Appellant Enrique Alvarez-Gonzalez appeals from his conviction in a bench trial for possession of approximately 152 pounds of marijuana with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1970). The sole question on аppeal concerns the validity of the district court’s ruling that the search of appellant’s trunk by a Border Patrol officer at a Border Patrol checkpoint near La Gloria, Texas, was a search at the “functional equivalent” of the border.
1
See Almeida-Sanchez
v.
United States,
The La Gloria checkpoint is located on Highway 1017, about eight miles northwest of La Gloria, Texas, and about 42 highway miles from the nearest port of entry from Mexico at Rio Grande City, Texas. It is a permanent checkpoint,
see United States v. Santibanez,
Since such an address seems necessary, we think it аppropriate to attempt to assist that court by setting out what matters we presently believe it should consider on the remand which we direct. Most of these are suggested, to one degree or another, by our discussion of the Sierra Blanca checkpoint in United States v. Hart: 4
The Sierra Blanca checkpoint is permanent in nature. Approximately one mile west of the checkpoint on Interstate Highway 10, there is a sign which reads, “Inspection station, all vehicles exit one mile.” Somewhat closer to the checkpoint, between one-half and three-fourths of a mile west, a second sign reads, “Form one lane right.” One thousand yards west of the checkpoint, a third sign states, “Inspection station, all vehicles right lane.”
During the hours that the Sierra Blanca checkpoint is open, there are cones positioned in the highway which direct all traffic onto a paved access road to the checkpoint. At the checkpoint itself, there are three stop signs, two with flashing red lights, and a trailer mounted on blocks which the сheckpoint officials use as an office. Although all vehicles traveling east on Interstate Highway 10 pass through the checkpoint when it is in operation, the officials do not stop every vehicle аnd search for aliens. In practice the officials wave some cars and trucks through the checkpoint and stop others to question their occupants.
Certain of these many characteristics may be more important than others in establishing the Sierra Blanca checkpoint as a functional equivalent of the border. One, the checkpoint is permanent in nature. Two, all traffic is diverted through thе checkpoint during its hours of operation just as all traffic would be channeled through a port of entry at the border itself. Three, the Sierra Blanca checkpoint operates during the hours when the ports of entry at Fabens and Fort Hancock are closed. Four, Interstate Highway 10 parallels the border for some 50 miles before turning northeast to the checkpoint and the highway comes within two miles of thе border itself in many points. Five, there are numerous roads, paths, trails which lead from the border to Interstate Highway 10 which do not pass through any port of entry. And, six, during one thirteen-month period officials at the Sierra Blanca checkpoint apprehended 1,291 aliens who had entered the United States illegally. Cf. United States v. Byrd,483 F.2d 1196 , 1199 n. 7 (5th Cir. 1973), modified,494 F.2d 1284 (5th Cir. 1974). We need not decide which of these factors are absolutely necessary in order to hold that the synergistic effect of these physical and operation *229 al characteristics elevates the Sierra Blanca checkpoint to the status of the border’s functional equivalent for a § 1357 seаrch.
We reaffirm the considerations which are applied in Hart’s six factors as appropriate for use in the analysis which the district court must make of La Gloria. We wish, however, to make these considerations somewhat more explicit.
Hart’s first three factors сoncern the manner of operation of the checkpoint: that it functions like a permanent border checkpoint and not like the roving patrol condemned in Almeida-Sanchez 5 or on a rаdically shifting basis approximating the peregrinations of such a patrol. 6 Thus the character of the checkpoint is the first basic consideration.
The second is the ratio between international аnd domestic traffic passing through the checkpoint in question. The presence of a continuing and significant percentage of domestic traffic through a given checkpoint cannot but be seen аs militating against granting it the status of functional equivalency. Indeed, the Ninth Circuit appears to regard this ratio as dis-positive:
[I]f a search takes place at a location where virtually everyone searched has just come from the other side of the border, the search is a functional equivalent of a border search. In contrast, if a search takes place at a location where a significant number of those stopped are domestic travelers going from one point to another within the United States, the search is not the functional equivalent of a border search.
United States v. Bowen,
Finally, an evaluation must be made of the degree to which, as to international traffiс, the checkpoint under consideration actually approximates the effect of one physically located at the border. This criterion is exemplified in the application by Hart’s latter factors, which discern an uncontrolled access from the border to the area which the checkpoint controls, the tactical need for such an interior location for effective control of crossings of the portion of the border involved, 7 and the apprehension at the checkpoint of significant numbers of illegal aliens — this last being, among other things, an indication that much of the international traffic passing through the checkpoint in question has passed through no other.
These, then, seem to us the major considerations which should be applied by the district court on remand to evaluate the La Gloria checkpoint for functional equivalence: relative permanence, relatively minimal interdiction of domestic traffic, a capability to monitor portions of international traffic not otherwise practically controllable. We do not intend our list to be exclusive, and the district court should feel free on remand to. consider whatever else it deems appropriatе.
We remand with instructions that the district court determine, after an appropriate hearing, whether the La Gloria checkpoint constituted the functional equiv *230 alent of the border and certify the record and its findings to us. 8
REMANDED, with instructions.
Notes
. We consider only whether the La Gloria сheckpoint qualifies as the functional equivalent of the border for immigrations searches. We are not called upon to consider whether functional equivalency might also justify a customs search.
Cf. United States v. Hart,
. The search in question occurred prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Ortiz
that clearly required probable cause for a search at a permanent checkpoint.
See United States v. Ortiz,
. Our affirmance without opinion pursuant to Local Rule 21 of
United States
v.
Fuentes,
.
.
. This is not to say that the point, if in reasonably constant operation in a fixed area, may not be shifted in location a mile or so occasionally so as to frustrate the specific rendezvous and expectations of the ill-intentioned.
. We adopt the unusual course of retaining this case before our panel because it is not the usual case. As with the issue of voluntariness of the confession in
Jackson v. Denno,
. Located, perhaps, “at a point marking the confluence of two or more roads that extend from the border . . . .”
Almeida-Sanchez v. United States,
