MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
Defendant Joshua Gonsalves, charged with various counts in connection with an alleged money laundering and oxycodone-trafficking conspiracy, moves to suppress all evidence obtained as the result of a warrantless stop of his motor vehicle by police on February 27, 2012. Defendant contends his Fourth Amendment rights were violated because the police lacked reasonable suspicion or probable cause to believe that he was committing a crime, and that the subsequent search and seizure were unreasonable. At the evidentia-ry hearing on June 20, 2014, Barnstable Detective and DEA Cape Cod Drug Task Force Agent Mark K. Butler testified for the government. After hearing, the Defendant’s Motion to Suppress (Docket No. 174) is DENIED.
II. FINDINGS OF FACT
The following facts are drawn from Detective Butler’s testimony and his signed affidavit, which was admitted into evidence at the hearing.
1. The Investigation
Beginning in 2011, the DEA Cape Cod Drug Task Force (“CCDTF”) began to investigate the oxycodone trafficking activities of Joshua Gonsalves and his brother, Stanley. Investigators also obtained information relating to Joshua Gonsalves’s oxy-codone trafficking activity through wire intercepts and text messages provided by cooperating defendants in a related case arising from an FBI investigation.
In October 2011, a confidential informant (CS-1) notified investigators that an associate of Gonsalves planned to drive off-Cape to purchase oxycodone. Investigators followed the vehicle from Cape Cod to Haverhill and back. Afterwards, CS-1 confirmed to investigators that the oxyco-done had arrived. On November 8, 2011, another confidential source made a controlled purchase of oxycodone pills from Gonsalves and his girlfriend Katelyn Shaw. Later in November, CS-1 informed inves
On February 2, 2012, CS-1 made a controlled purchase of oxycodone from defendant. Then, on February 25, 2012, CS-1 informed investigators that defendant planned to'travel to the New Bedford area to purchase oxycodone from his usual supplier. According to CS-1 and another informant, this supplier had been Joshua Gonsalves’s primary source of oxycodone pills during the fall, providing him with thousands of pills. These purchases continued through February. CS-1 stated that defendant planned to pick up approximately 2,000 oxycodone pills from the supplier, and that defendant would travel in a black Cadillac with Shaw. However, due to problems collecting enough money, CS-1 informed investigators the next day that the trip was delayed.
2. The Stop
On the afternoon of February 27, 2012, CS-1 advised authorities that Gonsalves had collected the additional money, and that, as planned, Gonsalves would drive from Cape Cod at about 4:30 p.m. to the New Bedford area in his black Cadillac with Shaw to purchase oxycodone from the supplier.
Shortly after receiving this information, at 4:50 p.m., Barnstable Detective Lieutenant Sean Balcom and others began following a black 2005 Cadillac as it traveled westbound on Route 6 off the Cape. Gon-salves was driving. The detectives followed the vehicle to Acushnet, Massachusetts, which borders on New Bedford. Detectives observed Gonsalves pull into a driveway and park next to a white Infiniti. The detectives recognized the white Infini-ti by its license plate number because the suspected oxycodone supplier had been previously stopped by Falmouth police while operating the same vehicle. Gon-salves, Shaw, and an unidentified woman entered the home. Detectives conducted surveillance of the Cadillac until approximately 8:00 p.m. when they reentered the Cadillac to make the homeward trek.
Barnstable detectives followed them back to Cape Cod intending to stop the vehicle to investigate drug trafficking regardless of whether there was traffic violation. Two officers stopped the Cadillac (which they said was traveling 65 m.p.h. in a 55 m.p.h. zone), and told Gonsalves he was being stopped for speeding.
Gonsalves refused to consent to a search of the Cadillac. As instructed by Balcom, York asked Gonsalves to step out of the vehicle. Gonsalves complied. Officers frisked Gonsalves and found a large wad of cash in his pocket.
Shaw was placed under arrest, at the scene. A patdown' search of Shaw revealed another fifteen oxycodone pills on her person. They were transported to the Barnstable Police Department. A full inventory search of the Cadillac at the Barnstable Police Department revealed $16,670 in cash hidden in a speaker box in the Cadillac’s trunk and a digital scale in the center console.
III. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
Defendant argues that the police lacked reasonable suspicion to believe that Joshua Gonsalves was committing a crime when they stopped his car. The government responds that it had both probable cause and reasonable suspicion to believe he was engaged in drug trafficking, and in any event he was speeding.
To satisfy the requirement of the Fourth Amendment that an investigatory stop of an automobile is reasonable, police officers must have a reasonable suspicion that a person is engaged in some illegal activity. United States v. Jones,
The court conducts a two-part inquiry to determine the objective reasonableness of the stop and search: “The police are not allowed to make an initial stop unless they have a reasonable, articu-lable suspicion about an individual’s involvement in some criminal activity. If the initial stop passes muster, actions undertaken during the course of the stop must be reasonably related in scope to the stop itself unless the police have a basis for expanding their investigation.” United States v. Arnott,
Reasonableness requires a practical, commonsense determination. United States v. Ruidiaz,
With respect to phase one, I find the police had reasonable suspicion that Gonsalves was involved in drug trafficking. The officer’s initial stop was justified by information provided by an informant of established reliability.
The next issue is whether the scope of the search was reasonably related to the initial stop. Police conducting a Terry stop in a drug investigation are entitled to take reasonable measures to protect their safety, like frisking the driver and/or passengers and searching the car for guns. The police had strong reason to believe Gonsalves had just concluded a drug transaction. The connection between guns and drugs is “legendary”. Arnott,
While waiting, two officers witnessed Shaw throw a plastic bag containing oxycodone pills. At that point, the officers had probable cause to arrest Shaw and the others in light of all the information available to the police. The police were entitled to search the car incident to the arrest. See Arizona v. Gant,
I find that the twenty-minute roadside stop was justified by reasonable suspicion based on information provided by a confidential informant of established reliability and that the stop and search were reasonable in scope and duration in light of the unfolding circumstances.
TV. ORDER
Defendant’s Motion to Suppress (Docket No. 174) is DENIED.
Notes
. See United States v. John Willis, et al., No. 11-cr-10212-JLT (D.Mass.).
. There is a dispute as to whether Gonsalves was speeding.
. Gonsalves said it was $1,500. Officers later counted the cash, which totaled $6,523.
. The government contends that the stop of Joshua Gonsalves was independently justified by an alleged speeding violation. If this stop were just based on a traffic stop, the analysis of the frisk and scope of the search would be different.
. Because reasonable suspicion justified the search and seizure by police up until the oxycodone was discovered, the Court need not determine whether CS-l’s information also established probable cause. See Arnott,
