This appeal arises out of a traffic stop of Defendant-Appellant Brayan Gomez. During surveillance in connection with a heroin-trafficking investigation in Hartford, Connecticut, officers observed Gomez commit several traffic violations and stopped his car. During the five-minute traffic stop, the officers prolonged the seizure by asking Gomez narcotics-related questions not pertinent to the traffic violations. After the questioning, Gomez consented to the search of a closed bag in the car’s trunk, which contained nearly a half-kilogram of heroin and drug-packaging materials.
Gomez moved to suppress this evidence, arguing that, inter alia, his seizure violated the Fourth Amendment because the officers measurably extended the stop for investigatory reasons unrelated to the traffic violations. Applying this Court’s holding in United States v. Harrison,
For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the Supreme Court’s decision in Rodriguez abrogates our holding in Harrison.
BACKGROUND
I. The Heroin-Trafficking Investigation
In March 2014, Hartford police detective James Campbell and Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) special agent Michael Schatz—members of a DEA task force—were investigating a large-scale heroin-trafficking organization operating out of Hartford.
On March 19, Campbell and Schatz began surveillance of two addresses associated with Alex Ortiz-Gomez—one in Hartford and another in East Hartford. The following morning, Campbell observed Brayan Gomez exit the Hartford address and drive away in a white Acura.
With Campbell and Schatz (in separate vehicles) covertly following, Gomez drove to a nearby Ramada Inn hotel in East Hartford and parked the black Honda. Although Campbell and Schatz did not arrive in time to see Gomez enter the hotel, Campbell saw him exit the Ramada Inn a few minutes later carrying a “weighted” black duffel bag. After placing the bag in the Honda’s trunk, Gomez drove away again, this time towards the highway; Campbell and Schatz continued to follow.
When Campbell saw Gomez place the duffel bag- in the car’s trunk and drive away,- he notified Schatz and other nearby officers via radio transmissions that he planned to. execute a pretextual stop of the Honda if Gomez committed a traffic violation, Gomez then drove through a red light before entering the highway. After Gomez merged on to' the highway, Campbell and Schatz observed him speeding and changing lanes without using a directional signal.
Gomez did not travel on the highway for long; he slowed to exit via an off-ramp in East Hartford, allowing Campbell and Schatz to catch up. According to Campbell, Gomez committed a third traffic violation at the end of the off-ramp by making a right turn at a red light without stopping.
II. The Traffic Stop
Shortly after Gomez exited the highway, Campbell used his unmarked car’s lights and siren to pull Gomez over. .Schatz arrived at the scene shortly thereafter and parked his car in front of the-black Honda, which was on the road’s shoulder. While Schatz remained in his-car, Campbell approached the Honda on the driver’s side and noticed, through the open driver-side window, that Gomez “appeared to be nervous as far 'as what [is] typical in a normal traffic stop”—keeping his hands on the steering-wheel, visibly shaking, and maintaining his gaze forward through'the windshield. -Campbell asked Gomez to turn off the car’s engine. When Gomez, without complying,- asked why he was stopped, Campbell again directed Gomez to turn off the engine for .“safety-purposes.” -
Shortly' after Gomez turned off the engine, Campbell’s questioning detoured from traffic violations to the subject of heroin: -
Question: After [Gomez] shut the car off, what interaction did .you have with him at [that] point? Campbell: Once he. complied and shut the vehicle off, he again asked me why he had been stopped. I told him that we were, conducting an investigation into bad heroin as well as firearms within the city of Hartford. Then I also told him that, you know, I observed him trav-elling at-a high rate of speed as well as travelling through the red lights. .
App’x 248 (emphasis added).
At Campbell’s request, Gomez provided him with the car’s registration,' which listed Joan Sanchez as the owner. At that time, Campbell did not also ask for Gomez’s license. Campbell then asked Gomez where he was coming from, and' Gomez responded, untruthfully, that he had come from home. After Campbell inquired where he was travelling, Gomez replied that he was going to the home of his sister-in-law Joan Sanchez—the owner of the black Honda^-but he did not know her exact address. Then, Campbell asked for the name of Joan Sanchez’s spouse; Gomez responded that she .was married to Alex Ortiz-Gojnez.
After this initial questioning with Gomez in the driver’s seat, Campbell asked him to exit the car and walk around to the passenger side.
