UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. SAID ALAN ANGULO-GAXIOLA
Case No. 4:23-cr-00039-RJS-PK
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF UTAH
May 10, 2024
Chief District Judge Robert J. Shelby; Magistrate Judge Paul Kohler
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO SUPPRESS
Defendant Said Alan Angulo-Gaxiola is charged with 1) Possession of Methamphetamine with an Intent to Distribute; and 2) Possession of Fentanyl with an Intent to Distribute.1 The charges stem from a traffic stop on Interstate-70 in Elsinore, Sevier County, Utah. On Saturday, March 18, 2023, near six o‘clock on a sunny spring night, Sevier County Sheriff‘s Deputy Bodee Wells stopped a truck Said2 was driving because Wells suspected its dark window tint violated Utah law. Said did not have a driver‘s license but produced valid border crossing cards issued by the United States to him and his passenger, his brother Saul Angulo-Gaxiola. Said also offered that Saul had a Mexican driver‘s license. But Wells did not ask for Saul‘s license, or the truck‘s vehicle registration, or proof of insurance. The border crossing cards and the names on them confused Wells, who had only been working as a patrol officer for a few weeks. So he requested help from Sevier County Sgt. Aaron Richards.
Thus began a nearly thirty-minute stop involving delays in obtaining standard information, misunderstandings by the officers, and suspicion allegedly arising both from those
Before the court is Said‘s Motion to Suppress all physical evidence obtained and all statements he made after the allegedly unreasonably prolonged the traffic stop of his truck.3 He argues the search violated the
BACKGROUND
Wells and Richards wore body cameras and recorded essentially the entire time they were engaged in the traffic stop. Their body camera recordings were entered into evidence at an evidentiary hearing on November 8, 2023, along with a copy of Said and Saul‘s border crossing cards and Saul‘s Mexican driver‘s license.6 The body camera footage captures Said‘s actions and conversations with the officers, most conversations between the officers, and many
Deputy Bodee Wells is a Patrol Deputy for the Sevier County, Utah Sheriff‘s Office.8 He assumed patrol duty in February 2023, moving from a prior position in the Sevier County Jail.9 Wells attended Utah‘s Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) course “from November [2022] to February [2023],” after which he did field training with Sgt. Aaron Richards,10 an eighteen-year veteran of the Sherriff‘s Office,11 “for about a month before [he] went out on [his] own.”12 At that point, Richards “was feeling confident that [Wells] could start doing things on [his] own while still being under his supervision in a different vehicle.”13 But Richards had told Wells that “if [he] needed any help to give him a call.”14 At most, Wells had only been patrolling on his own for a few weeks before the stop on Saturday, March 18, 2023.15
That evening, Wells was in his patrol car alone, driving south on Sevier Highway, when a red truck with Nevada license plates pulled out in front of him at about 5:56 p.m.16 He noticed the tint on the truck‘s windows “was very dark” so he “flipped around [his] vehicle . . . got
The weather that early evening, as depicted on the body camera footage, was sunny with no clouds in the blue sky. Trooper Wells testified he remembers it was “pretty cold” that evening,20 but on the body camera footage, neither Said nor any of the (what becomes four) officers on the scene is ever wearing a coat or jacket and there is no visible breath vapor. Indeed, at one point while in his patrol car, the footage depicts Deputy Wells roll down his window during a stretch he is in his car for a few minutes.21
The traffic stop began at about 5:57 p.m.22 Wells testified that it was “standard [procedure] on all of our traffic stops” to “give [dispatch] the location, and what vehicle we are out on, so other officers know where you are at, and dispatch can know what the vehicle was in case anything were to happen. . . . Dispatch will run the plate.”23
As the stop began, Wells, turned off his car‘s engine and radioed the truck‘s Nevada license plate number and his location to dispatch, telling them he was on the Interstate 70 on-ramp at mile marker 32. Wells did not receive information back from dispatch on the truck‘s
Wells exited his car and approached the truck on the passenger side so he would not be in the path of passing traffic.25 By that time, the truck‘s four side windows were all rolled down. Wells testified he thought this was “kind of odd because it was cold outside,” and “people only roll down one window to speak to us,” so that raised some suspicion that the occupants were airing out the truck.26 Wells did not further investigate any odors, ask the occupants to roll up any windows, or ask why all the windows were down.
Wells testified that it is standard traffic stop procedure to approach a vehicle, ask for a driver‘s license and registration, make conversation, then return to the patrol car to obtain information from dispatch or his computer.27 It is important on a stop to determine if the driver has a valid license and that “it is safe for them to be operating a vehicle.”28 In situations where the driver lacks a license, and a passenger has one, it is standard procedure to “try to let that driver leave, and only issue a citation to the driver that was driving without a license.”29
Unfortunately, Wells deviated from standard procedures in significant ways. He did not ask for registration or insurance information and, as discussed throughout this order, did not ask for a driver‘s license from the passenger who had one until about twenty minutes into the stop.
Upon approaching the truck, Wells saw two young men inside, in the driver and passenger seats. Wells asked the occupants how they were doing, then explained, “Hey, the
Wells thought it was “out of the normal” for Said to apologize and offer to remove the tint.35 He testified “most people traveling out of state, when I stop them for a window tint, they just say ‘Oh, well, I don‘t live here, so it is not an issue. I will just return home,’ and that‘s usually the end of that.”36 Wells believed Said‘s apology and offer to remedy the problem were “a little weird . . . nothing major . . . . Just that maybe there was a small amount of marijuana or something in the vehicle.”37
Wells then asked Said “Do you have your ID on you, your driver‘s license?”38 Said responded that he had an ID, but not his license, but then just admitted he didn‘t have a license at
Wells: [To the passenger, Saul] “Do you have a valid driver‘s license?”
Said [answering for Saul]: “He doesn‘t, no, He‘s from Mexico. He‘s my brother, he‘s on vacation.”
Well: “Oh. So, he probably doesn‘t have one here in the United States.”
Said then responds that Saul does not have one from the United States, but “he‘s got one from Mexico if that would work?”
Wells: “Ok, so neither of you have a driver‘s license here?”
Said: “From here, no.”
Wells: “Ok. Do you have a form of identification?”
Said then apologized again.
Wells: “That‘s ok. We‘re just going to have to figure something out because you can‘t be driving without a driver‘s license, so we will go from there.”39
Wells asked Said to help get “an ID” from Saul since he doesn‘t speak English. Said complied, and Wells gathered their border crossing identification cards. Wells did not ask for or obtain Saul‘s Mexican driver‘s license, or any proof of the truck‘s registration or insurance. At this point, just over three minutes had elapsed since the stop began.
