Dwayne C. Lowe appeals from a judgment of the district court 1 entered upon a jury verdict finding him guilty of possession with the intent to distribute cocaine and cocaine base. We affirm.
At approximately 2:00 a.m. on January 22, 1992, Jennings, Missouri police officer Daniel Taylor saw Lowe, who was driving a Ford Bronco, turn from Shannon Avenue onto Maya Lane, a one-way street, the wrong way without signaling. Taylor activated his patrol lights. Lowe pulled to the side of the road and parked in a no-parking lane. After a computer check revealed that Lowe’s license had been suspended, Taylor placed Lowe under arrest and issued tickets to him for failing to signal, driving the wrong way on a one-way street, and driving with a suspended license. Taylor then radioed his supervisor for permission to tow the Bronco. The supervisor granted permission. Before the vehicle was towed, Taylor and officer Rick Rapert searched the passenger compartment of the Bronco. Taylor found a gym bag under the passenger seat and, on looking inside, found cocaine and cocaine base. Ra-pert found a shoe box under the driver’s seat and, on removing the top, found approximately $39,185.00 in cash.
The officers then took Lowe to the police station and contacted the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Two DEA agents came to the station and advised Lowe of his Miranda rights. Lowe stated he understood his rights and gave a written statement. In the statement, Lowe explained that in exchange for $500.00 he had agreed to take the “goods” for a person named “Tim Dog” to an apartment near Maya Lane because Tim Dog’s “set was hot” and “techts” were watching him.
Before trial, Lowe moved to suppress the drugs and the statement, alleging that they were the products of an unlawful arrest and search. At the suppression hearing, officer Taylor testified that it was the policy of the Jennings Police Department to make a custodial arrest of a person ticketed for driving with a suspended license and to impound the vehicle and inventory it before towing. He explained that to conduct an inventory he
The magistrate judge recommended that Lowe’s suppression motion be denied, concluding that the arrest and search were lawful. The district court adopted the recommendation.
At trial, in addition to the drugs and money, the government introduced Lowe’s statement and presented expert testimony concerning illegal drug trade and the meaning of the terms in the statement. DEA agents explained that “goods” meant drugs, that “my set is hot” meant that the neighborhood was being watched by the police, and that “techts” meant detectives. Lowe testified that although he had agreed to take the gym bag and shoe box a couple of miles in exchange for $500.00, he did not know what they contained and “didn’t think about what was in” them. Over Lowe’s objection, the district court instructed the jury that it could find that Lowe knew that drugs and money were in the gym bag and shoe box if he “deliberately closed his eyes to what should have been obvious to him.”
On appeal, Lowe first challenges the district court’s denial of his suppression motion. He argues that the court erred in failing to grant the motion because his arrest was illegal. He reasons that because Maya Lane was a private street, under state law Taylor had no authority to stop him for turning the wrong way onto the street. We need not decide whether Taylor had authority under Missouri law to stop Lowe for turning the wrong way onto Maya Lane. Lowe does not dispute that Shannon Avenue is a public street
2
or that he violated the law when he failed to signal the turn onto Maya Lane. This court has held that “[w]hen an officer observes a traffic offense — however minor — he has probable cause to stop the driver of the vehicle.”
United States v. Cummins,
Lowe argues that the fact he failed to signal is irrelevant because Taylor testified that the reason for the stop was because Lowe was driving the wrong way on Maya Lane. This argument is without merit. In
Cummins,
we held that an officer had a legitimate reason to stop a car because the driver made a turn without signaling, “even if the officer would have ignored the traffic violation but for his other suspicions.”
Id.
at 501. We explained that the Supreme Court had left “little doubt that ‘the officer’s actual state of mind at the time of the challenged action was taken,’
Maryland v. Macon,
Lowe next argues that the search of his Bronco was an unlawful inventory search because the government failed to introduce the written policy of the Jennings Police Department. He relies on
United States v. Marshall,
We do not find
Marshall
dispositive of this case. First, there was no evidence of an investigative motive on the part of the police. Moreover, contrary to Lowe’s suggestion,
Marshall
did not hold that the search was unreasonable because the government failed to produce a written policy; it only held that the search was unreasonable because the “the testimony of [the] [o]fficers ... d[id] not reveal any established procedures designed to inventory and remove valuables or dangerous items from the impounded vehicle.”
Id.
Here, unlike
Marshall,
there was testimony that the department’s policy was to inventory vehicles of persons taken into custodial arrest
3
and that the opening of the gym bag and shoe box was part of an inventory. We note that the Fifth Circuit has rejected an argument that the “prosecution must produce
written
police procedures in order to establish that the police department complied with its own regulations in conducting an inventory.”
United States v. Skillern,
Lowe next argues that the district court abused its discretion in allowing DEA agents to testify about methods of operation in the drug community and the meaning of
We also reject Lowe’s argument that the district court erred in giving a deliberate-ignorance instruction. Such an instruction is appropriate when the defendant “asserts ‘a lack of guilty knowledge,’ but the evidence ‘support[s] an inference of deliberate ignorance.’ ”
United States v. Long,
Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Stephen N. Limbaugh, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. Indeed, in the district court Lowe conceded that Shannon Avenue is a public street.
. At trial, Taylor and Rapert suggested that the reason the Bronco was towed was because it was illegally parked. Because at the suppression hearing Taylor testified that, pursuant to department policy, the Bronco was towed because Lowe was being taken into custody, we need not decide whether the officers could have towed and inventoried the Bronco solely because it was parked in a no-parking lane.
. In the district court, Lowe argued that before towing the Bronco, the police were obligated to contact his brother, who was the owner, and give him the opportunity to take responsibility for the vehicle. We note that
"[Colorado v.] Bertine
explicitly rejected this argument.”
Skillern,
.Surprisingly, the government does not characterize the search as a search incident to a custodial arrest. In
New York v. Belton,
