Lead Opinion
Gregory B. Bloomfield (a.k.a. Earl Mar-cum Johnson) appeals the district court’s
I. BACKGROUND
At about 7 p.m. on March 6,1993, Missouri State Highway Patrolman Scott Jefferson Roberts was parked on the shoulder of 1-44 in Pulaski County when he saw a Hertz-Penske rental truck abruptly change lanes without signaling. Roberts followed the truck for about two miles to the 150-mile marker, where he pulled the truck over. He asked for the driver’s license, which bore the name Earl Marcum Johnson, and for the truck rental agreement. When Bloomfield handed the license and agreement to Roberts, Roberts noticed that he appeared to be very nervous: his hand was shaking, he was breathing heavily, his eyes were red, he only rolled the window part of the way down, and he did not look at Roberts. Roberts saw what appeared to be two radar detectors on the center of the truck’s dashboard.
Roberts asked Bloomfield to sit in the patrol car while he ran a radio check on the license. Bloomfield opened the truck door only slightly, squeezing himself out through a narrow opening. As the truck door was opened, Roberts noticed a “masking odor” of deodorant, and he saw a pager attached to Bloomfield’s waistband as they walked toward the patrol car.
In the patrol car, Roberts asked Bloomfield where he was coming from and where he was going. Bloomfield said that he had been working in Arizona, and was going to his home in North Carolina after stopping in Pennsylvania to visit his fiancee. Roberts then asked the name of the company Bloom
Roberts decided to call for a drug dog to check the truck and told Bloomfield of these plans. Roberts requested that the dog be sent as quickly as possible from Phelps County, the closest county with a drug dog, and, if the Phelps County dog was unavailable, from any State Highway Patrol troop that had a dog immediately available. Sergeant John S. Betts arrived, called by Roberts for assistance, and got into the back seat of the patrol car. Bloomfield asked if he were under arrest; Roberts and Betts told him that he was not.
While they were waiting for the dog to arrive, Bloomfield told Betts that he needed to use the bathroom, but that he did not want to go to a police station where there would be other police officers. Roberts and Betts then escorted Bloomfield, who drove his own truck, to the nearest zone office, about a ten-minute drive away. There were no other police officers at the zone office. While there, Bloomfield asked Roberts how long he would have to wait, and Roberts responded that he would hold Bloomfield until the dog arrived, unless he felt that the waiting period was becoming unreasonably long. Bloomfield waited outside the office, where he smoked several cigarettes; the officers waited inside.
About one hour after Roberts originally stopped Bloomfield, the dog arrived at the zone office and “alerted” to the cargo compartment of the rental truck, indicating the presence of drugs. Roberts placed Bloomfield under arrest and searched the truck, finding a range of deodorant products, including “Stick-Ups,” “Renuzit,” dog repellent, pet deodorizer and ammonia, and 797 pounds of marijuana.
Bloomfield moved to suppress the evidence found during the search of his rental truck. Following a hearing, the district court denied the motion and admitted the evidence. Before trial, Bloomfield entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress, and was sentenced to sixty months imprisonment, a $50 special assessment, and five years of supervised release by the district court. Bloomfield appealed the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress, and the district court was reversed by a majority of the circuit court panel. This rehearing en bane followed.
II. THE DISTRICT COURT’S FINDINGS
The district court’s explicit factual findings are unfortunately limited to finding that the stop was not pretextual, that Roberts smelled a “masking odor” from the truck when Bloomfield exited, and that the dog was summoned promptly and arrived within a reasonable time; the court made no other factual findings regarding the circumstances leading up to the arrival of the dog. Hearing Tr. at 94. Rule 12(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure requires that “[wjhere factual issues are involved in determining a motion, the [trial] court shall state its essential findings on the record.” Three circuit courts have held, however, that the failure of a district court to state the factual findings underlying its decision on a motion to suppress does not necessitate a remand. See, e.g., United States v. Yeagin,
The stated rationale is that Rule 12(e) confers on the litigants a personal “right” to have factual findings made, and that “failure to object” to a lack of findings “results in waiver.” This has the effect of denying defendants (and the government if it should appeal the granting of a suppression motion) a windfall when the trial court omits a finding apparent on the face of the record, or when, under any possible view of the record, the district court could have reached but one result.