Wells later testified concerning his failure to obtain Saul‘s driver‘s license at the stop‘s outset, claiming he had “just missed” that Said told him Saul had a Mexican driver‘s license until it was pointed out the day of the evidentiary hearing, watching his body camera footage:
Q. So were you able to determine during . . . that initial contact, whether or not they had driver‘s license?
A. The driver told me he did not have a driver‘s license. I asked if the passenger did and the driver initially tells me no.
A. Correct. I had never noticed that until you actually pointed it out to me. That—I just missed him mentioning the Mexico license of the passenger.40
Q. So going back to March 18th at the time of the stop, when that comment is made, you missed it?
A. Correct. I didn‘t understand what he was saying initially. He says, ‘No he doesn‘t have a license,’ and then went into the whole Mexico thing. And I was still thinking of the ‘No’ he had told me.41
To the extent Wells testimony is understood to mean he had not heard that Said‘s brother had a Mexican driver‘s license, this understanding is inconsistent with the video footage showing him ask Said the follow up question, “Ok, so neither of you have a driver‘s license here?” and receiving Said‘s response, “From here, no.”42
Wells testified his separate failure to request the truck‘s registration and proof of insurance as him “spacing off,” caused by his unfamiliarity with and confusion upon receiving the border crossing cards from Said and Saul. He testified, “I got so stuck looking at these cards that I had never seen, and thinking about my next step of how I was going to figure out the driver‘s license issue, where we were going to go from here, that I spaced even requesting those items of information.”43
At that point, Wells took only the border crossing cards and returned alone to his car. He was unsure what he was going to do, because “he needed to verify that there was no driver‘s
In his car, Wells studied the unfamiliar cards, briefly took an unrelated phone call concerning a shift change,45 and then returned to studying the cards for over a minute, without doing anything on his computer.46
A little later, he called dispatch to run two “subjects” for “27” (driver‘s license) and “29” (outstanding warrants) checks by name and date of birth.47 When dispatch responded, however, Wells failed to initially tell dispatch he was reading border crossing cards, and provided only Said and Saul‘s first and middle names, though the cards also provide their identical ‘surname‘—Angulo-Gaxiola.48 Unfortunately, Wells was unfamiliar with Mexican naming conventions, where a surname often has two names; or the English word ‘surname’ on the U.S.-issued cards as referring to the last name; or the phrase ‘given name’ on the cards as referring to the first and middle names.49 About thirty seconds after his initial request, Wells informed dispatch the cards are border crossing cards. He then says to himself, “I don‘t even know where to start.”50 Over seven minutes have elapsed since the stop began.
Wells testified that at some point while he was in his car, he saw that Said “had developed what is called tunnel vision,” and “was looking into his driver‘s side mirror very
Nearly eight minutes into the stop, Wells called Richards55 to get advice on how to proceed.56 As heard on Wells’ body camera footage, Wells told Richards he didn‘t know “where to start on these two dudes,” that he stopped them for window tint, “neither one of them have a driver‘s license,” and all the windows are rolled down as if “they‘re trying to air [the truck] out.” Wells told Richards the men are “way overly nervous,” but he didn‘t know how to look up their border crossing cards.57 Richards asked Wells if the men spoke English, and Wells responded that one does, explaining “[o]ne says he‘s from Nevada and he just picked up his friend in Mexico.” Of course, that description is inaccurate in multiple ways. Said did not state that he had “picked up” Saul in Mexico. And Said told Wells Saul was his brother, not just a friend—which would explain their identical surnames on the border crossing cards.
With Richards still on the phone, Wells asked dispatch to run a “27” (driver‘s license check) out of Nevada for “Said Alan”60—again, using an incomplete name. He decided to go ahead and ask for that even though Said told him he did not have a license at all because he had “kind of talked a little like he did. But he didn‘t have it now, so that‘s why I had them run him because he was the driver. . . .”61 Eleven minutes into the stop, dispatch responded, stating they found no license for “Said Alan.” Richards then ended the call with Wells.62
A moment later, Wells exited his car. Richards was now on the scene as well and approached Wells from behind. Richards asked Wells who owned the truck. Wells didn‘t have an answer, but handed Richards the two border crossing cards, saying “I didn‘t run it yet. I‘ll go run it.”63 Wells testified he meant that he would run the truck‘s registration.64
Nearly twelve minutes into the stop, Wells got back in his car and got on his laptop while Richards approached the truck to speak to Said.65 Thirteen minutes into the stop, Wells called dispatch to get a read on the “28“—the registration based on the truck‘s license plate information
As he sat in his car, about fifteen minutes into the stop, Wells heard Richards on his radio call out to inquire, “K-9 available?”70 Dispatch responded quickly to say they “will look for one.” Wells then remained in his car and, as depicted in his body camera footage, seems to be doing no traffic-related tasks. Wells disputes this perception, testifying that “[a]t that time, I was verifying all of the vehicle‘s information and still trying to locate the driver‘s license with the new information I had been provided.”71 Then, at the 15:46 mark, dispatch can be heard stating that a K-9 is en route. Wells remained in the car a little longer, until over sixteen minutes had elapsed.72 Wells testified that when he finally exited the car, he lacked the information he
While Wells was in his car for a little over four minutes, Richards was speaking to Said. Richards’ body camera captured his conversation and activity. Richards first approached the truck‘s driver‘s side and began to talk to Said through the window. Richards asked Said, “How are you guys? Doing alright? Your truck?” Said responded that it was “mine and my uncle‘s truck.”74 Over twelve minutes into the stop, Richards asked Said for the truck‘s registration—the first time an officer asked for it.75 Said responded that he had it and reached for it. Richards then asked if Wells had already taken the registration. Said told him he had not. Richards repeated the same question, asking, “Did the officer already get your registration? Said again responded that he had not.
Said then apologized and offered to remove the window tint. He told Richards, as he had told Wells—that he got the tint done a couple of days ago, and he thought it was too dark, but it is very hot in Nevada. Richards assured him, “No, you‘re alright.” Richards then asked, “You‘re just passing through, right?”76 Said answered yes, and told Richards he and Saul are on their way to help a friend with drywall.77 Richards interrupted Said, asked him to get his registration, and instructed him they would talk outside.78
Richards: “What‘s your uncle‘s name?
Said answered that his uncle‘s name was Adrian.
Richards: “How long you been in the States?”
Said responded he had been in the United States about seven years, that he‘s “23 [years old], I came when I was 15.”
Richards: “You just do drywall?”
Said answered that he does “drywall and some mechanic” side jobs.
Richards stood outside the truck, thumbing through documents Said had given him. He stepped away from the window for a moment, and continued to thumb through them, then returned to ask more questions. Seeing buckets in the truck‘s open bed, Richards asked Said, “What‘s in the buckets?” The answer, and some additional comments or questions from Richards, are not clearly audible on the body camera footage. Richards then again invited Said out of the truck and Said exited.80 At this point—over fourteen minutes into the stop—Richards began asking Said a series of questions:81
Richards: “So, how long have you known your friend? What‘s his name?”
