Anthony Bruce Cannon appeals his conviction for drug trafficking and money laundering in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 856, and 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(l)(B)(i). He argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence. We affirm.
On March 30,1990, Judge Gary Ransom of the Sacramento County Superior Court issued a search warrant authorizing police to search Cannon, two residences, a certain white Nissan Sentra, and other property, for evidence relating to drug trafficking. Later that evening, a confidential informant told police that Cannon was in Oak Park with cocaine and that Cannon’s white Nissan Sen-tra was parked at a certain intersection near the park. This information was consistent with previous reports about Cannon’s drug *474 trafficking recounted in the search warrant affidavit. Police proceeded to the intersection and located the car.
In order to confirm that Cannon was in fact driving the car, the investigating officers asked a uniformed officer, Glenn Walters, to effect a traffic stop. Because the officers had learned that Cannon did not have a valid driver’s license, Walters stopped Cannon pursuant to Cal.Veh.Code § 14601.1, 40000.-11, under which driving with a suspended license is a misdemeanor. He did not rely on the search warrant, which was not authorized for nighttime service.
After Walters pulled him over, Cannon admitted that he did not have a driver’s license, but provided a California ID card. Walters asked Cannon to exit the car and performed a pat search, discovering a pager in Cannon’s pocket. He then asked Cannon to sit in his patrol car while he ran a computer check on the ID card. The computer check confirmed that Cannon’s license was suspended.
After receiving this information, Walters asked Cannon’s permission to search the car. Cannon replied “sure, go ahead” and did not protest when Walters searched under the hood, in the passenger compartment and inside the trunk. Walters found a mobile phone in the glove compartment and more than $16,000 in large bills in the trunk.- After finding the cash, Walters radioed the investigating officers waiting some thirty feet away. They arrived, found cocaine residue, and formally arrested Cannon.
Police then obtained an endorsement for nighttime service and executed the search warrant, finding additional incriminating evidence at each of the residences listed in the warrant. In addition, Michele Tillmon, who lived with Cannon at one of the residences, led them to a third apartment where they saw rock cocaine in plain view. After obtaining a second warrant, police seized more than ten kilograms of cocaine, cocaine base and materials consistent with the manufacture of cocaine from this apartment. Cannon was thereafter indicted for drug trafficking and various money laundering offenses.
Before trial, Cannon timely moved to suppress the evidence found in his car, residences and other locations, arguing that Walters’ stop was illegal, that Walters did not ask permission to search the car, that any consent Cannon gave did not include the trunk of the car, and that the warrant was not supported by probable cause. At a suppression hearing, Cannon testified that he had not given Officer Walters permission to search his car. Walters testified that Cannon had told him to “go ahead.” The court found that Cannon had freely and voluntarily given his consent and ultimately rejected all of Cannon’s Fourth Amendment claims.
I. VALIDITY OF THE TRAFFIC STOP
Cannon first contends that Officer Walters’s initial stop was illegal because Walters used the driving violation as a pretext to investigate Cannon’s drug trafficking.
United States v. Gutierrez-Mederos,
“A pretextual stop occurs when the police use a legal justification to make the stop in order to search a person or place, or to interrogate a person, for an unrelated serious crime for which they do not have the reasonable suspicion necessary to support a stop.”
United States v. Guzman,
However, recognizing this problem has proved easier than solving it. Devising appropriate and workable formulas for limiting police discretion has proved difficult, and circuit courts now conflict on the proper standard for evaluating “pretextual stop” claims.
Cummins v. United States,
— U.S. -, -,
Other circuits have adopted a more stringent “would have” test, asking not whether a reasonable officer
could
have made the stop, but whether a reasonable officer
would
have made the stop, absent his unrelated suspicions.
Guzman,
Cannon argues that, in Ninth Circuit, the validity of a so-called pretext stop depends on the state of mind of the stopping officer. He contends that his stop was illegal because Walters would not have made the stop had he not been concerned about Cannon’s drug trafficking.
Some of our language has implied that this subjective inquiry is required.
See, e.g., United States v. Smith,
Most commentators and circuit courts, both those adopting the “would have” and those adopting the “could have” standards, agree that the validity of a so-called pretext stop should depend on the objective facts and circumstances of the stop, rather than on the subjective intent of the officer.
Guzman,
The Supreme Court has also emphasized that, in general, “[w]hether a Fourth Amendment violation has occurred ‘turns on an objective assessment of the officer’s actions in light of the facts and circumstances confronting him at the time’ and not on the officer’s actual state of mind at the time the challenged action was taken.”
Maryland v. Macon,
We have recently said that an inventory search is valid, even if the searching officer had an investigatory motive, as long as the officer would have conducted the search in question anyway pursuant to police inventory practices.