According to Campbell, he then asked whether Gomez “mind[ed]” if "Campbell searched the car, and Gomez replied “no, you can go ahead ... [tjhere’s nothing in there.” App’x 250; see also App’x 50. While Schatz watched Gomez, Campbell conducted a search of the front passenger area and found a receipt from the Ramada Inn. The receipt, which displayed Gomez’s name and home address,
After Campbell found the receipt, he approached Gomez and asked “if he had anything on his person.” App’x 253. Gomez replied that he did not. Campbell ■ then conducted a pat-down and asked him to remove the items from his pockets. Gomez removed his wallet, which contained his license, and two Ramada Inn room keys from his pants pocket. With the receipt and room keys -in hand, Campbell asked Gomez if he had stayed at -the Ramada Inn. Gomez initially responded that he was not staying at the- -hotel, but that his friends were. When Campbell pressed Gomez as to why he had the keys if only his friends were staying there, Gomez admitted that he had been staying there as well.
Campbell then asked Gomez whether he had anything in the car’s trunk,, and whether he “mind[ed]” if Campbell opened it. See App’x 256-58; see also App’x 58-59. According to both Campbell and Schatz, Gomez replied with.words to the .effect of “go ahead.” App’x 257-58, 312; see also App’x 58-59, 176. When Campbell opened the trunk, he saw the black duffel bag that Gomez had carried out of the.hotel earlier, a large cardboard box, and several smaller cardboard boxes stamped with the words “City Vibe.”
With the trunk open, Campbell asked whether Gomez “rhind[ed]” if he opened the duffel bag. App’x 256-58; see also App’x 62-63. According to both Campbell and Schatz, Gomez said something alóng the lines of “no, but what are you looking for?” App’x 256, 258, 313'; see also App’x 62-63, 177. Campbell opened the bag to find more than 13,000 baggies of heroin packaged for sale, a larger bag containing raw heroin, and other items used in packaging narcotics; in total, the duffel bag contained 378.6 grams of heroin. An East Hartford police officer who had arrived at the scene a few minutes earlier arrested Gomez. Gomez never received a citation for the traffic violations that he committed before the stop.
Campbell and Schatz testified that the entire stop—from the moment Campbell pulled Gomez over to the moment he opened the duffel bag—lasted about five minutes. App’x 271, 318.
III. District Court Proceedings
In March 2014, a federal grand jury in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut returned an indictment charging Gomez with one count of possession with intent to distribute heroin in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B). In June 2014, Gomez moved to suppress the heroin and drug-packaging materials, arguing that they were fruits of an unlawful search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment. Relying on his own two-page affidavit, Gomez claimed that he did not commit traffic violations and did not consent to the searches of the car, its trunk, or the closed duffel bag. Therefore, Gomez argued that (i) the traffic stop was not supported by probable cause or reasonable suspicion, and (ii) the warrantless searches were executed without his consent.
In November 2014, the district court (Burns, J.) held a suppression hearing during which Campbell and Schatz testified; Gomez did not testify.
In June 2015, after the case was transferred to a different district judge (Hall, C.J.), the district court held a second suppression hearing. Two months before that resumed hearing, the Supreme Court decided Rodriguez v. United States, — U.S. -,
In late June 2015, the district court issued a ruling denying Gomez’s motion to suppress. See United States v. Gomez, No. 14-cr-63,
Third, the district court concluded that Campbell did not unreasonably extend the traffic stop in violation of the Fourth Amendment, even though it acknowledged that he questioned Gomez about matters unrelated to the traffic violations. See id. at *2-8. The district court relied on this Court’s holding in Harrison:
The Second Circuit has previously found a stop of five to six minutes was not unlawfully prolonged, United States v. Harrison,606 F.3d 42 (2d Cir. 2010), and other circuits have upheld longer intervals....
There is no evidence on the record to contradict testimony by Detective Campbell and Special Agent Schatz that the stop lasted five minutes at most until Gomez was arrested. Based on the rec-. ord before it, the court finds that, while Gomez was questioned about matters unrelated to the traffic violation during this time period, such questioning did not unreasonably prolong the stop so as to render it unconstitutional.
Id. at *3. The district court did not address the Government’s alternative argument that independent reasonable suspicion of a drug offense justified extending the traffic stop for the narcotics questioning. See id. at *2-3.