Said answered that he [the passenger] is his big brother, and his name is Saul.
Said responded affirmatively, and offered that Saul is on vacation.
Richards: “From?”
Said answered that Saul is from Mexico.
Richards: “He‘s just on vacation?”
Said: “Yeah.”
Richards: “What part of Mexico?”
Said responded that Saul is from Sinaloa.
Richards: “What part of Mexico are you from, Sinaloa too?”
Said responded that he was from Sinaloa when he was young and he went to school there.
Upon hearing that answer, Richards paused questioning and immediately called out on his radio for a K-9. Recall, fifteen minutes had elapsed since the stop began.82
Richards then continued questioning Said:
Richards: “So when did he [Saul] cross the border?”
Said: “Like a month ago, a couple months ago. He‘s going back . . . next week.”
Richards: “He‘s going back next week?” “And you‘re going where?”
Said: “We‘re going to Denver.”
Richards: “How long [are] you going to be in Denver?”
Said: “Just for the weekend, I‘ve got to come back and work Monday.” Said is a foreman and has a couple guys working for him.
Richards: “Good money?”
Said responded that he earns about $1,500 per week.
Richards: “That‘s good.”
Richards: “You got a kid too?”
Richards: “And his daughter‘s still in Mexico?”
Said responded yes, that Saul has a family in Mexico.
Richards: “What does [Saul] do in Mexico for work?”
Said responded that Saul went to electrician school, and then explained his father drilled water wells.
At this time, Wells had left his car and can be seen on both body camera videos approaching Richards and Said. Richards continued questioning Said:
Richards: “Do you have work in Denver?”
Said: “Nah.”
Richards [interrupting]: “You‘re working the weekend?”
Said: “No, my friend has a house, and he wants to do patches, so I‘m trying to do the patches [and] and he‘s trying to paint the house and sell it. Just doing a favor.”
Richards: “Does Saul speak English?”
Said: “No, not really. We were just stopping to get some food and gas.”
By this time, over seventeen minutes into the stop, Wells stood with Richards and Said outside and began to ask Said more questions. Wells testified he decided to ask more questions because he “realized that [Sgt.] Richards had become suspicious, and called for a K-9, and there was more going on. So I engaged in the activity of asking some traditional questions of ‘Where are you going? Where are you coming from? to try to build my own suspicion.”83
So, in this effort to build his own suspicion, Wells began to question Said—asking, as Richards already had, questions about travel plans, including where Saul was from, if Said had
Said then apologized again, and explained he had been told the window tint‘s darkness would lessen over time, and he offered to remove it. Wells then asked Said if he has ever been in trouble for “not having a driver‘s license in Vegas,” and Said admitted he had been in trouble for that once when he was in an accident in Las Vegas.85 Wells then told Richards that Said is the truck owner, and that dispatch was running the “27.”86 Hearing this, Said interjected that he is the owner along with his uncle, who co-signed. Richards then asked Said, “Who‘s your [truck] loan through?” Said responded the loan was obtained through the car dealer in Las Vegas.
Over nineteen minutes since the stop began, the officers and Said appear to be simply standing outside.87 Wells testified they were at that time still waiting for a response from dispatch on the driver‘s license check using Said‘s full and accurate name,88 but no one contacted dispatch to prompt a return.
About this time, dispatch called out to say they were not getting anything back on checks on Saul, but they did get ‘criminal’ back on Said. Wells did not follow up with dispatch at that time concerning this development. Said, attempting to make conversation, asked Wells about the
At that time—about twenty minutes into the stop—Wells thought he could not chart a path to complete the stop because he “didn‘t have a licensed driver, or proof of a non-licensed driver, and I didn‘t know whether we were going to impound or not.”91 Wells testified that it was standard practice that if passenger had a valid license, Wells would not impound even if the driver did not have a license.92
So, Wells told Said, “Well, we‘re trying to figure out what we‘re going to do, because like I said, you can‘t drive without a driver‘s license.”93 Said responded that his brother could drive, that he “has a license, it‘s not from here. . .” and Wells interrupted, “but it‘s from Mexico.”94 Wells then asked if Saul had the actual license. Said quickly obtained the license from Saul (still sitting in the truck) though the truck‘s passenger-side window, twenty minutes and thirty-four seconds into the stop.
Wells testified that when he received the license, he understood for the first time there was a driver with a license, because he had been “under the impression there was no license present,” in part because when a stop begins and he asks “for identification, usually people provide me their driver‘s license not their visa cards.”95 This explanation seems incongruent with the fact that when Said reminded Wells that Saul had a license, Wells responded on the
Wells testified that at this point, he could finally resolve the traffic stop.96 Wells believed he could do this by either: 1) impounding the truck—something he would normally try to avoid doing—or 2) citing Said for the tint and driving without a license and allowing Saul to drive.97 If Said did not have driver‘s license information in Wells’ computer system, the option to issue a citation would require him to input the information manually, which Wells estimated might take five to seven minutes.”98
Rather than begin to work on one of those two options, Wells went to Richards’ patrol car. Richards had just requested “EPIC” checks on both Said and Saul.99 Standing outside Richards’ driver‘s side window, Wells handed Richards Saul‘s driver‘s license,100 saying “the brother has that license, so that‘s the other kid.”101 Wells explained he just got it after Said told him his brother had a license and “he just gave me that. He went over and asked him for it.”102
Rather than do anything related to the license, Richards then recounted to Wells his suspicions based what he thinks Said told him during his questioning:
He told me they are going to Denver for vacation . . . first it was to work . . . then it was to vacation, visit a friend. And then it was . . . be there a week, then when you coming home? Monday.103
Of course, Said did not tell Richards he was going to Denver for vacation, or for regular work. He told Richards he was going to Denver to help a friend patch a house so the friend could paint it and prepare it to sell. And he didn‘t tell Richards he would be in Denver for a week. He told him he would be there the weekend and had to be at work (at an unidentified time) on Monday in Las Vegas. Wells then offered “and [Said] told me he picked [Saul] up from Mexico and now he‘s been here living in Vegas, so I don‘t. . . .”104 But Said didn‘t tell Wells that he had picked up Saul in Mexico. Richards then told Wells to look at Said‘s “body language.”105 Wells responded that Said appeared “shut down” and was “comforting himself,” and that before, Said‘s eyes had been “locked” on Wells.106
Wells asked Richards where he thought Bagley, the K-9 officer, was.107 Richards responded, “They were up the canyon,” and Wells offered, “He was hauling butt on the radio. I can hear it.”108
Wells testified he asked about Bagley because “I was trying to go write the citation and continue with the stop. If he wasn‘t there, we were going to continue with the stop regardless. So I just kind of asked the question . . . in regards to if he was going to be here in time or not:”109
Q. Why was that a concern to you where Bagley was at?
Q. But you also recognized you needed to get moving at this point?
A. Correct.110
At the 23:30 mark—about three minutes after he had gotten Saul’s license, Wells asked Richards if dispatch had responded with the ‘27’ information on Said’s driver’s license. Richards responded, “I don’t know.” Neither officer followed up with dispatch to prompt a return, despite Richards’ uncertainty.
