The government appeals a district court order granting defendants’ motions to suppress evidence seized following a traffic stop, challenging the district court’s findings that: (a) defendant Bennett, the back seat passenger in defendant McKneely’s rented station wagon, had standing to contest the seizure of the evidence; (b) defendants’ detention was unlawful; .(c) defendants did not consent to the search of their vehicle; and (d) the “good faith exception” to the warrant requirement did not apply to the facts of this case.
United States v. McKneely,
On the morning of June 15, 1992, Sevier County Sheriffs Deputy Phil Barney, a veteran officer with 26 years’ experience patrolling Utah highways and extensive experience apprehending suspected drug traffickers, was heading westbound on Interstate 70. Shortly after 9:00 a.m., he clocked an eastbound vehicle going 71 miles per hour in a 65 mile zone. He changed direction, followed the vehicle for a short distance, and turned on his emergency equipment, thereby automatically activating a video camera which videotaped the entire stop from that point onward. Deputy Barney also activated a body microphone which recorded all conversations within a certain distance.
As he approached the vehicle, Deputy Barney observed defendant Ellis in the driver’s seat, defendant McKneely in the front passenger’s seat, and defendant Bennett in the back seat. At first, Deputy Barney did not *1449 inform defendants why he had stopped them but instead asked to see Mr. Ellis’ driver’s license. Although Mr. Ellis had no driver’s license, Deputy Barney discovered the vehicle was rented in Mr. McKneely’s name and. that Mr. McKneely, a licensed driver, had given Mr. Ellis permission to drive.
At that time, Deputy Barney smelled a “chemical” odor which he could not identify emanating from defendants’vehicle. There was nothing suspicious, however, about either Mr. McKneely’s driver’s license or the rental agreement.
Deputy Barney returned to his car and attempted to run a computer check on the vehicle and its occupants but was unable to do so because the computer system was “down.” He gave Mr. Ellis a citation for driving without a license and a verbal warning for speeding. He also returned Mr. MeKneely’s driver’s license and rental contract. He then asked if there were any drugs or guns in the vehicle. After receiving a negative response, he asked if he could search the vehicle.
The parties dispute whether consent was given. Though no understandable response to Deputy Barney’s request was captured on tape, 1 at the suppression hearing he testified that defendant McKneely replied “yes” in a low or quiet voice. However, his contemporaneous police report indicated that Mr. - Ellis, not Mr. McKneely, consented to the search.
Defendants exited and stepped to the rear of the vehicle. Defendant Ellis raised his hands to approximately chest level while exiting but immediately lowered them. Deputy Barney then proceeded to search the vehicle. When he discovered the. glove compartment was locked and could not open it with the ignition key, he asked defendants if they had the key. Defendants replied they did not.
Deputy ■ Barney informed defendants that he would obtain a search-warrant to search the locked glove compartment. Because' he could not reach the Sevier County Attorney on his mobile phone, Deputy Barney radioed the county dispatcher, who relayed the deputy’s information to the county attorney. As support for the issuance of the warrant, Barney gave two facts: (a) the strong, unidentifiable chemical smell coming from the vehicle; and (b) the missing key to the glove compartment. The actual warrant affidavit, however, included three additional grounds: (a) defendants’ vehicle had been stopped for a traffic violation; (b) one of the defendants had a criminal record relating to controlled substance offenses; and (c) Barney’s belief, based on his extensive drug investigation experience, that defendants were transporting drugs. 2
After calling in the search warrant, Deputy Barney began searching defendants’ luggage, which he had taken from the rear of the station wagon. When one of the defendants objected and told the officer to stop, he returned to his car and amended the warrant application to include defendants’ luggage.
The county attorney arrived with a search warrant about an hour and a half later. In the meantime, defendants sat on the tailgate of the rented station wagon. After the warrant had been delivered, Deputy Barney and other officers, who had joined him after the stop, opened the glove compartment and found approximately one pound of crack cocaine and a loaded pistol. Defendants were handcuffed, read their Miranda rights, and booked at the county jail.
The next day, defendants were transported to Salt Lake City and charged with possession with intent to distribute a mixture or substance containing crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§-841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(A) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Defendants McKneely and Ellis also were charged with carrying a firearm during a drug trafficking offense in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c) and 18 U.S.C. *1450 § 2. Defendants filed motions to suppress the evidence seized.
After holding evidentiary hearings and considering the parties’ memoranda, the district court ultimately granted defendants’ motions to suppress because of its findings that:
First, the stop of Defendants’ car was not pretextual. Nonetheless, Barney did not have a reasonable suspicion to detain Defendants after the initial stop, nor did Defendants consent to the initial search. When Defendants objected to the search, Barney did not have probable cause to obtain a warrant. Consequently, the warrant was improper. Further, the illegally seized evidence may not be introduced because the magistrate abandoned his judicial function by issuing a warrant that did not have a substantial basis for a finding of probable cause.
McKneely,
I.
