MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO SUPPRESS
Before the Court in the above styled and numbered cause of action is Defendant Roberto Coronado’s Motion To Suppress Evidence (Clerk’s Document No. 32) and the United States’s response (Clerk’s Document No. 38). 1 On January 25, 2007, this Court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion, after which the parties submitted supplemental briefs with authorities for the Court’s consideration (Clerk’s Document Nos. 47 & 49). After considering the motion, the testimony and exhibits admitted at the January 25 hearing, including a police video recorded during the stop, the parties’ supplemental briefing, the arguments of counsel, and the applicable law, the Court finds that the United States has failed to show that the law-enforcement officer on the scene had a reasonable suspicion supported by articulable facts based on objective data to initiate a traffic stop based on a violation of Texas’s minimum-speed regulations, 2 and concludes that the motion to suppress should be granted. 3
On October 5, 2006, at 11:09 a.m., Round Rock Police Officer Martin Flores stopped Defendants Coronado and Robert Ray Sanchez as they were driving a van northbound on United States Interstate Highway 35 (“IH 35”) in or near Round Rock, Williamson County, Texas. As a result of the traffic stop and subsequent search of the van, police officers recovered 11.97 kilograms of cocaine. Coronado and Sanchez were each charged by indictment with one count of conspiring to possess, with the intent to distribute, five kilograms or more of a mixture and substance containing a detectable amount of cocaine.
See
21 U.S.C. §§ 841, 846. Coronado filed a mo
Persons have a right “to be secure in their person, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. Amend. IV. A traffic stop is a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
See Delaware v. Prouse,
In determining the reasonableness of a search or seizure, a two-part inquiry is made. First a determination that “the officer’s action was justified at its inception,” and, if so, whether any continued intrusion is “reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first place.”
Terry v. Ohio,
Flores testified about his experience as a police officer and the circumstances related to the traffic stop of Defendants. Flores has been a police officer for six years and currently serves as an interdiction officer, who works with a canine partner. Together, they are part of a narcotics task force assigned to the Round Rock Police Department’s Traffic Operations Task Force. Although Flores’s patrol car is unmarked, in that it lacks lettering and a row of lights on the roof, it is conspicuously a police vehicle. It has red and blue lights mounted on the front and back of
On October 5, 2006, at 11:09 a.m., the weather clear, Flores was patrolling on IH 35 near mile marker 257 or 256 when he noticed a dark blue Chevrolet van driving northbound in the left, inside, or fast lane. Flores, who was traveling in the lane immediately to the right of the left, inside lane, noticed the van because as it passed Flores, the passenger in the van, later identified as Coronado, turned, smiled, and waved at Flores. Flores testified that to him this behavior seemed unusual, so he increased his speed to catch up to the van. Traffic was significant, as is the norm for that section of IH 35. No signs designating construction zones or reduced-speed zones were present, and no emergency conditions existed. The posted speed limit was sixty-five miles per hour and there were no minimum-speed signs.
Flores had to increase his speed in the middle lane to catch up to the van, and when he got close enough to read the van’s license plate, he called dispatch to check it. Although there is no evidence of the speed of the van traveling in the left, inside lane, Flores testified that the van was traveling in the regular flow of traffic. At this point, only Coronado’s smile and wave had raised Flores’s attention. Dispatch reported back to Flores that the van was registered to a woman in Del Rio, Texas, on the border with Mexico. Flores, based on his experience, knows that Del Rio is a source city for illegal narcotics brought into the United States from Mexico. Flores caught up to the van and observed that it continued in the left, inside lane, but that it decelerated to a speed of fifty-three miles per hour, twelve miles under the posted sixty-five mile-per-hour limit. Flores testified that he believed that the van’s deceleration caused an impediment in the traffic flow in violation of Texas’s minimum-speed regulations, because Flores observed approximately fifteen to twenty vehicles back up behind the van in the left, inside lane. See Tex. Transp. Code Ann. § 545.363(a) (West 1999). 4 Flores determined he had probable cause to make an investigatory traffic stop of the van for violating Texas’s minimum-speed regulations. He quickly decided to make a traffic stop of the van and turned on his police lights, which activated the video camera in his patrol car.