... The idea ... is that the district court, in reaching its legal conclusion, presumably made whatever factual findings were needed to support the conclusion. Denying a remand because of “waiver,” then, means we review facts we infer were actually, albeit silently, found.
This approach to inadequate Rule 12(e) findings of fact is consistent with this circuit’s longstanding approach to Rule 12(e)’s analogue in civil procedure, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a), which requires trial courts to make findings of fact specially. We have held that if the record “sufficiently informs th[is] court of the basis for the trial court’s decision on the material issue” presented, a remand for further findings is not required. Maxwell v. Mason,
Although, on the issue of reasonable suspicion, the district court specially found only that Roberts did smell a “masking odor” from the truck, its finding that this gave rise to reasonable suspicion that Bloomfield was carrying drugs indicates that the court treated Roberts’ testimony at the suppression hearing as credible.
III. DISCUSSION
A. The Traffic Stop
Bloomfield argues that the initial traffic stop was pretextual, and thus violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unlawful searches and seizures.
We review the district court’s finding that the initial stop was not pretextual for clear error. See United States v. Richards,
Once Roberts stopped Bloomfield, he was entitled to conduct an investigation “reasonably related in scope to the circumstances that justified the interference in the first place.” Cummins,
B. The Seizure
Bloomfield next argues that his detention while waiting for the drug dog to arrive was a de facto arrest. We review the question of whether the seizure and detention of Bloomfield and his truck amounted to an arrest de novo. United States v. Miller,
Stopping an automobile and detaining its occupants constitutes a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Berkemer v. McCarty,
Bloomfield and his truck were seized at the time of the initial stop, and that seizure extended throughout the waiting period until the dog “alerted” to the truck. Roberts testified that, after he radioed for the dog, Bloomfield expressed a desire to leave the site of the stop:
Q: What did you inform him when he requested to leave at the scene of the initial stop?
A [Roberts]: Again he asked to go on and use the rest room. We said no he wasn’t. He asked me how long he was going to have to wait, and I told him I did not know how long it would be. And he asked if he could go, and we told him there was nowhere to go at the 150 marker, his vehicle was staying there.
Hearing Tr. at 33. Roberts testified that Bloomfield again asked if he could leave at the zone office:
Q: At the zone office, then, he did request to leave; is that correct?
A [Roberts]: Again he said [sic] asked if I was going to hold him all night, and I said I didn’t intend to hold him there all night, but I would just hold him as long as I felt was reasonable.
Hearing Tr. at 34.
The initial seizure of Bloomfield and the truck was thus extended throughout the waiting period; Roberts testified that he said that he was holding the truck, and that he told Bloomfield that, without the truck, there was nowhere to go. Under these circumstances, a reasonable person would not have felt free to leave.
We consider both the length of the detention and the efforts of police to conduct their investigation quickly and unintrusively in' determining whether a detention is reasonable in the context of an investigative stop: “[A]n investigative detention must be temporary and last no longer than is necessary to effectuate the purpose of the stop. Similarly, the investigative methods employed should be the least intrusive means reasonably available to verify or dispel the officer’s suspicion in a short period of time.” United States v. Willis,
Although “[t]here is no bright line of demarcation between investigative stops and arrests,” Miller,
In Sharpe, the Court found that a twenty-minute detention was reasonable when the police acted diligently and defendant contributed to the delay.
The other circumstances surrounding the seizure also did not transform it into an arrest requiring a showing of probable cause. Roberts did not subject Bloomfield to any intrusion or restraint beyond that necessary for his investigation. He told Bloomfield that he was not under arrest. Hearing Tr. at 9. See United States v. Zukas,
C. The Terry Standard
Bloomfield also argues that his detention pending arrival of the drug dog was a seizure made without reasonable and articulable suspicion of criminal activity. If, during a traffic stop, an officer develops a reasonable, articulable suspicion that a vehicle is carrying contraband, he has “justification for a greater intrusion unrelated to the traffic offense.”
