Lead Opinion
During an investigation, federal law enforcement officials learned that Carlton Williams was involved in the distribution of heroin. The investigation involved surveillance of Williams's activity, which eventually led to a stop of his car. During the traffic stop, law enforcement officials conducted a search of Williams's car and its *327contents. As they expected, the officials discovered drugs during the search. Williams subsequently pleaded guilty to possession of heroin with intent to distribute in violation of federal drug laws. Williams now appeals the denial of his suppression motion and application of the United States Sentencing Guidelines' career offender enhancement. Finding no merit in either claim, we will affirm Williams's conviction and sentence.
I.
A. Factual Background
The underlying facts are uncontested. During an investigation that began as early as November 2012, a Drug Enforcement Administration task force officer learned that Williams bought heroin in Detroit, Michigan, which he packaged and sold in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The officer subsequently placed a GPS tracker on Williams's car and monitored his movements for approximately one month. On January 11, 2013, data from the GPS tracker indicated that Williams's car was driven to Detroit. Suspecting that Williams drove his car to Detroit to retrieve heroin, the task force officer organized a plan to have Williams's car stopped upon its return to Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania State Police trooper Michael Volk effectuated the traffic stop.
Later that same evening, Trooper Volk observed Williams's car speeding and stopped it. The trooper issued a citation for the traffic violation and told Williams that he was free to go. Before Williams left, however, Trooper Volk asked Williams for consent to search his car. Williams agreed and signed a consent to search form labeled "Waiver of Rights and Consent to Search." The parties do not dispute that Williams knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily consented to the search of his car, its contents, and his person.
Trooper Volk, with the help of other troopers, commenced a search of Williams's car that lasted for approximately seventy-one minutes. The troopers searched every part of the car, including its passenger compartment, trunk, and undercarriage. Unable to locate any narcotics, Trooper Volk requested the assistance of a narcotics-detection dog. Shortly thereafter, Trooper Volk updated another trooper on the progress of the search and indicated that "[the search] was going to take awhile [because] he hadn't found [the heroin], but the K-9 was on its way coming from a distance."
Williams eventually became less patient and told Trooper Volk "you searched my car three times, now you hold me up and I have to go."
The troopers continued their search despite Williams's irritation. As the search continued, Williams requested five items from his car, including his two cellular phones. One of the troopers retrieved Williams's cellular phones and attempted to search them before handing them over *328to Williams. The trooper was able to read the text messages contained on only one of the devices because the other device was password-protected. The trooper who read Williams's text messages told Trooper Volk that the messages suggested that Williams had "something."
The search of the car continued. After fifty-one minutes, the troopers had not discovered any drugs. They began to disassemble Williams's sound system speakers. Williams objected that the troopers were not permitted to search his speakers without a warrant. Trooper Volk told Williams to "relax," to which Williams replied, "I've been out here half an hour, man."
B. Procedural History
Williams was charged with possession of heroin with intent to distribute, in violation of
Prior to Williams's sentencing, the United States Probation Office prepared a Presentence Investigation Report (PSR), which the District Court adopted without change. The sentencing range calculation included U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1 's career offender enhancement because the District Court concluded that Williams had two prior convictions for controlled substance offenses: a 2007 conviction for possession with intent to distribute heroin and a 1998 conviction under
Williams appeals both the denial of his suppression motion and the District Court's application of the Guidelines' career offender designation. The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to
II.
"We review the District Court's denial of a motion to suppress for clear *329error as to the underlying factual findings, and we exercise plenary review of its application of the law to those facts."
A. The District Court Properly Denied Williams's Motion to Suppress
With respect to his suppression motion, Williams claims that the District Court erred in denying his suppression motion because he properly withdrew his consent to the search or was improperly prevented from doing so.
It is well settled that the Fourth Amendment protects suspects from unreasonable searches.