As the video begins, Flores’s police lights are on, and both his vehicle and the van are in the center lane, with the van moving toward the right lane. Soon after, the van stops on the right-hand shoulder of the highway. The van executed the movement to the shoulder safely. Whatever occurred before Flores activated his police lights is not depicted on the video. Thus, the van’s deceleration and the back up of fifteen to twenty vehicles, is not depicted on the video. What is depicted at the beginning of the video, is five cars passing Flores in the left, inside lane.
Flores’s stop of the van is justified if, at its inception, Flores had a reasonable suspicion based on articulable objective data that the occupants are engaged in illegal activity, or, based on
Whren,
Flores had an objectively reasonable suspicion that a traffic violation occurred or was about to occur. At the suppression hearing, Flores testified about his activities as an interdiction officer and that he has been instrumental in the seizure of illegal and controlled substances along the portion of IH 35 that he patrols. However, lacking from the record is any evidence that he stopped the van because he had a reasonable suspicion that its occupants, Defendants Coronado and Sanchez, were engaged in illegal narcotics activity. After the van’s passenger smiled and waved at him, he ran a check on the vehicle because he thought the behavior unusual, not that such activity gave him a reasonable suspicion, based on his experience as an interdiction officer, that the van’s occupants might be engaged in criminal activity. At that point, based on the totality of the circumstances, Flores needed to have an objectively reasonable suspicion that Sanchez committed or was about to commit a traffic offense in order to stop the van absent a warrant. Again, the sole stated basis for Flores’s stop of the van was that he believed he could stop the van because he had observed a traffic violation, that is that the van was impeding the normal and reasonable movement of traffic in violation of Texas minimum-speed regulations. The Court must determine whether, objectively, Flores had a reasonable suspicion that some sort of illegal activity, in this instance a violation of Texas’s minimum-speed regulations, occurred or was about to occur, before stopping the van.
See Lopez-Moreno,
The Court notes a dearth of Fifth Circuit authority addressing Texas’s minimum-speed regulations as a basis for a warrantless traffic stop and neither side has directed the Court to any such authority. Both sides, however, direct the Court to Texas state-court appellate opinions and a federal district-court opinion that address Texas’s minimum-speed regulations.
See State v. Rivenburgh,
This Court finds that based on the evidence presented, the United States fails to show that Flores had an objectively reasonable suspicion that the van was in violation of Texas’s minimum-speed regulations to justify the stop of the van. The Texas Transportation Code requires that “[a]n operator may not drive so slowly as to impede the normal and reasonable movement of traffic.” Tex. Transp. Code Ann. § 545.363(a). A violation only occurs when the normal and reasonable movement of traffic is impeded. Absent from the record is evidence of how long Flores observed the back up of cars behind the van in the left, inside lane, and whether the van, which was briefly traveling twelve miles under the posted speed limit, was impeding the normal and reasonable movement of traffic.
See Ross,
For these reasons, the Court finds that the record fails to support a reasonable suspicion that the van was impeding the normal and reasonable movement of traffic. Having determined that objectively the traffic stop was not based on a reasonable suspicion, the investigatory stop is unsupported by a reasonable suspicion and the arrest of Defendants and evidence obtained as a result of that stop must be excluded.
See Mapp v. Ohio,
IT IS ORDERED that the Motion To Suppress Evidence (Clerk’s Document No. 32) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendants’ arrests, all evidence obtained as a result of the search of the vehicle made without a warrant, is suppressed and the United States shall not be permitted to use such at trial.
Notes
. Because this Court granted Coronado's co-defendant Robert Ray Sanchez's Motion To Adopt Motions Of Other Defendants (Clerk's Document No. 39), this memorandum opinion and order applies to both Defendants.
. See Tex. Transp. Code Ann. § 545.363(a) (West 1999) (titled "Minimum Speed Regulations”).
.All findings of fact contained herein that are more appropriately considered conclusions of law are to be so deemed. Likewise, any conclusion of law more appropriately considered a finding of fact shall be so deemed.
. An operator “may not drive so slowly as to impede the normal and reasonable movement of traffic, except when reduced speed is necessary for safe operation or in compliance with law.” Tex. Transp. Code Ann. § 545.363(a) (West 1999).
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United States v. Pineiro,