We review the factual findings of the district court as to what the parties said or did for clear error; we review the district court’s finding that the Fourth Amendment has not been violated de novo. See United States v. Garcia,
Officer Roberts had a reasonable suspicion that Bloomfield was transporting drugs when Bloomfield exited his rental truck to accompany Roberts to the patrol car. While there is a possible innocent explanation for each of the factors cited by Roberts if examined separately, as a totality they were sufficient to create a reasonable suspicion that Bloomfield was transporting drugs.
Although it is customary for people to be “somewhat nervous” when Roberts pulls them over, it is unusual for people to “fidget” as Bloomfield did when the stop is a “normal
D. The Search
Bloomfield’s final argument that the warrantless search of the truck after the drug dog “alerted” was invalid requires only brief discussion. A dog’s identification of drugs in luggage or in a car provides probable cause that drugs are present. Place,
IY. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the decision of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Russell G. Clark, Senior Judge, United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri.
. The court found that Williams required remand because the district court had not stated the legal basis for its denial of Williams' motion to suppress: "If we knew the district court's legal reasoning in this case, we might have little difficulty in ascertaining the pertinent but unstated findings underlying it.” Williams,
In Williams, although the court remanded for both factual findings and conclusions of law, the reason for the remand was not the lack of factual findings, but the fact that the appellate court could not discover from the record on what legal basis the district court’s decision rested: the circuit court stated that "[t]he record suggests three possible grounds on which the district court could have ruled,” consent, search incident to arrest, or reasonable suspicion. Id. at 1289-90. The passage from Williams cited by the dissent itself supports this reading of Williams, stating that remand is needed when the district court "not only” fails to make findings of fact, "but also” does not state its legal reasoning. Id. at 1288. This suggests that the district court’s failure to state legal reasoning, not its failure to find facts, was the dispositive ground for remand. In United States v. Taylor, the D.C. Circuit again discussed remand in the context, not of inadequate findings of fact, but of failure to state a legal conclusion: "We are somewhat troubled because the District Court ... never expressed a conclusion that the officers had probable cause to arrest Taylor.”
. In Charles, plaintiff claimed disparate treat- . ment, alleging that she was discharged, rather than demoted, because of her race. There was directly conflicting testimony on the question of whether Allstate Insurance had a practice of demoting, rather than discharging, managers who had performance difficulties, and the district court made no findings of fact on this issue.
. Although Bloomfield denied that he was excessively nervous when giving Roberts his license and while sitting in the patrol car, the question of whether Roberts had reasonable suspicion centers on Roberts' perception of the facts, not on how Bloomfield actually felt. See United States v. Weaver,
. These facts include that: Roberts observed that Bloomfield was breathing heavily, his hands were shaking, and his eyes were red; Roberts saw a radar and a laser detector on the truck's dashboard; Bloomfield “squeezed” out of the truck's door; Roberts noticed the smell of deodorizers; Bloomfield carried a pager; Bloomfield's answers to questions were evasive, and he failed to give his employer's name or the name of the Pennsylvania town he said he was going to visit; and Bloomfield initially acted as if he did not hear Roberts ask him if he could search the truck. Presentence Investigation Report at 3-4.
."[Qluestions [about purpose and destination] were reasonably related to ascertaining the reasons for Barahona's erratic driving and whether he posed a danger to others on the road.” Barahona,
. In both- Place and Royer, the Supreme Court has suggested that the use of drug dogs in examining suspect luggage is- valuable as often the fastest and least intrusive method of resolving suspicions during an investigative stop.
. In Terry v. Ohio, the Supreme Court held that when the police are dealing with "necessarily swift action predicated upon the on-the-spot observations of the officer on the beat — which historically has not been, and as a practical matter could not be, subjected to the warrant procedure,” a limited search and seizure does not require probable cause, but "specific and articu-lable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant th[e] intrusion.”
Hogan held that, when police had prepared information about and surveillance of a suspect ahead of time, knew his address and workplace, were observing his residence, and had obtained search warrants for his residence and truck, they could not seize his automobile and his person, for which they did not have a warrant, without probable cause.