In its written suppression order, the district court first considered whether defendant Bennett had standing, as the vehicle’s back seat passenger, to challenge the search. Citing Supreme Court precedent, the court determined because Mr. Bennett had neither a reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of the glove compartment as a passenger, nor “automatic standing” merely because he had been charged with a possessory offense, he lacked standing to challenge the search. However, relying on
United States v. Arango,
It is undisputed that Mr. Bennett does not have standing to challenge the search of the vehicle merely as a passenger or because he was charged with a possessory crime.
See United States v. Erwin,
However, “standing to challenge a stop presents issues separate and distinct from standing to challenge a search.”
Erwin,
II.
In addressing defendants’ contention that they were illegally detained, the district court first resolved “[t]he initial traffic stop was an investigatory detention that was supported by articulable facts that gave rise to a reasonable suspicion, namely that the vehicle was speeding.”
McKneely,
*1451 The court concluded Deputy Barney did not have reasonable suspicion to detain defendants beyond the initial traffic stop because he “was not aware of any inconsistency” in McKneely’s documents, “was not apprised that any of the Defendants had a, criminal record,” and could not identify the chemical odor emanating from defendants’ vehicle. Id. The court found the deputy’s inability to identify the chemical odor partic-' ularly troubling given his involvement in over 200 drug stops.
Curiously, the court also determined that defendants were “free to leave” after Deputy . Barney returned Mr. MeKneely’s papers and cited Mr. Ellis. Id. at 1544 (citation omitted). The court reasoned, “Barney’s request to search the vehicle was not made in a threatening or overbearing manner, he did not touch Defendants or display a weapon, and other officers were not present.” Id. (citation omitted). Our review of this matter, therefore, is somewhat complicated by the district court’s apparently inconsistent legal conclusions.
“[T]he unlawful detention inquiry is fact-intensive, and we review the district court’s fact findings for clear error.”
United States v. Dewitt,
We conclude the district court misapplied the law of this Circuit, thereby overlooking the clear line historically drawn between police-citizen encounters which occur before and after an officer returns a person’s driver’s license, ear registration, or other documentation. We have consistently held an officer who retains a .driver’s paperwork while asking the person questions unrelated to .the initial purpose of a traffic stop must have reasonable suspicion to do so because such a detention constitutes a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
3
Yet, it is equally true that “the Fourth Amendment’s ban on unreasonable seizures does not prohibit a police officer from asking a motorist questions if the encounter is a consensual one.”
United States v. Walker,
As in
Turner,
III.
The district court concluded defendants did not consent to the search of their vehicle. Citing this Circuit’s test for assessing whether consent is voluntary, the court first determined defendants’ “consent was neither specific nor unequivocal” because “the videotape and tape recording reeordéd no audible consent from Defendants” when Deputy Barney asked to search their vehicle. Id. The court further found because Barney was uncertain which defendant affirmatively answered his request, the government failed to carry its burden of proof. 4 Thus, the court resolved “[w]hether Defendants responded or not, ... their showing of consent [did] not meet the level necessary to establish voluntary and intelligent consent.” Id.
Additionally, the court found defendants’ consent had been coerced or made under duress. Although Deputy Barney’s actions were not threatening, the court nonetheless determined defendants “apparently felt threatened,” as “evidenced by Ellis’s response as he exited the vehicle: he raised his hands as if he thought he was under arrest.” Id. 5 According to the court, “[t]his action bespeaks a feeling of duress, not a voluntary consent.” Id. 6
Accordingly, because “the initial search of the vehicle and detention of Defendants [were] constitutionally flawed inasmuch as [they were] not based on reasonable suspicion or on consent,” the district court granted the motions to suppress of defendants Ellis and McKneely. Id. As we have noted already, the court also suppressed the evidence with respect to defendant Bennett under the “poisonous tree” doctrine, finding he too had been illegally detained. Id.
On appeal, the government contends consent was “valid, freely and voluntarily given” because none of the standard indicia of coercion accompanied Barney’s polite request to search defendants’ vehicle; that is, no weapons were drawn, no commands were issued, and no other officers were present. The government further asserts the confusion about whether Mr. Ellis or Mr. McKneely consented to the search is insignificant be-causé “[a]n authorization to search by one having common authority to use property is legal authorization for an officer’s search.” According to the government, moreover,' defendants’ subsequent request that Deputy Barney stop searching their luggage also indicates that “consent was given in the first place” but later revoked. Thus, given the lack of coercion, Deputy Barney’s “clear and unequivocal” search request, and the absence of any testimony to the contrary, the government contends the district court’s finding that consent was involuntary or nonexistent is clearly erroneous.
“[A] search may be conducted without probable cause and without a warr'ant if the search is conducted pursuant to voluntary consent.”
United States v. Guglielmo,
The burden of proving that consent was given freely and voluntarily is always on the government.
Id.
at 818;
Werking,
As a general rule, we have found consent voluntary where there is no evidence of coercion and the testimony establishes consent was freely given.
