The controlling issue in this case is whether, after Border Patrol agents have completed a programmatic immigration check of bus passengers, those agents may continue to detain the passengers, absent individualized suspicion, to look for drugs. Because we have previously held that this type of continued detention violates the Fourth Amendment,
see United States v. Portillo-Aguirre,
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
On December 14, 1998 a Greyhound bus entered the Sierra Blanca checkpoint and was stopped for an immigration check of passengers. Border Patrol Agent Manuel Marquez boarded the bus and inquired as to evеry passenger’s citizenship as he moved to the back of the bus. By the time he reached the back of the bus, Marquez had assured himself that all passengers on board were legally in the United States.
Marquez then began to return to the front of the bus, searching the carry-on luggage in the upper bins using the “squeeze and sniff’ method that he had been taught as part of his Border Patrol training. Marquez wоuld remove a piece of luggage from the overhead bin, squeeze it “all the way around” to check for soft spots, and sometimes smell it. At some point in this process, Marquez felt a “brick-like hard item” in a black travel bag, which he believed could be narcotics. It is unclear from the record how many bags had already been searched at this point, or how much time had elapsed.
Marquez asked passengers on the bus to whom the bag belonged, but no one claimed the bag. He then removed the bag from the bus, and a drug-sniffing dog alerted to it. Marquez then re-boardеd the bus and continued his check of the overhead luggage bin. Eventually he discovered two more brick-like items and arrested the appellant, Cliff Ellis.
On January 7, 1999 Ellis was indicted for violation of 8 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) fоr possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. Prior to trial Ellis moved to suppress the evidence obtained during the bus search on grounds that (among others): (1) the immigration inspection exceedеd its permissible duration; (2) the search of his luggage was unreasonable. The motion to suppress was denied on March 3,1999, and Ellis was convicted that same day. Ellis then timely appealed. As the аppeal was pending we remanded the case to the district court to reconsider its ruling on the motion to suppress in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bond v. United States,
On remand, the district court again denied Ellis’ motion to suppress. The district court rejected Ellis’ argument that the detention had been illegally extended after the immigration purpose for the stop had been completed. The court concluded that, because reasonable suspicion of drug activity arose only after a trivial delay, the stop did not exceed its permissible duration. The district court acknowledged that, under Bond II, the “squeeze and sniff’ inspection was itself an illegal searсh, but decided the evidence was properly admitted under the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we review questiоns of law
de novo
and the district court’s factual findings for clear error.
Portillo-Aguirre,
III. DISCUSSION
Ellis first argues that the drug evidence against him was the fruit of an illеgally extended seizure. While he does not challenge the legality of the initial immigration stop, Ellis argues that the agent violated his Fourth Amendment rights by extending the detention to conduct a search for drugs, after the lawful immigration purpose of the stop had terminated. Ellis cites
United States v. Machuca-Barrera,
We agree with Ellis that this case falls squarely under the holdings of Machuca-Barrera and Portillo-Aguirre.
In
Machuca-Barrera,
an immigration check of two teenagers at a permanent checkpoint еventually revealed drugs in their car.
Machuca-Barrera
represented our first chance to discuss the interplay of
United States v. Martinez-Fuerte,
In a Terry stop, “[o]nce the purpose justifying the stop has been served, the detained person must be free to leave.” Id. Likewise, we held in Machuca-Bar-rera that the “scope of an immigration checkpoint stop is limited to the justifying, programmatic purpose of the stop: determining the citizenship status of persons passing thrоugh the checkpoint.” Id. at 433. Emphasizing that judges “are ill-equipped” to “measure[ ] the pertinence of questions to the immigration purpose,” the Court re-stated its “practical” and “workable” rule: “a stop may not exceed its permissible duration unless an officer has reasonable suspicion.” Id. at 434; see also id. (“[A]n agent at an immigration stop may investigate non-immigration matters beyond the рermissible length of the immigration stop if and only if the initial lawful stop creates reasonable suspicion warranting further investigation.”).
We applied
Machuca-Barrera
to the context of buses stopped at immigration cheсkpoints in
Portillo-Aguirre.
There, a Border Patrol agent had completed his immigration check, and, in the walk from the back of the bus toward the exit at front, the agent stopped to question Portillo-Aguirre about drugs, thereby extending the bus’ detention three minutes.
Portillo-Aguirre
observed that to decide otherwise wоuld undermine the Supreme Court’s holding in
Edmond
that checkpoints for the primary purpose of drug interdiction are unconstitutional.
Here, there is no dispute that agent Marquez was “squeezing and sniffing” the passengers’ bags for drugs, without individualized suspicion, after having completed the immigration check. Accordingly, the rule of Portillo-Aguirre mandates reversal.
To be sure, we emphasize that if a Border Patrol agent develops reasonable suspicion in the course of actually exiting the bus, that agеnt may extend the detention.
See Portillo-Aguirre,
The government cites a portion of
Bond I
in urging that we nevertheless affirm. On similar facts to this case,
Bond I
held that the search was not an unlawfully extended detention because there was no evidence the inspection “delayed the bus’ departure more than an additional one or two minutes.”
In any event, assuming that
Bond I’s
“trivial delay” rule may be set apart from the rest of the opinion to survive
Bond II,
our discussion in
Machuca-Barrera
demonstrates that the “trivial delay” rule does not survive the Supreme Court’s decision in
Edmond,
at least insofar as it would apply to suspicionless drug interdiction.
Machuca-Barrera,
in harmonizing
Edmond
and
Martinez-Fuerte,
made plain the bounds of suspicionless immigration stops and laid the foundation for
PortilloAguirre.
Tо the extent that the government’s position is inconsistent with
Machuca-Barrera
and
PortiUo-Aguirre,
we conclude it is also inconsistent with
Edmond,
and should no longer be followed.
Ruiz v. Estelle,
Finally, the government appears to argue that the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies to the еxtended detention.
See United States v. Jackson,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the stated reasons, we REVERSE.
Notes
.
Terry v. Ohio,
. The Court cited
United States v. Jones,