After the district court denied his motion, in September 2016 Gomez conditionally pleaded guilty pursuant to a plea agreement that allowed him to appeal the district court’s suppression ruling. In January 2016, the district court sentenced Gomez to sixty months’ imprisonment, the statutory minimum under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B). After the district court entered judgment on January 8, 2016, Gomez timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
“On appeal from a denial of a suppression motion, we review a district court’s findings of fact for clear error, and its resolution of questions of law and mixed questions of law and fact de novo." United States v. Ulbricht,
Gomez raises three arguments on appeal. First, he contends that the officers unconstitutionally prolonged his traffic stop, a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. Second, Gomez argues that the district court clearly erred in finding that the initial stop was based on valid probable cause or reasonable suspicion to believe he committed a traffic violation. Third, he challenges the veracity of the officers’ testimony and the district court’s factual finding that he verbally consented to the searches of the car, its trunk, and the closed duffel bag in the trunk.
I. Duration of the Traffic Stop
A. Traffic Stops after Rodriguez v. United States
The Fourth Amendment guarantees “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures....” U.S. Const, amend. IV. “Temporary detention of individuals during the stop of an automobile by the police, even if only for a brief period and for a limited purpose, constitutes a ‘seizure’ of ‘persons’ within the meaning of [the Fourth Amendment].” Whren v. United States,
1. Pre-Rodriguez Supreme Court Decisions.
A decade before Rodriguez v. United States, — U.S.-,
In Caballes, the Court considered a ten-minute traffic stop for speeding where one officer led a narcotics-detection .• dog around the driver’s car while a second officer simultaneously “was in the process of writing a warning ticket.” Id. at 406,
A few years later, in Arizona v. Johnson, the Court further considered “[a]n officer’s inquiries into matters unrelated to the justification for the traffic stop.” Arizona v. Johnson,
2. Circuit Courts Applying Johnson and Caballes
After Johnson and Caballes, several of our sister circuits determined whether unrelated investigations during otherwise lawful traffic stops “measurably extended]” such stops or prolonged them beyond the time “reasonably required” to issue a ticket. See Johnson,
In particular, the Eighth Circuit developed a de minimis rule: a brief, minutes-long extension of a traffic stop to conduct an unrelated investigation, such as a dog sniff, is a de minimis intrusion on a driver’s personal liberty that does not violate the Fourth Amendment. See United States v. Alexander,
In United States v. Harrison, we applied Johnson and Caballes in the context of a traffic stop (for a defective license plate! light) that was' extended by officer questioning; a search of the car revealed a gun and, ultimately, crack cocaine. See United States v, Harrison,
Even though we acknowledged that the officer, testified that he “had all of the information needed to issue the traffic ticket before he first approached” the car’s passengers to ask questions unrelated to thk defective light, we explained that the stop’s extension was reasonable because “the time elapsed between the stop and the arrest was only five to six minutes, and the questions about the passengers’ comings and goings were subsumed in that brief interval.” Id. at 45. Furthermore, while we did not expressly adopt the de minimis rule, we cited decisions from other circuits for the proposition that “Monger intervals than five to six minutes have been deemed tolerable.” Id. (collecting cases),
3. Rodriguez
In Rodriguez v. United States, the Supreme Court rejected the Eighth Circuit’s de minimis rule, holding that “a police stop exceeding the time needed to handle the matter for which the stop was made violates the Constitution’s shield against unreasonable seizures.” Rodriguez v. United States, — U.S.-,
Adopting findings made by a magistrate judge, the district court in Rodriguez found that the officer lacked independent reasonable suspicion of a drug offense to extend the detention once he issued the written warning, but it nevertheless denied the defendant’s motion to suppress, concluding that the seven-to-eight minute extension was “only a de minimis intrusion on Rodriguez’s Fourth Amendment rights and was therefore permissible.” Id. at 1613-14. The Eighth Circuit affirmed, held that the delay was an acceptable de min-imis intrusion, and did not review the district court’s finding that the officer lacked independent reasonable suspicion to extend the seizure. See id. at 1614.
