Paul Van Dreel was convicted by a jury of: 1) conspiring to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute cocaine; 2) distribution of cocaine; and 3) possession with, intent to distribute cocaine, all in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). He challenges the convictions on all three counts on the grounds that a search of his residence for evidence of hunting violations was a pretext for a general search for drugs in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and that evidence admitted at trial regarding guns seized from his home should have been excluded because its prejudicial effect outweighed its probative value. Van Dreel also challenges the distribution count for lack of sufficient evidence. We affirm.
I.
In the course of investigating Dale Pier-quet for drug violations, the Brown County Drug Task Force began to surveil Van Dreel, an associate of Pierquet. The Task Force suspected that Van Dreel was supplying cocaine to Pierquet. Using information gathered from surveillance, the police obtained and executed two search warrants for Van Dreel’s rural Wisconsin property. In addition to Van Dreel’s home, the property held a garage, a semitrailer and approximately 60 vehicles. Two searches yielded no evidence of drugs (except for a small amount of cocaine residue), but did reveal a number of weapons and evidence of possible hunting violations. Subsequent to these unfruitful searches, the police arrested two men who had been observed visiting Van Dreel during the earlier surveillance. A search of their car revealed a hidden compartment lined with red grease and containing an envelope holding $4250 in cash. The police decided to use the hunting violation evidence to obtain another search warrant for Van Dreel’s property. The new warrant authorized a search for evidence of deer poaching violations, including parts of deer carcasses, deer tags, licenses, ledgers indicating the sale of deer *904 meat, bows, arrows, weapons and ammunition. Although the warrant was issued at the request of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, an officer from the Drug-Task Force participated in the search, admittedly in hopes of finding evidence of drug dealing. This officer had participated in the two earlier searches and was fully familiar with the investigation. While searching through a junked pickup truck, one of the sixty vehicles stored on Van Dreel’s property, the Drug Task Force officer discovered a piece of plastic wrap marked with the same red grease found in the secret compartment of the car of two of Van Dreel’s confederates. The officer found the plastic wrap under the truck’s seat, which he had pushed forward in the course of his search. Recognizing the value of this evidence to the drug investigation, the officer seized the plastic wrap.
After their arrests, various members of the conspiracy testified against Van Dreel. Pier-quet testified that Van Dreel regularly supplied him with cocaine, which he then resold to support his own cocaine addiction. Juan Carpió, one of the men arrested in the car with the secret compartment, testified that he sold cocaine to Van Dreel on a number of occasions, including the day of Carpio’s arrest. Carpió confirmed that on that day, he had sold several ounces of cocaine to Van Dreel for $4250, and that he had delivered the cocaine to Van Dreel out of the grease-lined hidden compartment. Not surprisingly, the grease-stained plastic wrap recovered during the hunting violation search as well as the matching grease-stained envelope of cash were key pieces of corroborating evidence.
In the district court, Van Dreel moved to suppress the fruits of the search for evidence of hunting violations, arguing that the police really intended to search for evidence of drug crimes. He also contended that the officers exceeded the scope of the warrant when they searched under the seat of a pickup truck stored on the property. The district court rejected Van Dreel’s argument, finding that the warrant authorized a search of the pickup truck, and finding-that the grease-stained plastic wrap was in plain view. Because the incriminating nature of the plastic wrap was immediately apparent to the officer conducting the search, the district court held, the seizure was appropriate. The district court similarly rejected Van Dreel’s attempt to exclude evidence regarding a number of guns the police seized from his home during one of the searches. Finding that guns are often tools of the drug trade, the court held that the probative value of the guns did not outweigh their prejudicial effect. The court was persuaded by the government’s offer to stipulate to the gun evidence rather than displaying the weapons to the jury in a more dramatic fashion. Finally, the district court denied Van Dreel’s motion for a judgment of acquittal, holding that the evidence was sufficient to convict him on all three counts. Van Dreel appealed.
II.
We begin with Van Dreel’s contention that the court should have suppressed the plastic wrap evidence because it was seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment. Van Dreel’s attack on this evidence is two-pronged. He objects to the use of the warrant relating to hunting violations as a pretext for searching for drug evidence. Such a use, he claims, is a violation of the prohibition against general warrants. He also claims that the officer exceeded the scope of the warrant when he moved a truck seat forward to inspect beneath it. Van Dreel posits that an officer could not reasonably have expected to find evidence of hunting violations beneath that seat. Anticipating the government’s reply that ammunition could have been found under the seat, Van Dreel adds that the officer should not have been searching for ammunition because it is lawful to possess ammunition. We review warrantless search and seizure issues
de novo. United State v. Bruce,
The Supreme Court decisively answered the pretext question in
Whren v. United States,
Not only have we never held, outside the context of inventory search or administrative inspection ... that an officer’s motive invalidates objectively justifiable behavior under the Fourth Amendment; but we have repeatedly held and asserted the contrary.
Applying that rationale here, the subjective intentions of the Drug Task Force officer played no role in the probable cause analysis in this case. The officer was rightfully on the scene pursuant to a valid warrant allowing a search for evidence of hunting violations. That the Drug Task Force officer might have hoped to find evidence relating to cocaine trafficking is irrelevant to the Fourth Amendment analysis under Whren, because once probable cause exists, and a valid warrant has been issued, the officer’s subjective intent in conducting the search is irrelevant. Id. Van Dreel does not challenge the validity of the hunting violations warrant, tacitly admitting the police had probable cause to believe they would find evidence of hunting violations on the premises. The officer’s subjective intent is therefore irrelevant.
Van Dreel also complained that the officer exceeded the scope of the warrant by moving the truck seat forward. At oral argument, Van Dreel clarified his belief that the police could not have reasonably expected to find evidence of hunting violations under the seat of an abandoned truck. No one would reasonably believe that deer carcasses or racks would be found under the seat of a truck, according to Van Dreel. That the warrant authorizes a search for ammunition is irrelevant, states Van Dreel, because it is lawful to possess ammunition. We rejected this argument outright in
Bruce.
We next consider Van Dreel’s objection to the admission of evidence relating to guns seized from his residence. We review a district court’s decision to admit evidence for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Johnson,
Van Dreel’s final challenge is to the sufficiency of the evidence on Count II of the indictment. That count charged Van Dreel with distributing cocaine on October 19, 1996. Van Dreel argues that there is no evidence in the record from which a rational jury could conclude that he distributed cocaine on that particular date. The hurdle a defendant must overcome to successfully challenge the sufficiency of the evidence is formidable.
United States v. Crowder,
Affirmed.