Now nearly twenty-four minutes into the stop, it is unclear what, if anything, Richards is doing related to the traffic stop. And it is clear Wells was doing nothing to complete the citation. Rather, he turned to chat with a third officer (not Bagley) who had arrived on the scene and was also standing outside of Richards’ car.111 Wells explained to this officer:
Can’t figure out who these people are. And they’re headed from Nevada to Colorado for work, vacation and they’re coming home Monday. Today’s Saturday. So very interesting . . . He told me at first he just picked up his friend from Mexico, and then he told me that the friend’s been staying in Vegas for awhile. . . .They both have visas. . . .The driver had no license. . . he told me up front he didn’t have one. He says the passenger has a Mexico driver’s license. And this was like twenty minutes after we’d been trying to figure out who they are, he says that, so I just got that license.
Wells then stated, “Hoping Bagley [the K-9 officer] gets here soon.”112
During this time, Richards can be seen on his body camera video slowly entering the truck’s license plate information into his computer.113 He does this despite having obtained and
Over the radio, Richards and Wells heard Bagley confirm he is traveling eastbound. Wells told Richards to tell Bagley they were on the on ramp, and Richards did so.119 Wells then asked Richards if he should have Said get in the truck “so [Bagley] can get the dog out,” but Richards told him to keep Said out of the truck.120 The officers then heard on the radio that Bagley had arrived at the scene,121 over twenty-six minutes into the stop, at about 6:23 p.m.122
Upon hearing that, Richards immediately handed the documents held back to Wells, and told Wells he can “write a ticket, or whatever. . . [inaudible] through.”123 Wells took the
Wells later testified that he planned to cite Said “for driving without a license and the window tint, and [he] was going to let the passenger of the vehicle with the Mexican license drive the vehicle.”130 He charted this course though he was unaware if there had been a return on the ‘27’ from dispatch—driver’s license information on Said using his full and accurate name:
Dispatch had not returned that information [on Said] to me, and now we did have a licensed driver. And he [Said] told me [he had] no license, so I felt confident I could cite him for that.”131
Wells testified that while this was dog sniff was happening, he “did watch the dog. They are very amazing to watch, so while I was filling [out the citation], while he went around and indicated, I was watching that.”136 At the 31:30 mark, Wells exited his car. He had not completed the citation. Indeed, upon exiting his car, he asked the other officers if he “should hold off on the citation or just write it out?”137 Richards said he could hold off on it. He testified that he decided to wait to complete the citation after seeing the dog alert on the truck, because “now we had a reason to search the vehicle,” and if they found anything, the citation could be different or simply moot if anyone was arrested.138
DISCUSSION
I. Applicable Legal Principles144
Said, as the proponent of a motion to suppress, “has the burden of showing the Fourth Amendment was implicated,145 while the government has the burden of proving its actions were justified.”146 It is the court’s work to “assess the credibility of witnesses and determine the weight to give to the evidence presented; the inferences the district court draws from that evidence and testimony are entirely within its discretion.”147
To meet this reasonableness standard, “a traffic stop must be justified at its inception and the officer’s actions must be ‘reasonably related in scope’ to the ‘mission of the stop.’”150 In Rodriguez v. United States, the Supreme Court instructs that “[a] seizure for a traffic violation justifies a police investigation of that violation.”151 Because it is a “‘relatively brief encounter,’ a routine traffic stop is ‘more analogous to a so-called Terry-stop . . . than to a formal arrest.’”152
“Like a Terry stop, the tolerable duration of the police inquiries in the traffic-stop context is determined by the seizure’s ‘mission’—to address the traffic violations that warranted the stop and attend to related safety concerns.”153 A stop may last long enough to address the infraction, and not longer.154
The tasks tied to the infraction include deciding “whether to issue a traffic ticket” and “‘ordinary inquiries incident to [the traffic] stop,’” such as “checking the driver’s license, determining whether there are outstanding warrants against the driver, and inspecting the
Officers may also engage in investigations unrelated to the purpose of the stop if they do “not lengthen the roadside detention.”157 Put another way, “a traffic stop ‘can become unlawful if it is prolonged beyond the time reasonably required to complete th[e] mission’ of issuing a warning ticket,”158 unless there is “reasonable suspicion ordinarily demanded to justify detaining an individual.”159 Otherwise, “[a]uthority for the seizure thus ends when tasks tied to the infraction are—or reasonably should have been—completed.”160
The Tenth Circuit has summarized the foregoing principles, stating “[u]nder Rodriguez, therefore, an unlawful seizure occurs when an officer (1) diverts from the traffic-based mission of the stop to investigate ordinary criminal conduct, (2) in a way that ‘prolongs’ (i.e., adds time to) the stop, and (3) the investigative detour is unsupported by any independent reasonable suspicion.”161 “Even de minimis delays caused by unrelated inquiries violate the Fourth Amendment.”162
A K-9 dog sniff is “not an ordinary incident of a traffic stop,” but is “a measure aimed at ‘detect[ing] evidence of ordinary criminal wrongdoing.’”163 Thus, when a sniff is employed, the
Said does not challenge the stop’s initial justification, the window tint.167 But he argues: 1) “the tasks tied to the traffic stop for a window tint violation reasonably should have been completed much quicker than 29 minutes, the time it took for the k-9 unit to arrive and begin its search,” and 2) Wells and Richards “diverted from the issue of the window tint in a way that prolonged the traffic stop, and that they lacked reasonable suspicion of criminal activity” to warrant the diversion.168
The court concludes the officers delayed the stop beyond what the traffic-based mission reasonably demanded, both 1) as a result of a mistakes and a lack of reasonable diligence, and 2) to investigate their suspicions about Said and Saul. These delays were not based on reasonable suspicion. Accordingly, the officers’ actions violated the Fourth Amendment.
