Appellant Cesar Adrian Espinosa-Alva-rado (“Espinosa-Alvarado”) pled guilty, conditionally, to possession with intent to distribute marihuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and was sentenced to a 33-month term of imprisonment. He appeals, challenging the denial of his pretrial suppression motion.
BACKGROUND 1
On Thursday, February 1, 2001, at approximately 6:45 a.m., 2 sensor hits received by the United States Border Patrol alerted to a border crossing and entry into the United States. From these sensors, the Border Patrol agents in the Fort Hancock Border Patrol Station learned that a vehicle had crossed the United States/Mexico border approximately 13 miles west of the station, heading toward Texas Highway 20, a two-lane highway that closely parallels Interstate 10 and the border.
In response, agents Omar Ortiz (“Ortiz”) and Eduardo De La Cruz (“De La Cruz”), experienced Border Patrol Agents, 3 headed west on Highway 20 in a well-marked Chevy Tahoe. As they were traveling, another agent radioed twice, first indicating that he had found an abandoned Dodge Durango parked along Highway 20 with a flat tire three and a half miles west of the sensor alerts and then, a minute later, that the vehicle appeared to be carrying narcotics.
Shortly thereafter, Ortiz and De La Cruz observed a Mercury Grand Marquis coming towards them on Highway 20. The vehicle, which had New Mexico license plates, was approximately one mile west from the location of the sensor alerts, less than one mile north of the Texas/Mexico border and one hour from the Texas/New Mexico Boarder. This area of Hwy 20 is known for its relatively high density of alien and narcotics smuggling.
From a distance, the agents observed a driver and a passenger, but as the agents approached the passenger slumped below the Marquis dashboard, and the driver did not look at the agents. After passing the vehicle, Ortiz and De La Cruz turned their vehicle around and began following the Marquis. At this point the passenger, later identified as Espinoza-Alvarado, was again visible. As the agents’ vehicle approached, the Marquis slowed from 55 miles per hour, the speed limit, to 45 miles per hour and the driver began looking in his mirrors excessively. Ortiz and De La Cruz initiated an immigration stop of the vehicle.
Espinosa-Alvardo contends that the immigration stop was made in violation of the rights guaranteed him by the Fourth Amendment, and that therefore the evidence obtained subsequent to the stop was erroneously admitted by the district court. We disagree.
ANALYSIS
A border patrol agent conducting a roving patrol may make a temporary in
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vestigative stop of a vehicle only if the agent is aware of specific articulable facts that reasonably warrant suspicion “to believe that criminal activity ‘may be afoot.’ ”
United States v. Arvizu,
In making reasonable-suspicion determinations, we look at the “ ‘totality of the circumstances’ of each case to see whether the detaining officer has a ‘particularized and objective basis’ for suspecting legal wrongdoing. This process allows officers to draw on their own experience and specialized training to make inferences from and deductions about the cumulative information available to them that might well elude an untrained person.” Id. at 750-51 (citations omitted).
“In determining whether a Border Patrol agent acted with reasonable suspicion, the district court may consider the following relevant factors: (1) known characteristics of a particular area, (2) previous experience of the arresting agents with criminal activity, (3) proximity of the area to the border, (4) usual traffic patterns of that road, (5) information about recent illegal trafficking in aliens or narcotics in the area, (6) the behavior of the vehicle’s driver, (7) the appearance of the vehicle, and (8) the number, appearance and behavior of the passengers.”
United States v. Inocencio,
Here, there was clearly reasonable suspicion that the Marquis had originated from the border.
Inocencio,
On the other hand, there was nothing about the Marquis that indicated to the agents that it was being used for illegal activity. In addition, Ortiz testified that the sensors activated usually indicated narcotics trafficking rather than alien smuggling, and the agents were aware of the possibility that the Durango could have been the vehicle to have triggered them (though the agents were not aware of how long the already-abandoned Durango had been at its location). Nevertheless, taking all of the facts known by the agents into consideration, we conclude that the agents were reasonably suspicious of Espinosa-Alvarado’s activities.
Because Espinosa-Alvarado’s challenges to the evidence obtained subsequent to the stop are totally dependent upon a conclusion that the initial stop was unlawful, they fail. 6
CONCLUSION
In light of the foregoing discussion, the conviction of Espinosa-Alvarado is hereby AFFIRMED.
Notes
.The following background section is derived from the findings of fact made by United States Magistrate Judge Durwood Edwards following a suppression hearing. In reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, the trial court's factual findings are reviewed for clear error, and its legal conclusions, including whether there was reasonable suspicion for a stop, are reviewed de novo.
United States v. Jacquinot,
. This was approximately the time of a Border Patrol “shift change.” Smugglers often wait for a shift change to smuggle narcotics or aliens into the country.
. The agents had over eight and a half years of combined experience, almost all of it ob- ■ tained while the agents were stationed at Fort Hancock.
. Espinosa-Alvarado contends that he did not disappear. Espinosa-Alvarado also suggests that to the extent that he did disappear, he may have been "ben[ding] over to pick something up from the floorboard.” As noted above, we must defer to the trial court's findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous. Ortiz testified that Espinosa-Alvarado was not visible when their vehicles passed. Accordingly, the finding of fact is not clearly erroneous despite slightly inconsistent testimony from De La Cruz that only one occupant was "clearly visible” when he and Ortiz passed. See
Jacquinot,
. Espinosa-Alvarado cites
United States v. Chavez-Villarreal,
. Finally, we note that Espinosa-Alvarado's brief could be construed as suggesting that
Arvizu
is inconsistent with our prior case-law. To the extent that Espinosa-Alvarado is making this argument, we disagree.
Arvizu
simply clarified the principle that reviewing courts "must look at the ‘totality of the circumstances' of each case” when making reasonable-suspicion determinations, making clear that a "divide-and-conquer” style analysis is inappropriate.
Id.
at 750-51. Our case law has long been consistent with this principle.
See e.g. United States v. Zapata-Ibarra,
