Lead Opinion
Today we decide whether the district court erred in granting a defendant’s motion to suppress evidence gathered following a warrantless investigatory stop — a stop made partly in good faith reliance on information that was inaccurate through police error. A panel of our Court affirmed the district court, concluding that the vehicle stop violated the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights and further holding that “negligent” police conduct truncated the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule. We now reconsider that decision en banc and reverse the district court.
I.
The facts are set forth in the panel opinion,
Suspicious, Agent Martinez then radioed the truck’s license plate number “WM-1438” to the dispatcher, who misunderstood him to say “WN-1438.” The dispatcher acknowledged the message but owing to the error radioed back that the license check had revealed that the plates were issued to a 1973 Ford dump truck and not the 1982 Chevrolet welding truck that Agent Martinez was following.
Based on his observations and on the license check, Agent Martinez pulled the truck over. Agent Martinez inquired about the defendant’s citizenship; and the defendant produced a resident alien card, volunteering that he was en route to a town down the road to do a construction job. When Agent Martinez asked the name of the town, however, the defendant replied that he had forgotten both it and the delivery address for the lumber. After additional questioning, Agent Martinez suspected that the defendant was lying. He asked permission to inspect the truck, and the defendant consented. Looking under the truck, Agent Martinez discovered a freshly welded, false compartment underneath its bed. After asking the defendant whether he knew if someone had tampered with the truck and receiving a negative response, he asked the defendant to step out of the car and produce a copy of his title.
Upon examining the title, Agent Martinez realized that the license check may have been inaccurate because the title matched the license plate on the truck. He radioed the dispatcher to run a second check and then radioed a border patrol agent at the nearby Freer checkpoint station, asking him to bring a drug sniffing dog to determine whether or not a search of the false compartment was necessary. The second license check gave Agent Martinez the correct information. When the dog arrived, it alerted to the rear of the truck; Border Patrol agents later discovered over half a ton of cocaine in the false compartment.
The United States indicted De Leon-Reyna for possession with intent to distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A). He filed a motion to suppress the evidence, maintaining that Agent Martinez’s initial stop was without a warrant or reasonable suspicion. During the district court’s hearing on the motion to suppress, the dispatcher testified that it is her unit’s policy to use code words for communicating license plate letters, although that policy is not always followed. In making his transmission on the occasion in question, Martinez did not use code words for the license plate letters.
The district court granted the motion to suppress, concluding
“that the Government cannot justify a stop based on erroneous information when the error is due to the negligence of its own employees. Once the putative false registration is removed from the picture, the remaining circumstances do not justify a stop,”
and that
“[t]he Court does not question the good faith of the officers who made this stop, but as yet there is no precedent extending a good-faith exception to erroneous factual information relied upon by officers in making a warrantless stop. The Court thus concludes that it has no other recourse but to grant the motion to suppress.”
II.
We conclude that regardless of whether Martinez was negligent in failing to follow his unit’s code word policy, his good faith reliance on the license report information, as forming a part of the total circumstances he evaluated in determining whether to stop the vehicle, was objectively reasonable, and that accordingly the district court and the panel erred in holding that this information could be given no consideration whatever in evaluating whether the stop was justified under the reasonable suspicion standard of United States v. Cortez,
In Fourth Amendment cases, the Supreme Court begins with the basic premise that, when examining whether an officer’s judgment is objectively reasonable, “the essence of all that has been written is that the totality of the circumstances — the whole picture — must be taken into account.” Cortez,
The Supreme Court held that — despite the officers’ failure to obtain a warrant or to make further inquiries as to who had a possessory interest in the apartment — the search would be valid if the officers’ belief that they had consent, in light of all the, circumstances, was objectively reasonable. See id. at 2801. See also Maryland v. Garrison,
Similarly, the issue here is not whether Martinez should have followed his unit’s
Under the totality of the facts and circumstances present here, an objective officer situated as was Martinez could have reasonably relied on the license plate report information. Officer Martinez testified that he got up close to the back of defendant’s truck so that he could clearly see the tag and carefully spoke the letters and numbers into his radio transmitter. The experienced dispatcher — thirteen years on the job — obviously thought she understood the transmission. She made no request to Martinez to repeat what he had said or to use phonetics for letters. At the receiving end of the dispatcher’s responsive transmission, Martinez had no basis for thinking she had had any problem in understanding the tag number as he gave it. The dispatcher testified that officers often did not follow the policy procedures when transmitting license plate numbers.
