*1 Before TACHA, MCKAY, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
TACHA, Circuit Judge.
Dеfendants Kenneth and Shirley Hutchings each plead guilty to one charge of manufacturing marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), and were each *2 sentenced to forty months imprisonment and a five-year supervised release. They appeal from the district court’s denial of their motion to suppress evidence. The defendants claim that law enforcement officers collected evidence against them in a manner prohibited by both the Posse Comitatus Act and the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. We take jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm.
Background
Prior to and during the summer of 1993, the United States Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) employed defendants Kenneth and Shirley Hutchings to provide security and maintenance on an otherwise-abandoned, 10,000-square-acre property known as the White River Oil Shale Project (“White River”), locаted in Uintah County, Utah. The main compound of White River consisted of various facilities formerly maintained by private oil companies. The Hutchings lived there in a trailer, which they owned, and also kept a shed containing personal belongings there.
That same summer, a number оf federal and state government agencies-- including the BLM, the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”), the Utah Division of Investigations, and the Utah National Guard--participated jointly in Operation Greenleaf, a marijuana eradication program. On August 10, 1993, two participants in Operatiоn Greenleaf, Sergeant John Egbert of the Utah National *3 Guard and DEA Special Agent Jeff Bryan, hiked onto White River land, acting on reports of a marijuana “grow” in the area. Sgt. Egbert, who was under the command of Utah National Guard Lt. Col. Kim Watts, carried orienteering equipment аnd relayed reports from Bryan to DEA local headquarters with his advanced communications equipment. The next day, August 11, Sgt. Egbert, Agent Bryan, and another DEA agent observed the defendants watering marijuana plants some distance from the trailer.
That night, additional DEA personnel joinеd the three men outside the White River region. Shortly after midnight, DEA agents and other law enforcement personnel entered the compound, ordered the Hutchings out of their trailer, and arrested them. Several officers briefly entered the trailer; the entry lasted less than onе minute and nothing was seized from the trailer at that time. Sgt. Egbert remained in a vehicle and did not participate in the arrest.
For several hours on August 12, Sergeant Egbert aided the others in removing the plants--performing what is known as a “whack and stack”--a process that was not completed until late in the afternoon. Seven other National Guardsmen, all under the command of Lt. Col. Watts, provided helicopter services, communications support, and other indirect assistance during the whack and stack.
A warrant authorizing a search of the compound, including the Hutchings’ trailer, was obtained at approximately 6:00 p.m. on August 12. The warrant described the trailer’s location, make, color and design, year of manufacture, and serial number. It misidentified the geographic location of the compound as section 14; in fact, it was situated in section 27. Immediately after receiving notification that the warrant had been issued, the officers searched the trailer for evidence.
Discussion
We first address the application of the Posse Comitatus Act to these events and then proсeed to the related Fourth Amendment issues.
I. The Posse Comitatus Act.
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The Posse Comitatus Act (“PCA”) was enacted at the end of Reconstruction
for the purpose of “limit[ing] ‘the direct active use of federal troops by civil law
enforcement officers’ to enforce the laws of this nation.” U.S. v. Hartley, 796
F.2d 112, 114 (5th Cir. 1986) (quoting U.S. v. Red Feather ,
The dispositive question here is whether the officers were “any part of the
Army or Air Force” during the activities at White River. A brief explanation of
the National Guard’s complex structure is necessary to explain why they were not.
The National Guard occupies a unique place in our federal system of government;
it has been described appropriately as a “hybrid” body. See Tirado-Acosta v.
Puerto Rico National Guard,
Therefore, a National Guardsman’s participation in a marijuana arrest--
without more--does not constitute a violation of the PCA. See United States v.
