Lawrence Maher, an erstwhile Massachusetts drug dealer supplying cocaine to southern Maine, was the subject of a police sting operation. While under surveillance on July 22, 2004, Maher wandered drunkenly around a public parking lot in Old Orchard Beach, Maine, calling out the name of a potential drug buyer. He then got in his van, which contained drugs, and fell asleep at the wheel with the key in the ignition and an open beer can beside him.
The police, well aware of the opportunity created, naturally investigated. They arrested Maher for the state crime of operating under the influence (OUI) after Maher failed field sobriety tests. Incident to arrest, they searched Maher’s person and van and found heroin, cocaine, and drug paraphernalia. Maher’s luck was no better at trial. He was found guilty of the federal crime of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). On April 6, 2005, he was sentenced to 262 months in prison and six years’ supervised release.
On appeal Maher makes an easily disposed-of Fourth Amendment claim, which is significant largely because we reject his legal argument that reasonable suspicion of drunk driving cannot exist where the would-be operator is asleep and the vehicle is off. Of more significance is his argument, under
Crawford v. Washington,
I.
We recount the facts. As to those facts relevant to the suppression issue, we rehearse the findings of the magistrate judge, consistent with record support.
See United States v. Romain,
On July 20, 2004, Officer Ernest MacVane, a Windham, Maine, police officer assigned to a task force of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), arrested one William Johnson on cocaine charges. Johnson told Officer MacVane that he had bought his cocaine *16 from Maher, who lived in Massachusetts and was a significant trafficker in southern Maine.
Johnson agreed to assist in a staged drug transaction with Maher. He was told that his telephone calls with Maher would be monitored and recorded. Johnson called Maher on July 20 and asked if Maher was “coming down here again.” Maher replied, “tomorrow I hope, yeah.” The following exchange ensued:
Maher: [D]o you got any numbers?
Johnson: What’s that?
Maher: One, two, three (unintelligible).
Johnson: Four.
Maher: Okay, buddy.
After some discussion of whether Johnson might come to Massachusetts instead, Maher told Johnson, “I got you down for four either way.” He did not explicitly mention cocaine.
On the night of July 21, DEA Agent Kate Barnard called Maher to set up a separate meeting. 1 She told Maher she was “Sue,” and said she wanted to “hook up” so that she could “get something.” Maher, apparently thinking she was an acquaintance, 2 agreed to meet her at Rad-ley’s Market in Old Orchard Beach. The next morning, Johnson called Maher to discuss meeting. Maher told Johnson he was waiting for a friend at a store (an apparent reference to Radley’s Market) and told Johnson to call back.
Later that morning, DEA Agent Paul Buchanan saw Maher wandering in the parking lot adjacent to Radley’s Market, stumbling and calling the name “Sue.” 3 Agent Buchanan watched Maher enter the market and emerge minutes later. Maher appeared intoxicated to Agent Buchanan, who said he was still stumbling and disoriented.
Maher climbed into the driver’s seat of a white minivan. About ten minutes later, Agent Buchanan approached the minivan and saw Maher asleep or unconscious, slumped in the driver’s seat. No one else was in the van. The keys were in the ignition, though the engine was not running. This information was relayed to Old Orchard Beach Police Officer Gerald Hamilton.
Officer Hamilton drove to Radley’s Market and approached the minivan. He spoke to Maher, but Maher did not wake up, so Officer Hamilton reached through the window and shook Maher to rouse him. The officer asked Maher if he was okay, and Maher replied that he was just leaving. Officer Hamilton observed that Maher had droopy eyes and spoke in a mumble.
Officer Hamilton could see an open beer can in the minivan’s console and a six-pack on the passenger seat. He asked Maher if he had drunk alcohol or used drugs. Maher replied that he had had only about two ounces of beer and that he did not use drugs. Officer Hamilton told Maher he should not have driven. Maher replied that Officer Hamilton was right; he asked the officer to “cut [him] a break” and said he would find his way to a friend’s house. Officer Hamilton then ordered Maher out of the van and conducted three field sobri *17 ety tests. Maher failed all three and was arrested on suspicion of OUI. See Me.Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 29-A, § 2411.
During a search incident to arrest, Officer Hamilton found in Maher’s pocket a large roll of currency, totaling $7,902, and a film canister containing approximately half a gram of what was later determined to be heroin. In the van, police found a black canvas bag which contained three sandwich bags, each of which held a ball of white powdery material slightly smaller than a baseball. The substance was later determined to be 163 grams of cocaine. 4 The canvas bag also held a black digital scale. Additionally, it contained a Posfi-It note which listed several names; to the right of each was a number. The first name was Johnson’s. To the right of his name was the number “4.”
