For his alleged role in transporting marijuana away from the Texas-Mexico border, Brian Dennis Barnard was convicted in a nonjury trial of conspiracy to possess and possession of marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 841(a)(1) (1970). He received on еach count a three-year sentence with a two-year special parole term, the sentences to run concurrently. Finding as we do that the search during which the contraband was discovered was constitutionally permissible and that suffiсient evidence in the record supports the conviction, we affirm.
While tracking illegal aliens on Texas Farm Road 649 near its intersection with Farm Road 2686 some 20 miles north of the *391 Rio Grande on the morning of January 19, 1976, Border Patrol Officer Webster Ozuna wаs passed by two automobiles proceeding north on 649 about a mile apart. Officer Ozuna had been in the area for about half an hour, and the two ears were the first he had seen. First to pass him was an MG sports car with two occupants and a citizen’s band (CB) radio antenna; the driver appeared to be talking into a microphone as the MG passed. Following at a distance of about one mile was a white Mercury which, like the MG, carried a CB antenna. Officer Ozuna noticеd that the license plates on the Mercury included the same three-letter prefix, FBU, as the MG’s license plates, indicating that both automobiles were registered in the same county and in one other than Starr County, through which they were driving. 1 Further, the driver and sole occupant of the Mercury appeared nervous, looking repeatedly at the officer, and the rear end of the car appeared to be riding low. Suspecting that the trunk of the Mercury might contain illegal aliens, Officer Ozuna got in his jeep and began following it. He testified that the Mercury was driven erratically, at speeds ranging from 35 to 60 miles per hour, and that the MG, in view up ahead on the straight road, varied its speed to maintain a constant distance betweеn it and the Mercury. After following for 10 or 15 miles, Officer Ozuna stopped the Mercury and watched the MG accelerate out of sight.
Meeting the driver, Crabb, 2 at the rear bumper of the Mercury, Ozuna smelled the odor of marijuana and asked for a trunk key. Crabb replied that hе did not own the car and did not have a trunk key. Glancing inside the Mercury, Ozuna saw on the key ring a round-headed key and asked Crabb to use it to open the trunk. Crabb instead gave the keys to Ozuna, who then opened the trunk and found 84 pounds of marijuana in kilo bricks. Ozuna arrested Crabb and radioed ahead for other officers to stop the MG, giving a description and the license prefix. About 20 miles north and a half hour later, the MG was stopped; officers learned the identity of the driver, appellant Barnаrd, and passenger, Walters, 3 and then allowed them to proceed.
I. Legality of the Stop and Search.
After the initial stop of the Mercury, the odor of marijuana emanating from the trunk furnished probable cause for the search of the trunk.
United States
v.
Diaz,
Several of the
Brignoni-Ponce
faсtors were, indeed, present when Officer Ozuna stopped the Mercury. It appeared, for example, to be heavily loaded, as it would be if aliens were concealed in the trunk.
See United States v. Lara,
The subsequent stop of the MG, enabling the officers to ascertain the identities of Barnard and Walters, was likewise constitutionally valid. When Officer Ozuna discovered marijuana in the Mercury, he knew that a crime had been committed and had reasonable cause, given his observations and his knowledge of the “lead car-load car” technique, to believe that the оccupants of the MG were involved in its commission.
United States v. Vital-Padilla,
II. Sufficiency of the Evidence.
Since Barnard received concurrent sentences on the conspiracy and pоssession count, our inquiry into the sufficiency of
*393
the evidence ends when we find that one of the convictions is supported by evidence in the record.
Mishan
v.
United States,
We have already noted several of the officer’s observations which tended to connect the two vehicles in an apparent concerted effort to smuggle some form of contraband, human or otherwise, and thus to justify the stops of the vehicles; the court below in evaluating the proof was entitled to consider these as bearing on Barnard’s potential guilt. It also could consider the amount of marijuana seized — 84 pounds, which, although not an outsized load for the area, 7 is enough to justify the inference that more than one person must be involved in moving it toward its ultimate dispersal. But the weightiest evidence of Barnard’s involvement surfaced after the stop of the MG. Barnard was driving the MG, and his passenger, Walters, was the son of the owner of the Mercury. A subsequent search of the Mercury produced evidencе further tending to connect both Walters and Barnard with it. In the Mercury’s glove compartment was found Walters’ wallet, containing his driver’s license and some business cards in his name. A shaving kit carrying the inscription “C. E. Barnard” was in the front seat, and hanging in the back seat was a sweater with a laundry tag marked “E. Barnard.” Granting that appellant’s given names abbreviate to “B. D.” rather than “C. E.,” the court was nevertheless permitted to find some evidence tying Barnard to the load car from the presence therein of thе sweater and shaving kit because of the coincidence of the last names.
The record, then, contains ample evidence to support the trial court’s determination, first, that a conspiracy existed, and second, that Barnard wаs an active, knowing participant. First, the totality of the evidence certainly leaves the impression of “a concert of action, all parties working together understandingly, with a single design . ,”
United States v. Prout,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In fact, a title search revealed that both vehicles were registered in Aransas County, Texas, about 140 air miles from the Starr County location where Officer Ozuna first saw the two cars.
. Crabb was convicted on his guilty plea.
. Walters, like Crabb, pleaded guilty and received a probated sentence.
. A scout car containing no aliens or contraband may, for example, be used to locate temporary border checkpoints which аre open and operating and in some way — as by the use of CB radio — alert the load car to change course or turn back.
. “The fact that the first car to appear in the area in forty minutes was followed fairly closely by a seсond car could reasonably be expected to trigger the officers’ suspicion of the lead car-load car modus operandi.” Id.
On the other hand, it would be improper to infer that the lead car-load car scheme was being used when the purported scout car was actually following, rather than preceding, the load car.
United States v. Barragan-Martinez,
. Absent connecting factors such as the CB antennas or similar license plates, the proximity of the automobiles might seem ambiguous, since some distance — here a mile — must be maintained if the lead car is to be of any use in alerting the load car of checkpoints and patrols. It is said that two-way radios greatly facilitate the two-car technique by allowing lead and load cars to keep an adequate distance apart and yet remain in communication. See TEXAS MONTHLY, April 1977, at 86-87 (discussing CB radio usage in Starr County marijuana convoys).
.
See, e. g., United States
v.
Alvarez,