Benish,
It would, in fact, be a rare situation in which a Guardsman enforced drug
laws and was not serving the state. Under federаl funding laws which allow the
National Guards to participate in programs such as Operation Greenleaf, the
National Guards forfeit their federal support if any Guardsmen employed in an
anti-drug effort are in federal service. See 32 U.S.C. § 112(a)(1) (granting funds
for use of National Guаrdsman in anti-drug efforts “ while not in federal service ”)
(emphasis added). That condition was, in fact, likely added to ensure that the
federal funding of counter-drug activities did not lead to abuse of the Posse
Comitatus Act. Tirado-Acosta,
It is possible, however, that a Guardsman who had bеen called into federal service--that is, one who was wearing his federal “hat”--could be wrongfully employed in a domestic anti-drug campaign. In the instant case, however, the district court found in accordance with the undisputed evidence that the Guardsmen were in stаte service for the entire duration of the drug interdiction efforts at White River on August 10-12, including the time of the Hutchings’ arrest and the whack-and-stack operation. United States v. Hutchings, No. 93- CR-214G (D. Utah Dec. 11, 1995). Lt. Col. Watts specifically instructed the involved Guardsmen that they were under the direction оf the Governor of Utah during this time. Id. More importantly, the orders themselves indicated a “Title 32 Duty Status,” demonstrating that the Guardsmen’s assignment to White River *8 was a state-controlled, not a federal, assignment. Id. We adhere to the district court’s conclusions and find no violation of the PCA.
It is true, as the defendant notes, that a National Guardsman may appear to be a member of the Army because he is wearing a similar uniform or is carrying identification that is unclear as to whether he is under state or federal command. These indicia, however persuasivе they may be to the eye, have never determined the character of a Guardsman’s service. As discussed above, that question depends solely on whether command of the Guardsman has been taken away from a state’s governor by one authorized to do so by Cоngress. Such action is absent in this case.
The defendant also argues that the activities at White River violated a federal requirement that counter-drug activities in which the National Guard participates be authorized by state law. See 32 U.S.C. § 112(c)(4). This attack fails for two reаsons. First, Utah Code Annotated § 39-1-5 provides broad authority for the use of the Utah National Guard, stating that the “governor may order into active service the National Guard . . . as he finds necessary.” Second, the statute upon which this argument is based, 32 U.S.C. § 112, is merely a funding statute. The only consequence of running afoul of section 112 is the revocation of monies. It does not impact this litigation in any way.
In light of the above, we need not reach the question of whether exclusion of evidence is an appropriate remedy when federal military pеrsonnel collect evidence in violation of the PCA.
II. The Fourth Amendment
We next address the Hutchings’ claim that the initial “search” of the land,
prior to obtaining the warrant, was unconstitutional. It is well-established that
government activity is not a search unless it intrudes upon an individual’s
justified expectatiоn of privacy. See, e.g. , Katz v. United States,
The Hutchings also assert that the warrantless “protective sweep” of their
trailer at the time of their arrest violated the Fourth Amendment and seek
suppression of all physical evidence seized in the trailer. However, the district
court found that the officers were in the trailer for less than one minute and that
the purpose of the entry was to conduct a quick sweep of the trailer to secure thе
trailer and ensure the safety of the officers. The Fourth Amendment does not
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require a warrant for brief protective sweeps like this one. See, e.g., United
States v. Mains,
The Hutchings additionally contend that the incorrect legal description
contained in the search warrant of the section number where the trailer was
located violated the Fourth Amendment. Even making the assumption that a
warrant was in fact required for the search of the Hutchings’ trailer, this argument
is without merit. Our general rule is that a “‘descriрtion is sufficient [if it]
enable[s] the officers to ascertain the place to be searched’ with reasonable
effort.” United States v. Sturmoski,
Finally, the Hutchings argue that the warrant was invalid because it failed
to state that a residence was to be searched, citing our decision in U.S. v.
Dahlman,
Conclusion
We find that the activities of the National Guardsmen did not violate the PCA, and that the searсh of the Hutchings’ marijuana plants and trailer did not violate the Fourth Amendment. We affirm the district court’s denial of the Hutchings’ motion to suppress evidence.
Notes
[1] Since these events occurred, Congress has amended the PCA to read: “. . . . shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than two years, or both.” 18 U.S.C.A. § 1385 (Supp. 1997).
