C&I Specialized, Inc., an apparently legitimate business, was a front for a drug-running operation. Acting on a tip, agents entered C&I’s business premises in Harvey, Illinois, at 10 a.m. on a Thursday morning and asked Casey Tolar, C&I’s owner, for permission to examine the cargo of a truck that had recently arrived. Tolar signed a consent form. During the ensuing search the agents found 477 kilograms of cocaine and 2,350 kilograms of marijuana hidden inside a few of the large propane tanks in the truck’s cargo. Tolar has been sentenced to life imprisonment for this large-scale drug operation.
Given the outcome of the search, Tolar’s best chance lay in asking the district court to suppress the evidence. He offered two principal theories: first, that his consent was .the fruit of an unlawful entry by the agents; second, that the consent was in any event involuntary. After a hearing, the district court rejected both theories and denied the motion to suppress. Tolar renews both contentions on appeal, leading with the argument that, because C&I’s business premises were enclosed by a chain-link fence (topped by barbed wire) and a sign warned illegal parkers that their cars would be towed, the agents were not entitled to enter even though another sign stated that the business was open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and the gate to the lot was open.
Tolar’s argument starts with the major premise that the fourth amendment forbids all trespasses, adds the minor premise that the entry was a trespass despite the open gate and the open-for-business sign (that sign was the doing of a prior owner, Tolar insists, and did not reflect his practices), and concludes that the unauthorized entry therefore was unlawful. Then Tolar treats the consent as the “fruit of the poisonous tree” and argues that the evidence seized on its authority must be suppressed. The “fruits” argument is a doubtful one. The statements of a person held in unlawful custody may be tainted, see
Brown v. Illinois,
Only a rule equating trespass with a violation of the Constitution could support Tolar’s position. Yet a trespass is neither necessary nor sufficient for constitutional purposes. Wiretaps do not entail trespasses, but they may invade privacy and are treated as searches; other investigative steps, which do involve trespass, pose no risk of invading privacy and hence are not deemed searches or seizures. See
Rakas v. Illinois,
As for the search: The district court found that Tolar’s consent and subsequent inculpatory statements were voluntary. Both the agents and Tolar’s companion testified that the agents entered peaceably and behaved amicably. Tolar represented on the consent form that no threats had been made. He testified otherwise, but the district judge did not commit a clear error in believing the agents, Tolar’s companion, and the statements To-lar himself made when giving consent. See
Anderson v. Bessemer City,
Only one decision affecting the sentence has been contested. The district court concluded that Tolar’s ability to
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drive an 18-wheel rig was a special skill “that significantly facilitated the commission or concealment of the offense” and earned a two-level increase under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3. Tolar recognizes that
United States v. Lewis,
AFFIRMED.