*330Although the Supreme Court has not itself expressly held that the subject of a consensual search may terminate the search by withdrawing his consent, considerable support for such a proposition is easily found in its Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. The Court recognized in Walter v. United States ,
Moreover, recognition of a party's right to take away the consent that he or she has conferred advances society's interest in promoting consensual searches. The Supreme Court has acknowledged that consensual searches are important because they promote the effective enforcement of criminal laws.
Turning to the merits of this case, we must decide whether Williams actually withdrew his consent. As the parties note, *331"the ultimate touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is 'reasonableness.' "
With these principles in mind, we hold that the circumstances here do not demonstrate that Williams withdrew his consent to the troopers' search of his car. Williams knew how to express the absence of consent to search. As the record demonstrates, Williams told the troopers that they did not have consent to search his speakers or his cellular phones. The search of those areas then stopped.
Williams also argues that he conveyed withdrawal of his consent to search the car when he complained that he had been standing "out [there] half an hour" and after he told officer Volk "you searched my car three times [and] y'all got me on the side of this road in the middle of the winter holding me up and I got to go."
Other courts have reached the same conclusion when presented with similar facts. For example, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in United States v. Gray held that a suspect had not withdrawn consent simply by objecting that the search was "ridiculous" and that he was "ready to go."
*332amount to a withdrawal of consent.
Williams alternatively contends that, even if he did not withdraw his consent to the search, the evidence should be suppressed because the "coercive" nature of the search prevented him from revoking consent.
The Fourth Amendment requires that consent not be coerced.
Our assessment of the totality of the circumstances precludes us from concluding that the District Court committed clear error. As the District Court noted, Williams's interaction with the troopers was not hostile. The troopers neither made threats nor showed force. No restraints were employed at the time of the search. The District Court's finding that Williams exhibited his ability to intelligently delimit the scope of the search is supported by the record. Accordingly, the District Court did not err in finding that, throughout the entire encounter, Williams's grant of consent was not the product of coercion.
B. The District Court Properly Applied the Guidelines' Career Offender Enhancement
Williams next appeals his career offender designation, arguing that his 1998 RICO conviction-predicated on his distribution of heroin and crack cocaine-was not a requisite "controlled substance offense" under the Sentencing Guidelines. We disagree.
Under the Sentencing Guidelines, a defendant must be sentenced as a "career offender" if: (1) he was at least eighteen years old when he committed the instant offense of conviction; (2) the instant offense is a felony crime of violence or controlled substance offense; and (3) he has at least two prior felony convictions for a crime of violence or controlled substance offense.
*333In this case, there is no dispute that the instant offense-possession with intent to distribute heroin in violation of §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(C) -is a controlled substance offense. Nor is there any doubt that Williams was at least eighteen at the time. The parties agree that Williams's 2007 conviction for possession with intent to distribute heroin supplies one of the two required prior felony convictions. The 1998 RICO conviction, we now hold, supplies the second.
Ordinarily, to determine whether a prior conviction qualifies as a crime of violence or controlled substance offense, we apply a categorical approach.
There is an exception, however. When a crime is defined with alternative elements, we may review a limited set of documents-including the indictment and plea colloquy, among others-but only to determine which version of the statute formed the basis of the prior conviction.
RICO, in particular Section 1962(c), is one such divisible statute. That statutory subsection, the basis for Williams's 1998 RICO conviction, proscribes "conduct[ing] ... [an] enterprise's affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt." It proscribes two alternative forms of conduct: either racketeering activity or the collection of unlawful debt. That fork in the statute has even more branches. "Racketeering activity," a statutory phrase without independent meaning, has "constituent parts" or alternative "elements" that need to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt to sustain a conviction.
Fortunately, because Section 1962(c) is divisible, we may consult select portions of the record under the modified categorical approach to make that determination.
*334The superseding indictment and Williams's 1998 plea colloquy are illuminating. They reveal that Williams pleaded guilty to a RICO violation under Section 1962(c) and five underlying RICO predicate acts.