We conclude that in this setting an objectively reasonable officer could properly rely on the license report information, notwithstanding that he knew it was obtained without the use of code words, as forming a part of the total circumstances to be evaluated in determining whether there existed the requisite reasonable suspicion to stop the vehicle. Accordingly, although the license plate information turned out to be erroneous, it nevertheless may not be disregarded in determining either the legality of the stop or the availability of the good faith exception.
III.
Under the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule, “evidence is not to be suppressed ... where it is discovered by officers in the course of actions that are taken in good faith and in the reasonable, though mistaken, belief that they are authorized.” Williams,
“[particularly when law enforcement officers have acted in objective good faith or their transgressions have been minor, the magnitude of the benefit conferred on such guilty defendants offends basic concepts of the criminal justice system.” Id. (emphasis added).
Concluding that the good faith exception applies to cases in which a police officer errs, but nevertheless maintains a good faith and objectively reasonable belief
The Supreme Court has stated that “officers on roving patrol may stop vehicles only if they are aware of specific articula-ble facts, together with rational inferences from those facts, that reasonably warrant suspicion” that a vehicle harbors contraband. United States v. Brignoni-Ponce,
Here we determine that it was objectively reasonable for an officer in Agent Martinez’s position to conclude that under all the circumstances there was a particularized and objective basis for reasonable suspicion that defendant’s vehicle was engaged in criminal activity — in other words, that a stop of the vehicle was lawful under the standards of Cortez and Brignoni-Ponce. Martinez’s decision to pull the truck оver — including his good faith reliance on the license plate information— was not unreasonable in the face of all of the surrounding circumstances: the road’s common use by drug traffickers and close proximity to the border; the Border Patrol reference manual warning of smuggling efforts via false compartments in plywood cargo; the incongruity of the truck and the cargo it carried; and his evaluation of the circumstances and defendant’s conduct, based on four years of experience in the same area of Texas.
Indeed, we are inclined to believe that the stop of defendant’s vehicle fully complied with the Cortez standard and was hence lawful. But even if we were to ultimately conclude that the circumstances fall marginally short of Cortez’s requirements, nevertheless it is abundantly clear that it would have been objectively reasonable for an experienced, well-trained police officer in this setting to conclude that those requirements were satisfied and that the stop was hence legal. Cf. Anderson v. Creighton,
Conclusion
Agent Martinez’s failure to comply with his unit’s code word policy is not of itself the determinative issue in this case, nor is the question of whether in some sense or for some purpose that failure may be characterized as negligent. And, it is not determinative that the license plate information ultimately turned out to be wrong, just as it is not determinative that Agent Martinez’s suspicion ultimately turned out to be well founded. What is determinative is that it was objectively reasonable for an
The district court’s order granting defendant’s motion to suppress is reversed and the cause is remanded.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Martinez was approximately thirty to forty miles from the Mexican border. In his four years with the Border Patrol prior to the defendant’s arrest, Agent Martinez himself had apprehended illegal aliens on FM 2050 on more than thirteen different occasions. FM 2050 is not well-traveled; only two other cars passed Agent Martinez in the hour and a half he was on duty before the defendant’s truck appeared.
. Considering “the totality of the circumstances ... the detaining officers must have a particularized and objective basis for suspecting" that the vehicle stopped is engaged in criminal activity, id. at 695, although this need not rise to the level of affording probable cause for arrest or search. Id. at 697.
. There was no contrary evidence. The only evidence concerning the policy was the dispatcher's testimony.
. All of the foregoing are valid considerations for making an investigatory stop. See Brignoni-Ponce,
. By ultimately resolving this case on the Leon-Williams exception to the exclusionary rule, without determining that the stop violated the Fourth Amendment (indeed, as indicated, we conclude it likely did not), we do not imply that the district courts usually should not (or should) first resolve the substantive Fourth Amendment issue. Where there is an important unresolved substantive issue under the Fourth Amendment, it may often be preferable to reach that issue first, and only proceed to Leon-Williams if the substantive issue is resolved agаinst the validity of the challenged action (see Leon,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom JOHNSON, Circuit Judge, joins dissenting.