II. Did the Stop Take Longer than Reasonably Necessary to Complete its Mission?
Said first argues the traffic stop, for a window tint violation, should reasonably have concluded quicker than the twenty-nine minutes or so that elapsed before Bagley and his dog began the K-9 sniff, and that several actions, primarily by Wells, impermissibly prolonged
As noted above, the “tolerable duration” of a traffic stop is determined by its mission—to address the violation warranting the stop and attending to related safety concerns.170 The Tenth Circuit, citing Rodriguez, explains “an officer’s authority to seize a motorist ‘ends when tasks tied to the traffic infraction are—or reasonably should have been—completed:”171
Thus, even ordinary inquiries incident to a traffic stop and permissible safety precautions must be completed within a reasonable amount of time. In determining whether the duration of a traffic stop was reasonable, we consider whether the officers diligently pursued the mission of the stop. Accordingly, officers may not undertake safety precautions for the purpose of lengthening the stop to allow for investigation of unrelated criminal activity.172
And in United States v. Leon, the Tenth Circuit recently reiterated that in considering the time reasonably required to complete a traffic stop, “it is appropriate to consider police diligence. . . .”173 But an officer is not required to complete the stop “‘as fast as humanly possible.’”174 “‘This is because reasonableness—rather than efficiency—is the touchstone of the Fourth Amendment.’”175
In United States v. Cortez, the Tenth Circuit rejected the two defendants’ argument that an officer had violated the Fourth Amendment by holding them at a traffic stop in New Mexico,
The driver and another passenger were charged with conspiracy to transport the men.179 The defendants then jointly moved the suppress evidence and statements obtained from the stop, arguing it was extended without reasonable suspicion. After the motion was denied by the district court, the defendants appealed.180 The Tenth Circuit affirmed, concluding the officer had developed reasonable suspicion of criminal activity about seven minutes into the stop.181
The court also rejected the defendants’ argument that the officer had in those first seven minutes “unreasonably prolonged the stop through delinquency and by asking questions unrelated to the mission of issuing a traffic citation.”182
Specifically, the officer had in those initial seven minutes:
- Stopped a vehicle, a truck, with a female driver, and front seat passengers—an adult female and a young girl.185 (Two male adults were also in a back seat with a young boy, but the officer did not initially notice them.)
- Approached the truck and spoke to the driver about how fast she had been driving, and he requested an obtained from her a “license, insurance, and registration.”186
- Per his practice, he asked the driver to stand at the right front bumper of his police car.187
- From the police car, ran the license through his computer system to check for warrants, and asked the driver “a series of questions regarding her travel plans and who she was traveling with.”188 He also asked her what she did for a living, whose truck she was driving, about how long she had been in the town she had been traveling from—an Arizona town on the United States border with Mexico—and with whom she had been staying.189
- Checked the truck’s VIN and asked the adult female passenger a series of questions similar to those he had asked the driver.190
At that point, the officer noticed the men in the back seat. He asked the female passenger about them, and she became reticent to speak, but offered she did not know the men, and that
This was seven minutes into the stop, and as the court of appeals concluded, the officer had the requisite reasonable suspicion to contact and await help from Border Patrol.
In contrast to the seven minutes described in Cortez, the undersigned concludes the officers here delayed the conclusion of the stop not only to investigate criminal activity unrelated to the window tint, discussed below, but also simply due to delinquency or a failure to follow standard procedures. Wells, still learning as a brand-new patrol officer, did not follow these procedures or diligently process information from Said. These failures resulted in an unreasonably prolonged stop, impermissible under the Fourth Amendment.
First, Wells failed to ask for the registration and insurance paperwork at the outset of the stop, a part of standard procedure. The registration would have immediately revealed the truck registered to Said in Nevada, much sooner than the nearly thirteen to fourteen minutes into the stop when Wells finally requested, then obtained, the return on the license plate information from dispatch and finally understood Said’s ‘extended’ name.193 The registration and insurance documents would also have displayed Said’s full name in a format Wells would certainly more clearly understand, thus confirming Said’s actual name at the outset of the stop, permitting any further checks to be completed accurately much earlier, and presumably reducing or eliminating the time Wells spent studying the unfamiliar border cards.
Again, however, the evidence demonstrates that even 20 minutes after providing the correct names to dispatch (which in turn was approximately five minutes after providing the incorrect names), Deputy Wells was still waiting on a return he needed to complete the citation.196
The United States makes this argument repeatedly in its briefing as an answer to the multiple alleged delays and diversions.197 The court finds it unpersuasive for several reasons.
The United States’ argument is unsupported by Wells’ own actions during the stop and his subsequent testimony at the evidentiary hearing. Wells testified at the evidentiary hearing that the stop continued as long as it did because he didn’t have a licensed driver, and that once there was a license, he could take action to resolve the stop. Wells in fact decided at the scene to write a ticket when he obtained Saul’s license and before he knew whether the return on Said’s driver’s license check came back. This course of action seems objectively reasonable, given that Said told Wells multiple times that he did not have a license, and had even been in trouble in Las Vegas for not having one. Indeed, Wells testified “[d]ispatch had not returned that information
And after Richards told Wells he simply didn’t know if dispatch had in fact provided the driver’s license return for Said or not, neither officer contacted dispatch to prompt the return. Finally, it is important to recall that Wells’ own unreasonable actions from the outset—failing to obtain registration and insurance documents or a license plate return confirming Said’s correct, full name—delayed running an accurate check using Said’s full name until over fourteen minutes into the stop, when dispatch suggested to Wells that it take place.199
Second, Wells failed to retrieve Saul’s Mexico driver’s license that Said offered in the stop’s initial moments, obtaining it over eighteen minutes after he learned of it, and over twenty minutes into the stop. This is despite the fact Wells acknowledged Said’s offer of the license, but then asked if there was any license “from here.” Wells did not ask for Saul’s license until the stop had gone on for about twenty minutes and Said once again offered it. Had Wells reasonably processed the information offered, and retrieved the license from the outset, he would have had a basis to resolve the stop much quicker, knowing there was a licensed driver and an impound unnecessary, per Wells’ standard practice. As Wells testified, he felt he could resolve the stop after he received the license because he had all the information he needed to complete the citation.
The United States argues Wells would not be required to end the stop simply because he had obtained a license because he could also reasonably take time to “verify its validity,
As noted above, Richards shuffled through the registration, insurance, border crossing cards, and Saul’s driver’s license while sitting in his car. But when Bagley arrived on the scene, and Richards handed the documents back to Wells to write a citation “or whatever,” Wells quickly returned to ask Richards if Saul’s license was “an actual driver’s license? Do I have him drive?” Though Richards had been holding the license at some length, he still needed “to read it” to ascertain its validity and took it back from Wells. Richards very quickly reviewed it, handed it back to Wells, and stated, “Yeah, it’s a driver’s license, but we’ll just go from here.” Thus, even assuming it was reasonable for Wells to need to call Richards and wait for him to come to the scene to help, and to review the license for Wells once obtained, the ‘validity check’ Richards cursorily performed could have been quickly completed when he arrived—about eleven minutes into the stop.
Said also faults Wells for the delays in processing stop-related tasks while Wells was concerned about Said staring at him, and while watching the K-9 sniff at times rather than
Based on the foregoing, the stop was prolonged due to unreasonable delinquency. The resulting delays caused the stop—over twenty-nine minutes from initiation to when the K-9 sniffed and alerted—to last much longer than needed to complete the traffic-based mission of issuing a citation for window tint and/or unlicensed driver and complete any needed safety checks. This violated the Fourth Amendment, and now warrants suppression of evidence and statements resulting from the stop.
