on the bus, to explain that they are enlisting public assistance to stem the flow of illegal drugs and firearms, and then finally to request permission to conduct a consent search of the passenger’s luggage. The sheriff’s office also trains its detectives to stand to the side or slightly behind the seat of the passengers that they approach; thus passengers remain free to leave the bus if they wish to avoid questioning.
At about 2:15 p.m. on April 24, 1989, Detectives Callazo and Stephens bоarded a north-bound bus that had just arrived from Miami, Florida. The detectives had received no prior tip or information which suggested that the defendant (or any other passenger) was carrying illicit drugs. The detectives, although casually dressed, wore jackets bearing the insignia оf the Broward County Sheriff’s Department. Both men were armed, but concealed their pistols beneath their jackets so that passengers could not observe the weapons. The agents, in accordance with their usual procedure, proceeded directly to the rear of the bus with the intention of working their way toward the front.
The appellant Fields occupied the window seat on the driver’s side of the very rear of the bus. Detective Callazo approached *472 him, explained that he and Detective Stephens were narcotics officers, and showed Fields (and a passenger seated next to him) his identification. The detectives, as the sheriffs office had instructed them, positioned themselves so that Fields’ access to the front of the bus remained unimpeded.
Detective Callazo then informed Fields and his seatmate that law enforcement officials in Florida were enlisting the public’s assistance and cooperation in obstructing the transportation of illegal narcotics and firearms on buses. He also explained that the officials were seeking the permission of passengers to conduct a search of their luggage. Detective Callazo emphasized that the search was “strictly voluntary,” and stated that the passengers had the right to refuse to consent to the search.
At this point, the parties’ stories diverge. Detective Callazo testified that he pointed to a black zippered bag located in the overhead rack, and asked if the bag belonged to Fields. Fields identified the bag as his own, and Detective Callazo repeated that he had a right to refuse the officers permission to search his luggage. The detective then asked Fields if he would consent to a search of his bag, and Fields replied, “Go ahead.” Detective Callazo removed the bag from the overhead rack and placed it in Fields’ lap, unzipped the bag and began to examine its contents. The detective immediately discovered a separate, smaller bag which he believed contained cocaine. Detective Callazo then placed Fields under arrest, and told him to accompany the officers off the bus. Fields replied, “Okay man, I’m not going to give you any trouble.” Fields exited the bus, and the detectives, after advising him of his Miranda rights, placed him under arrest for the transportation of cocaine.
Fields’ version of these events differs. At an evidentiary hearing, he stаted that when the detectives approached the rear of the bus, they announced that they were law enforcement officers and that they “were going to conduct a search of the passengers’ luggage.” The detectives then selected and opened an item of luggage belonging to the passenger seated next to him. According to Fields, only then did Detective Callazo ask that passenger if she would consent to a search of her bag. Fields also stated that neither detective indicated that the passengers had the .right to refuse to consent to the search. At any rate, after the (female) passenger permitted a search of her luggage, the detective picked up her purse and again asked if she would consent to a search of her luggage. The pаssenger hesitated, and then consented. Detective Collazo next removed Fields’ bag from the overhead rack and asked if it belonged to him. He (the detective) then placed the bag on the seat located just behind Fields, and began to unzip the bag. At this point, Detеctive Callazo asked Fields permission to search his bag; Fields concedes that he consented to the search. Fields also stated, however, that he consented only because he thought that the detective would search his bag regardless of whether he gаve his permission or not. Fields stated that Detective Stephens (a much larger man than Fields), intimidated him by blocking his exit from the bus.
PROCEEDINGS IN THE DISTRICT COURT
Fields filed a Motion to Suppress Evidence in the District Court for the Southern District of Georgia. A federal magistrate conducted a motion hearing on this issue on July 6, 1989, and filed a Report and Recommendation denying the motion on July 12, 1989. On July 28, 1989, the district court adopted this Report and Recommendation as its opinion.
On October 2, 1989, Fields entered a plea of guilty to possession of controlled substances with the intent to distribute them. (Fields’ guilty plea remained subject to his right to appeal his motion to suppress). The district court then sentenced him to thirty-seven months incarceration, a $50.00 special assessment fee, and five years of supervised release.
This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
The appellant now challenges the distriсt court’s conclusion that he freely consented
*473
to the detectives’ search. As legions of courts have noted, questions of search, seizure and consent derive from “... the perpetual conflict between, on [the] one hand, the right of an individual to be free frоm governmental interference and, on the other hand, the need of government to ensure the safety of its citizens.”
Bostick v. State of Florida,
We begin by noting that although Fields’ testimony at times conflicted with that of the detectives, we “of course may not weigh this conflicting evidence or make credibility choices among the witnesses.”
Banco Nacional de Nicaragua v. Argonaut Insurance Co.,
Fields also contends, however, that even under the district court’s findings, he never “freely and voluntarily” consented to the detectives’ search; he argues instead that the dеtectives effectively “seized” him. In support of this argument, Fields refers us to two recent opinions, which, although they do not bind this court, involve factual scenarios almost identical to our own.
See Bostick v. State of Florida,
Because Bostick was en route to Atlanta, he could not leave the bus, which was soon to depart. He had only the confines of the bus itself in which to move about, had he felt the officers would let him do so.
Under such circumstances a reasonable traveler would not have felt that he was “free to leave” or that he was “free to disregard the questions and walk away.” (Citations omitted).
In a similar context, the District Court for the District of Columbia noted:
The very nature of the encounter between Detective Hanson and Mr. Lewis placed the latter in a position in which he could reasonably believe that he was not free to walk away. To walk away from this encounter, Mr. Lewis, who was waiting for the bus to depart for his Richmond destination, would have had to stand up from his seat, work his way out of the narrow row in which he was situ-atéd, and then negotiate his way past Detective Hanson, who was positioned in the narrow exit aisle. In effect, he would havе had to leave the bus, give up his seat, and lose his ability to travel to Richmond in accordance with his travel plans.
Lewis,
These thoughtful opinions disturb us, and we note, as Fields urges, that they impose almost a blanket prohibition on drug interdiction efforts such as the one at issue here. We also note, however, that another panel of this circuit has already analyzed, and approved, Broward County’s random searches of passengers on buses.
In
United States v. Hammock,
These circumstances include the blocking of an individual’s path or the impeding of his progress, the retention of a ticket or piece of identification; an officer’s statement that the individual is the subject of an investigation, or that a truly innocent person would cooperate with the law enforcement officer, the display of weapons, the number of officers present and their demeanor, the length of the detention, and the extent to which the officer physically restrained the individual. (Citations omitted).
Hammock,
CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Fields notes that the detectives removed his bag from the overhead rack, and that his bаg contained his bus ticket. Thus, he argues, the detectives retained his bus ticket in the manner anticipated, and discouraged, by this circuit in
United States v. Berry,
Fields also argues that the detectives carried weapons, but we note that they were careful to conceal them. Concealed weapons do not constitute "the display of weapons" anticipatеd by
Hammock,
. As a general matter, we note that most courts which discuss these issues focus on the officer’s position on the bus, and the extent to which he might have inhibited a passenger's movements. In
our
view, however, an officer's location has little to do with the question of consent. The rеal problem, as we see it, is that the officer is delaying the
progress
of the bus, and interfering with the public's right to travel, a right long recognized in this country as fundamental.
See e.g., United States v. Guest,
We also note that although the officers may view themselves as militants in a new "war on drugs,”
(see, e.g. Bostick,
