Appellant was detained by customs officials upon her arrival at San Francisco International Airport from Bangkok, Thailand, and subjected to a baggage search. This search revealed items which, in addition to her apparent physical restrictions in walking and sitting, led customs agents to believe she had something secreted in a body cavity. After appellant refused to submit to a strip search, the agents sought a court order requiring her to submit to a strip search and x-ray, and if the x-ray revealed a foreign object in a body cavity, to submit to a body cavity search as well.
The order was obtained and the x-ray taken, which revealed a foreign body in appellant’s vagina. Appellant then removed the object which proved to be packets of heroin encased in a plastic container. Appellant was detained while these events occurred, the detention lasting approximately seven hours, part of which time her attorney was present.
A motion to suppress the heroin was denied by the trial court. That denial is appealed, with four grounds argued in support. Appellant also argues that error occurred in the giving of a jury instruction on deliberate ignorance. We affirm the conviction.
I. Representation by Counsel at the Order Application
Appellant’s attorney learned that the customs agents were preparing an affidavit to seek a court order requiring appellant to submit to a strip search and requested the name of the magistrate to whom the application was going to be made. The assistant United States Attorney in charge of the investigation refused to provide this information and the attorney did not obtain it until after the application had been granted. Appellant now contends that her due process rights of notice and an opportunity to be heard were violated by the government’s refusal to allow her attorney to participate in the search order “hearing.”
Viewing the government’s request for a court order as the equivalent of a search warrant, it becomes clear that appellant had no right to have counsel present during the application, and appellant offers no authority supporting such a right. One court has required the presence of counsel for the accused during a search warrant application where the “search” involved surgical exploration of the accused’s body.
See United States v. Crowder,
Since the application for the order was the functional equivalent of an application for a search warrant, traditionally an ex parte proceeding, appellant’s due process rights were not violated by the government’s refusal to permit her attorney to participate.
II. Magistrate’s Jurisdiction to Issue the Order
The appellant next argues that the magistrate had no legal authority to issue the order compelling her to submit to the strip search and x-ray, citing
United States v. Holland,
III. Reasonableness of the Body Cavity Search
Appellant argues that the body cavity search exceeded the Fourth Amendment reasonableness standard because her attorney was not allowed to be present during the examination. We cannot agree. The agents took steps to minimize the intrusiveness of the search. They sought a court order before proceeding with the. strip
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search, even though they were not legally required to do so; the examination was conducted by a licensed physician with only female agents present; an x-ray was taken to determine the existence of any objects in appellant’s abdomen, rather than the more intrusive manual examination; and appellant was allowed to remove the object herself after it was discovered. In short, the agents attempted to minimize the emotional and physical trauma of such a search.
See United States v. Cameron,
IV. Legality of the Detention
The appellant was detained for about seven hours before she was formally arrested. Appellant argues that this detention was actually an arrest, unsupported by probable cause, and therefore urges the fruit of the search be suppressed. As support, she cites three recent cases where detentions were held to have been arrests because of their length or significant restriction on the detainee’s liberty.
Dunaway v. New York,
In contrast to these cases, the detention complained of here occurred in the context of a border search. Traditionally, governmental intrusions on citizens’ mobility at the international borders are reviewed by the courts under different standards than other police investigatory techniques.
See, e. g., Shorter v. United States,
The detention of appellant while a warrant was sought was reasonable. Given the strong preference for search warrants in body cavity searches expressed by this court in
United States v. Cameron,
V. The Jewell Instruction
At trial, the court gave an instruction regarding a defendant’s deliberate ignorance of certain facts, known as a “Jewell” instruction.
See United States v. Jewell,
Appellant is correct in asserting that the
Jewell
instruction is appropriate only in those cases where the defendant claims a lack of knowledge and there are facts that point in the direction of deliberate ignorance.
See United States v. Murrieta-Bejarano,
AFFIRMED.
