Appellant Ismael Espericueta-Reyes appeals from his conviction for possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. Section 841(a)(1), and illegal importation of a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. Section 952. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the judgment of conviction. FACTS
George Cons, a special agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration received information from a reliable source that a certain vehicle containing contraband and displaying a certain Arizona license plate was about to pass through the San Luis, Mexico Arizona Port of Entry (hereinafter “POE”). After some discussion, customs officials decided that they would allow the vehicle through the port but would place it under surveillance in order to determine whether others were involved with the driver-carrier in the smuggling of contraband.
At about 4:30 p. m. that vehicle entered the United States from Mexico. The car was driven by Jose Luis Martinez-Mendez, appellant’s co-defendant at trial. The car was routed to secondary inspection 1 where it was searched, the first of three searches ultimately made by customs officers. No contraband was found, and the car was allowed to proceed; however, it was placed under surveillance and followed by customs officers as it was driven to various locations in San Luis, Arizona.
The car was continuously in the pursuing officer’s line of sight except for several minutes during which it was lost from view. The car was eventually driven to a gas station where the driver put gasoline into the car. Appellant, standing by the gas pumps, handed the driver something which appeared to be money. After the driver paid for the gasoline he drove out of the station with appellant as his passenger. Approximately two or three minutes later, the officers stopped the vehicle at a spot about a mile from the POE by using red lights and sirens. A plain clothes officer, after identifying himself as a customs official, asked the defendants to step out of the vehicle.
The defendants were separated and each was patted down for weapons. Neither was handcuffed; they were not advised of their constitutional rights. Appellant and co-defendant were asked questions concerning the ownership of the car, and each stated that appellant was the owner.
A cursory inspection was made of the vehicle, but the dangerous condition presented by the traffic on the narrow highway made a more extensive search there impractical. The officer advised each man that he was not under arrest; however, he asked them to return to the POE “to clarify a few things.”
At the POE the car was searched a third time and heroin was found concealed in the *619 right rear wheel well. Appellant and his co-defendant were detained for about 50 minutes during this search. After the heroin was found, appellant and his co-defendant were told they were under arrest, and were advised of their constitutional rights.
1. The Propriety of the Second and Third Vehicle Searches
Appellant first contends that the substance found pursuant to the second and third vehicle searches should be suppressed because those searches were not supported by probable cause. 2 According to the appellant, the first search of the vehicle at the POE “severed” the connection of the vehicle with the border; hence, the subsequent searches cannot be considered “extended border searches” and therefore had to be supported by probable cause. For the reasons stated below, we hold that each search made after the initial border crossing was a part of an extended border search which was reasonable and consonant with the Fourth Amendment.
Searches made at the time of an initial border crossing as well as searches which qualify as “extended border searches” need not be supported by probable cause. The right to search persons and containers at the border derives from the nation’s right to control who and what may enter the country.
United States v. Ramsey,
The first question we must decide is whether the searches which occurred after the border was crossed were in fact extended border searches which did not have to be supported by probable cause. We hold that they were.
The fact that a prior search had been conducted at the time of the initial border crossing is not dispositive of whether later searches are properly considered extended border searches. See
United States v. Smith,
As the
Alexander
Court noted, the task of policing the border is a difficult one; the work of customs officials is made far more effective by the identification of accomplices of the carrier bringing contraband into the United States.
United States v. Martinez,
This is not to say that limitless border searches of an international traveler’s possessions by customs officials at any time or place are constitutionally permissible solely because it would make the task of border officials easier. The demands of effective law enforcement are often in tension with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment. See
Almeida Sanchez
v.
United States,
The challenged searches in the matter before this Court were reasonably related in time and place to the initial border crossing. The vehicle, which was under virtually constant surveillance, was stopped in the general border area, within an hour and a half of the initial border crossing; the final search was conducted at the border itself, less than a mile from the place where the car was stopped.
Each of the requirements of the Alexander test for an extended border search were met under the circumstances of this case. The vehicle was virtually under constant surveillance from the time it was first searched at the border until the time that the car was stopped, with the exception of a few minutes during which it was lost from view. The subsequent searches occurred within an hour and a half of the time the vehicle entered the country, and were conducted at and near the border. These circumstances were sufficient to have convinced the fact finder with reasonable eer- *621 tainty that there had been no material change in the condition of the vehicle from the time it entered the United States until the time of the second search. Indeed, appellant’s counsel conceded at oral argument that, the question of multiple searches aside, the surveillance in this case was sufficient to justify classification of the subsequent searches as extended border searches.
