OPINION
Oluyemisi Lawson challenges the district court’s denial of her motion to suppress evidence obtained from a search of her luggage upon her arrival from an international flight at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport. Because customs officials did not need reasonable suspicion to x-ray her luggage during this “border” search and because they had reasonable suspicion that she possessed narcotics when they drilled a 3/8-inch hole in, and cut the liner in, her luggage, we affirm.
I.
On February 24, 2005, customs officer Heidi Tien identified Oluyemisi Lawson, a passenger on an incoming flight from Paris to the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport, as a potential drug courier. According to the flight manifest, Lawson had made her reservation the day before and had paid for her $1700 ticket in cash. Her passport had been issued overseas. And Lawson’s travel history revealed that in November 2004, she had flown to Memphis and had declared her destination to be an address that agents had previously associated with “known and suspected heroin smugglers that have been intercepted in Cincinnati and other airports.” JA 95. Based on this information, Tien alerted customs officers that Lawson fit the profile of a potential drug courier.
When Lawson’s flight arrived later that day, Tien identified Lawson and her 16-month-old son at the baggage carousel, where she retrieved three suitcases. *699 Along with other passengers, Lawson passed through a primary checkpoint where customs officers examined her passport and then asked her to move to a secondary inspection area. Tien and two other officers asked Lawson to verify that the luggage was hers, then asked her who had paid for the plane ticket and when. She responded that “her husband paid for her ticket in cash two weeks ago,” JA 176, a response that was not consistent with the passenger manifest.
After asking these questions and receiving these answers, the officers examined the three bags. They emptied the contents of the first bag and unzipped and removed the interior liner, at which point they could see that the bag “had been tampered with.” JA 110. “[A]t the bottom of the bag there was a plastic piece with hardware that was changed out” — some of the original rivets holding the piece in place had been replaced with screws— “and [the piece] was cracked down the middle.” JA 178. The crack was covered with a piece of clear tape. In addition, the bag’s retractable handle, which should have been long enough that “an average size person could hold it and pull [the wheeled bag] along,” “only came out about 6 inches,” JA 111, instead of approximately 24 inches, as the officers expected based on the size of the bag. As the officers made these discoveries, they observed Lawson grow “visibly nervous.” Id.
Based on this apparent tampering with the bag, the officers x-rayed it. The x-rays showed “the hollow nature of the [bag’s] handle” as well as a “denser image in the [handle’s] tube where it should have been just [as] hollow.” JA 117. To determine the source of this anomaly, the officers removed the “cap” of the handle and peered down the tube but could not see anything. JA 182. The officers “made a small incision on the interior of the bag” to expose the handle tubes and observed that “some modification” had been made to the handle tube. JA 124. Tapping the tube elicited a “metal thump, not a hollow ping,” which confirmed the officers’ suspicion “that there was something in the tube.” JA 188.
Unable to see into the tube, the officers drilled a 3/8-inch hole in it at the point where the x-rays showed the “denser image.” JA 117, 124. “[A]n off-white powdery substance came out with the drill,” JA 113, which field tests showed to be heroin. The officers also discovered heroin stored similarly in the remaining two bags. The officers arrested Lawson and charged her with conspiring to import one kilogram or more of a substance containing a detectable amount of heroin. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 952, 960.
Lawson filed a motion to suppress the evidence. The district court rejected the motion, and Lawson entered a conditional plea to the charge reserving her right to appeal the suppression ruling. The district court imposed a (conditional) 44-month sentence.
II.
Generally speaking, border searches “are not subject to any requirement of reasonable suspicion, probable cause, or warrant.”
United States v. Montoya de Hernandez,
Lawson rightly concedes that this search, conducted at a customs checkpoint after the arrival of an international flight, occurred at the functional equivalent of the country’s border.
See Almeida-Sanchez v. United States,
Where Lawson parts company with the government is over the customs officers’ actions in (1) x-raying her bag and (2) cutting it and drilling into it. The officers did both things without reasonable suspicion, she submits, making both actions unconstitutional.
