On Mаy 20, 1990, law enforcement officers intercepted and detained the appellant, Lucelly Abadía, immediately upon her arrival at Lambert International Airport in St. Louis, for the purpose of investigating a tip that she was smuggling cocaine. During her detention she consented to the search of her luggage which led to the discovery оf cocaine and, ultimately, to her formal arrest. Prior to her trial, she unsuccessfully moved for the suppression of the statements that she made and the evidence that was seized from her at the airport. After a two-day jury trial she was convicted for possessing cocaine with the intent to distribute it, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1988), and sentenced to sixty-three months in prison. On appeal she contends it was error for the District Court 1 to deny her suppression motion because the detention that proceeded her formal arrest (hereinafter her pre-arrest detention) was itself a de facto arrest and was unsupported by probable cause. We affirm.
On or about May 18, 1990, a confidential informant advised Enrique Aguilar, Senior Special Agent for the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service, that on May 20 Lucy Abadía would be flying from Miami to St. Louis, with one or two kilograms of cocaine in her check-on luggage.
2
Agent Aguilar thereupon conveyed this information to Sergeant Larry Wheeler, a St. Louis County Police Officer who had been assigned to the Drug Enforcement Agency (hereinafter DEA) Task Fоrce as a Detective at Lambert International Airport. Sgt. Wheeler then contacted TWA and verified that Abadia would be coming into St. Louis on flight 683. He also learned that that flight was scheduled to arrive in St. Louis at gate 46 at 2:56 p.m. and that Abadia’s seat number was 17A.
Sgt. Wheeler, Agent Aguilar, and several other law enforcement agents waited for flight 683 аt gate 46. When it arrived, Sgt. Wheeler, Officer Kimberly Presley of the Airport Police Department, and several other officers obtained permission from the captain to board the plane. To aid the officers, the flight attendant instructed the passengers to remain seated. With the passengers still on the plane, Sgt. Wheeler apрroached row 17, 3 saw a woman in that row who fit the informant’s description of Abadia, 4 and identified himself to her as a police officer, showing her his DEA credentials. He asked her if she was Lucy Aba-dia. She nodded and also indicated that she did not understand much English. He then directed her to follow him off the plane. After Abadia had disembarked, Officer Presley asked her for her ticket and Abadia complied. Officer Presley saw that the ticket was in the name of Lucelly Aba-dia 5 and returned it to her. Sgt. Wheeler and Officer Presley then led Abadia to the airport DEA office, approximately 2400 feet away from the location at which Aba-dia arrived. There they were met by DEA Task Force Offiсer Michael Williams, who was to serve as a Spanish/English translator. 6
Officer Williams identified himself to Abadia, showed her his DEA credentials, and read Abadia her
Miranda
rights in Spanish from a Spanish-English language card. He also had her read them to herself. Abadia indicated that she understood her rights and would talk to the law enforcement officers. Officer Williams then communicated with her in Spanish and he told Sgt. Wheeler in English what he and Abadia were saying. He explained to Aba-dia that they were investigating her for carrying cocaine in her luggage and asked her whether she had checked any luggage. She responded affirmatively. He also asked her if she packed it herself and whether she would describe it to him. She responded affirmatively and described her suitcase to him. He asked her if she would give them her claim ticket and permit an officer to retrieve her suitcase from the carousel. She said that they could do so and gave him her ticket. After another
On June 15, 1990, Abadia was charged with one count of possessing cocaine with intent to distribute it, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Prior to trial, she moved for the suppression of all the statements she made and all the evidence seized from her at the airport on May 20, 1990, on the basis that her pre-arrest detention violated her rights under the Fourth Amendment. 8 The District Court adopted the recommendation of the Magistrate Judge 9 and held that her pre-arrest detention did not constitute an arrest and also that it was supported by “the reasonable and ar-ticulable suspicion [necessary] to support a Terry stop.” United States v. Abadia, No. 90-101CR(1), mem. op. at 5 (E.D.Mo. Nov. 27, 1990), reprinted in Addendum B to Appellant’s Brief at D-5. 10 It also concluded that her statements were voluntary and that she consented to the search of her luggage, and it therefore denied the motion to suppress. Id. at 6. The court did not reach the issue of probable cause.