Prior to trial, the defense filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized from Maher’s van. The defense argued that even assuming Maher was intoxicated, Officer Hamilton had lacked any reason to think Maher had committed OUI.
After a suppression hearing during which Officers MacVane and Hamilton testified, the magistrate judge recommended on October 27, 2004, that the motion to suppress be denied. The magistrate judge noted that under Maine law, an officer may order field sobriety tests on reasonable suspicion of OUI. He also noted that attempted operation counts as operation under the Maine OUI statute. See Me. Rev.Stat. Ann. tit. 29-A, § 2401(6). The magistrate judge catalogued the evidence that Maher was intoxicated before entering the minivan and found that when awakened, Maher both admitted that he had driven and said he was “just leaving.” The court concluded: “This was sufficient evidence, together with the rational inference that the defendant had entered the vehicle in order to drive it, to justify ... the field sobriety tests.” The district court adopted this decision and denied the motion to suppress.
At trial, the government never called the informant, Johnson, as a witness. It did, however, introduce the drugs seized from the minivan and testimony that the amount of cocaine seized far exceeded the amount one might have for personal use. The parties stipulated that the substance seized from the minivan was cocaine weighing 163.7 grams.
II.
A. The Motion to Suppress
Maher first challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress the evidence seized in the minivan. “Our review of the ultimate determinations of probable cause and reasonable suspicion on a motion to suppress is de novo.”
United States v. Scott,
Maher argues that the totality of the circumstances did not create reasonable suspicion that he had committed, or was about to commit, the state crime of OUI. He argues that the absence of reasonable suspicion breaks the chain of circumstance that permitted the drug seizure: Without *18 reasonable suspicion, Officer Hamilton had no basis to require sobriety tests; without the tests, Officer Hamilton had no probable cause to arrest Maher for OUI; without the arrest, there was no reason to search the van.
We reject this argument at its starting point. Assuming arguendo that “reasonable suspicion” is the applicable legal standard, 5 it was met on these facts.
Reasonable suspicion, a less demanding standard than probable cause, denotes at least a minimal level of objective justification for a stop.
United States v. Sokolow,
In this case, Officer Hamilton knew (because he had been told by other officers) that Maher had just been stumbling disori-entedly, a common characteristic of intoxication, around the parking lot of Radley’s Market.
See United States v. Meade,
But Maher’s mere intoxication is not what led to the search of the car. The search was justified on the basis of reasonable suspicion that the crime of OUI had been committed, which led to the sobriety tests, which led to the arrest. Officer Hamilton knew Maher was the only occupant of the minivan, that he was in the driver’s seat, and that the key was in the ignition. He knew Maher’s vehicle was parked in a state other than his home state. The inference was entirely rational that Maher had driven while intoxicated and that he would drive again.
See United States v. Escobar-de Jesus,
Maher’s key legal argument is that “courts seem to require that a sleeping defendant be found behind the wheel ... with a running engine before they will find reasonable suspicion of OUI.” We reject any argument that reasonable suspicion of OUI cannot exist when an apparently intoxicated person is found asleep behind the wheel unless the engine is running. Fourth Amendment analysis is always context-specific and rarely employs litmus tests.
7
See Brigham City v. Stuart,
— U.S. -,
B. The Confrontation Clause Challenge
Maher argues there were twelve instances at his trial in which hearsay was erroneously admitted, and that eonse-quently he is entitled to a new trial. He lumps them together and argues that the admission of the testimony violated his constitutional rights under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment, as defined in
Crawford v. Washington,
Post
-Crawford,
the admission of non-testifying informants’ out-of-court testimonial statements, through the testimony of police officers, is a recurring issue in the courts of appeals.
Crawford
holds that a declarant’s “testimonial” out-of-court statement is not admissible under the Confrontation Clause unless (1) the declarant testifies,
id.
at 53-54,
Assuming the declarant does not testify and is in fact available, and/or there was no prior opportunity for cross-examination of the declarant, Crawford claims will usually turn on one of two issues. First, was the out-of-court statement testimonial? Second, if so, is it admissible for reasons other than the truth of the matter asserted?