As to the x-ray of her luggage, the officers did not need reasonable suspicion before undertaking this examination, one that has become a customary feature of commercial airline travel. An x-ray examination of a
person,
it is true, may require some level of suspicion because it may present risks to health that an x-ray examination of luggage will not present and because it may permit greater intrusions into the privacy and dignity of the individual.
See, e.g., Montoya de Hernandez,
As any airline traveler over the last several years well knows, luggage is routinely x-rayed at the airport, whether in connection with domestic or international flights.
See United States v. Allman,
Perhaps most significantly, the greater intrusion to privacy and dignity that attends the routine border search that Lawson rightly concedes was appropriate in this instance (opening and reviewing the contents of luggage and occasionally removing those contents) assuredly permits the lesser intrusion that accompanies a discrete x-ray examination of one’s luggage away from the “unwanted gaze” of fellow travelers.
See United States v. Vega-Barvo,
Under these circumstances, we accept the commonsense (and commonly observed) conclusion that customs officers may x-ray an airline passenger’s luggage at the border without reasonable suspicion — a conclusion that several other courts have embraced and that none (to our knowledge) has rejected.
See Okafor,
The customs officers also did not violate Lawson’s Fourth Amendment rights when they cut the liner in her luggage, then drilled a hole in it. Even assuming for the sake of argument that these acts required reasonable suspicion, a point we need not decide,
cf. United States v. Chaudhry,
In prior travels, Lawson had declared her destination to be an address connected with drug smuggling. The trip in question began in Lagos, Nigeria, a city that Tien knew to be “a significant source of heroin seizures in the United States.” JA 92. She claimed that her husband had purchased her ticket two weeks before the flight, while the manifest revealed that she had paid for it in cash and had done so just the day before. She appeared nervous and avoided eye contact.
See United States v. Sokolow,
Lawson points out that her nervousness could have sprung from the fact that in Nigeria “women have a different social status than men.” Lawson Br. at 19. What the Supreme Court said in rejecting a similar argument in
Sokolow
applies with equal force here. “Any one of these factors,” the Court explained, “is not by itself proof of any illegal conduct” and may well be “consistent with innocent travel.”
Sokolow,
Equally unavailing is Lawson’s claim that “[t]he shortened extension of the handles was identical for all suitcases which would indicate a common manufacturer” and contraband-free luggage. Lawson Br. at 19. This of course is one inference that the customs officers could have drawn, but it is hardly the only one and hardly the most reasonable one. That all three pieces of luggage contained extension handles that were too short to permit the traveler to pull the luggage behind her suggests either a common (and useless) manufacturing design or that something was amiss with respect to all three pieces of luggage, which would of course increase the officers’ suspicion. The officers did not act unreasonably in taking the latter view.
Lawson also points out that “[t]here is no [x-ray] image available for [her] or the Court to review to determine whether the image viewed by the agent did i[n] fact *703 justify a further search.” Lawson Br. at 19-20. Lawson offers no authority to support this argument, and the number of x-rays performed by customs officers each day, to say nothing of the uncertainty over whether this x-ray equipment could have handled such a requirement, make this proposed requirement an imposing one. See JA 116 (“The [x-ray] system’s not capable of recording those images at this time.”). For present purposes, it suffices to say that the district judge heard the officers’ testimony about what the x-rays revealed, considered Lawson’s cross-examination and ultimately “found each [government] witness to be highly credible” — a finding that Lawson has not contested. See D. Ct. Op. at 2 n. 1. Under these circumstances, the district court did not err in refusing to require the government to produce the x-ray image of Lawson’s luggage.
Nor did the officers act unreasonably in the way (and the extent to which) they cut and drilled into the luggage. The record shows that the bag remained as functional after the search as it was before it. The district court found that “[t]he cut was to the innermost lining of the bag, which did not render the bag unuseable nor the cut even visible to the eye once the interior lining was zipped back in place. The hole drilled in the rail was small, could easily be taped or covered over if necessary, and also did not interfere with the function of the luggage.” Id. at 15. On this record, we agree with the district court that “the manner of inspection here” was not conducted in such an “offensive or destructive manner as to be unreasonable.” Id. at 16.
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