. If an officer can cite only one or two factors such as nervousness or out-of-state license plates or identification, he may not have a reasonable suspicion to seize a person pending investigation. See, e.g., Garcia,
. The dissent attempts to narrow the concept of reasonable suspicion by discounting “subjective perceptions” of law enforcement officers as factors supporting reasonable suspicion. This would constitute a dramatic departure from our previous case law: we have often held that nervousness and other "subjective perceptions” are valid factors supporting reasonable suspicion. See, e.g., Richards,
Dissenting Opinion
I write in dissent because I-not only disagree with the majority opinion’s conclusion that there was no Fourth Amendment violation, but I also disagree with its failure to remand the case for proper development of the factual record.
I. The “Any Reasonable View of the Evidence” Standard
A.
The majority opinion admits that the district court’s factual findings are “unfortunately limited to finding that the stop was not pretextual, that Roberts smelled a ‘masking odor’ from the truck when Bloomfield exited, and that the dog was summoned promptly and arrived within a reasonable time.” Maj. op. at 913. Unfortunately, the majority opinion moves forward without hesitation to affirm a felony conviction despite the inadequately developed district court record. The majority opinion justifies its refusal to remand by adopting the “any reasonable view of the evidence” standard for the review of a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress evidence. This standard allows an appeals court to scour the record in a search for material to bolster a district court’s ruling which is based on insufficient findings of fact. Such findings, however, are clearly mandated by Rule 12(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The plain language of the Rule provides in part: “Where factual issues are involved in determining a motion, the court shall state its essential findings on the record.” Fed. R.Crim.P. 12(e) (emphasis added). Two other circuits have adopted a plain reading of the Rule and will remand a case for more factual findings when a district court fails to
B.
Even assuming the “any reasonable view of the evidence” standard is applicable to Rule 12(e), I believe nonetheless that the majority opinion has wrongly applied it in this particular case. Cases from two of the three circuits which the majority opinion relies upon have applied this standard where the circumstances on the record either made only one conclusion possible or left no doubt as to the district court’s assessment of credibility. In such narrow instances, the absence of Rule 12(e) findings does not impede an appeals court’s ability to conduct a proper review. This limited application of the standard is made clear by the D.C. Circuit in its discussion of the policy behind Rule 12(e) in United States v. Williams:
When a district court’s ruling on a pretrial motion involves factual issues, Rule 12(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure commands the court to “state its essential findings on the record.” The rule serves several functions. Findings on the record inform the parties and other interested persons of the grounds of the ruling, add discipline to the process of judicial decision-making and enable appellate courts properly to perform their reviewing function. If the district court not only fails to make “essential findings on the record,” but also expresses nothing in the way of legal reasoning, if it simply announces a result, it may frustrate these objectives. We say “may” because there are cases in which the facts are so certain and the legal consequences so apparent, that little guesswork is needed to determine the grounds for the ruling.951 F.2d 1287 , 1288 (D.C.Cir.1992) (emphasis added). This opening paragraph of the court’s opinion indicates that cases which can be excepted from the Rule 12(e) mandate are limited to those matters where the facts are certain and little guesswork is involved. The Williams court further noted that its gloss on Rule 12(e) is meant to prevent a windfall to the losing party on the suppression motion in cases where the “trial court omits a finding apparent on the face of the record, or when, under any possible view of the record, the district court could have reached but one result.” Id. at 1291 (citations omitted). The Williams court’s approach to Rule 12(e) has a much narrower scope than the approach taken by the majority here today.1
A subsequent opinion from the D.C. Circuit strongly suggests that the “any reasonable view of the evidence” standard should
In Griffin, a case from the Tenth Circuit which the majority opinion relies upon for its version of the “any reasonable view of the evidence” standard, the court said: “We have before us no specific or detailed findings of fact, only the trial court’s statement that the Government’s evidence was credible and defendant’s was not.”