III. The Stop’s Traffic-Based Mission was Diverted to Investigate Criminal Activity
In addition to arguing that Wells’ actions impermissibly prolonged the stop’s traffic-based mission and safety checks due to unreasonable mistakes, Said also argues the officers impermissibly prolonged the stop by shifting from its traffic-based mission to investigate ordinary criminal conduct while lacking reasonable suspicion. In his briefing, Said did not expressly identify a precise ‘Rodriguez moment’ when this diversion occurred, though he did set forth a relatively clear timeline of the delays in moving the stop along and the various investigative actions. But at oral argument, his counsel more clearly identified such a moment as beginning at least when Wells presents Saul’s driver’s license to Richards, which, by the court’s review, occurred at the 20:53 mark on Wells’ video capturing the entire stop from its initiation. This diversion took place after the K-9 was requested, and while Wells and Richards closely monitored Bagley’s progress getting to the scene with the dog.
The United States responds that there simply was no ‘Rodriguez moment.’ But, if there was any diversion, the United States contends it was supported by reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.
In Rodriguez, the Supreme Court held absent reasonable suspicion, a delay adding time to a traffic stop beyond what is reasonably needed to complete the stop’s mission is an unreasonable seizure under the Fourth Amendment. There, the delay was about seven or eight minutes, occurring after a citation was issued.203 Likewise, in United States v. Frazier204 the Tenth Circuit found an officer had caused at least two delays without reasonable suspicion,205 violating the Fourth Amendment. First, he added time to the traffic stop to locate and arrange for
Under Rodriguez, it makes no difference whether an investigative detour occurs before or after the completion of the stop’s traffic-based mission. The question is whether the stop would have ended sooner had the officer continued to work diligently on the traffic-related tasks rather than pursue an unrelated investigation. Thus, the government must show not only that the search occurred during a period when Mr. Frazier would have been seized anyway, it must also show that the stop would not have ended sooner had the trooper forgone the search and instead continued to work diligently on traffic-related tasks. It has failed to do so.208
In contrast, the Tenth Circuit found no impermissible delay in Cates v. United States, where a trooper sent a text requesting a K-9 in the midst of a traffic stop.209 There, Trooper Neilson stopped an SUV for speeding, and asked the driver—Cates—for his driver’s license, registration, and proof of insurance.210 Cates provided his license, but explained the SUV was rented and the agreement was on his phone. Knowing the agreement could take time to find, Trooper Neilson invited Cates to search for the agreement in his patrol car while the trooper completed paperwork for a warning citation.211 While conversing, Trooper Neilson saw Cates’
As Trooper Neilson walked to his patrol car, he radioed another nearby officer—Trooper Jackson—to come to the stop. He then waited by his car for Cates to leave the SUV and get to the car. When Cates got there, Trooper Neilson asked him to sit in the passenger seat.213 Trooper Neilson texted Trooper Jackson, asking him to run his K-9 around the SUV. Trooper Neilson then ran the driver’s license and continued speaking to Cates about his travel plans.214 Trooper Neilson learned that Cates had been arrested, then asked him about it. At that time, Trooper Jackson arrived with his K9, walked past Trooper Neilson’s car, and started the K-9 sniff. This was about three minutes after the stop began. Trooper Neilson then asked dispatch to check Cates’ criminal history.215 The dog quickly altered to narcotics both the driver’s and passenger’s side door, and Trooper Jackson went to Trooper Neilson’s car to let him know.216 At that point, Trooper Neilson had neither completed a warning for Cates nor received the results of Cates’s criminal history check, and Cates still had not provided a rental agreement or proof of insurance.217
Under these facts, the court of appeals affirmed denial of Cates’s motion to suppress because Trooper Neilson had diligently pursued the stop’s mission and did not illegally prolong the stop to arrange for the K-9. The court explained, “[a]lthough we can imagine other situations in which an officer’s decision to arrange for an open-air dog sniff would unreasonably prolong a
A. Diversion from Traffic Based Mission
In addition to the unreasonable delays previously discussed, the officers halted any diligent work on resolving the stop when Wells handed Richards Saul’s Mexican driver’s license. For at least five and a half minutes, they diverted from any further work on the window tint (which was never tested at all before the K-9 alerted) or on any alleged remaining concern about Saul or Said’s driver’s license.
Instead, the officers discussed Said’s body language and compared—sometimes inaccurately—the things Said said to them. Wells even chatted with a third officer on the scene about his suspicions. Richards also shuffled through the documents and cards he held, but it is unclear what the purpose of this was. Indeed, it appears he was not scrutinizing anything to further the stop’s resolution, where he later still needed to read Saul’s license when Wells asked
him if it was a valid license. Richards also slowly re-checked the truck‘s license plate information to “quality check” the information he already had, a seemingly unnecessary task. And though they did not know if dispatch had returned information on Said‘s own driver‘s
During this diversion, no work appears to have been done to complete the stop, and no information appears to have obtained to add to what the officers knew before it. As discussed at length above, the court is unpersuaded for several reasons by the United States’ argument that the officers were still waiting for the check on Said‘s driver‘s license before they could begin to work on the citation—and if it was needed, the officers reasonably should have worked to obtain it from dispatch. The diversion thus prolonged the traffic-based mission of stop for at least five and a half minutes. And from their conversation and actions, the diversion from completing the stop appears designed to allow time for Bagley to arrive with his dog and conduct a K-9 sniff, which occurred over nine minutes after Wells handed Richards Saul‘s driver‘s license.222 This amounts to a “Rodriguez moment.”
B. The Diversion Was Not Justified by Reasonable Suspicion
The United States argues that even if a Rodriguez moment is found, the officers “had reasonable suspicion of criminal activity at that moment, allowing [Said‘s] seizure to be extended.”223 In its briefing, the United States identifies the following as grounds for such suspicion:
- The truck‘s rolled-down windows;224
- The fact that Said and Saul were from Sinaloa, Mexico originally;225
- The brothers’ implausible travel plans;226
- Said‘s lack of precise knowledge of when his brother arrived in the United States;227
- Said‘s nervousness;228
- Said‘s apologies and offers to remove the window tint;229
- Said‘s staring at Wells;230 and
- Said‘s willingness to volunteer information, particularly about his work.231
Said counters any alleged suspicion is not reasonable, but rather based on “subjective, unparticularized hunches.”232 The court agrees.