The Supreme Court vacated the Eighth Circuit’s judgment, beginning by explaining that “[l]ike a Terry stop, the tolerable duration of police inquiries in the traffic-stop context is determined by the seizure’s mission—to address the traffic violation that warranted the stop and attend to related safety concerns.” Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Acknowledging Caballes (dog sniff) and Johnson (questioning of a passenger by a different officer)—in which the Court “concluded that the Fourth Amendment tolerated certain unrelated investigations that did not lengthen the roadside detention”— the Court reiterated that “[bjecause addressing the infraction is the purpose of the stop, it may last no longer than is necessary to effectuate that purpose.” Id. (emphasis added) (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, “[ajuthority for the seizure ... ends when tasks tied to the traffic infraction are—or reasonably should have been—completed.” Id.
To be sure, the Court recognized that an officer “may conduct certain unrelated checks during an otherwise lawful traffic stop.” Id. at 1615. But “he may not do so in a way that prolongs the stop, absent the reasonable suspicion ordinarily demanded to justify detaining an individual.” Id. Therefore, officers may conduct certain ordinary inquiries related to a traffic stop, such as “checking the driver’s license, determining whether there are outstanding warrants against the driver, and inspecting the automobile’s registration and proof of insurance,” without independent reasonable suspicion of other crimes. Id. However, tasks not related to the traffic mission, such as dog sniffs or “[o]n-scene investigation into other crimes,” are unlawful if they prolong the stop absent independent reasonable suspicion. Id. at 1616.
In so holding, the Court emphasized that the “critical question” is not whether the unrelated investigation “occurs before or after the officer issues a ticket,” but whether conducting the unrelated investigation “prolongs—ie., adds time to—the stop.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Additionally, the Court specifically rejected the Government’s contention that an officer may “incrementally” prolong a stop to conduct an unrelated investigation “so long as the officer is reasonably diligent in pursuing the traffic-related purpose of the stop, and the overall duration of the stop remains reasonable in relation to the duration of other traffic stops involving similar circumstances.” Id. (alteration omitted). The Court explained that an officer does not “earn bonus time to pursue an unrelated criminal investigation” by “completing all traffic-related tasks expeditiously” because “[t]he reasonableness of a seizure ... depends on what the police in fact do.” Id.
The Court remanded to the Eighth Circuit, leaving open “[t]he question whether reasonable suspicion of criminal activity justified detaining Rodriguez beyond completion of the traffic infraction investigation, ...”
On remand, the Eighth Circuit again affirmed, but it did not address reasonable suspicion of a drug offense. See United States v. Rodriguez,
B. Analysis
1. Rodriguez Abrogates Harrison
We begin by addressing Gomez’s contention that the district court erred by applying Harrison rather than Rodriguez,
Although at least one district court in this Circuit has recognized Rodriguez’s abrogation of Harrison,
We held in Harrison ■ that unrelated questioning “subsumed” in a five-to-six minute traffic stop does not measurably prolong a stop so as to render it unconstitutional. See Harrison,
Iri Rodriguez, however, the Court held that a'police stop “exceeding the time needed to handle the matter for which the stop was' made” violates the Fourth Amendment absent independent' reasonable suspicion of another offensé. Rodriguez,
Accordingly, we conclude that Rodriguez abrogates Harrison, and that the district court therefore erred by applying Harrir son in denying Gomez’s motion to suppress. See Gomez,
2, Gomez’s Traffic Stop is Unconstitutional
' We conclude that Gomez’s traffic stop violates the Fourth Amendment because Campbell’s investigative inquiries unrelated to the traffic violations “prolonged]—i.e., add[ed] time to—the stop.” Rodriguez,
Although both Campbell and Schatz testified that the stop lasted no longer than five minutes, the district court’s factual findings confirm that “Gomez was questioned about matters unrelated to the traffic violation[s] during this time period.” Gomez,
From the moment that Campbell first approached the black Honda, his questioning “detour[ed] from th[e] mission” of the stop (Gomez’s traffic violations) to the DEA’s heroin-trafficking investigation. See Rodriguez,
Once [Gomez] complied and 'shut the vehicle off, he again asked me why he had been stopped. 'I told him that we were ■ conducting an investigation into bad heroin as well as firearms within the city of Hartford. Then I also told him that, you know, I observed him travel[l]ing at a high rate of speed as well as travelling through the red lights.
App’x 248 (emphasis added). After Campbell asked for the car’s registration (but notably not Gomez’s license—necessary to write a ticket), he asked Gomez who Joan Sanchez— the car’s owner—was married to, and Gomez responded that she was married to Alex Ortiz-Gomez (the suspected leader of the heroin-trafficking organization).