Officer Ernie Martinez negligently transmitted a vehicle’s license plate number, received an erroneous registration report because of his negligence, and then stopped the vehicle partially because of the erroneous registration information. The majority holds that the district court erred in refusing to include the registration information as a factor in determining whether Officer Martinez had a reasonable suspicion that the welding truck was transporting narcotics, but then pretermits the legality of the stop and applies the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule to hold that the district court erred in suppressing the cocaine which was discovered in the truck. My objection to both holdings is identical: erroneous information created by the negligent conduct of a law enforcement officer cannot be used to support a finding that the officer acted reasonably. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
I.
To better comprehend my position and the position of the majority, it is helpful to understand the genesis of this appeal. At issue is the suppression of 1200 pounds of cocaine. Nevertheless, from the beginning, this case has been poorly prosecuted by the government.
The majority repeatedly attempts to slip out of the “negligеnce” label to which the government has yoked it. Its first tactic is to ignore the finding of negligence and focus on the word designation policy itself, arguing that the “code word policy [is not] constitutionally mandated,” “does not have the force of law,” and “is [not] even written, much less published.” See Majority Opinion at p. 400. Then, without any foundation in the record, it disparages transmissions in which word designations are used, hypothesizing them to be only eighty-five percent reliable and only twenty percent more reliable than transmissions in which the word designations are not used. See id. These arguments are specious. The codification and reliability of the border patrol’s communication policy are only relevant in determining whether Officer Martinez was negligent when he failed to follow that policy. The government conceded that he was. Therefore, because we must accept the finding that Martinez was acting unreasonably when he neglected to use the word designation policy, the fourth amendment and the good faith exception required him to follow that policy.
The second tactic that the majority uses to throw off the negligence yoke is to surreptitiously challenge its factual constitution: Officer Martinez “got up close to the back of” the truck and “carefully spoke the letters and numbers into his radio”; the dispatcher with thirteen years of experience thought that she understood the transmission, and Martinez had no reason to believe that she had not understood it; and “officers often did not follow the policy procedures when transmitting license plate numbers.”
The second inexplicable blunder by the government was to tie the suppression of 1200 pounds of cocaine to the fate of the license registration report. As the majority points out, a number of peculiar things about the truck aroused Officer Martinez’s suspicions before he ran a check on the truck’s license plates. First, smugglers frequently used the road on which the truck was traveling, FM 2050, to avoid a border patrol checkpoint.
But the government never attempted to argue that the circumstances apart from the registration information justified an investigatory stop. See United States v. De Leon-Reyna,
Therefore, despite its obfuscation, the majority is defending the following proposition: that information obtained through unreasonable means can make a law enforcement officer’s suspicions, or his “good faith” belief about those suspicions, more reasonable.
II.
A. The Good Faith Exception
The “good faith” exception is a misnomer. The key to determining whether the exception applies is not whether the officer acted in “good faith” but whether the officer’s actions were objectively reasonable. See United States v. Leon,
The majority attempts to separate Martinez’s conduct from his state of mind by arguing that Martinez did not have to be objectively reasonable in acquiring the information as long as he was objectively reasonable in believing the information after he received it. This premise makes no sense, however, when one considers that the purpose of the exclusionary rule is to affect the future conduct of law enforcement officers. See id. at 920,
The Supreme Court has consistently said that one of the purposes of the exclusionary rule is to deter negligent conduct by law enforcement officers. It has done so by reiterating the statement, first made in Michigan v. Tucker,
In Sheppard, police discovered a woman's badly burned body in a vacant lot and suspected Osborne Sheppard, one of her boyfriends, of having killed her. See id. at 984,
At his trial, Sheppard moved to suppress the evidence, arguing that the “corrected” warrant still failed to conform to the fourth amendment because it did not adequately describe the things to be seized. The Supreme Court noted that the warrant was constitutionally defective, see id. at 988 n. 5,
[T]he police conduct in this case clearly was objectively reasonable and largely error-free. An error of constitutional dimensions may have been committed with respect to the issuance of the warrant, but it was the judge, not the police officers, who made the critical mistake. “[T]he exclusionary rule was adopted to deter unlawful searches by police, not to punish the errors of magistrates and judges.”