“Under this totality approach, factors consistent with innocent travel may collectively amount to reasonable suspicion.”239 Moreover, with “the specialized training and experience that law enforcement officers have, [courts] generally defer to their ability to distinguish between innocent and suspicious behavior, but deference becomes inappropriate when an officer relies on a circumstance incorrigibly free of associations with criminal activity.”240
The court finds the factors the United States cites to support a finding of reasonable suspicion, considered in their totality and when the “Rodriguez moment” occurred, at best support only an insufficient hunch about criminal activity.
1. Windows Rolled Down
Wells first found it suspicious that all four of the truck‘s windows were rolled down after the truck stopped, because it suggested the occupants might be airing the truck out to “hide an odor of alcohol or marijuana.”241 On this point, the United States cites United States v. Bravo-Ortega,242 stating “the court factored in ‘that both front windows were rolled down even though it was early February and cold outside.‘”243 But while rolled down windows might be suspicious in some circumstances, it bears noting that the rolled down windows in Bravo-Ortega were something the trooper testified “contributed to his reasonable suspicion of criminal activity,”244 but not mentioned by the court in its evaluation of whether that suspicion was justified.
In any event, the court agrees with the United States that the four rolled-down windows might initially suggest the possibility that the truck‘s occupants were trying to dissipate an odor. But under the circumstances here, and as the events unfolded, the amount of suspicion this might have initially created was minimal and never bolstered. There is no testimony that any odor was ever detected, let alone investigated. As Said points out in his briefing, no officer asked him to roll up the windows either to contain a smell or even further investigate the reason for the initial stop—the too-dark tint.245 When Wells approached the truck initially, he went to the passenger side, but Said as the driver might have expected him to talk to him on the driver‘s side, thus making it understandable to have at least the front driver and passenger windows down. And, as defense counsel argued at oral argument, having all windows down may have been an attempt to
2. Drug Hubs or Destinations
The United States argues one of the “key fact[s] that support”248 the officers’ finding reasonable suspicion was that Said and Saul were “from Sinaloa, Mexico,” because there is a notable drug cartel in the area.249 But the Tenth Circuit has explained that identification of a defendant traveling to or from a “drug hub or destination” adds little if anything to a reasonable suspicion calculus.250 This is because “law enforcement officers have offered countless cities as drug source cities and countless others as distribution cities,” rendering “the probativeness of a particular defendant‘s route . . . minimal.”251 The United States cites no case supporting the court‘s consideration of this fact to find reasonable suspicion, and does not respond to the cases
3. Implausible Travel Plans and Purposes
The United States argues Said‘s travel plans were highly implausible—an eleven- or twelve-hour trip from Las Vegas to Denver on Saturday and returning sometime on Monday. Richards also found in implausible that Said worked in drywall and was traveling to Denver to help a friend with patching because Richards didn‘t think Said‘s hands looked like those of one who does physical labor because “they looked soft.”253 But Richards also testified he was a foot
Implausible travel plans may “contribute to reasonable suspicion“—such as “when ‘it beg[s] credulity to think that the purported purpose of the trip could justify [them].‘”255 But the Tenth Circuit states “we have ‘been reluctant deem travel plans implausible—and hence a factor supporting reasonable suspicion—where the plan is simply unusual or strange because it indicates a choice that the typical person, or the officer, would not make.”256 Similarly, the court of appeals has expressed reluctance to find suspicion in “unusual travel purposes, at least absent lies, inconsistencies, and the like.”257 And the arguable weight of alleged suspicion on these points may lessen if an officer asks no follow-up questions.258
The United States argues Said‘s roundtrip travel from Las Vegas to Denver is unlikely for the vast majority of the innocent traveling public, particularly where the traffic stop in Utah took place a little before 6:00 p.m. on Saturday and Said planned to be “back to Las Vegas approximately 36 hours later”259—which would be 6:00 a.m. Monday morning. But it first bears noting there is nothing in the record suggesting Said planned to be in Las Vegas by 6:00 a.m, or even the morning on Monday. Said stated he needed to be back at work as a foreman on Monday but does not offer a specific time of day when his supervisory work needed to begin.
Still, arguing the Saturday-to-Monday travel plan begs credulity, the United States cites United States v. Simpson.260 There, the stopped driver had told the officer he had driven all the way from Nebraska to Reno to stay at a friend‘s house, had not gone to any casinos, offered odd details about where he stayed but was evasive about the host friend‘s name, and offered inconsistent answers about how long his stay was—one day or a “couple.”261 The court of appeals credited the officer‘s belief that the driver was being evasive, but found that the driver‘s “travel plans by themselves were of limited significance” (the long drive for a relatively short stay), and gave “no weight” to the failure to gamble in a casino.262 Indeed, the court noted that if the driver‘s “evasiveness about his ‘bizarre’ travel plans were the only factor being used to establish reasonable suspicion, it would be insufficient by itself. . . .”263 But, “in conjunction with the other factors presented“—including the driver‘s known criminal history in drug transportation and extreme nervousness (trembling)—the court gave “some weight” to the unusual, evasively-described, and conflicting travel plans.264
Like the Simpson defendant, Said‘s travel plans were notably ambitious, but far from implausible—particularly where there were two adult drivers. But in contrast to the Simpson
4. Not Knowing More about His Brother‘s Travel
Richards found suspicious Said‘s answers to questions about his brother Saul‘s travel—specifically, the dates he arrived in the United States from Mexico and when he planned to return. Richards testified that when asked how long his brother had been in the country, Said said “[a] month or maybe two, a month or two,” and that Said also told him his brother was returning to Mexico in a week.265 Richards thought this was suspicious for two reasons. First, he believes that when family “is coming from out of the country to visit with you, you generally know the date they got there.”266 Second, Said had explained that his brother had family that had “stayed in Mexico,” but Richards’ own “wife would be upset if I went on vacation and left her home, so”267 that seemed implausible to Richards.
Little weight can be afforded Richards’ suspicions, largely based on his own perceptions of what a normal family member would do or think, and not based on any objective facts or specialized law enforcement training. This is particularly true where he asked Said no follow up questions on these matters, such as whether Saul had visited other family before reaching Said in Las Vegas, or if the “family” in Mexico included even a wife—something that is simply not in
5. Nervousness
The United States argues the officers’ found Said to be “extremely nervous,” exhibited specifically by lip-licking and profuse sweating.268 The court gives no weight to this alleged nervousness.