Finally, as noted earlier, extended border searches need not be supported by probable cause: “mere suspicion” alone is clearly enough to justify such searches for purposes of customs law enforcement. See Alexander, supra, at 382. Far more than “mere suspicion” was present here. The customs agents in this case were acting at all times on the tip of a reliable informant that the vehicle in question contained contraband. This, along with the peculiar behavior of the appellant and his co-defendant at the service station, provided sufficient grounds to justify the stop along the highway and the subsequent searches of the vehicle.
Prior to the decision in
United States v. Ramsey,
the cases had generally held that the authority to search persons or containers after they leave the point of border crossing was more limited than the right to search at the actual border.
See, e.g., United States v. Bowman,
Ramsey
made clear that searches at the border itself were reasonable under the Fourth Amendment simply because they took place at the border. The question then arises whether a stricter standard of reasonableness for extended border searches remains intact after
Ramsey,
since such searches are for certain purposes the “functional equivalent” of searches at the border.
See United States v. Johnson,
2. Suppression of the Appellant’s Statements
The appellant next argues that the statements he made at the roadside as to ownership of the vehicle should be suppressed because they were the fruits of an illegal detention. 5 Alternatively, appellant argues that, even if the detention of which he complains was proper, the statements he made during that detention should be suppressed because the detaining officers failed to give him the appropriate Miranda warnings.
Detentions during routine searches and questioning at the border' are considered “reasonable” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
See, Chavez-Martinez v. United States,
Finally, the brief questioning of appellant which took place along the highway did not have to be preceded by
Miranda
warnings. Just as detentions during legitimate extended border searches do not constitute arrests, routine inquiries during extended border searches concerning ownership of the containers crossing the border do not, absent unusual circumstances, constitute “custodial interrogation” within the meaning of
Miranda. See United States v. Golden,
3. The Alleged Rule 86 Violation
Appellant argues alternatively that the inculpatory statement he made along the highway should have been excluded because the government failed to disclose the statement to his attorney 15 days prior to trial, in violation of Local Rule 86 and Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, Section 16(b).
Rule 16(a) provides in relevant part:
“Upon request of a defendant the government shall permit the defendant to inspect and copy ... the substance of any oral statement which the government intends to offer in evidence at the trial whether before or after arrest in response to interrogation by any person then known to the defendant to be a government agent. ...”
Similarly, Local Rule 86 states in relevant part:
“The United States Attorney, at least 15 days prior to trial, shall give written notice to the defendant through his attorney of any and all written or oral confessions, admissions, or statements of the defendant which the government intends to use during the course of the trial.”
The government first learned of the statements in question the day before trial during a pretrial interview of a customs officer. While the record is not completely clear, it appears that the substance of the *623 appellant’s statements as recalled by the officer were communicated orally to appellant’s counsel that same afternoon, and that a written statement designating the areas covered by the statements was given'to her the night before trial.
The mere fact that the requirements of Rule 86 were not complied with will not in itself bar the admission of statements into evidence where, as here, the government in good faith did not learn of the statements in time to comply with the rule. Under such circumstances the rule is substantially complied with if the government promptly discloses the substance of the newly discovered statements to defense counsel and promptly informs him or her of the government’s intent to use the statements at trial.
See United States v. Anderson,
Late disclosure of inculpatory statements may, in certain circumstances interfere with a defendant’s right to a fair trial, since substantial prejudice may result if counsel does not have adequate time to attempt to overcome the prejudicial effect of such evidence. See United States v. Anderson, supra, at 323-24. In such a case, it is the responsibility of defense counsel to bring the matter of potential prejudice to the attention of the court prior to trial and either request a continuance or move the court for a ruling excluding the objectionable testimony on due process grounds. Such a procedure will afford the defendant the opportunity for a full and fair hearing as to defendant’s objections, and will allow the trial court to make an informed decision as to how best to deal with any prejudice the defendant might otherwise suffer.