If the “any reasonable view of the evidence” standard is to apply at all, I believe that it should apply only where the trial court makes clear its assessment of witness credibility. In the present case, a strict application of Rule 12(e) would not afford Bloomfield a windfall. We have only the disputed testimony of Trooper Roberts upon which to rely. Thus, the trial court’s assessment of his credibility as a witness is of the utmost importance. Apparently aware of this problem, the majority opinion states: “Although, on the issue of reasonable suspicion, the district court specially found only that Roberts did smell a ‘masking odor’ from the truck, its finding that this gave rise to reasonable suspicion that Bloomfield was carrying drugs indicates that the court treated Roberts’ testimony at the suppression hearing as credible.” Maj. op. at 915. This is the first step in the majority’s analytic alchemy. Because the district court believed one fact presented through Roberts’ testimony, the majority opinion assumes that the other testimony given by Roberts, which “implicitly” formed the basis of the judge’s ruling, was also credible. “[Credibility determinations are not an all-or-nothing proposition.” United States v. Cassidy,
The harm to Bloomfield which results from the majority’s application of this standard is obvious. The majority cites numerous facts from the PSR to support its conclusion as to reasonable suspicion which were taken from Roberts’ testimony at the suppression hearing. This manipulation of the record elevates facts from the PSR to the level of a district court’s findings of fact. The district court’s acceptance of a PSR for purposes of sentencing is not the same as a district court’s finding of fact. The underdeveloped record we have on appeal simply leaves us with too much “guesswork.” The. majority opinion avoids this obstacle to proper appellate review by engaging in post-hoc characterization which magically converts disputed testimony in the record into facts which the district court “implicitly” found. The approach disregards the established principle that appeals courts should refuse to rule before the record is fully developed. See Public Service Comm. v. Wisconsin Telephone Co.,
II. The Fourth Amendment Violation
The majority opinion discusses at great length Bloomfield’s argument that his seizure was a de facto arrest executed without probable cause. By contrast, it only briefly discusses whether the trooper had reasonable suspicion to detain and question Bloomfield beyond the scope of the initial traffic stop. This portion of its opinion, however, is most injurious to the protections of the Fourth Amendment. Though the majority opinion significantly lowers the standard for facts sufficient to allow expanded police inquiry beyond questions reasonably related to the purpose of the initial stop, the majority fails to address adequately recent cases from this circuit-which directly consider the issue of what circumstances permit expanded questioning. The majority opinion concedes: “Bloomfield and his truck were seized at the time of the initial stop, and that seizure extended throughout the waiting period until the dog ‘alerted’ to the truck.” Maj. op. at 916. Therefore, the relevant question is whether Trooper Roberts had a reasonable suspicion which would justify the expansion of the investigation beyond the scope of the original traffic stop. Because the majority opinion finds that “Officer Roberts had a reasonable suspicion that Bloomfield was transporting drugs when Bloomfield exited his rental truck,” I will not discuss the events after that point because they cannot properly inform the reasonable suspicion analysis in this matter. Maj. op. at 918.
In United States v. Barahona,
The factors allowing expanded questioning in Barahona are significantly stronger than those cited by the majority opinion in the present case. All of the factors giving rise to reasonable suspicion in Barahona were premised on concrete facts which were not susceptible to the subjective perceptions of the trooper. Barahona’s name was not the name stated on the rental agreement. His license could not be verified. He said he was on vacation in St. Louis, but the rental agreement required that the car be returned to Los Angeles in two days at the most. These factors do not require the trooper to make a subjective evaluation of the detainee’s appearance. They are objectively suspicious. The majority opinion today concludes that red eyes, shaky hands, heavy breathing, radar detectors, a pager, a partially open window, and the strong scent of deodorant likewise create a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot. (As noted above, the only factor relied upon by the district court was the deodorant smell.) This type of evidence almost always comes in through testimony and is often contested. The district court has the job of hearing conflicting testimony, weighing credibility, and ultimately deciding whose version to believe. Such determination is especially critical in a case which rests in large part on the trooper’s evaluation of the appearance and demeanor of the detainee. Yet, in precisely the matter which most needs explicit findings, we have a conspicuous and irremediable absence of them.
