Defendant Handy and her mother returned from Thailand. Customs officials at an international airport strip searched both women and found heroin in the mother’s underpants. Later body cavity searches of both women recovered 27 rubber recepta- *1420 cíes containing heroin. Both were convicted on stipulated facts and Handy appeals, challenging her strip search.
FACTS
In its written denial of the suppression motion, the court found:
(a) [Handy] was returning from Thailand, a known source country for narcotics.
(b) She was exceedingly nervous and trembling.
(c) In her luggage or purse were found a lubricant, dental floss and an anti-laxative. It was known that these materials were commonly used by individuals transporting controlled substances in body cavities.
(d) When asked about the lubricant, dental floss and anti-laxative, she gave a fanciful story that she did not know how those items got into her purse, that she had dropped her purse, and when she picked it up, those items were in it.
(e) Her posture and gait were not normal. She shuffled as she walked and was not able to move freely.
(f) Her nose was running, she was sniffling and she had difficulty finding her passport in her purse. She had trouble finishing her sentences and in making sense out of what she was saying. All of these indicated that she may have been at the time under the influence of some kind of narcotic.
(g) When a patdown search was conducted of her, a washcloth was observed in her panties. She stated that her period had started. Her use of a washcloth was suspicious, however, because tampons had been found in her purse.
District Court Order of December 17, 1984 at 2.
Handy was sentenced to two concurrent 18-month terms in prison, a five-year period of probation and a special parole term. After sentencing, the district judge denied Handy’s motion for bail pending appeal. Handy renewed her motion before this court. A motions panel reversed and ordered release on bail.
United States v. Handy,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The standard for reviewing the district court’s determination that the search at issue was a valid border search is de novo.
See United States v. Cardona,
ANALYSIS
Handy argues the government failed to show it had the necessary indicia that Handy was carrying contraband when its agents strip searched her. She asks that the evidence from the strip search, and from the body cavity search that followed, be suppressed. Although in her brief Handy appears to take issue with the court’s factual findings, the record supports them.
For a strip search at a border checkpoint, customs officials must have a “real suspicion.”
United States v. Aman,
When evaluating a border search, we must view as a whole all factors that would be considered by an experienced and prudent customs inspector.
Rodriguez,
We reviewed several body cavity search cases in
United States v. Mendez-Jiminez,
CONCLUSION
The objective, articulable facts upon which the customs officials relied here are such that they would have led an experienced and prudent customs official to suspect Handy was concealing contraband on or in her body. The district court did not err in finding that the strip search was reasonable.
Nor did the district court err in denying release on bail pending appeal. No substantial question of law or fact has been raised by the appellant.
AFFIRMED. The mandate will issue now. No petition for rehearing will be entertained.