These undisputed facts* demonstrate that Campbell spent much of the time of the stop, if not most of it, asking questions and executing searches related to the heroin investigation rather than conducting “ordinary inquiries incident to the traffic stop”—such as checking Gomez’s license, determining whether theré were outstanding warrants for him, and inspecting the car’s proof of insurance. See Rodriguez,
The Government does not appear to dispute this conclusion, arguing only in passing that Campbell and Schatz “simultaneously pursued the traffic violations and the heroin trafficking investigation.” Ap-pellee’s Br. 14. However, the record belies that argument. While Officer Campbell was initially questioning Gomez in the driver’s seat of the black Honda, Agent Schatz had not even exited his car yet. And when Schatz did join them on the side of the road, he stood by and watched Gomez while Campbell questioned him and searched the car. This is not a situation where one officer expeditiously completed all traffic-related tasks while another officer questioned the driver or conducted a dog sniff without extending the stop. See Caballes,
The Government’s principal argument, however, is that the extended traffic stop is lawful under Rodriguez because the officers possessed independent reasonable suspicion that Gomez was trafficking heroin. See Appellee’s Br. 30-35; see also Rodriguez,
“In general, ‘a federal appellate court does not consider an issue not passed upon below.’ ” Booking v. Gen. Star Mgmt. Co.,
The existence of reasonable suspicion is not a purely legal issue; rather, it is a mixed question of law and fact dependent on the totality of the circumstances. United States v. Freeman,
Accordingly, Gomez’s traffic stop violated the Fourth Amendment under Rodriguez because Campbell prolonged the traffic stop by asking unrelated investigatory questions and the district court made no finding that Campbell had independent reasonable suspicion of a different offense.
3. The Good-Faith Exception Applies
Although we conclude that Gomez’s traffic stop was unlawfully extended under Rodriguez, we nevertheless also conclude that suppression is not warranted because the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies to the conduct of Campbell and Schatz.
“To safeguard Fourth Amendment rights, the Supreme Court created ‘an exclusionary rule that, when applicable, forbids the use of improperly obtained evidence at trial.’” United States v. Bershchansky,
The good-faith exception provides, among other things, that “searches conducted in objectively reasonable reliance on binding appellate precedent are. not subject to the exclusionary rule”, because “suppression would do • nothing to deter police misconduct in these circumstances, and because it would come at a high cost to both the truth and the public safety.”
The Government argues, • for the first time on appeal, that the good-faith exception applies because Harrison—which upheld a five-to-six minute traffic stop extended by unrelated questioning—was binding precedent in this Circuit at the time of Gomez’s traffic stop, and the officers here conducted the five-minute stop in objectively reasonable reliance on Harrison.
It is notable that the Eighth Circuit applied the good-faith exception on remand after the Supreme Court rejected the de minimis rule in Rodyiguez\ “[u]n-der Davis ... the exclusionary rule does not apply because the circumstances of Rodriguez’s seizure fell squarely within our.case law and the search was conducted in objectively reasonable reliance” on the then-binding de minimis rule. Rodriguez,
In response, Gomez does not dispute that Harrison was binding precedent at the time of his March 2014 traffic stop—more than a year before the Supreme Court’s decision in Rodriguez, Nor does he contend that the officers failed to conduct the seizure in objectively reasonable reliance on our precedent, or that the five-minute traffic stop here is distinguishable from the five-to-six minute traffic stop that we upheld in Harrison, Rather, with respect to the good-faith exception, he asserts forfeiture: the Government forfeited its good-faith argument, according to Gomez, by failing to raise it before the district court.
“It is well settled that arguments not presented to the district court are considered waived, [or forfeited] and generally will not be considered for the first time on appeal.” Anderson Grp., LLC v. City of Saratoga Springs,
We generally exercise this discretion to consider an otherwise forfeited argument “where necessary to avoid a manifest injustice or where the argument presents a question of law and there is no need for additional fact-finding.” Bogle-Assegai v. Connecticut,
Under these circumstances, we will exercise our discretion to consider the Government’s good-faith argument, which presents a question of law that requires no additional fact-finding. See Rodriguez,
More specifically, Gomez first moved to suppress the evidence against him in June 2014, ten months before the Supreme Court decided Rodriguez. In his initial motion, Gomez did not even challenge the duration of the traffic stop generally, much less argue that Harrison no longer controlled. ■ The district court held the first suppression hearing in November 2014—a month after the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Rodriguez. See — U.S.-,
After the first hearing, Gomez filed a supplemental brief in February 2015 (a month after the Supreme Court heard oral árgument in Rodriguez) contending, for the first time, that Campbell unreasonably prolonged the stop.