On appeal Abadia claims that it was error for the court to deny her suppression motion as, she contends, her pre-arrest detention exceeded the brief and limitеd investigatory detention permitted in a
Terry-type
stop and thus constituted a de facto arrest. She further argues that this de facto arrest was unconstitutional because it was not supported by probable cause, and thus the statements that she made and the evidence that was seized are inadmissible as the fruits of an illegal seizure.
See Florida v. Royer,
“Probable cause ... to make a war-rantless arrest [exists] when, at the moment of the arrest, the collective knowledge of the officers involved,”
United States v. Wajda,
In
Draper v. United States,
The same comments can be made about the tip that precipitated Abadia’s pre-arrest detention. Here the confidential informant, on two recent occasions, had pro
For the reasons set forth above, we reject Abadia’s claim that her prе-arrest detention constituted a de facto arrest unsupported by probable cause, in violation of the Fourth Amendment. The District Court did not err in denying Abadia’s suppression motion, and her conviction is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Honorable John F. Nangle, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. The facts in this opinion are taken from the magistrate's findings of fact,
see United States v. Abadia,
. At oral argument, counsel for Abadia stated that Abadia was not sitting in seat 17A, but was seated in thе same row, when the police boarded her flight.
. Sgt. Wheeler testified that he determined, as he approached Abadia on the plane, but before he had confirmed her identity, that she fit the physical description provided by the informant. See Transcript of Abadia’s Preliminary Examination and Detention Hearing at 7.
. Neither of the parties nor the magistrate found to be significant the fact that the informant referred to Abadia as “Lucy Abadia,” Mag-is. Recommendation at 3, that Abadia responded affirmatively when asked if she was "Lucy Abadia,” id. at 4-5, but that her ticket was in the name of “Lucelly Abadia.” Id. at 5.
.Officer Williams had studied Spanish in high school and college and periodically served as a police translator when Spanish speaking subjects were arrested. Sgt. Wheeler, having anticipated that Abadia might need a translator, had instructed Officer Williams to meet them at the airport’s DEA office.
. Initially, when Sgt. Wheeler attempted to open the suitcase, he discovered that it was locked. Officer Williams asked Abadia if they could have the keys to her suitcase and she responded by retrieving them from her purse, which was still in her possession, and giving them to the officers. She also opened a combination lock on the front of the suitcase and opened the suitcase for the officers.
. She also moved for the suppression of the fruits of any electronic surveillance. As there was no electronic surveillance of Abadia, this portion of the motion was denied.
. The Honorable David D. Noce, United States Magistrate Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. During oral argument, Abadia conceded that the District Court was correct in concluding that “Sergeant Wheeler possessed thе reasonable and articulable suspicion [necessary] to support a Terry stop of [Abadia].” District Court’s Order at 5. The government likewise conceded that Abadia was seized, within the meaning of the fourth amendment, when Sgt. Wheeler directed her off the plane. We therefore do not address these issues.
. Justices Marshall, Powell, and Stevеns joined in this opinion and judgment. Justice Brennan concurred in the result.
. Although the District Court did not reach the issue of whether there was probable cause for arrest, ”[w]e may affirm a judgment on any ground supported by the record even if not relied upon by the district court____”
Lane v. Peterson,
. We need not and do not address the question of whether Abadia’s pre-arrеst detention constituted more than a Terry-type detention.
. As the question of whether there was probable cause to arrest is an objective question, Sgt. Wheeler’s characterization of the informant’s description of Abadia as "sketchy,”
see
Transcript of Abadia’s Preliminary Examination and Detention Hearing at 7, is not dispositive.
See also Klingler v. United States,
.The only fact noted by the Supreme Court that the police had not corroborated was whether Draper actually was carrying the three ounces of heroin that the informant said he would be
. The physical description of Abadia was that she was a Colombian female in her late twenties, five feet four inches tall, with wavy, dark hair. The physical description of Draper was that he was “a Negro of light brown complexion, 27 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches tall, weighting] about 160 pounds."
Draper,
. The fact that the police had not verified Draper’s identity prior to his arrest is not addressed in Draper. Cf. supra note 15 and accompanying text.
. Abadia does not appear to claim that she was subjected to a de facto arrest prior to the moment Sgt. Wheeler directed her off the plane. Even if she took such a position, it would merit little discussion.
See Royer,
