After Jonathan Harold Peyton acknowledged there was a gun in the vehicle he was driving, police found the gun, arrested Pey-ton, searched his vehicle, and discovered methamphetamine and thousands in cash. A jury convicted Peyton of possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute and carrying a firearm in relation to a drug trafficking crime. On appeal, Peyton challenges the validity of the search, the denial of his motion for a mistrial, and the sufficiency of the evidence. We affirm.
Hot Springs, Arkansas police stopped Pey-ton and a passenger because the El Camino Peyton was driving had no license plates. Shining a flashlight into the vehicle, the officer spotted a pistol holster under the driver’s seat. Peyton admitted there was a gun in the car. The officer retrieved a loaded pistol from under the passenger seat and arrested Peyton for carrying a weapon. Deciding to have the El Camino towed, the officer conducted an inventory search and discovered 38.57 grams of methamphetamine in an Arkansas Bank and Trust bag behind the driver’s seat and $6,650 in currency underneath the seat. A search of Peyton himself turned up $4,350 more.
The district court denied Peyton’s pretrial motion to suppress the drugs and cash. The district court also ruled that, to prove intent, the Government could introduce evidence police had stopped Peyton on a second occasion and had again found drugs, cash, and a gun. See Fed.R.Evid. 404(b). In its opening statement, the Government referred to the second stop and the incriminating items then found; After the officer who had stopped Peyton the second time began to testify, but before he named Peyton as the driver, it became clear the second stop was illegal. The district court promptly ordered the officer’s testimony stricken and told the jury to disregard it, but denied Peyton’s motion for a mistrial. Having generally instructed the jury opening statements are not evidence, the district court offered to give the jury a specific curative instruction on the Government’s opening statement. Peyton declined the offer.
We take up first the district court’s denial of Peyton’s motion to suppress. Peyton failed to show the inventory search of his El Camino was unlawful.
See United States v. Cummins,
Next, the district court did not abuse its discretion when it denied Peyton’s motion for a mistrial.
See United States v. Hernandez,
We also reject Peyton’s contention he was not carrying a firearm in a drug trafficking crime.
See United States v. Rhodenizer,
We affirm Peyton’s conviction.