The final step in this analysis is to assess whether the offense of conviction-as decoded by this selective review of the record-sweeps any more broadly than the relevant generic offense,
Because both his 2007 heroin distribution conviction and his 1998 RICO conviction were prior felony convictions for controlled substance offenses, the District Court correctly applied the career offender enhancement to Williams.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the judgment of the District Court.
HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
I agree with my colleagues that the District Court did not err when it denied Williams's motion to suppress evidence. I also agree that Williams is-as the District Court found-a career offender under § 4B1.1 of the United States Sentencing Guidelines (2015) (USSG). As to that second issue, I concur in the judgment only because I cannot subscribe to the Majority's modified categorical approach, which I *335believe misapplies the Supreme Court's decisions in Taylor v. United States ,
At the outset, it's important to note that the Supreme Court has not yet applied Taylor (or Mathis ) in a case involving a RICO predicate offense. And although some of our sister courts have adjudicated cases involving the interplay between RICO and the § 4B1.1 career offender guideline, they have not settled on a consistent mode of analysis. For example, the Ninth Circuit placed "the focus of the inquiry ... on the conduct for which [the defendant] was convicted" without mentioning the categorical approach or citing Taylor . United States v. Scott ,
Here, my colleagues have chosen to follow the path marked by the Supreme Court in Taylor and Mathis . And if the Taylor / Mathis framework applies to this case, the Majority is quite right that the relevant statute (
But the modified categorical approach yields a result contrary to the one the Majority reaches. Section 1961(1)(D), which specifies the type of racketeering activity Williams was engaged in, is not "categorically a subset of the Guidelines' definition of a 'controlled substance offense.' " Maj. Op. 334. Under Guidelines § 4B1.2(b), a "controlled substance offense" encompasses "the manufacture, import, export, distribution, or dispensing of a controlled substance (or a counterfeit substance) or the possession of a controlled substance (or a counterfeit substance) with intent to manufacture, import, export, distribute, or dispense." That definition differs from Williams's RICO conviction, which involved "the felonious manufacture, importation, receiving, concealment, buying, selling, or otherwise dealing in a controlled substance or listed chemical (as defined in section 102 of the Controlled Substances Act), punishable under any law of the United States."
Would the Supreme Court really conclude that Williams's RICO conviction did *336not constitute a "controlled substance offense"? I think not. The predicate acts underlying Williams's conviction included the distribution of and possession with intent to distribute: (1) in excess of a kilogram of heroin; (2) in excess of 50 grams of cocaine base; (3) in excess of 5 grams of cocaine base; (4) less than 5 grams of cocaine base; and (5) less than 100 grams of heroin. The enumeration of these predicate acts plainly establishes that Williams's RICO conviction is for a controlled substance offense.
To hold that it is not defies common sense not only in this case, but in any RICO case predicated on federal drug crimes. This is so because in every such case the "element" that Taylor and Mathis require us to compare to USSG § 4B1.2(b) will be the same:
I cannot accept that Congress, the United States Sentencing Commission, or the Supreme Court would endorse such an absurd result. Accordingly, I would hold that the approach the Court has articulated in cases like Taylor , Descamps , and Mathis does not apply here. The categorical approach was developed to ensure that federal defendants who have committed essentially the same crimes in the past don't receive disparate sentences merely because they committed those prior offenses in different states. See Taylor ,
Were the Supreme Court confronted with the question before us, I think it would not attempt to pound the square peg of RICO into the round hole of the categorical/modified categorical approach. It would be especially surprising for the Court to do so not only because the predicate offense at issue here is markedly different from the state burglary crimes at issue in Taylor and Mathis , but also because several Justices have expressed dissatisfaction with the categorical approach generally.
* * *
For the reasons stated, I join the Court's opinion regarding the denial of Williams's motion to suppress, and I concur in the Court's judgment that Williams is a career offender.
United States v. Williams ,
Id. at *6.
App. 222.
Williams ,
Supp. App. 19-25.
United States v. Johnson ,
United States v. Bansal ,
United States v. Price ,
Price ,
U.S. Const. Amend. IV.
