Appellant Lopez complains that the roving border patrol stop of his vehicle violated the fourth amendment. We agree that the district court should have granted his motion to suppress and reverse his conviction for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
Two border patrol agents were driving south on Highway 16 when they stopped for the red light at the intersection of Highway 359. Reference to the map printed as footnote two of this Court’s opinion in
United States
v.
Shields,
The agents testified that they became suspicious when appellant avoided making eye contact with them. They noticed that appellant’s vehicle had Harris County (Houston) license plates, indicating that the car was registered over 300 miles from Hebbronville. When appellant turned right, the agents followed him and observed that his car was riding high in the rear. They then noticed that the car had air shock absorbers that appeared to be new. Based upon these facts, they stopped appellant’s car. They then detected the odor of marijuana, searched the car, and uncovered the incriminating evidence.
I. The Legal Standard
The issue before us is whether the stop of appellant’s car complied with fourth amendment mandates. The governing standards have been set forth in several recent Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit border search decisions.
Agents need not have probable cause or reasonable suspicion in order to stop and search at the border or its functional equivalent.
See Almeida-Sanchez
v.
United States,
Brignoni-Ponce
provides the governing standard in the case at bar. The government does not and could not contend that the intersection at Hebbronville was
*712
either a permanent checkpoint or the functional equivalent of the border. We are thus faced with the stop of a vehicle by a roving patrol. We must decide whether the officers’ observations reasonably warranted suspicion that appellant’s vehicle contained aliens who were illegally in the country. In answering this question, we must consider the totality of circumstances confronting the officers at the time.
Brignoni-Ponce, supra,
In
United States v. Escamilla,
II. Application of the Brignoni-Ponce Standard
A “vital” element of the
BrignoniPonce
test is whether the agents had reason to believe that the vehicle in question had come from the border.
United States v. Escamilla, supra,
The government also places heavy reliance on appellant’s failure to make eye contact with the agents. In Escamilla we concluded that “this particular factor cannot weigh in the balance in any way whatsoever” Id. at 1233. In this impersonal age, failure to make eye contact with strangers is commonplace; it may be the rule rather than the exception. Reasonable suspicion should not turn on the ophthalmological reactions of the appellant. As we noted in Escamilla, characterizing appellant’s failure to look at the agents as “suspicious” will place other persons driving near the border in a most precarious position:
In United States v. Barnard,553 F.2d 389 , 391-92 (5th Cir. 1977), the court found it suspicious that the driver of a vehicle “glanced repeatedly and nervously at [a Border Patrol Agent] as he passed.” For the court to now hold that the opposition [sic] reaction to the officers’ presence is a legitimate consideration in deciding whether to stop a vehicle would put the officers in a classic “heads I win, tails you lose” position. The driver, of course, can only lose.
Id. at 1233.
Neither can we give much weight to the allegation that the trunk of appellant’s car was riding high. Little familiarity with the laws of physics is required in order to see *713 the weakness of this factor. Persons hiding in trunks are more like pianos than like blimps; they tend to make a trunk ride low rather than to make it ride high. Yet the border patrol’s position seems to be “Riding high or riding low, either way a-searching we will go.” The government argues that people who smuggle aliens tend to elevate their trunks in order to disguise the presence of a heavy load. The agents here, according to the government’s theory, were merely reacting to a possible deception that might be practiced by a person transporting aliens. The government’s argument, however, demonstrates only that we cannot necessarily infer that a trunk is empty merely by observing its elevated position. While we may grant this, it is quite another thing to infer that a trunk is full because it is riding high. Many people view it as fashionable to elevate the rears of their cars, and air shocks are often used to accomplish that purpose. Government agents are entitled to draw no inference of wrongdoing from such activity.
Finally, we view the fact that the car was old, with a large trunk and out-of-county license plates, as having only minor importance. We would have thought it obvious that citizens may leave their state or county without having their purposes questioned. Our concept of the border has become somewhat expansive, but it has not yet attained continental proportions. We are a people on the move, and nary an eyebrow should be raised by seeing a Harris County license plate over 50 miles from our neighbor to the south. It should take more than the elevation of an eyebrow to justify the stop in question here.
III. Conclusion
Automobiles may not be subjected to arbitrary searches whenever they are near the border. Officers may make a stop only when articulable facts lead them reasonably to suspect that a particular vehicle contains illegal aliens. In this case, no such articulable facts exist, and we conclude from our examination of the totality of circumstances that any suspicion directed at the vehicle was unreasonable. The judgment of conviction is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