The Tenth Circuit has “consistently held that ordinary nervousness bears little weight in the reasonable suspicion calculus.”269 Understandably, “most motorists experience some degree of nervousness when stopped by the police and ‘unless the police officer has significant knowledge of a person, it is difficult, even for a skilled police officer, to evaluate whether a person is acting normally for them or nervously.‘”270 But “somewhat more weight is given to extreme and persistent nervousness,” supported by “‘specific indicia that the defendant‘s nervousness was extreme, rather than credit an officer‘s naked assertion.‘”271 For instance, the court of appeals has found extreme nervousness when exhibited by physical manifestations, such as uncontrolled shaking.272
The Tenth Circuit noted while the district court considered the driver‘s nervousness, it did not “find he was extremely nervous“—nor could it where the “evidence does not support that finding.”276 There were no physical signs of extreme nervousness, and he “was cooperative and offered explanations to questions posed by [the trooper].”277 Though the trooper believed the driver offered “an inordinate amount of detail or engaged in unnecessary concertation,” the court of appeals found it a “natural” response to the questions the trooper asked, and could also have simply reflected the driver‘s “communication style rather than nervousness.”278 While acknowledging the trooper‘s training and experience, the court found the alleged nervousness bore “negligible weight in [its] calculus.”279
6. Apologizing and Offering to Take Off the Window Tint
Somewhat related to the nervousness calculation, the United States argues the officers were reasonably suspicious of Said because he was both 1) too apologetic and eager to remove the offending window tint, and 2) Wells found the fact that Said apologized for what Wells knew was a minor infraction—too-dark window tint—was suspicious and made him think “[j]ust that maybe there was a small amount of marijuana or something in the vehicle.”282
Both Wells and Richards found it suspicious that Said offered multiple times to rip off the window times. Wells testified this was “out of the normal,” because most people traveling
The United States cites a 2005 unreported case from this district, United States v. Gallardo,286 for the proposition that “the court found that the defendant‘s willingness to remove the vehicle‘s window tint on scene added to the reasonable suspicion.”287 There is no such finding in this case. There, the initial stop was for a window tint too dark under Utah law, but a check of the driver‘s license revealed it was not valid.288 When the officer returned the driver‘s papers and gave him a warning for the tint and lack of a valid license, the driver “asked if he could go to the next town (approximately seven miles away) to get the window tinting removed,” the officer asked the driver how he would do that, when he didn‘t have a license.289 There are
The court finds nothing suspicious about Said apologizing in the manner depicted on the body camera footage and offering to take the window tint off. It seems a normal reaction to apologize to a police officer for a traffic violation. And it seems entirely understandable for Said to want to fix a fixable problem, if possible, both to remedy the existing violation and to avoid being stopped again for the same violation. This is particularly true where Said planned to keep driving through Utah that day on to Denver—not to “return home“—and then return on Monday. His too-dark tint could warrant additional stops by Utah law enforcement repeatedly unless he did something to fix it. This is true even if the tint was “expensive“—a statement for which Richards offered no specific factual support. But more important—Said told Wells from the outset of the stop (one minute into Wells’ body camera footage) that he had just gotten the tint installed in Las Vegas, he had been concerned it might be too dark, and the installer had offered to “replace” it if that turned out to be true.292
7. Locked Eyes
Wells testified that at some point while Said was still in his truck, he had locked eyes on Wells, intently watching his movements in a way that Wells found concerning. Richards later
In United States v. McRae,295 the Tenth Circuit affirmed a finding of reasonable suspicion during a traffic stop based on: 1) implausible travel plans (a driver stopped in Utah stating he retuned the car and was driving to a wedding in New York when the agreement said the car was due to be returned in Los Angeles two days later); 2) nervousness and an untruthful answer to questions about a criminal record; and 3) the fact that when the experienced police officer returned to his car to conduct stop-related business, the driver “adjusted his [rear-view] mirror and intensely watched [him].”296 “Deferring to ‘the ability of a trained law enforcement officer to distinguish between innocent and suspicious actions,‘” the court of appeals found “the district court did not err in finding [the officer] credible” and that the behavior could contribute to reasonable suspicion of unlawful conduct.297
The court gives some weight to the initially intense focus, locked eyes, or “tunnel vision,” Wells witnessed. But whatever threat (or, as Richards speculated, anxiety) Wells thought was possible in that moment, he then also interacted at length in conversation with Said, and could observe his demeanor and behavior. Aside from this early moment of intense focus, there is nothing else during the stop that Wells, or Richards, identified as threatening. And if Wells felt
8. Volunteering Information
Last, the United States argues the officers were suspicious because Said volunteered information, particularly about his work history. In Richards’ his experience, people “don‘t go into great detail” about their work history during a traffic stop, “especially when it wasn‘t even asked about.”298 The United States in its briefing does not specify the factual details Said provided, but had not been asked about. And a review of the body camera footage reveals Said was, in reality, asked for a lot of details about his family (including whether his brother or he had kids), travel plans, truck (including where he got the loan for it and—twice—the name of the uncle who co-signed for it), and his work. The questions related to Said‘s work, including from Richards, who inquired about whether Said only did drywall, whether he earned ‘good money,’ whether he had work in Denver, and what was in the construction-related buckets in the back of the truck. Said appeared forthcoming and cooperative in his answers. Under these circumstances, the court gives no weight to the suspicion Richards claims to have developed because Said offered details about his work.
In totality, the factors supporting the officers’ expressed concerns about criminal activity do not rise to the level of reasonable suspicion. The concerns about the rolled-up windows and Said‘s locked eyes might have caused some initial concern, but neither was investigated or
Accordingly, the five and a half minute “Rodriguez moment” in this stop—the diversion from resolving the traffic stop‘s mission when Wells handed Richards Saul‘s license and the two officers discussed Said‘s body language, their own suspicions, and appeared to be waiting for Bagley and the K-9—was unwarranted and impermissibly prolonged the stop in violation of the
IV. The Remedy for the Fourth Amendment Violations is Suppression of the Evidence and Statements
As discussed above, the stop‘s traffic-related mission was unreasonably delayed and diverted without reasonable suspicion, prolonging the stop in violation of the
CONCLUSION
Said‘s Motion to Suppress the evidence and statements obtained from the traffic stop on March 18, 2023 is GRANTED.
DATED this 10th day of May 2023.
BY THE COURT:
___________________________________
The Honorable Robert J. Shelby
Chief United States District Court Judge
Notes
Q. Okay. All right. Now, you talked a little bit about locations. Are you aware that Mucha is a city?
A. No.
Q. Okay. Would it surprise you if I told you that Mucha is a city inside of Sinaloa?
A. That‘s knowledge to me today.
Q. And then are you familiar with the fact that if you travel from Sinaloa to America you have to go through Sonora, the state of Sonora?
A. I knew that Sonora was a state, but I didn‘t know the city—
Q. So you don‘t know the geography—
A. Right.
Q. --of those places, but you recognize them as places in Mexico?
A. Yes.
Tr. 106:25-107:1-11.Based upon [Mr. Gallardo‘s] nervous behavior, his story about where he was going, where he was coming from, how long he was there, how he got there, how he was getting to where he was going, how the owner was going to reacquire their vehicle, who the owner was, how he came in contact with that, who his brother was, and the fact that he didn‘t even know his brother‘s telephone number. The whole story just didn‘t seem plausible to me.
