Convicted of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, defendant challenges the warrantless search of his carry-on bag at an airport preboarding security checkpoint. We affirm.
At the Miami International Airport, defendant approached a preboarding security checkpoint, placed his carry-on shoulder bag on the conveyor belt for security x-ray and proceeded through the magnetometer. A private security officer operating the x-ray machine observed suspicious images on the viewing screen which he thought might be knives or letter openers bunched together. He ordered a second security employee to search the bag. During the search, a detective of the Miami Drug Courier Intercept Unit positioned himself so that he could observe the items being removed from defendant’s bag. The security employee had difficulty removing a pair of pants, which she testified appeared to have something heavy inside. The detective assisted her by holding the bag in place, and as she lifted the pants out, two plastic bags containing cocaine fell from the legs and into the bottom of the bag. The detective immediately placed defendant under arrest and seized the shoulder bag and its contents.
Following an evidentiary hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress, the district court,
Although the Government argues the court’s finding of governmental action was erroneous, it is not necessary to decide that issue because the search of defendant’s bag was reasonable under Fourth Amendment standards. The validity of airport preboarding security searches, even on the basis of “mere and unsupported suspicion,” has been recognized in numerous cases.
E. g., United States v. Skipwith,
In this case, the district court found that the search was not pretextual but was based solely on the reasonable belief that defendant’s bag might contain dangerous objects which passengers are not permitted to carry on board. The district court’s finding was not clearly erroneous.
See United States v. Duckett,
[i]n reaching our decision [that the seizure was lawful] we are confronted with the fact that the agent’s judgment that the box contained a gun proved to be erroneous. But we do not deem this to be the controlling question.... We must consider the case on the basis of what the officers saw and the reliable information they possessed.
United States v. Wysocki,
*354
The detective was legitimately in the security screening area. Objects within the view of an officer who has a right to be in a position to have that view are subject to seizure and may be introduced into evidence.
Harris v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