After the case was transferred to a different district judge with Gomez’s motion pending, the district court held a second suppression hearing in June 2015, two months after the Supreme Court decided Rodriguez, In advance of the hearing, Gomez did not file a supplemental brief, nor did he discuss the Supreme Court’s decision during the hearing. When the district court twice questioned his counsel about Harrison during the hearing, his counsel did not raise Rodriguez.
Simply put, the first time Gomez argued that Harrison was no longer controlling precedent—or even cited Rodrigue®—¿was in his opening brief on appeal. We therefore conclude that the Government’s failure to raise the good-faith exception prior to its brief on appeal was understandable. See In re Nortel,
Accordingly, under these circumstances, we will exercise our discretion to consider the Government’s good-faith argument, and we conclude that the exception applies because the officers conducted Gomez’s five-minute traffic stop in objectively reasonable reliance on our then-binding precedent in Harrison. Therefore, although Rodriguez abrogates Harrison, and Gomez’s traffic stop was unlawfully extended absent independent reasonable suspicion in violation of Rodriguez, the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies.
II. Legality of the Initial Stop
Gomez also contends that the traffic stop was unlawful at its inception because Campbell did not have valid probable cause or reasonable suspicion to believe he committed a traffic violation. See Stewart,
Based on our review of the testimony during both suppression hearings and the contemporaneous radio communications, we conclude that the district court committed no error, clear or otherwise, in finding that Campbell had probable cause or reasonable suspicion to initiate the traffic stop. Campbell and Schatz testified consistently with each other across both hearings that Gomez drove through a red light before entering the highway. Moreover, the radid communications corroborate their testimony. Additionally, they both testified repeatedly—again corroborated by the radio communications—that Gomez was speeding while on the highway.
Faced with this evidence, Gomez raises two arguments to. challenge the district court’s credibility determination. See Jiau,
First, Gomez points to certain radio transmissions Campbell made (before Gomez even ran the red light entering the highway) indicating that the officers “definitely” needed to stop him. See App’x 202 at 13:39-14:46. Based on Campbell’s statements, Gomez argues that the officers intended to stop him “no matter what—even if they had to manufacture a traffic violation in order to do so.” Appellant’s Br. 30. This argument is unpersuasive. As an initial matter, it is well established that “an officer’s use of a traffic violation as a pretext to stop a car in order to obtain evidence for some more serious crime is of no constitutional significance.” United States v. Dhinsa,
Everybody was aware of the nature of our investigation. When we saw [Gomez] leave with a bag, I wanted everybody to be available if an opportunity to conduct a traffic stop or anything else presented itself. Meaning if he conducts any violations that we [a]re going to conduct a motor vehicle traffic stop for everybody to be aware.
App’x 236 (emphasis added). The district court, which listened to the radio communications, did not clearly err in crediting Campbell’s explanation. See United States v. Delva,
Second, Gomez urges us to conclude that Campbell “offered false testimony” about Gomez’s purported third traffic violation—turning right at a red light without stopping after exiting the highway—in order to cast doubt on Campbell’s testimony as to the other two violations. Appellant’s Br. 32. Although Campbell’s testimony about the third violation may be inconsistent and contradicted by Schatz’s account, Gomez’s argument is insufficient to disturb the district court’s finding for two reasons. First, we pay special deference to the district court’s credibility determination, see Jiau,
Accordingly, we cannot conclude that the district court erred in finding that Gomez’s traffic stop was based on valid probable cause or reasonable suspicion of a traffic violation.