See, e.g., United States v. Espinosa,
Here, Deputy Barney’s testimony that defendants voluntarily consented to the search is uncontroverted by facts because defendants offered no testimony to the contrary. Moreover, one critical fact, overlooked by the district court, makes defendants’ consent quite apparent.
The videotape discloses that off camefa one of the defendants forcefully spoke up during Deputy Barney’s search and forbade him to go any further -without a warrant. That statement is clearly and unmistakably audible, and its implication cannot be denied. . Unless defendants initially gave their consent, they had no need to revoke it. But, more significantly, the words used, without more, belie any notion that consent was not given:
Hey look. We gave you all permission but now I don’t want you going though my stuff until you' get a search warrant. Can I get ... my stuff back, please? You’re going though all my stuff. I gave you permission that' you could go through it at first.... [but now] you’re doing an illegal search and seizure.
(emphasis added). That statement itself renders the district court’s contrary finding clearly erroneous. Therefore, we conclude defendants consented to the search that preceded the issuance of the warrant, and there is no “poisonous tree” in this case. Our conclusion leads us to consider the search which produced the evidence upon which the charges are based.
IV.
A.
The district court concluded Deputy Barney did not have probable cause to support the issuance of the warrant. We hold under the circumstances of this ease, however, that point is insignificant because the district,court’s finding on probable cause is trumped by the good faith exception stated in
United States v. Leon,
“The first notion to be remembered in considering the good faith principle is the presumption created in
Leon
that when an officer relies upon a warrant, the officer is acting in good faith.”
United States v. Cardall,
Because “the ‘good-faith inquiry .is confined to the objectively ascertainable question whether a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the search was illegal despite the magistrate’s authorization,’ ”
Cook,
However, when reviewing an officer’s reliance upon a warrant, we must determine whether the underlying documents are
“devoid
of factual support, not merely whether the facts they contain are legally sufficient.”
Cardall,
A corollary to the presumption in favor of good faith reliance upon warrants is that “police officers should be entitled to rely upon the probable-cause determination of a neutral magistrate when defending an attack on their good faith for either seeking or executing a warrant” particularly where, “with the benefit of hindsight and thoughtful reflection, reviewing judges still cannot agree
on
the sufficiency of the affidavit.”
Corral-Corral,
The good faith presumption is not without limits, however. An officer who knows or should have known that a search warrant was invalid may not rely upon the good faith exception to immunize his subsequent seizure of evidence.
Leon,
Thus, in
United States v. Baker,
We see nothing in the record indicating Deputy Barney would have had any reason to believe the affidavit was constitutionally invalid or even questionable. Given the strong presumption in favor of warrant searches, the “great deference” accorded to a magistrate’s probable cause determination, and the fact that the warrant affidavit contained sufficient facts at least to establish a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, we hold a reasonable officer in Deputy Barney’s shoes would have assumed the search warrant was valid. Thus, the district court erred in concluding otherwise.
B.
The district court reasoned the good faith exception did not apply in part because it believed the magistrate had abandoned his neutral and detached role. However, instead of enumerating any specific instances of impropriety, the court relied solely upon its surmise that “Barney and officials of Sevier County have worked together closely for many years and have been involved together in numerous drug arrests.”
McKneely,
There is, however, no evidence in the record to support the court’s belief or to otherwise establish an abandonment of neutrality.
Compare Lo-Ji Sales, Inc. v. New York,
Moreover, in
Cardall,
we rejected an argument that the magistrate abandoned his neutral and detached role, concluding the suggestion was “based upon the conclusion the warrant was insufficient — a view with which we have already dispensed.”
Other circuits have rejected similar attacks on a magistrate’s neutrality. For instance, in
United States v. Brown,
Also, in
United States v. Sager,
In the absence of any evidentiary facts to the contrary, the district court’s reasoning in this ease is unsubstantiated surmise. The conclusion reached by the court cannot be upheld because the affidavit supporting the warrant was not so lacking in indicia of probable cause that Deputy Barney’s reliance upon it was entirely unreasonable.
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings.
Notes
. The videotape of the entire transaction has been made a part of the record on appeal. There is a definite oral response to Deputy Barney’s request; however, the response is neither loud nor clear enough to understand what was said.
. A deputy at the sheriffs office signed the affidavit supporting the warrant. Though Barney did not authorize the deputy to sign for him, he testified this was usual county procedure. There is no dispute over the accuracy of the added facts.
.
See, e.g., United States v. Gonzalez,
. Although we may simply be disputing the court’s choice of words, as we previously noted, there is a definite and audible response to Deputy Barney’s request. The difficulty, however, is in understanding that response.
. The district court's finding that defendant Ellis nonetheless felt threatened because he raised his hands upon exiting the vehicle does not flow from the evidence. The tape shows the defendant's action was so equivocal and so fleeting that no reasonable inference can be drawn from it.
.The court also concluded the evidence of consent was neither clear nor convincing in light of the "evidence weighing against consent.”
United States v. McKneely,
.
See Illinois v. Gates,
.
United States v. Ventresca,
