On Dеcember 17, 1985, Maria Reyes and Griselle Santiago, New York residents, arrived together at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport on a flight which originated in Colombia. When they were found to hаve a total of 143 sausage-shaped balloons filled with cocaine secreted in their alimentary canals, they were arrested and charged with importing and possessing the drugs. They now seek reversal of their convictions, which followed guilty pleas in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, on the ground that x-ray confirmation of the drug’s presence in their bodies violated their constitutional rights. Finding no merit in this contention, we affirm.
There was nothing unusual about appellants’ attempt to smuggle Colombian drugs into the United States. Anyone at all familiar with what Chiеf Justice Rehnquist has termed “the veritable national crisis in law enforcement caused by smuggling of illicit narcotics”,
United States v. Montoya de Hernandez,
Moreover, although the ingestion of drug-filled balloons and condoms is extremеly dangerous,
United States v. Oyekan,
Vinсent Luongo, the Customs Inspector who interviewed appellants upon their arrival, was no fool. A college graduate with extensive training in Spanish, he had been interrogating Hispaniс arrivals at Kennedy Airport practically every day for over two years. When he learned that appellants had been to Pereira, Colombia, a town that, in his words, has a “notоrious reputation” as the source of swallowed narcotics, he suspected that appellants might be among the swallowers. Further inquiry strengthened his suspicions. When he asked Reyes why she went to Colombia, she told him that she had gone there on vacation. It is by now well known that a high percentage of individuals discovered in the act of smuggling Colombian narcotics claim to have gone to that Country on vacation,
United States v. Smith,
Although appellants informed Luongo that they were living together in the Bronx, Santiago explained her trip to Colombia by tеlling Luongo that she had recently married and went to Colombia to visit her mother-in-law. Luongo then asked Santiago if she was carrying any pictures or photographs of her and her husband “that she would present to her mother-in-law in Colombia” and was told that she didn’t have any pictures of her or her husband. Luongo testified that he thought it strange that Santiago “went down to visit her mother-in-law, and сould provide no proof to show her mother-in-law as to the marriage.” In overruling an objection from Reyes’ counsel at the suppression hearing, District Judge Platt expressed his complete agreement with Luongo: “There wouldn’t have been a lady in the world that would not have taken pictures down to show the husband’s mother.” Like the district judge, we believe Luongo’s reaction was reasonable and in accord with “common sense and ordinary human experience.”
United States v. Sharpe,
It is well settled that a reasonable suspicion of illegal concealment may be based, in part, on an “implausible story”,
United States v. Montoya de Hernandez, supra,
Other facts uncovered by Luongo made the legitimacy of appellants’ expensive round-trips to Colombia even more suspect. Appellants had only limited income from their jobs as clerks. Their plane tickets were purchased only one week before their departure for Colombia, and their passports were obtained only three days before departure, an unusual time schedule for persons planning a vacation trip to a foreign country. Finally, although appellants lived and worked in the Bronx, their tickets were purchased at the same time at a travel agency on Long Island, which reasonably suggests that they were purchased by a third party. The tickets were paid for in cash, thus hiding the identity of the payor,
see United States v. Ogberaha,
Appellants take the position that their detention at the border was unlawful because the unusual features of their travel arrangements and itinerary were, in the words of Reyes’ appellate brief, “reasonably susceptible of an innocent explanation.” We note that appellants, whose only hope of avoiding conviction was by way оf the exclusionary rule, did not take advantage of the opportunity presented by the suppression hearing to make that “innocent explanation”. Recognizing, as we do, that thе burden of proof at the suppression hearing was not on appellants, we nonetheless find no merit in their present argument. “[T]he mere fact that conduct is as consistent with innocеnce as with guilt does not preclude such conduct from providing the basis for a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.”
United States v. Delos-Rios,
Bearing in mind our deference to the expertise of trained customs inspectors and the inherent difficulty of detecting alimentary canal smuggling,
United States v. Ogberaha, supra,
Although the district court found nothing to indicate that the consent was not knowing and voluntary, appellants now contend that they were being unlawfully detained when the consent was given and therefore it was invalid as fruit of the poisonous tree. This contention is without merit. None of the cases cited by appellants involves a border inspection, where detention “beyond the scopе of a routine customs search and inspection[] is justified at its inception if customs agents, considering all the facts surrounding the traveler and her trip, reasonably suspect that the traveler is smuggling contraband in her alimentary canal.”
United States v. Montoya de Hernandez, supra,
Since we hold that appellants’ consent was validly given, we need not reach the question whether consent was necessary. We knоw, of course, that, in some Circuits, an x-ray examination of alimentary canal smugglers may be conducted without their consent if based upon appropriate reasonable suspicion.
See, e.g., United States v. Mejia,
The judgments of conviction are affirmed.