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte ,
Id . at 219,
Florida v. Jimeno ,
Id . at 251,
See Jimeno ,
See United States v. Dyer ,
Schneckloth ,
Id . at 227,
Dyer ,
Brigham City v. Stuart ,
See e.g., United States v. Martel-Martines ,
See, e.g., United States v. $304,980.00 in U.S. Currency ,
Williams ,
Williams ,
U.S. v. Sanders ,
Schneckloth ,
United States v. Antoon ,
Price ,
Antoon,
Id . (quoting Krasnov v. Dinan ,
U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1(a).
Taylor v. United States ,
See, e.g. , United States v. Chapman ,
United States v. Robinson ,
Descamps v. United States ,
Mathis v. United States , --- U.S. ----,
App. 324.
Supp. App. 19-25.
Mathis ,
U.S.S.G. § 4B1.2(b).
Concurrence Opinion
Although I agree with the reasoning and the conclusions of the majority opinion, *337which I in fact wrote, I write separately because of my concern that the categorical approach, along with its offspring, the modified categorical approach, is pushing us into a catechism of inquiry that renders these approaches ludicrous. The categorical approach was developed to avoid the "practical difficulties and potential unfairness" inherent in "determining the precise facts underlying a defendant's conviction when those facts are not plain from the elements of the offense itself."
Given the unique structure of RICO, we are able to determine easily what predicate offenses led to the RICO conviction. There is no possibility of lack of precision. RICO's cross-referential and multi-layered structure makes it unlike other criminal statutes. Williams pleaded guilty to a RICO violation under
In this situation, I see no need to determine whether § 1962(c) is a divisible statute; I see no need to discuss the alternative forms of conduct covered by it; I see no need to decode the offense of conviction or to ask whether it sweeps more broadly than the relevant generic offense.
Instead, I should be able to look at the RICO conviction and the integrated predicate acts. The predicate acts here are drug offenses, violations of
I write separately to explain this approach with the hope a future panel may see that there is no need, in the case of a RICO conviction, to engage in the catechism of the modified categorical approach.
A review of the video makes clear that the microphone was on Trooper Volk's person. It clearly picked up everything Trooper Volk said, and less clearly picked up others' speech when they were speaking with him. It faintly and sporadically picked up other sounds, including comments by Williams and the trooper or troopers standing near him. When Trooper Volk got into his cruiser and closed the door, the road noise and all other sounds died away.
United States v. Ferriero ,
United States v. Brown ,
Concurrence Opinion
I join the majority opinion except for Part II.A. There, the majority rules that consent to a search may be revoked, but that Carlton Williams did not do so. I would hold that he did. I am concerned *338that the majority's ruling erects obstacles that will make it difficult, in the future, for individuals to withdraw consent to police searches. I nevertheless concur in the result because-taking consent out of the equation-there was probable cause to search Williams's car.
I.
I agree with the majority's ruling, joining other Circuits, that consent to search may be revoked. A person may "delimit as he chooses the scope of the search to which he consents," and the scope of the consent is measured by asking, "[W]hat would the typical reasonable person have understood by the exchange between the officer and the suspect?" Florida v. Jimeno ,
I also agree with the majority's recounting of the facts, which is largely as follows. Trooper Michael Volk pulled Williams over on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, gave him a warning, told him he was free to go, and then asked if he would consent to a search of his car. Williams signed the proffered consent form. Then, for an hour and ten minutes on a dark winter night, he stood on the side of the highway with a second state trooper, Trooper Vresh, while Trooper Volk searched his car. A third trooper, Trooper Brautigam, also arrived shortly after the stop began.
Williams testified at the suppression hearing that he eventually said, "[Y]ou searched my car three times, now you hold me up and I have to go." United States v. Williams , No. 2:14-cr-30,
Later in the search, Williams asked for his cell phones, which were in his car. Trooper Brautigam got them and began to read messages on one of the phones. Williams said that the officers could not search his phone without a warrant. When the troopers began to disassemble the stereo speakers in his trunk, Williams protested, "[Y]ou need a warrant to go through my speakers."