III. Consent to the Searches
Finally, Gomez argues that the district court committed dear - error in crediting the officers’ testimony and finding that Gomez verbally consented to Campbell’s searches of (i) the interior of the black Honda, (ii) its trunk, and (iii) the closed duffel bag in the trunk. His argument is Unavailing,
It is “well settled that one of the specifically established exceptions to the requirements of both a warrant and probable cause is a search that is conducted pursuant to consent.” Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
Here, based on the record of the suppression hearings and the district court’s credibility findings, we encounter no such error. ■ See Gomez,
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the Supreme Court’s decision in Rodriguez abrogates our holding in Harrison, and that the extension of Gomez’s traffic stop violated the Fourth Amendment. Nevertheless,-the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies because the. officers reasonably relied on our then-binding precedent. As to Gomez’s remaining arguments, the district court did not clearly err in concluding that the initial traffic stop was valid' and that Gomez consented to the searches. We therefore AFFIRM the-judgment of the district court. .
Notes
. This opinion has been circulated to all the judges of the Court prior to filing,
. Unless otherwise noted, the following background is drawn from the testimony of Campbell and Schatz during the June 2015 suppression hearing, the second suppression hearing that was held due to the retirement of the district judge originally assigned to this case. In denying Gomez’s motion to suppress, the district court credited their testimony as to the issues of (i) a traffic violation, (ii) Gomez’s consent to the searches, (iii) the duration of the stop, and (iv) the nature of the questioning during the stop.
. Although Campbell initially believed that Brayan Gomez was Alex Ortiz-Gomez’s brother, they are cousins.
. Campbell recognized Brayan Gomez at this time.
. As we discuss further in addressing the le■gality of- the initial traffic stop, Campbell’s . testimony concerning, this third purported violation may be inconsistent and perhaps contradicted by Schatz’s testimony. See infra at 96-98.
. The precise order of Campbell's initial statements to Gomez is not entirely clear, as he testified during the November 2014 suppres- ■ sion hearing that h& first notified the-Gomez about his traffic violations and “[t]hen ... told [Gomez] that [the officers] were doing an investigation involving heroin and firearms...,” App’x 47-48. Furthermore, on cross-examination during the suppression hearings, Campbell admitted that he "may" have initially told Gomez, untruthfully, that he was stopped because he fit the description of someone involved in a shooting. App’x 88-89. According to Campbell, this was a "technique” to "calm the person down or to not let them know that we [are] on to the fact of what they are doing initially.” See App’x 88-89, 2,84-85; see also App’x 292,
. At this point, there still appears to have been confusion over whether Gomez was the cousin or brother of Alex Ortiz-Gomez.
. According to Campbell, traffic from the nearby intersection was passing on the driver’s side, and he therefore asked,-Gomez to exit the Honda,for safety purposes.
. The listed address was 82 Sisson Avenue in Hartford—the address where Gomez entered the white Acura earlier that morning,
. After the stop, Campbell obtained another receipt from the Ramada Inn’s staff indicating that Gomez checked out of the Ramada Inn on- March 20, the morning of the stop, and paid in cash,
. Campbell and Schatz testified that throughout their interaction with Gomez outside of the car, he appeared nervous—failing to make eye contact, swaying in place, and fidgeting.
. According to Campbell, Schatz was familiar with the "brand” of "City Vibe” heroin from executing controlled purchases through an informant. App’x ’261-62; see also App’x 62.
. In his motion, Gomez did not argue that the traffic stop was unreasonably prolonged in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
. The East Hartford police officer who arrested Gomez after the searches also testified, essentially for the undisputed fact that Gomez did not receive a traffic citation.
. The district court did not base its decision on, or address, the disputed third traffic violation concerning the red light at the end of the exit ramp. See id. at *1-3.
. Accordingly, the Court proceeded to address a separate issue, holding' that a dog sniff—an investigation unrelated to the underlying speeding violation—conducted while a driver is otherwise "lawfully seized for a traffic violation" "generally does not implicate legitimate privacy interests” and thus “does not rise to the level of a constitutionally cognizable infringement” of the Fourth Amendment, Id. at 409,
. See, e.g., United States v. McBride,
. Jndeed, we cited the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in Hernandez, which doubted whether the Fourth Amendment “is concerned with such trifling amounts of time” as seventeen minutes. See id. (quoting Hernandez,
. The Court declined to affirm on the basis of the officer acquiring reasonable suspicion for the drugs. The district court concluded that the officer did not have reasonable suspicion to prolong the traffic stop once he issued the written warning. The Eighth Circuit did not address that issue. Id. at 1616-17; see also id. at 1615 (criticizing one dissent for making its “own finding of 'reasonable suspicion’ ”).