There has been a great deal of attention to the first issue, which this court discussed in
United States v. Brito,
There has been somewhat less development, post-Crawford, of the second issue, perhaps because this Crawford exception appears simply to rest upon a long-established exception to the hearsay rule for statements not offered for the truth of the matter. Even before Crawford, however, it was recognized in the standard treatises’ discussions of the hearsay rule that:
One area where abuse may be a particular' problem involves statements by arresting or investigating officers regarding the reason for their presence at the scene of a crime. The officers should not be put in the misleading position of appearing to have happened upon the scene and therefore should be entitled to provide some explanation for their presence and conduct. They should not, however, be allowed to relate historical aspects of the case, such as complaints and reports of others containing inadmissible hearsay. Such statements are sometimes erroneously admitted under the argument that the officers are entitled to give the information upon which they acted. The need for this evidence is slight, and the likelihood of misuse great. Instead, a statement that an officer acted “upon information received,” or words to that effect, should be sufficient.
2 Broun, et al., McCormick on Evidence § 249, at 103 (5th ed.1999) (emphasis added).
Maher’s Crawford arguments appear to cover two different types of testimony by officers concerning statements by the non-testifying informant-declarant: (1) testimony that the informant said X to the officer, and (2) testimony from which *21 (Maher argues) the jury would necessarily infer that the declarant had said X, but which did not itself quote or paraphrase the declarant’s statements. Crawford covers the first category — the admission of out-of-court statements by non-testifying and un-cross-examined declarants through testimony of others. Maher makes no effort to explain why Crawford should be read to extend to the second category, and so we disregard the statements which fall in that category.
We address Maher’s strongest argument that the testimony violated Crawford. Early in the government’s case, the prosecutor asked Officer MacVane how he found out that Maher “may be involved in illegal activity.” There was no objection. Officer MacVane replied: “William Johnson.” Moments later, the prosecutor and Officer MacVane engaged in the following colloquy:
Q: [Bjased on Bill Johnson’s response to your questions about who gave him the cocaine, did you do followup inquiries regarding whether such a person existed?
A: Yes I did.
Q: What did you do on those lines?
A: I checked the name Lawrence Maher in the State of Maine Department of Motor Vehicle database and also the Massachusetts database and found that he existed in both of them.
Again, there was no objection.
Obviously concerned about the use the jury might make of this testimony, the trial court admirably and sua sponte instructed: “The statements made by Mr. Johnson, whatever they are, that is for you to decide, are not to be used by you as to the truth of those statements. They are merely to be used as something that he responded to by doing something else.” The court then gave the jurors an example of the difference between hearsay and non-hearsay use of a statement.
The first
Crawford
issue to be addressed is whether the informant’s statement that Maher was involved in illegal drug dealing activity was testimonial. As best we can tell from the record, it was testimonial. The Supreme Court’s first formulation of “testimonial” included custodial examinations.
Crawford,
The next question is whether Officer MacVane’s testimony about Johnson’s testimonial statement was admissible under
Crawford
for reasons other than the truth of Johnson’s assertion that Maher sold him illegal drugs. The government says it was admissible for reasons other than the truth of the matter because it set the context for what the police officers did next. Sometimes the rationale that an out-of-court statement provides context for other admissible evidence will be valid. In
United States v. Walter,
This situation is very different and more directly raises the risks which concerned the Crawford court. The government’s articulated justification — that any statement by an informant to police which sets context for the police investigation is not offered for the truth of the statement and thus not within Crawford — is impossibly overbroad. It is overbroad even in classic hearsay terms, as stated in the McCormick treatise. What gives this situation added bite is that the “context” rationale may be used by the prosecution not just to get around hearsay law, but to circumvent Crawford’s constitutional rule. As the Seventh Circuit has warned, citing Crawford:
Under the prosecution’s theory, every time a person says to the police “X committed the crime,” the statement (including all corroborating details) would be admissible to show why the police investigated X. That would eviscerate the constitutional right to confront and cross-examine one’s accusers.
United States v. Silva,
Here, Officer MacVane testified that the confidential informant had said Maher was a drug dealer, even though the prosecution easily could have structured its narrative to avoid such testimony. The information was surely relevant, but that is not our question. As McCormick points out, the officer, for example, could merely have said he “acted upon information received, or words to that effect.” 2 Broun, supra, § 249, at 103 (internal quotation marks omitted). It appears the testimony was primarily given exactly for the truth of the assertion that Maher was a drug dealer and should not have been admitted given the adequate alternative approach.
But Maher did not object to this portion of Officer MacVane’s testimony, and he certainly cannot meet the plain error test. The testimony was immediately followed by a sua sponte instruction to the effect that any statements of the confidential informant should not be taken as standing for the truth of the matter asserted (i.e., that Maher was a dealer who supplied Johnson with drugs).
