The defendant-appellant Francisco Moreno (“Moreno” or “the defendant”), a Mexican citizen, has contested his conviction under 28 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) imposed pursuant to his conditional plea of guilty to possessing approximately fifteen kilograms of cocaine with intent to distribute, arguing that the district court erroneously denied his motion to suppress the narcotics evidence against him, all of which had been seized from inside his vehicle following a traffic stop. The defendant has contended that the arresting officer had illegally stopped his vehicle.
On the afternoon of March 9, 2000, Memphis Police Detective Brady Valentine (‘Valentine”) was operating a stationary radar device from inside his patrol car while it was parked on the median strip of Interstate Highway 240 within the Memphis, Tennessee municipal boundaries. Around 12:30 p.m., Valentine observed a maroon Chrysler Town and Country minivan which had “darkened” or “tinted” side windows. Both a Tennessee statute (Tenn.Code Ann. § 55-9-107) and a Memphis ordinance (Section 21-338) criminalized the operation of some motor carriages having colorized or “tinted” windows. However, as developed below, the two enactments have dissimilar elements. Valentine stopped the Chrysler minivan to enable his further investigation of a suspected “window tint” violation. A video camera mounted inside Valentine’s squad cruiser recorded the traffic stop.
The officer observed North Carolina license plates affixed to the target vehicle, and two persons seated therein, as he approached its passenger side. The passenger (and van’s owner), defendant Moreno, lowered its right front window. Through that portal, Valentine requested the driver’s motor vehicle operator’s permit, and informed both Moreno and the driver Paul Ramirez (“Ramirez”) that he had stopped
Both occupants verbally authorized a vehicular search.
Following a March 15, 2000 two-count federal indictment which charged the defendant with conspiracy to possess approximately fifteen kilograms of cocaine with intent to distribute (count one) and possession of approximately fifteen kilograms cocaine with intent to distribute (count two), Moreno moved to suppress the cocaine evidence seized from the Chrysler minivan, arguing inter alia that the initial traffic stop was illegal because (1) the vehicle’s windows did not offend the Tennessee window tinting statute, and (2) the Memphis window tinting ordinance was either void under the United States Constitution or pre-empted by inconsistent state law. On August 21, 2000, a magistrate judge issued a Report and Recommendation which advised denial of the defense’s suppression motion. Following objections by both the defendant and the government, the district court, on September 28, 2000, rejected the defendant’s objections, sustained the government’s objections, and adopted the Report and Recommendation with the sole exception of a single footnote opposed by the U.S. Attorney which is not germane to the subject appeal.
On October 5, 2000, Moreno and the United States executed a plea agreement whereby, among other things, the defendant pledged to plead guilty to count two of the indictment, and the prosecution promised to dismiss count one. On October 11, 2000, with the trial court’s approval, the defendant and the government agreed, in writing, to preserve Moreno’s right to challenge the lower court’s adverse resolution of his suppression motion. On February 26, 2001, the trial judge journalized judgment against Moreno on count two, and sentenced him to seventy months in a federal penitentiary, to be followed by three years of supervised release should the government fail to deport him upon the conclusion of his imprisonment. On March 1, 2001, Moreno initiated a timely appeal to this court.
Absent a warrant, a law enforcement operative may lawfully stop a moving vehicle in at least two circumstances: (1) when he or she has “probable cause”
Initially, Moreno has contended that Detective Valentine lacked the requisite “probable cause” or “reasonable suspicion” to justify the stop of the minivan for any length of time. At the inception of the subject traffic stop, the officer informed Moreno and Ramirez that he suspected that their vehicle’s windows violated the Tennessee state statute controlling window tinting. That enactment posits:
It is unlawful for any person to operate, upon a public highway, street or road, any motor vehicle registered in this state, in which any window, which has a visible light transmittance equal to, but not less than, that specified in the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 205, has been altered, treated, or replaced by the affixing, application or installation of any material which:
(A) Has a visible light transmittance of less than thirty-five percent (35%); or
(B) With the exception of the manufacturer’s standard installed shade band, reduces the visible light transmittance in the windshield below seventy percent (70%).
TenmCode Ann. § 55-9-107(a)(l).
The defendant has asserted that the patrolman knew or should have known, prior to his initial contact with the occupants of the Chrysler, that section 55-9-107(a)(l) did not proscribe the operation of Moreno’s minivan in Tennessee irrespective of its darkened windows, allegedly for at least three reasons: (1) the vehicle displayed North Carolina license plates, whereas section 55-9-107(a)(l) reached only motorcars registered in Tennessee; (2) the Tennessee statute averredly implicated only “after-market” tinting, whereas the van’s windows allegedly lacked any label(s) identifying an “after-market” tint application;
It shall be unlawful for any person to operate a motor vehicle upon a public highway, street or road, which has been altered, treated or replaced by the affixation, application or installation of any material which:
(1) Reduces the light transmittance in both front windows below eighteen (18) percent; or
(2) Causes the reflectance of any window to be more than thirty-five (35) percent.
Memphis City Code § 21-338(c).
Accordingly, unlike the previously-quoted Tennessee statute, which governs only vehicles registered by that state, the implicated city ordinance applies to all vehicles moving on public thoroughfares within the Memphis municipal borders. Furthermore, whereas the state regulation forbids the “transmittance ” of less than 35% of visible light by vehicle windows, the municipal ordinance prohibits the “reflectance” of more than 35% of ambient light by vehicular windows (or, in other words, the transmittance of 65% or less of visible light into the passenger compartment). Thus, the reach of the Memphis ordinance is significantly broader than that of the state statute, in that it (1) embraces vehicles having comparatively lightly-tinted windows (2) irrespective of their state of registration.