United States v. Bowhay,
From any objective standpoint, Cannon’s stop was legal. Driving with a suspended license is a misdemeanor and grounds for arrest. Cal.Veh.Code § 14601.1, 40000.11. It is a serious offense for which any reasonable officer would stop a driver. Walters had probable cause to believe that the white Nissan’s driver did not have a license. His fellow officers had personally reviewed Cannon’s DMV records and told him that Cannon did not have a license.
United States v. Angulo-Lopez,
II. ARREST
Cannon also contends that his arrest and detention were illegal. This argument is patently frivolous.
Once Cannon was validly stopped, Walters properly asked Cannon to exit his car. Cannon was stopped late at night in a secluded area known for drug trafficking. He was a suspected cocaine dealer. Thus,
*477
Walters reasonably performed a pat-down search for his own protection.
Terry v. Ohio,
Once Walters discovered the money, and the other officers discovered the cocaine residue, this evidence, together with the evidence in the affidavit, established probable cause to arrest for a felony.
III. CONSENT TO SEAECH
Cannon also contends that Walters’s search of his car was illegal (A) because Cannon did not voluntarily consent to the search and (B) because Walters’ search of the trunk exceeded the scope of Cannon’s consent.
A. Voluntary Consent
We review the district court’s finding that Cannon voluntarily consented to the search for clear error.
United States v. George,
The district court rejected Cannon’s suppression hearing testimony that Walters did not ask for permission to search his car. Finding Walters’s testimony more credible, the court determined that Walters asked for permission to search the vehicle and that Cannon replied “sure, go ahead.” These findings are not clearly erroneous.
Huffhines,
B. Scope of Search
A trial court’s findings about the scope of a suspect’s consent are also reviewed for clear error.
Huffhines,
*478 IV. THE SEARCH OF THE RESIDENCES
Cannon also argues that the evidence found in his various residences is inadmissible (A) because it is fruit of his illegal detention and (B) because the warrant to search the residences was not supported by probable cause. Both of these contentions are meritless. Cannon’s initial detention was not illegal 6 and the search warrant was valid.
A warrant is valid if the magistrate or judge had a substantial basis for concluding that the affidavit established probable cause.
United States v. Bertrand,
Police officers confirmed some of these details. Business records confirmed that Cannon had in fact rented the pager in question. Police saw Cannon driving cars which fit the informants’ descriptions and saw him frequently engage in counter-surveillance driving techniques, including sudden turns, U-turns, driving above and below speed limits, driving around a block several times and parking in open areas for long periods. Cannon appeared to possess several residences and cars, but did not have a job.
In addition, a probation officer discovered that one of his probationers was carrying cocaine and an address book listing Cannon’s initials, “A.C.”, and his pager number. A second individual arrested in Oak Park for cocaine possession was carrying a piece of paper listing the notation “AC” and Cannon’s pager number. A probation search of a third individual, Cannon’s cousin, whom informants had identified as a person who sold cocaine for Cannon, yielded 52.5 grams of cocaine, a scale, over $26,000 in cash, evidence of manufacturing rock cocaine, and photographs of Cannon.
Cannon argues that the affidavit fails to establish probable cause because some of the informants did not give dates detailing when they had personally seen Cannon with cocaine and others had only personally observed Cannon with cocaine several months previously. This argument is nonsense. The information in the affidavit suggests that Cannon was involved in a long-term, regular, drug trafficking business. The informants’ statements supported this theory and were not so stale as to be inadequate.
See, e.g., United States v. Hernandez-Escarsega,
Cannon’s argument that the informants are not reliable has the indicia of something mindlessly taken from a Fourth Amendment check list. Each informant’s statement was corroborated by overlapping information provided by other informants and by independent police work.
Hernandez-Escarsega,
Cannon’s conviction is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The government argues that the pretextual stop cases do not even apply to Cannon’s case, as these cases are based on a concern that officers will use traffic laws to circumvent the Fourth Amendment when they do not have probable cause to stop an individual for a more serious offense. The government argues that the officers could have stopped Cannon even if he had a valid license, because the search warrant and the informant’s tip established probable cause and the automobile exception to the warrant requirement obviated the need for a warrant endorsed for night service.
California v. Acevedo,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Ferguson,
.
See also United States v. Mota,
."In fact, in all of these cases except
Mota,
we upheld the stop in question. Our decision today is not inconsistent with
Mota,
as we did not base our decision in
Mota
on the arresting officer's subjective state of mind. Rather, we found the arrest and search incident to arrest invalid because state law did not authorize a custodial arrest for operating a business without a permit.
.
See also United States v. Robinson,
. Even if the initial detention was illegal, most of the evidence discovered in the subsequent searches would be admissible under the independent source or inevitable discovery rules.
Murray v. United States,