Cf. United States v. Jadusingh,
The government needed to prove only that Maher possessed, with the intent to distribute, cocaine. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a). This was proven by what was in his van: cocaine in amounts too large to be explained by personal use; a digital scale; multiple baggies of drugs (a fact consistent with distribution); a slip of paper with the name of the informant who arranged the buy. 9 Further, the police saw Maher walking around the assigned meeting place for a second potential drug sale, calling out the name he had been given.
The dividing line often will not be clear between what is true background to explain police conduct (and thus an exception to the hearsay rule and thus an exception to Crawford) and what is an attempt to evade Crawford and the normal restrictions on hearsay. But we are on firm ground in warning prosecutors of the risks they face in backdoor attempts to get statements by non-testifying confidential informants before a jury.
C. Challenges to Officer MacVane’s Postr-It Note Testimony
Finally, Maher raises several unpreserved challenges to the admissibility of one subsection of Officer MacVane’s testimony; we review for plain error.
The challenged colloquy occurred while the prosecutor was questioning Officer MacVane about the Post-It note found in *24 Maher’s minivan, and specifically about the significance of the number “4” scrawled next to Johnson’s name:
Q: Based on your participation in numerous narcotics cases that you said you had participated in, what significance did this piece of paper have in general with regard to drug trafficking?
A: Based on my training and experience it was significant because I recognize it as drug notes. Drug distributors’ way of being organized. In this particular case what it appears to me is a customer list with their orders on it.
Q: Based on your training and experience and knowledge in this case what did the “four” pertain to?
A: Four ounces of cocaine.
Maher’s argument repeats the familiar debate about whether police officers, in giving certain descriptions about how drug deals work, are testifying on the basis of particularized knowledge under Fed. R.Evid. 701, or as expert witnesses under Fed.R.Evid. 702.
10
See, e.g., United States v. Ayala-Pizarro,
Rule 701, on the other hand, is meant to admit testimony based on the lay expertise a witness personally acquires through experience, often on the job. We discussed at greater length the difference under the two rules, as applied to police officer testimony, in
Ayala-Pizarro. See
Here Officer MacVane’s testimony, that based on his experience the Post-It notes were likely notes of drug orders and the number “4” referred to a quantity of the drug found in the van, “did not cross the line to become expert testimony.” Id.; see also id. at 29 (holding that an officer’s testimony that heroin seized at drug points was typically packed in aluminum decks and that the heroin seized in the case was packaged in such decks was Rule 701 testimony). There was no error, much less plain error.
III.
The other arguments presented by Maher have been considered and are without merit.
The conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. At a suppression hearing, Officer MacVane testified that Agent Barnard did so to "try to get Mr. Maher to commit to a location that we could locate him and find him.”
. When the agent told Maher she was "Sue,” he asked her if she was "Sue Conley.” The agent replied in the affirmative. The name Sue Conley was later found in an address book recovered from Maher's van.
.Agent Buchanan recognized Maher from, inter alia, a previous booking photograph that he had been shown.
. Officer MacVane testified, accurately, that there are approximately 28 grams in an ounce. This means the cocaine seized from the minivan weighed almost six ounces.
. Neither the Supreme Court nor this court has decided what quantum of suspicion is required before a police officer can order a motorist to perform field sobriety tests. The Maine courts, however, have adopted the "reasonable suspicion” standard first articulated in
Terry v. Ohio,
. Maher argues that Officer Hamilton had no reason to believe he had consumed alcohol before driving to the parking lot, and that the presence of the six-pack in fact raises the inference that he had not. Maher also relies on the fact that no officer saw him driving the van. These arguments do not alter our conclusion that the other evidence amply supported the police action.
See State
v.
Merrill,
. Maher makes an additional argument in his reply brief that his incriminating statements cannot be used in the reasonable suspicion calculus because, at the moment Officer Hamilton shook him awake, he was "seized.” This argument, not raised before the reply brief, is forfeited.
See United States v. Isler,
. In
United States v. Cromer,
. Officer MacVane offered uncontroverted testimony that a personal use quantity of cocaine is typically a half-gram to a gram,
see United States v. Morales,
. Maher also argues that this exchange constituted a Confrontation Clause violation because Officer MacVane's opinion was based not on his expertise, but on Johnson's testimonial statements. For additional reasons to those already stated, we reject this argument. Officer’s MacVane’s experience provided an independent basis for the evidence, as we explain below.