. The district court cited Rodriguez but did not indicate that it affected Harrison. See Gomez,
. A Supreme Court decision "construing the Fourth Amendment is to be applied retroactively to all convictions that were not yet final at the time the decision was rendered.” United States v. Johnson,
. See United States v. Gomez,
. Notably, the Government does not meaningfully, contest that Rodriguez overrules Harrison. See Appellee’s Br. 36 & n.7 (arguing that even if Gomez is correct, we "need not decide here whether Rodriguez abrogates Harrison").
; Wé conclude that the other potential - grounds for distinguishing. Harrison from Rodriguez are unpersuasive. First, although Harrison involved questioning while Rodriguez involved a dog sniff, the Court treated both as investigations unrelated to the traffic stop’s mission. See Rodriguez,
. This is an unusual question for a traffic stop.that, under Rodriguez, must be.focused 'on the traffic violations that justified the stop.
. Specifically, the district court made the following findings: (i) “that [the officers] had probable cause or reasonable suspicion that Gomez had committed a traffic violation;” (ii) "that [Gomez] did consent to the search of his vehicle, including the trunk;” (iii) “that the process was reasonable in time, and that the officer’s unrelated inquiries did not measurably extend'the duration of the stop;” and (iv) "[that] Gomez was questioned about matters unrelated to the traffic violation during th[e] [stop].” App’x 339-40, 342 (internal quotation marks omitted).
. If it reached the issue, the district court could have—had it made more detailed findings of fact—found that there was reasonable suspicion to extend the stop. Setting aside what occurred during the traffic stop—which may have been unlawfully extended from its outset—the officers testified that prior to the stop they observed: Gomez leave an address associated with Ortiz-Gomez (the suspected leader of a heroin-trafficking organization); drive to a second address associated with Ortiz-Gomez; quickly change cars; drive away in a car that had been previously stopped with Ortiz-Gomez and $80,000 in cash; drive to a hotel just miles away from the two addresses; exit the hotel minutes later carrying a weighted duffel bag that he was not carrying previously; and, before driving away, place the duffel bag in the car's trunk (rather than its passenger compartment). See supra at 81-82. In other words, a pretextual stop and reasonable suspicion are not mutually exclusive; an officer may conduct a pretextual stop based on a traffic violation and then, in full compliance with Rodriguez, extend the stop if the officer develops reasonable suspicion based on the actions of a driver or passenger either (i) before the stop, or (ii) during traffic-related processing of the stop. But again, an officer may not extend an otherwise lawful stop for non-traffic related purposes absent reasonable suspicion of another offense.
. Gomez has not argued-that this variation of the -good-faith exception does not also apply to seizures, as opposed to searches, conducted in objectively reasonable reliance on binding appellate precedent. See Davis,
. Technically, Gomez asserts ‘-'waiver,'1 but "[t]he terms waiver and forfeiture.—though often used interchangeably by jurists and litigants—are not synonymous.” Hamer v. Neighborhood Housing Servs. of Chi., No. 16-658, — U.S. —,
. See also In re Nortel,
. Our decision not to reach the Government’s fact-dependent reasonable suspicion argument, which it raised before the district court, is not inconsistent with our decision to reach the Government’s purely legal good-faith argument, which it raised for the first time on appeal. Although we have broad discretion to consider 'issues “raised ... in the [district [c]ourt, but that were not reached there,” Booking,
. jt appears that the Government did not file a responsive supplemental brief.
. For the first time on appeal, Gomez suggests that Campbell, a Hartford police detective and cross-deputized DEA task force officer, had no authority to conduct a traffic stop in the neighboring jurisdiction of East Hartford. Although Gomez’s counsel explored this issue on cross-examination during the first suppression hearing, he did not argue that the stop was invalid on this basis in his initial motion to suppress or his post-hearing supplemental brief, or during oral argument at the end of the second suppression hearing. We therefore consider this argument forfeited.
. • Gomez-.argues that even, if he did verbally consent to the searches, Campbell’s purportedly illegal pat-down prior to the trunk search tainted the voluntariness of Gomez's consent. The record is clear that Gomez waived this argument during- - the second suppression hearing, during which his counsel responded affirmatively when the court asked directly: “I think in one of your briefs earlier ... you cite some cases that actually go to voluntariness of consent. I want to be clear, my understanding is your client’s position is that he gave no consent so the voluntariness is not an issue." App-’x 327 (emphasis added).