Therefore, considering the undisputed proof that the defendant’s van’s side windows were tinted to some optically discernable degree, which Officer Valentine had adjudged to appear violative of a controlling legal standard, he had, at minimum, a “reasonable suspicion” that Moreno’s vehicle may have violated the relatively far-reaching Memphis ordinance when he stopped that automobile for further investigation.
At bottom, any confusion on Valentine’s part about the origin of the law which he was enforcing — that is, whether it was a state statute or a municipal ordinance — is, in the final analysis, immaterial. The ultimate dispositive uncontroverted fact is that he correctly concluded that an extant regulation which he was sworn to enforce within the Memphis municipal limits may have illegalized the movement of the subject minivan on the public byways because of its side window tinting, thus warranting his further, investigation to ascertain whether that vehicle’s windows complied
Accordingly, Officer Valentine’s stop of the subject motorcar was authorized by his “reasonable suspicion” that its side windows may have violated the Memphis tint ordinance. Consequently, the defendant’s postulate that the predicate vehicular stop constituted an “unreasonable seizure” under the Fourth Amendment, which vitiated the subsequent consent search of that vehicle, was misconceived.
Additionally, Moreno has contended that the Memphis “window tint” ordinance violated the United States Constitution, for two reasons. Primarily, he has alleged that the Memphis enactment contravened Congress’ sole plenary power to regulate interstate commerce. See Dennis v. Higgins,
That ill-formulated argument must be rejected. The peace officer had no objective reason to question the vitality of Memphis City Code § 21-338(c). Facially, that ordinance was a commonplace automotive equipment safety regulation of the kind
Therefore, because Officer Valentine’s invocation” of the Memphis ordinance as authorization for the subject traffic stop was “objectively reasonable,” that stop is unassailable even if the ordinance is judicially voidable by reason of conflict with the federal Constitution or the law of Tennessee. See Illinois v. Krull,
This reviewing court has carefully considered the trial court record, the controlling law, and the briefs and arguments of counsel, and has concluded that the defendant’s contentions were each ill-conceived. Accordingly, the faulted traffic stop was justified as incident to Officer Valentine’s good faith enforcement of Memphis City Code § 21-338(c), and thus did not transgress the Fourth Amendment. Hence, the lower court correctly rejected Moreno’s petition to suppress evidence discovered inside the minivan following that stop. Moreno’s judgment of conviction and sentence is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. On review, the defendant has not assailed his and his cohort Ramirez’s voluntary approval of the search, nor has he faulted the conduct of Valentine’s narcotics investigation per se. See generally United. States v. Drayton, - U.S. -,
. Generally, evidentiary rulings should be scrutinized for "abuse of discretion.” See General Electric Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 142-43,
. The Fourth Amendment posits, in relevant part, that "[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons ... and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated[J” U.S. Const, amend. IV.
The "touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness.” Ohio v. Robinette,
. " 'Probable cause’ denotes ‘facts and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge that are sufficient to warrant a prudent person, or one of reasonable caution, in believing, in the circumstances shown, that the suspect has committed, is committing, or is about to commit an offense.’ Criss v. City of Kent,
. "While ‘reasonable suspicion’ is a less demanding standard than probable cause and requires a showing considerably less than preponderance of the evidence, the Fourth Amendment requires at least a minimal level of objective justification for making the stop. The officer must be able to articulate more than an 'inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or "hunch” ' of criminal activity.” Illinois v. Wardlow,
. “The scope of the detention must be carefully tailored to its underlying justification.” Florida v. Royer,
. The Joint Appendix contained no proof in support of the defendant’s sweeping assertion that “after-market” window tinting is universally accompanied by identifying decals; nor did it reflect any evidence relevant to the actual origin of the window tinting on Moreno’s van.
Because this reviewing court's ultimate resolution of this appeal, as developed herein, does not require it to define the full scope of Tenn.Code Ann. § 55-9-107(a)(l), it expresses no opinion as to whether or not the Tennessee statute may exclusively be applied to the operation of vehicles having windows which were treated "after-market.”
. The Joint Appendix reflected no evidence regarding the precise degree to which the minivan's windows were smoked. Instead, Moreno has in essence asserted, without evidentiary support, that it should have been visually manifest to the police officer that the vehicle's windows were not so blackened as to transmit less than 35% of ambient natural luminescence.
. The defendant has not gainsaid the government’s contention that the degree of darkening on the minivan’s side windows violated, or at minimum visually appeared to violate, the Memphis ordinance.
. Therefore, the defendant’s protests (1) that Valentine did not test the darkness of the windows with his state-issued "comparison card” until after he had searched the vehicle and arrested its occupants; (2) that the officer may have erroneously concluded that the van windows were tinted to a degree disallowed under state law; (3) that the patrolman’s Tennessee "comparison card” may have been inaccurate and misleading; and (4) that neither occupant of the automobile was subsequently charged with any "window tint” infraction, were each immaterial to the action sub judice. Because, for the reasons evolved herein, Valentine’s initial stop of the vehicle, and his affiliated brief questioning of its occupants, were lawful, and because events immediately subsequent to the permissible stop supplied the officer with sufficient reasonable suspicion to shift the object of his investigation to the suspected carriage of illegal contraband, the existence or nonexistence of an actual "window tint” violation under either state or municipal law was ultimately irrelevant to the prosecution in controversy.