However, even with such findings, I would not conclude that these facts rose to the level of reasonable suspicion. The objective factors which Trooper Roberts recounted — the presence of radar detectors, a pager, and the partially rolled-down window — are readily susceptible to myriad innocent explanations. This is especially true of the one fact found by the district court — the car deodorant. Furthermore, these factors and the majority’s heavy reliance upon the trooper’s subjective impressions of Bloomfield do not reach the level of evidence of a reasonable suspicion which we have required in prior precedent. See, e.g., United States v. Garcia,
The majority opinion also fails to discuss the inconsistency of its approach in the present case to the Fourth Amendment approach we took in Garcia. The majority opinion cites Garcia to support the following proposition: “If an officer can cite only one or two factors such as nervousness, hesitation in answering questions or out-of-state license plates, he may not have a reasonable suspicion to seize a person pending investigation.” Maj. op. at 918 n. 9. The majority opinion attempts to distinguish the present case by noting that Trooper Roberts cited at least “six factors” which excited his suspicion, but it fails to mention that in Garcia^ the trooper relied on eight factors which excited his suspicion.
The precedents cited above manifest a serious and appropriate concern for the protection of innocent activity. Today the majority opinion shows little regard for the protection of innocent activity, and cavalierly denies Bloomfield protection under the Fourth Amendment. In some sense, the Fourth Amendment provides a right to be left alone. This understanding is consistent with our foundational principles of “liberty” and “the pursuit of happiness.” When examining a search and seizure question against this historical and constitutional background, courts must be Argus-eyed in the protection of innocent activity from unreasonable intrusion. The majority opinion does not demonstrate such vigilance.
The majority opinion finds that there was no Fourth Amendment violation because even though Trooper Roberts’ investigation went beyond the scope of the initial stop, he had “a reasonable suspicion that Bloomfield was transporting drugs when Bloomfield exited his rental truck to accompany Roberts to the patrol car.” The majority opinion attempts to bolster this conclusion with facts from the PSR. The first factor is the act of “fidgeting,” and with regard to this “incriminating” action, the majority opinion observes: “Although it is customary for people to be ‘somewhat nervous’ when Roberts pulls them over, it is unusual for people to ‘fidget’ as Bloomfield did when the stop is a ‘normal routine’ traffic stop.” Maj. op. at 918-19. The fact that the distinction between “somewhat nervous” and “fidgeting” is cited in the majority opinion to support its conclusion as to reasonable suspicion eloquently exposes the weakness of the foundation underlying its result. At the point when Bloomfield exited the vehicle, I reiterate that the only relevant factual finding was that Roberts detected a strong odor. (Such odor is pejoratively referred to as a “masking odor,” but, of course, all deodorants mask other less desirable smells.) Beyond this fact, we have only the trooper’s disputed testimony. Even accepting the majority’s assumption that the facts gleaned from the PSR formed the basis of the district court’s ruling, I do not believe that there was a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity at the moment Bloomfield exited the vehicle. Once Bloomfield’s license and rental agreement had been verified, he should have been allowed to go on his way. Viewing the totality of the circumstances up to the point where the majority opinion finds a reasonable suspicion, a large group of innocent motorists could also be called into suspicion. Even the “masking odor” factor could apply to the millions of motorists who use car deodorizers.
From the evidence seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment, we learned that Bloomfield was transporting marijuana, but that is irrelevant to the exclusionary rule. The Fourth Amendment is still part of the Constitution. The police cannot be allowed to engage, without reasonable suspicion, in intrusive practices likely to invade the privacy of a large number of innocent citizens in the name of drug interdiction. See Garcia,
Because I believe the majority opinion conveniently, but wrongly, disregards the long-established principles of appellate review in its haste to uphold a seizure which was unreasonable under the still extant Fourth Amendment, I respectfully dissent.
. The majority opinion claims that the court in United States v. Williams,
. The majority opinion draws an analogy to Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. It notes that an appellate court may affirm a decision based on incomplete findings if there can be no genuine dispute about how the trial court actually resolved the facts missing for the express findings. Charles v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I join part II of Judge McMillian’s dissenting opinion. His eloquent and forceful discussion of the place of the Fourth Amend
Dissenting Opinion
I join Judge McMillian’s dissent, but add some further comments.
