Whеn passing sentence, the judge expressly considered, over the defendant’s objection, testimony that the defendant had given at a hearing on his motion to suppress evidence assertedly seized in violation of his fourth amendment rights. We reject the argument that the sentencing judge viоlated the defendant’s constitutional rights by considering the testimony that the defendant offered at the suppression hearing. We decline to expand the rule announced in
Simmons v. United States,
I
Stopped at a permanent Border Patrol checkpoint near Falfurrias, Texas, defendant Hector Hernandez Camacho responded to questions regarding his citizenship. The Border Patrol Agent asked Camacho to open the trunk of his car and when he did so marijuana was found. Indicted for possession with intent to distribute some seventy pounds of marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), Camacho moved to suppress the evidence on the ground that the search lacked probable cause.
At the suppression hearing, the arresting officer explained that as he approached the car he smelled marijuana and for that reason asked Camacho to open its trunk. Camacho sought to discredit the officer’s testimony by explaining why the marijuana would have been difficult to smell: he gave a detailed account of the careful manner in which he had wrapped the contraband and described an elaborate soaking and deodorizing procedure that he had used in order to avoid getting caught by the police. The district judge expressly credited the testimony of the agent and rejected Camacho’s argument that the contraband had been rendered undetectable. The judge, however, apparently believed Camacho’s assertion that he had made a sophisticated attempt to avoid giving the police probable cause to search his car:
The defendаnt is an experienced drug dealer based upon his own testimony today....
Because my memory is faulty ..., I would like to make this note: ... that at testimony in this case the defendant gave to the Court examples of his own past experience about drug dealing; that is to say, his knowledge of how to wrap marijuana, knowledge of what he normally had done in the past, knowledge of how to cure marijuana in the past, all of which indicates to the Court that this is not a first time offender. The Court does not know what the record is of the defendant, but we’ll look at this time to see if there аre any previous convictions.
At Camacho’s sentencing hearing, the defense attorney and Judge Head engaged in the following discussion:
MR. FOLSOM: Your Honor, there is something else that [Camacho] objects to. It’s not in the presentence report, but we had a motion to suppress hearing, Your Honor, and at that hearing, the Court made certain determinations that he was a known drug dealer. The defendant feels that the Court disbelieved his story.
THE COURT: I did.
MR. FOLSOM: As to the packaging of it.
THE COURT: No, I believed everything he said. I just believe that he’s wrong. MR. FOLSOM: I understand, Your Hon- or, but what I’m saying is he feels and I think legally what he’s talking about, he was рut on for the specific purpose of the motion to suppress and he doesn’t feel that legally you have a right to *229 consider that evidence in your sentencing.
THE COURT: That’s crazy.
MR. FOLSOM: I’m pointing it out to the Court.
THE COURT: At least I think it’s crazy. I may be wrong, but I don’t think so. I believe I’m entitled to consider everything I know about that comes into my information. The fact that [Camacho] said it makes it еven stronger than if somebody else said it....
When imposing Camacho’s sentence, Judge Head made the following comments:
In addition to [a record of prior criminal convictions], I’m definitely going to consider the testimony that you put on in this Court concerning your expertise with the packaging and sale of marijuana.
This was obviously not your first offense. You described in great detail how to cure and wrap marijuana to such degree that you could not be detected. It is a matter to which you gave great forethought with obvious experience and you, sir, I’m sorry, but you leаve me no opportunity. You are sentenced to five years in the custody of the attorney general and you have a ten year special parole term.
II
In
Simmons v. United States,
-1-
We begin by noting that
Estelle v. Smith
is inapposite. In
Estelle,
the trial court
sua sponte
ordered a psychiatric competency examination of a prisoner even though the defendant had not raised any issue of competency or insanity; the defendant’s lawyer was apparently not advised about the psychiatric examination and the prisoner was nоt given a
Miranda
warning. In these “distinct circumstances,”
By contrast, the defendant in this non-capital casе voluntarily took the stand at the suppression hearing and tried, as persuasively as he could, to convince the judge that he had found a way to outwit the police and succeed in his criminal enterprise. The undoubted fact that Camacho had an incentive to offer this testimony at his supрression hearing does not imply that the testimony was compelled within the meaning of the fifth amendment. Rather, Camacho’s eagerness to show his sophistication in crime was just another strange side-effect of the fourth amendment exclusionary rule, which, regardless of its ultimate wisdom, punishes the government fоr its agents’ acting on unfounded suspicions only when those suspicions prove to be correct.
We also note at the outset that the Supreme Court has declined to suggest that the relatively old
Simmons
rule is one that should logically be extended to the sentencing phase of a criminal proсeeding. On the contrary, the Court has left open “the proper breadth of the
Simmons
privilege,” and has cited without disapproval several cases in which prosecutors were allowed to use, for impeachment purposes at trial, a defendant’s testimony at a suppression hear
*230
ing.
United States v. Salvucci,
Finally, we are mindful of,the Supreme Court’s recent expressions of its profound uneasiness with the “substantial social costs” оf the fourth amendment exclusionary rule itself.
United States v. Leon,
— U.S. -,
-2-
Discretion in imposing sentence is considerable and well-established:
It is surely true, as the Government asserts, that a trial judge in the federal judicial system generally has wide discretion in determining what sentence to impose. It is also true that before making that determination, a judge may appropriately conduct an inquiry broad in scope, largely unlimited either as to the kind of information he may consider, or the source from which it may come.
United States v. Tucker,
*231 -3-
As the Simmons rule itself suggests, it would not be radically incоnsistent with the principles of our legal system to conclude that a district judge — having heard a defendant’s testimony at a suppression hearing and having gained, both from facts that transpired and from the demeanor of the accused, information highly relevant to the sentencing decisiоn — should nonetheless put that information aside when considering what sentence to impose. Such self-blinding would not be wholly foreign to the district court, whose professional assignment frequently requires it to make decisions while removing highly relevant facts from the decisional calculus. The extension of Simmons proposed to us today could be defended by pointing to an unquestioned reality in criminal trials: allowing the sentencing judge to consider the testimony that a defendant gave at a suppression hearing imposes a cost on the defendant for his attempt to take advantage of the fourth amendment exclusionary rule. The Simmons Court, sensitive to this “undeniable tension” between protections associated with the fifth and fourth amendments, partially erased the defendant’s dilemma by forbidding the prosecution to use a defendant’s suppression-hearing testimony to prove his guilt at trial.
In considering the proposed extension of the
Simmons
rule, however, we must also be sensitive to legitimate concerns that compete with those that underlay the
Simmons
decision. Most obviously, perhaps, requiring the judge to ignore the defendant’s own sworn testimony would disserve the goal of tailored and informed sentеncing. Precisely because the testimony offered at these hearings often reflects badly on the defendant, it is apt to be especially reliable and highly relevant to the question of the appropriate punishment.
Cf. Stone v. Powell,
We believe that these considerations are sufficient to justify rejecting any application of the
Simmons
rule to the sentencing phase of a criminal proceeding. In our circuit, however, as in several others, there is an additional anomaly that would be created by the proposed extension of
Simmons.
Had the evidence that was the subject of Camacho’s testimоny been suppressed on constitutional grounds, that evidence itself could nonetheless have been considered by the sentencing judge when deciding what punishment was appropriate.
See United States v. Butler,
We conclude that the district court did not infringe defendant Camacho’s constitutional rights when the court considered, for *232 purposes of deciding on a sentence, Camacho’s testimony at the hearing on the motion to suppress evidence.
AFFIRMED.
