In this case we consider whether, on the facts at issue, the stop and subsequent search of appellant John Jay Elsoffer by Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) agents violated Elsoffer’s Fourth Amendment rights.
I.
A verdict of guilty having been rendered and there being substantial evidence of guilt, we present the facts in this case in the light most favorable to the government.
See United States
v.
Glasser,
Two DEA agents while on duty at the Atlanta airport saw appellant Elsoffer exit a flight from West Palm Beach, Florida. Elsoffer was dressed in faded dungarees and had long hair and a full beard. As Elsoffer left the arrival gate, one agent, Terry Mathewson, saw a bulge shaped like a good-sized softbound book on the front of appellant’s trousers from waistline to crotch. Mathewson saw the bulge again while observing Elsoffer as the latter walked about the airport concourse. Going to an airline ticket counter, the agent learned that Elsoffer had paid in cash for a one-way ticket from West Palm Beach to New York via Atlanta.
Joined by the other agent, Mathewson walked up to Elsoffer, who was using a vending machine, identified himself and his comrade as police officers, and asked to talk. After studying the agents’ credentials, Elsoffer agreed. On request, Elsoffer handed Mathewson his ticket. The agent asked if appellant’s name was “Elosser,” the name on the ticket. Elsoffer said yes. Retaining the ticket, Mathewson asked for more identification. Elsoffer produced a driver’s license with his name correctly spelled. Keeping both the ticket and the driver’s license,
1
Mathewson began asking Elsoffer questions about his home and itinerary. Elsoffer stated, somewhat evasively,
Elsoffer opened his suitcase in the lounge. As one agent searched the suitcase, noticing that it contained only two or three changes of clothes, the other asked Elsoffer to consent to a patdown search. Elsoffer became upset, shouted that he did not want the search to continue, tried to close the suitcase on an agent’s hand, and again questioned the agents’ identity. The agents calmed Elsoffer and offered to take him to an Atlanta police office near the airport to prove they actually were police officers. Elsoffer agreed to go to the office, making clear that he would not leave the airport to go down dark alleys. The agents handcuffed Elsoffer at some point while in the lounge. 3
The agents took Elsoffer to the police office. DEA agent Paul Markonni arrived, was told of the events that had transpired, and asked Elsoffer to accompany him to an inner office. Elsoffer walked into the office, keeping his hands in front of the bulge as he did so. The agents twice asked for, and were twice refused, consent for a search. Markonni twice asked Elsoffer to stand and, on Elsoffer’s refusal, ordered him to do so. Elsoffer put his hands in front of the bulge and tried to roll himself into a ball. The two agents forcibly stretched Elsoffer out while Markonni searched him and found that the bulge was caused by a packet containing white powder that proved to be cocaine. Elsoffer was formally arrested.
Elsoffer made a motion to suppress the evidence seized during the search. The magistrate’s report suggesting that the motion be denied appears to find that Elsoffer was not seized during the initial stop, that on being handcuffed he was seized in a manner that was tantamount to an arrest, and that the search following the detention was legal because the agents had probable cause to arrest. The district court, adopting the magistrate’s report and conclusion, denied the motion. Acting on the basis of the report, the district court, sitting without a jury, convicted Elsoffer of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.
4
On appeal, this Court remanded,
II.
The former Fifth Circuit recently has canvassed the legal standards governing airport stops.
United States v. Berry,
As the Court noted in Berry, the Supreme Court has articulated three levels of police-citizen encounters: “communication between police and citizens involving no coercion or detention and therefore without the compass of the Fourth Amendment, brief ‘seizures’ that must be supported by reasonable suspicion, and full scale arrests that must be supported by probable cause.” At 591. Our first inquiry must therefore bo to determine the point in this case at which voluntary communication ended and Elsoffer was seized by the DEA agents.
The Court in
Berry
held that an initial stop of an individual at an airport is not a seizure. It adopted the proposal of Justice Stewart in his plurality opinion in
United States v. Mendenhall,
We focus next on the time at which the detention of Elsoffer expanded beyond the scope of a seizure and became
We must, finally, determine whether there existed probable cause to arrest Elsoffer when he was taken to the lounge. If there was probable cause, the subsequent search of his person was legal as a search incident to a lawful arrest.
See, e.g., United States
v.
Richards,
The standard governing a finding of probable cause is well established. Probable cause exists if “ ‘the facts and circumstances within [the arresting officers’] knowledge and of which they had reasonably trustworthy information [are] sufficient in themselves to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that’ an offense has been or is being committed.”
Draper v. United States,
We conclude that the district court ruled correctly in denying appellant’s motion to suppress the evidence seized during the search of Elsoffer’s person. We find the evidence sufficient for his conviction.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The record does not indicate when Mathewson finally returned the ticket and license to Elsoffer. It does indicate that the agent retained the documents while interrogating Elsoffer and throughout the “initial interview.”
. Mathewson, although expressing surprise that Elsoffer knew him to be a DEA agent, had testified earlier that Elsoffer had looked at his badge and credentials and had studied his credentials. Given such apparently close scrutiny of those credentials, which presumably showed that Mathewson worked for the DEA, there seems to be nothing unusual in Elsoffer’s knowing that Mathewson was a DEA agent.
. The agents testified that they had not handcuffed Elsoffer in the lounge. Elsoffer testified that they had. The magistrate credited Elsoffer’s testimony.
. Both parties to this litigation stipulated that the findings of the magistrate’s report would serve as the evidentiary basis for the district court decision on Elsoffer’s guilt.
. Elsoffer asserts that due process requires us to remand the case to the trial court again because the court on the initial remand reviewed the record only with regard to the suppression hearing, not with regard to Elsoffer’s guilt. We reject this assertion. First, Elsoffer did not raise this objection below. A party failing to object below waives his right to raise an issue on appeal absent plain error.
See
. The district court ruled on the motion to suppress before Berry appeared in print.
. We note that our holding would not differ even if the record was clear in showing that the agents had returned Elsoffer’s documents before asking him whether he would consent to a search or go to a lounge. We do not believe that after a return of the documents retained during interrogation, followed by requests to consent to a search and go to an office, an individual would feel that his detention had ended.
. Elsoffer contends that the search was unreasonable even if probable cause existed because it was not preceded by formal arrest. We reject his contention. In
Rawlings v. Kentucky,
. The government does not argue that Elsoffer’s misidentification of himself gave probable cause as a violation of Georgia Code § 26 2506, which provides that an individual falsely identifying himself to a police officer is guilty of a misdemeanor. See
United States v. Pulvano,
. We emphasize the limited nature of our finding. We do not hold that any bulge on a person would give probable cause for an arrest. The crucial consideration here is the odd size and shape of the bulge with respect to its position on appellant’s person. Before reaching our conclusion, we examined photographs of the original package.
