Drug Enforcement Agency Agent Paul Markonni saw Gary Douglas Jensen leaving a flight from Miami, Florida, and entering the airline terminal at Atlanta, Georgia. 1 Markonni and another agent, after making inquiries concerning Jensen’s ticket and itinerary, approached Jensen who was sitting at a departure gate awaiting the continuation of his flight to Phoenix, Arizona. Markonni sat down next to Jensen, displayed his credentials, identified himself as a law enforcement officer, and asked if he could talk with him. Jensen agreed. On request Jensen handed Markonni his ticket and driver’s license. Markonni returned the ticket and license, then said, “Mr. Jensen, we’re narcotics officers, and we’re looking for drugs and narcotics at the airport. Are you carrying any drugs or narcotics either on your person or in your luggage?” Jensen replied that he was not. Markonni asked whether Jensen would consent to a search of his person and suitcase. Jensen responded by requesting that they go somewhere else to talk. Markonni agreed. While the men were walking down a concourse Markonni asked Jensen what he wanted to talk about. Jensen replied, “You know.” Markonni then stated that “I take it from that that you mean that you are carrying something in the way of drugs and narcotics.” Jensen replied that “[y]ou already know.” Markonni took Jensen to an airline office, read him his Miranda rights, and told him that he could refuse to consent to a search. Jensen gave written consent to a search. Cocaine was discovered in his luggage.
The district court denied Jensen’s motion to suppress the evidence seized in the search of his luggage. After Jensen waived a jury trial, the court found him guilty of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C.A. § 841(a)(1). Jensen appeals.
Jensen presents two major arguments. He first asserts that Markonni’s action in initially stopping him was arbitrary and capricious and therefore should be invalidated. We decline to rule the stop illegal. First, Markonni did perceive certain characteristics concerning Jensen that guided his decision in stopping him and prevented the stop from being arbitrary and capricious. At the time he stopped Jensen, Markonni knew that Jensen was travelling from a drug center, had an unusual itinerary involving a flight from Phoenix, Arizona, to Miami, Florida, one
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evening and a return the next morning, and had paid for his ticket in cash. Those characteristics are part of a drug courier profile for detecting possible drug smugglers.
See United States v.
Berry,
Jensen also asserts that he was seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment when he was asked to consent to a search of his luggage.
Berry
resolved the standard for determining whether a seizure has occurred: there has been a seizure “if ‘in view of all the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would believe that he was not free to leave.’ ”
Id.
at 595 (quoting
United States v. Mendenhall,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We recite the facts in the light most favorable to the government.
See, e.g., United States
v.
Berry,
. In
Berry
the Court articulated three tiers of police-citizen encounters: “communication between police and citizens involving no coercion or detention and therefore without the scope of the Fourth Amendment, brief ‘seizures’ that must be supported by reasonable suspicion, and full-scale arrests that must be supported by probable cause.”
. We note that under the Berry standard a court should consider whether the person stopped reasonably would have felt that he was the focus of an investigation and that he was not free to leave. The intent of law enforcement officials making a stop to focus their investigation on the specific individual stopped is relevant only insofar as the individual perceives that intent.
. Given our holding we need not reach Jensen’s assertions that no reasonable suspicion for a seizure existed or that his later consent to a search did not vitiate the taint of any Fourth Amendment violation.