I agree with the majority that when Williams said he had been "out [there] half an hour," he could have been expressing impatience rather than withdrawing consent. But I view differently his earlier statement: "[Y]ou searched my car three times [and] y'all got me on the side of this road in the middle of the winter holding me up and I got to go ." Maj. Op. II.A. (emphasis added). I believe that a typical reasonable person would interpret this statement as withdrawing consent to any further search. See *339Jimeno ,
My position arguably conflicts with the Eighth Circuit, which ruled that a defendant's "indicat[ion] that he needed to be on his way" did not withdrawal consent to a search. United States v. Ross ,
The majority supports its holding by saying that Williams knew how to withdraw consent because he "told the troopers that they did not have consent to search his speakers or his cellular phones." Maj. Op. II.A. But Williams did not say that, and the inaccuracy of the majority's paraphrase is consequential. Williams actually said that the troopers needed a warrant to search his speakers and cell phone. He was wrong, so his statements show only that he misunderstood Fourth Amendment law. See California v. Acevedo ,
The majority further supports its conclusion by noting that there was no evidence-aside from Williams's own testimony-that Trooper Volk heard his comment, "[Y]ou searched my car three times, now you hold me up and I have to go." I do not believe that Trooper Volk's ability to hear this comment is relevant. As the majority notes, he was assisted by two other troopers. The District Court found, more specifically, that Troopers Vresh and Brautigam arrived partway into the traffic stop, and that "Trooper Volk ... directed [Williams] to wait with Trooper Vresh while Volk searched the vehicle." Id. at *5. The record fully supports this finding, to which I defer. The dash camera video shows Williams walking off camera with Vresh to wait as directed, and then shows Brautigam walking on and off camera, clearly going back and forth between Williams's car and where Williams was standing with Vresh. Because the troopers were working as a team, Williams should have been able to withdraw consent by speaking to any of them. The District Court made no findings with regard to whether Troopers Vresh or Brautigam could hear Williams's comment, but the record shows that they, not Trooper Volk, were the ones in a position to hear Williams.
II.
Despite the fact that I believe Williams withdrew his consent to the search, I would affirm the District Court's denial of *340the suppression motion because there was probable cause to search Williams's car.
The facts leading up to the Turnpike stop were these. A confidential informant conducted two controlled buys of heroin from Williams in November and December 2012. Based on the way the drug was packaged, Pittsburgh Police task force Detective Eric Harpster believed the heroin was from Detroit. The detective obtained a warrant to install a tracking device on Williams's car. On the day of the fateful traffic stop in January 2013, Detective Harpster tracked the car as it drove from Pittsburgh to Detroit, made a very quick turnaround, and drove back toward Pennsylvania. Detective Harpster contacted Trooper Volk. He asked Trooper Volk to conduct a traffic stop and try to find any heroin that might be in Williams's car.
"The automobile exception to the warrant requirement permits law enforcement to seize and search an automobile without a warrant if 'probable cause exists to believe it contains contraband.' " United States v. Burton ,
"The probable cause inquiry is 'commonsense,' 'practical,' and 'nontechnical;' it is based on the totality of the circumstances and is judged by the standard of 'reasonable and prudent men.' " United States v. Donahue ,
Contrary to Williams's argument, Detective Harpster was not required to recount the full probable cause analysis to Trooper Volk. "[T]he arresting officer need not possess an encyclopedic knowledge of the facts supporting probable cause, but can instead rely on an instruction to arrest delivered by other officers possessing probable cause." Burton ,
III.
For these reasons, I concur in the judgment affirming the denial of the suppression motion. However, I would not reach that result on the basis that Williams consented to the search (and failed to effectively withdraw his consent). Instead, I would hold that although he withdrew consent, there was probable cause to search his car. This analysis is more faithful to our Fourth Amendment jurisprudence, and in particular, the reasonableness that is its touchstone.
See, e.g. , Mathis ,
United States v. Robinson ,