Unfortunately, the majority opinion reaches out to sustain a drug conviction and in the process further shrinks the constitutional right against unreasonable governmental intrusions. The majority may feel justified in giving the defendant, a drug carrier, his just deserts. The people’s right, however, to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, as guaranteed by the founding fathers in the fourth amendment, is diminished in the process.
How many millions of motorists who use car deodorizers are now at a greater risk of having their vehicles and persons detained for one or more hours as suspected drug carriers until the police can procure the services of a drug dog; and how many people would not demonstrate varying degrees of nervous behavior in the presence of the police?
In this case, without even a petition for rehearing by the government, the majority has overruled the panel opinion authored by Judge McMillian, which I joined. As that now vacated opinion observed “[t]he district court simply concluded that no Fourth Amendment violation occurred because ‘Officer Roberts had a reasonable basis for concluding that the vehicle may be carrying some controlled substance in that he clearly smelled the masking odor from the cab of the truck.’ ” United States v. Bloomfield,
While I am critical of the majority opinion, I offer a small ray of hope that in this circuit the people still may be afforded some protection, if only a little, by the fourth amendment. I refer the reader to United States v. Hogan,
In Hogan, the police obtained information from a reliable confidential informant (Cl) that Jimmie Hogan had been selling drugs (methamphetamines and marijuana) at the Chrysler plant in Fenton, Missouri. The Cl had observed the drug sales hand to hand. Further, according to the Cl, Hogan regularly drove a white Dodge pickup to work in the midaftemoon to join the second shift. Based on this information, the police obtained a warrant to search the white Dodge pickup and Hogan’s home. At noon on the day in question, Hogan left his house driving in the direction of the Chrysler plant in a blue Oldsmobile Cutlass, not the white Dodge pickup.
The police seized Hogan and the car he was driving three to five miles from his home. The police then drove Hogan back to his home while another police agent drove the Oldsmobile back to Hogan’s home. The police, as in Bloomfield, detained Hogan and his vehicle until a narcotics-sniffing dog arrived. The dog smelled the car and alerted the police to the presence of drugs. Police then obtained a warrant, searched the Oldsmobile and recovered drugs — methamphetamine and marijuana — verifying the Cl’s information.
Judge Wollman authored the unanimous opinion (joined by Judge Fagg and myself) which invalidated the search. Hogan,
Comparing Hogan to Bloomfield, I note these crucial facts.
Police Information
1. The police seized Bloomfield and his truck based on smell. The Bloomfield majority recites that Officer Roberts had a reasonable suspicion that Bloomfield was transporting drugs when Bloomfield exited his rental truck. Maj. op. at 918. The majority, however, concedes that “Bloomfield and his truck were seized at the time of the initial stop, and that seizure extended throughout the waiting period until the dog ‘alerted’ to the truck.” Id. at 915-16.
2. In Hogan, however, the police had reliable information that Hogan dealt drugs. Is that not better information than a “hunch” based on smell? The police, following a similar protocol to that in Bloomfield, took an additional step after observing the “alerting” dog. The police obtained a search warrant. In Hogan, the court concluded that the search was illegal.
Here, however, the majority concludes that the Bloomfield search was legal. Other than the parties’ names, the only distinctions I note between Hogan and Bloomfield are: (1) in Bloomfield, the police had less knowledge that the vehicle’s driver was a drug courier; and (2) in Hogan, the police may have detained the suspect for a shorter period of time.
Perhaps the reader in-comparing the two opinions may find other distinctions or may conclude that these distinctions are without a difference. In my view, a comparison between Hogan and Bloomfield demonstrates the error in the majority’s analysis. I am delighted, however, that the majority acknowledges Hogan and attempts to contrast the two cases. Hogan remains good law and can be relied on in this circuit. At least for now, I am encouraged to see a bit of life in this circuit’s fourth amendment jurisprudence.