Id. at 990,
The good faith exception only applies if the law enforcement officer has acted reasonably. No doctrinal basis exists for bifurcating Martinez’s actions from his state of mind.
B. The “Reasonableness” Requirement of the Fourth Amendment and That of the Good Faith Exception
Although the majority holds that Officer Martinez could have based his suspicions about the welding truck on the erroneous registration information, it explicitly refuses to decide whether the stop violated the fourth amendment. See Majority Opinion at p. 401 n. 5. Rather, it reaches the conclusion that the good faith exception permits the cocaine to be admitted as evidence at De Leon-Reyna’s trial.
The structure of the majority’s analysis is curious for two reasons. First, as noted above, Officer Martinez’s observations may have satisfied the fourth amendment even without the erroneous registration report. If, as the majority holds, we are permitted to add the erroneous report to those observations, the officer clearly had a reason to suspect that the truck was involved in criminal activity, and, therefore, the stop was legal.
Second, under the facts of this case, the fourth amendment is equipollent to the good faith exception, i.e., Officer Martinez could not have met the “reasonableness” requirement for the good faith exception without meeting the “reasonableness” requirement of the fourth amendment. Under the fourth amendment, Officer Mar
In Illinois v. Rodriguez, police officers searched the defendant’s apartment after receiving the consent of a woman whom they mistakenly believed had common authority over the premises. See
In Hill v. California, police investigating a robbery had probable cause to arrest Hill. See
Therefore, because Officer Martinez made the mistake and also made the stop, if that mistake had been reasonable, as the majority asserts, the stop would have been legal under the fourth amendment. In fact, the majority’s premise that there is a difference between its good faith exception and the fourth amendment is belied by the opinion itself. According to the majority, the fourth amendment is satisfied if Martinez’s “good faith reliance on the license plate report, along with the other circumstances, in determining to stop the defendant’s truck, was objectively reasonable.” See Majority Opinion at p. 399. The good faith exception is satisfied if “under all the circumstances there was a particularized and objective basis for reasonable suspicion that [the] defendant’s vehicle was engaged in criminal activity.” See id. at p. 401. Under the facts of this case, I cannot discern a difference between these two tests.
The majority does use slightly different language to distinguish its analysis of the fourth amendment from its analysis of the good faith exception: Officer Martinez was reasonable in relying on the erroneous license information under the fourth amendment if we consider the “totality of the circumstances,” but he was reasonable un
C. A Reasonable Belief Cannot be the Product of Unreasonable Conduct Under Either the Fourth Amendment or the Good Faith Exception
As explained in Part 11(A), the exclusionary rule requires that an officer’s actions as well as his state of mind be objectively reasonable. In addition, the majority’s attempt to use the “totality of the circumstances” in order to distinguish Martinez’s actions from his state of mind is inherently illogical, whether it is done under the auspices of the fourth amendment or the exclusionary rule, because an actor’s belief cannot be characterized as “reasonable” if it is grounded on facts produced by that actor’s unreasonable conduct. See Delaware v. Prouse,
The “totality of the circumstances” approach is quantitative: it permits a court to add together individual facts known to law enforcement officers to determine whether the officers had a reasonable basis for suspecting that someone was involved in a crime. For example, police may not have reasonable suspicion to detain someone based solely on an anonymous tip, but they could have reasonable suspicion if that tip was corroborated by independent investigation. See Alabama v. White, - U.S. -,
The majority disputes this: it argues that Officer Martinez’s negligence simply diminishes the reliability of the report and, therefore, it should be discounted “somewhat.” See Majority Opinion at p. 401. But again, the fallacy in this analysis is illustrated by the majority’s own argument. If, as the majority asserts, the only reason for “discounting” the registration report is that it was twenty percent less reliable than if Officer Martinez had used word designations, why would not the license report itself justify the stop? Why modify it using the “additional circumstances”? After all, if a law enforcement officer is sixty-five percent sure that a vehicle is operating with stolen license plates, he certainly would be reasonable in stopping the vehicle and asking to see its registration.
