Appellant, a citizen of Argentina, arrived June 3, 1970, at John F. Kennedy Airport, Carolina, Puerto Rico, on a flight from Chile at about 10:30 p.m. After completing the routine customs inspection, where his baggage and overcoat were examined, appellant walked towards the exit where he was stopped by a customs inspector, one Brugueras, and requested to step into a nearby office for a “secondary search.” During the course of this search, which included visual inspection of portions of appellant’s body after he lowered his trousers, appellant’s overcoat slipped from the chair behind him. Inspector Kopish, who was present while Brugueras conducted the search, grabbed the coat and felt a package inside the lining. The package turned out to contain cocaine.
At his jury-waived trial for knowingly importing cocaine in violation of 21 U. S.C. § 174, the contraband was introduced, the district court having ruled, after a hearing on appellant’s motion to suppress, that the evidence was not obtained as a result of an illegal search and seizure. This determination was reaffirmed by Aldrich, C. J., sitting as district judge on appellant’s motion for reconsideration. Appellant was convicted solely on the basis of this evidence and was sentenced to eight years imprisonment. The single issue raised by this appeal is whether the court erred in ruling the contraband admissible.
Appellant contends that a “strip search” may not be initiated, even by a customs official at a frontier, without a “real suspicion”, i.e., one “supported by objective, articulable facts.” United States v. Guadalupe-Garza,
In this ease, the contraband came to the inspector’s attention when appellant’s coat slipped to the floor.
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Had this event happened, without the attendant more intimate search, there would be no basis whatsoever for suppression. It is well settled that a customs officer may search an individual’s baggage and outer clothing, in a reasonable manner, based on subjective suspicion alone, or even on a random basis. Landau v. United States Attorney,
If the discovery of the cocaine was made “by exploitation” of the “primary illegality”, the body search, the tainted contraband would be inadmissible. Wong Sun v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant claims that one of the inspectors took the coat from the chair after appellant had begun to replace his belongings in his pockets. The fact that the chair was behind appellant renders this version suspect, as the district court apparently felt. Even under appellant’s version, however, we would apply the analysis in the text, infra.