In the matter before this Court, appellant failed to make a record as to how disclosure of the statement on the eve of trial prejudiced him.
6
Absent such a showing of prejudice, the trial court did not err in admitting the statement in question.
United States v. Arcentales,
4. The Alleged Bruton Error
Finally, appellant contends that he was denied his constitutional right of confrontation by the admission of his co-defendant’s statement that appellant owned the vehicle in which the contraband was eventually found.
10
Neither appellant nor his co-defendant testified at trial.; a customs officer testified that during their brief detention along the highway both the appellant and his co-defendant acknowledged that appellant owned the vehicle in question. Introduction of the co-defendant’s statement, according to the appellant, violated the principles of
Bruton v. United States,
Under the facts of this case, we find that the admission of the co-defendant’s statements was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
11
Chapman v. California,
Judgment AFFIRMED.
Notes
. During secondary inspection the trunk of the vehicle was searched, and Martinez-Mendez was asked some routine questions concerning his destination and the ownership of the vehicle. RT. 88.
. We view the second and third searches as part of an extended border search interrupted only because the dangerous conditions along the highway made it unsafe to conduct a more thorough search of the vehicle there. Similarly, the detention involved along the highway and at the POE five blocks away, should be viewed as a single detention pursuant to a single extended border search.
. In United States v. Bowman, customs officials at the border became suspicious during their search of defendant’s vehicle, but defendants were allowed to proceed. After a brief colloquy with other officials, the agent determined that the car should be searched more thoroughly. The defendant’s car was found and stopped about two hours later and contraband was found. The 5th Circuit upheld the second search as a valid extended border search.
. See United States v. Smith, supra, at 1301. Note, From Bags to Body Cavities: The Law of Border Search, 74 Column.L.Rev. 53, 70-71, n.96 (1974) [hereinafter The Law of Border Search ].
The phrase “sweep-in search” was coined in The Law of Border Search, supra, at 70. Not all extended border searches are concerned with “sweeping in” accomplices of the carrier of contraband. In some situations, a search is delayed in order to “bolster by further observation ... a suspicion that is arguably marginal at the time the border crossing was observed.” United States v. Bilir,592 F.2d 735 , 740 n.9 (4th Cir. 1979). In others, an extended border search is proper because customs officials are first alerted to suspicious circumstances immediately after the vehicle has left the inspection area. See, e. g., Jones v. United States,326 F.2d 124 (9th Cir. 1963), cert. denied,377 U.S. 956 ,84 S.Ct. 1635 ,12 L.Ed.2d 499 (1964); United States v. Bowman, supra, n.3; United States v. Maggard,451 F.2d 502 (5th Cir. 1971), cert. denied,405 U.S. 1045 ,92 S.Ct. 1330 ,31 L.Ed.2d 587 (1972). We express no opinion as to the constitutional parameters of these searches.
. Appellant suggests that his brief detention along the highway was an arrest under our decision in
United States v. Beck,
. Clearly these statements may have been damaging to the appellant; however, that is not the sense in which the appellant must demonstrate prejudice.
United States v. Eddy,
. Appellant’s written motion to suppress challenged the legality of the second search on the grounds that it was not supported by probable cause.
. The colloquy was as follows:
Officer Badyl: I recall the driver indicated to me that the passenger was the owner of the vehicle, at which time I went to the passenger and asked him if he, in fact, was the owner of ■the vehicle. And he indicated-
Ms. Wintermute: Objection, your Honor.
The Court: Yes; just what happened after that. We don’t want any conversations at this point with the driver. (Emphasis added)
.The exchange was as follows:
Mr. Salazar: Your Honor, before 1 begin, could I get a clarification regarding conversations that any of these officials may have had with the defendants prior to their arrest; since they were noticed on those conversations I assume then that these are going to be limited for the purposes of this hearing only, is that correct?
The Court: Well, we will reach that when we get to it.
. The appellant at trial did not raise a constitutional objection to the admission of the co-defendant’s statements. Nevertheless, under
United States v. Longee,
. In the past, this circuit has followed the rule that admission of the confession of a non-testifying co-defendant which “interlocked” with a confession by the defendant violated the principles of
Bruton
and required an analysis of whether admission of the co-defendant’s statement was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Ignacio v. People of Territory of Guam,