The majority implicitly recognizes the qualitative defect of the registration report and does not attempt to defend its value independent of the other incriminating circumstances. Rather it asserts that Officer Martinez’s “additional observations” made his tainted (unreasonable) reliance on the erroneous license plate information reasonable, and that we can then combine the converted “unreasonable” reliance on the license plate with those same “additional observations” and conclude that Officer Martinez had a “reasonable” belief that De Leon-Reyna was engaged in criminal activity. This type, of reasoning is commonly disparaged with the epithet, bootstrapping.
If we assume that Officer Martinez would not have been objectively reasonable in believing that he could stop De Leon-Reyna before receiving the erroneous registration information, adding an additional piece of information to the equation, obtained through unrеasonable means, does not make his belief objectively reasonable.
III.
I understand the majority’s reluctance to suppress 1200 pounds of cocaine because the arresting officer failed to properly transmit a license plate number. Nevertheless, the touchstone for admitting that evidence under the fourth amendment and under the good faith exception is “objective reasonableness.” Here, the district court held and the government conceded that the officer was negligent and, therefore, by definition, unreasonable. Therefore, I do nоt believe that the registration information can be included as a factor in determining whether Officer Martinez had a reasonable suspicion that the welding truck was engaged in criminal activity or that the good faith exception can be used to admit this evidence, and I respectfully dissent.
. After the panel issued its original opinion affirming the suppression of the evidence, the government did not file a petition for rehearing.
. The district court’s determination that Officer Martinez was negligent is a finding of fact, which cannot be disturbed unless it is clearly erroneous. See In re Air Crash at Dallas/Fort Worth Airport on August 2, 1985,
.That other officers failed to follow the word designation policy would not shield Officer Martinez from negligence. See, e.g., Helling v. Carey,
. Compare United States v. Ortega-Serrano,
. See United States v. Cortez,
. See United States v. Lopez-Gonzalez,
. If Martinez’s observations, by themselves, would have made a reasonable person with his four years of expеrience suspicious that the welding truck was engaged in illegal activity, he did not violate the fourth amendment when he stopped De Leon-Reyna’s truck. See Sokolow,
. See, e.g., United States v. Brignoni-Ponce,
. See W. Keeton, D. Dobbs, R. Keeton, & D. Owen, Prosser & Keeton on Torts § 32, at 174-75 (Lawyer’s 5th ed. 1984) (explaining that one’s conduct is negligent if one fails to act as a reasonable person would in a similar situation).
. See, e.g., Maine v. Moulton,
. See, e.g., Illinois v. Rodriguez, - U.S. -,
. The State court did not evaluate the reasonableness of the officers’ belief, and, therefore, the case was remanded "for consideration of that question.” See Illinois v. Rodriguez, - U.S. -,
. To illustrate the bootstrapping problem, assume that both the license plate information and the "additional circumstances” are necessary for Officer Martinez to form the reasonable belief required by the good faith exception. Therefore, if each of these pieces of information had a mathematical value of "1,” we would need a "2” for the exception to be satisfied (1 + 1). The problem is that the erroneous license plate information is worth "0,” and 1+0 does not equal 2. The majority argues that we can use the additional circumstances to change the 0 to a 1, or to a fraction of 1, but “(1 X 0) + 1” still equals 1.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the judgment:
As Judge Thornberry’s thoughtful dissent points out, the rationale employed by the majority to reach the conclusion that the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies in this case also supports the conclusion that the stop in this case met the “reasonableness” requirement of the fourth amendment, and I would decide the case on the latter basis. The Supreme Court’s cases on the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule (which post-date our Williams decision) feature an external source, e.g., a warrant or a statute, on which the officer could rely. Because it is unnecessary to do so in this case, I see no need to extend those cases to the stop at issue here, which does not contain such a source. I therefore concur in the judgment.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I cannot join the majority for I cannot agree that there could be a good faith reliance by officer Martinez on information which, as factually found by the district court and conceded by the government, by definition was unreasonably acquired by the officer. If the posture of this case permitted, I would conclude that the officer’s stop of the vehicle did not violate the fourth amendment. Because that resolution is not available, and because I cannot accord to the unreasonably acquired information the healing balm accorded by the majority, I must respectfully dissent. In doing so, I join much of what Brother Thornberry has written in his dissent.
