The United States Government brings this appeal challenging a district court order suppressing contraband evidence obtained in an automobile search. The district court held that covering the cargo area of a sport utility vehicle creates the “functional еquivalent” of a trunk and places the covered area beyond the permissible scope of an automobile search incident to arrest. We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731 and reverse.
*1204 BACKGROUND
On February 7, 1998 at around 11:00 p.m., two Colorado State Troopers were parked in the median along Interstate 76 near Ft. Morgan, Colorado, on routine traffic patrol. The troopers observed a green Isuzu Rodeo sport utility vehicle pass by without a visible license plate on the back. Appellee, Mr. Rodolfo Alvidrez-Terrazas, was driving the vehicle, with co-Appellee, Mr. Mario Olguin-Rivera, riding in the back seat. The officers stopped the vehicle to check for a licensing violation. After approaching the vehicle for close inspection, the officers discovered an expirеd temporary license attached to the inside of the back window. At that point, the troopers instructed the driver, Mr. Alvidrez-Terrazas, to get out of the vehicle and present his driver’s license. Because Mr. Alvi-drez-Terrazas was unable to produce a license or any other form of identification, the troopers decided to arrest him. The troopers also asked the passenger Mr. Olguin-Rivera to exit the vehicle and produce his driver’s license. Mr. Olguin-Rivera, who the troopers later discovered had legally rented the vehicle, showеd the troopers his license and then stood by as they began to search the vehicle.
The troopers started their search of the interior at the front of the passenger compartment and worked toward the back. Eventually, one of the troopers opеned the tailgate to search the rear cargo area which had a built-in, vinyl cover pulled over the top. The trooper testified the vinyl cover operated much like a rolling window shade that could be extended over the top of cargo and then retracted when not in use. This particular cover was drawn from the front of the cargo area near the back of the passenger seat and latched at the back of the vehicle near the tailgate. After opening the tailgate, the troopers could see two large bags under the vinyl covering. Without touching or removing the bags, the troopers asked Mr. Olguin-Rivera who the bags belonged to and what they contained. After some discussion, Mr. Olguin-Rivera finally admitted the bags were his and that they contained marijuana. The troopers then arrested Mr. Olguin-Rivеra and searched the bags which contained a total of 118 pounds of marijuana.
Mr. Olguin-Rivera and Mr. Alvidrez-Ter-razas were subsequently charged with one count of possession with intent to distribute marijuana under 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(C), and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Both defendants filed similar motions to suppress the drug possession evidence claiming the troopers violated their Fourth Amendment rights during the initial encounter. On April 16, 1998, the district court conducted a consolidated hearing, and after hearing testimony and arguments, the court ruled to suppress the evidence. The district court found the covering over the rear compartment of the sport utility vehicle created the “functional equivalent of the trunk of an automobile,” and therefore caused the troopers’ search to “exceed[] the proper scope” of an automobile search inсident to arrest.
DISCUSSION
This appeal presents us squarely with the question whether placing a cover over the luggage or cargo area in a sport utility vehicle creates the functional equivalent of a trunk and renders the covered area beyond the permissiblе scope of an automobile search incident to arrest under the Fourth Amendment. In reviewing the district court’s grant of a suppression motion, we accept the district court’s factual findings absent clear error and review
de novo
the district court’s determination of reasonаbleness under the Fourth Amendment to suppress the contraband evidence.
See United States v. Lacey,
1. Constitutional Framework
The Fourth Amendment generally prohibits law enforcement from conducting a search without a valid warrant supported by probable cause.
See National Treasury Employees Union v. Von Raab,
In order to address this uncertainty and cure the disarray it caused in case law, the Supreme Court in
New York v. Belton,
2. Application
The district court applied the rules from
Belton
and its progeny to invalidate the search in this instance because it determined any evidence or weapons contained in the covered cargo area of the vehicle were beyond the defendants’ “reasonable ability to access,” thereby making the covered cargo area more like a trunk than part of the passenger compartment. However, we disagree with the court’s conclusion and find “where, as here, the vehicle contains no trunk, the entire inside of the vehicle constitutes the passenger compartment and may be lawfully searched,”
United States v. Henning,
In arriving at our decision, we do not ignore the arguments of Mr. Olguin-Rivera and Mr. Alvidrez-Terrazas or the rationale of the district court. We acknowledge this case presents a closer legal question than ones involving the uncovered hatchback area of a car or the luggage arеa of a station wagon or sport utility vehicle generally. A long line of cases from this court and others has clearly established that police officers may search hatchback or cargo storage areas in vehicles without a “trunk” (in the traditional sense) as constituting part of the passenger compartment for purposes of search *1206 incident to arrest. 1 We find these cases equally persuasive and controlling in situations where the cargo area is covered. Consequently, in keeping with the principles these cases establish, we decline to validate a rule that effectively allows the occupants of sport utility vehicles or other similar automobiles to transform a cargo area into the functional equivalent of a trunk simply by covering the area. We find the extension of the built-in, vinyl cover over the top of the cargo area simply does not make it tantamount to a trunk for search and seizure purposes.
Our decision rests on several factors. First, although we emphasize “reachability” is not itself dispositive, we find the cargo area of the vehicle in this case was accessible to the defendants. The district court found in its ruling that, although difficult to do, a passenger in the rear seat could reach the bags under the cover without exiting the vehicle. One of the troopers on the scene also testified that a persоn could climb through the whole vehicle, including the back cargo area. We find these facts sufficient to make the covered portion of the cargo area different than a trunk in the traditional sense. Trunks are inaccessible from the passenger compartment, whereas the cargo area in the vehicle in this case — whether covered or not — is still accessible to the vehicle’s occupants.
Second, we rest our decision on principles of consistency. Under
Belton
we allow the officers to search containers within the passenger compartment of an automobile,
Finally, and most importantly, sound policy compels us to adhere to a bright-line rule in this instance.
Belton
emphasized police officers “have only limited time and expertise to reflect on and balance the social and individual interests involved in the specific circumstances they confront,” and consequently “the protection of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments can only be realized if the police are acting under a set of rules which, in most instances, makes it possible to reach a correct determination beforehand as to whether an invasion of privacy is justified in the interest of law enforcement.”
Id.
at 458,
The basic problem with making a rule allowing the covering of the cargo area to create the functional equivalent of a trunk is the path of uncertainty it leads us down. Such a rule requires the type of subtle, fine-line distinctions the Court disfavors,
see, e.g.,, Belton,
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we REVERSE the order of the district court suppressing the contraband evidence.
Notes
.
See Lacey,
