Quoe Viet Hoang entered a conditional guilty plea to federal narcotics charges after methamphetamine was found in a package sent to him via FedEx. A narcotics detection dog alerted to the package while it was in transit, and it was then diverted while a search warrant was obtained. The search revealed the presence of drugs, and a controlled delivery to Hoang resulted in his arrest. Before entering his plea, Hoang moved to suppress evidence of the methamphetamine, asserting that the detention and search of the package violated the Fourth Amendment. He contends that the district court erred by refusing to conduct an evidentiary hearing and by denying the motion to suppress. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Because under
United States v. England,
I. BACKGROUND
On November 2, 2004, an Orange County Sheriffs Department investigatоr, Officer Todd, was inspecting packages at the FedEx World Service Center Office at John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California. FedEx Corporate Security authorized Officer Todd, accompanied by his narcotics detection canine, Otto, to be on its premises. At approximately 9:05 a.m., a FedEx employee allowed the investigator into the facility’s hold room. The hold room is used for the processing of parcels as they enter the facility or are sent out for delivery.
At 9:10 a.m., Otto was let into the hold room off-lead, where he randomly sniffed approximately seven packages located in various parts of the room. Otto alerted to one of the packages, indicating that he had detected the odor of a controlled substance. Officer Todd examined the package, which was addressed to Hoang at an address in Hawaii, and noticed several features that, based on his experience, suggested that the package contained narcotics. First, it was scheduled for priority overnight delivery, and the delivery fee had been paid in cash. Second, there were no telephone numbers for the sender or recipient listed on the package. Third, the parcel emanated an odor of coffee, a common masking agent. At 9:15 a.m., Officer Todd confisсated the suspicious package and left his business card with the FedEx employee who had provided access to the hold room. He then locked the package in his John Wayne Airport office and attempted to locate the sender’s address. He determined that the sender’s address on the package was fiсtitious. Based on an affidavit containing these facts, an Orange County Magistrate Judge issued a search warrant for the package that same day at 11:40 a.m. Nothing in the record suggests that the package was ever returned to FedEx in Orange County.
The package did indeed contain narcotics. The Orange County Sheriffs De *1159 partment sеnt the package to drug enforcement authorities in Hawaii. They obtained anticipatory search warrants. An undercover officer in the guise of a FedEx driver made a controlled delivery of the package to Hoang. Hoang accepted and opened the package. He then unpacked the рseudo-drugs that had been substituted for the methamphetamine. He was subsequently arrested and was indicted on November 9, 2004.
Hoang moved to suppress the evidence obtained or derived from the seizure and search of the package as having been obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment. He made claims relating to both seаrch and seizure. He asserted that there was no reasonable suspicion to support detaining the package initially; the inspector’s confiscation was a seizure unsupported by probable cause; and the initial random search lacked individualized suspicion. He also claimed that the dog' sniff was an illegal seаrch. The government conceded that the selection of which packages to subject to a dog sniff was not supported by any reasonable, articulable suspicion. The district court denied the motion to suppress and Hoang pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846, subject to the outcome of this appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
“We review de novo the denial of a motion to suppress. Whether the exclusionary rule applies to a given case is reviewed de novo, while the underlying factual findings are reviewed for clear error.”
United States v. Crawford,
The exclusionary rule may be invoked only if there was a violation of Hoang’s Fourth Amеndment interests.
See Mapp v. Ohio,
1. Hoang’s Fourth Amendment Interests
“Letters and other sealed packages are in the general class of effects in which the public at large has a legitimate expectation of privacy; warrantless sеarches of such effects are presumptively unreasonable.”
United States v. Jacobsen,
2. Hoang’s Possessory Interest
We have characterized the posses-sory interest in a mailed pаckage as being solely in the package’s timely delivery.
England,
Notwithstanding the clear language in
England
and
Hernandez,
Hoang argues that the momentary diversion of the package without reasonable suspicion violated his Fourth Amendment rights, relying upon some of our earlier casеs suggesting that
any
detention of mail may require a showing of reasonable suspicion or probable cause.
See Aldaz,
The leading Supreme Court case addressing the possessory interest potentially implicated by detention of mail,
United States v. Van Leeuwen,
We only hold that on the facts of this case — the nature of the mailings, their suspicious character, the fact that there were two packages going to separate destinations, the unavoidable delay in contacting the more distant of the two destinations, the distance between Mt. Vernon and Seattle — a 29-hour delay between the mailings and the service of the warrant cannot be said to be ‘unreasonable’ within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
Id.
at 253,
In
England,
two packages of cocaine were sent by the defendant from California to Alabama.
We distinguished Van Leeuwen because, [u]nlike the present case, the delivery of Van Leeuwen’s packages was substantially delayed by their detention. As а result, the primary issue before the Court was not whether the detention of *1162 Van Leeuwen’s packages interfered with his interest in them, but whether this interference was justified despite the lack of probable cause.
Id.
at 421. Nevertheless,
Van Leeuwen
supports our conclusion in
England
that any possessory interest in packages placed in the United States mail is attenuated. At least two other circuit courts have similarly interpreted the limits of the Fourth Amendment possessory interest.
See United States v. Zacher,
Under England, as subsequently interpreted in Hernandez and Judge Gould’s well-reasoned concurrence in Gill, for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment, no seizure occurs if a package is detained in a manner that does not significantly interfere with its timely delivery in the normal course of business. 3 Therefore, the ten minute detention of Hoang’s package in the FedEx hold room without reasonable suspicion does not implicate his Fourth Amendment rights. 4 Hoang cannot credibly argue that a ten minute delay on that morning interfered with FedEx’s ability to deliver his package on time the next day. Hoang’s Fourth Amendment rights were not implicated by the brief pre-sniff detention, and thus could not be violated. Once Otto alerted, probable cause supported the further diversion of the package, and the search was properly conducted pursuant to а warrant. Accordingly, the district court properly denied the motion to suppress evidence derived from the search of the package. 5
*1163 3. Evidentiary Hearing
We reject Hoang’s argument that the district court should have held an evidentiary hearing. “We review for an abuse of discretion a court’s decision whether to conduct an evidentiаry hearing on a motion to suppress. An evidentiary hearing on a motion to suppress need be held only when the moving papers allege facts with sufficient definiteness, clarity, and specificity to enable the trial court to conclude that contested issues of fact exist.”
United States v. Howell,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Hoang’s conviction and sentence are AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We note that Otto's alert to the package created probable cause to believe that the package contained illicit drugs.
United States v. Hillison,
. In England, Van Leeuwen, and Zacher, the defendant was the sender of the diverted package, while in Hernandez, LaFrance, and Banks, the defendant was the recipient of the package. Here, Hoang was the recipient, and thus we are guided by the Hernandez court’s application of the England holding to recipients.
. Thus, law enforcement interactions with packages that cause a de minimis interference with the flow of delivery do not implicate the Fourth Amendment. We need not and do not hold that if delivery could hypothetically or by some extraordinary measure be made on time, there is no seizure.
. Officer Todd entered the hold room at 9:05 and seized the package at 9:15, after Otto alerted. Thus, the period of detention before probable cause arosе was at most ten minutes.
. We observe that the terms of service in the contract between the sender and FedEx may also alter the expectations of the sender or the recipient and may very well affect a subsequent court’s analysis of the propriety of any FedEx-approved inspection and diversion of packages. Because that issue was not raised by the parties, we do not address it here.
