Following a jury trial, Ramiro Urbina was convicted of one count of possession with intent to distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841. The jury also found that the government proved two counts of criminal forfeiture, pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 853. The district court sentenced Urbina to 300 months’ imprisonment. He appeals his conviction and sentence, and the government cross-appeals the sentence. We affirm the conviction and remand the case for resentencing in light of
United States v. Booker,
*308 I.
Urbina’s first point on appeal challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence. We relate the facts as found by the district court, adopting the report and recommendation of a magistrate judge. On April 1, 2003, at approximately 10 a.m., Missouri State Highway Patrolman Corporal Thomas Hall observed a gold pickup truck pulling a horse trailer on 1 — 44 in Lawrence County, Missouri. Hall stopped the truck after observing the vehicle cross the center line of traffic on at least four occasions. Corporal Gary Bra-den, also of the Highway Patrol, arrived immediately after the stop. Hall asked Urbina, the driver, if the wind was blowing his vehicle over the line, and Urbina replied, “It may be, but I’m tired too.” Ur-bina told the officer that he was en route to Dayton, Ohio, to pick up a horse for a friend.
Hall noticed an auxiliary gas tank in the back of the truck. He asked Urbina the purpose of the tank, and Urbina responded that he used it as an extra tank and hooked it up to the battery. Hall saw no wiring connecting the tank to the battery.
Urbina was unable to produce a driver’s license, but did offer Hall an Oregon identification card. Hall asked Urbina to accompany him back to the patrol car, where he determined that the Oregon driver’s license was suspended. While in the patrol car, Urbina said that the truck belonged to his brother-in-law, but that he, Urbina, owned the trailer and had purchased it specifically for this trip. Urbina acknowledged that he did not own any horses, and then said, contradicting his earlier explanation, that he was going to Ohio to purchase an automobile. Hall asked Urbina if there was anything illegal in the truck, and Urbina said no. Hall then asked for consent to search the truck, and Urbina agreed. A drug dog was in the back seat of the patrol car during the stop, but it was never used to investigate the vehicle, because Urbina consented to the search.
After examining the horse trailer and the cab of the truck without finding contraband, Hall and Braden examined the bed of the truck. Around the auxiliary tank, they observed scratch marks that appeared fresh. Hall also testified that the tank was not fastened to the bed of the truck. The officers tipped the tank and heard not the sloshing sound one might expect from gasoline, but rather a dull thud, as if nonmetallic objects were moving around inside. Hall noticed that on the bottom of the tank, there was fresh paint and putty surrounding a portion of the tank that had been cut out and then reattached. Hall stated that in his experience, there normally is no opening on the bottom of an auxiliary gas tank.
Both troopers had been involved in stops in which narcotics had been hidden in auxiliary gas tanks, and their suspicions were raised by what they had seen of the tank on Urbina’s vehicle. Braden then kicked in the access panel on the tank with his boot and observed six bundles in the tank. He pried open the tank further with a screwdriver and discovered that the bundles contained cocaine.
II.
A.
Urbina first argues that he did not voluntarily consent to a search. The district court recognized that Urbina had raised this issue in his motion to suppress, and addressed the issue, noting that it was undisputed that Urbina answered “yes” when asked for consent and finding no evidence of any coercion by the troopers or the presence of the drug dog. We thus reject the government’s contention that
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the issue is not preserved, and we review the district court’s determination that consent was voluntary for clear error.
United States v. Poulack,
To determine if consent is freely and voluntarily given, we consider the totality of the circumstances.
Schneckloth v. Bustamante,
Urbina argues that the circumstances surrounding his consent undermine its vol-untariness. He claims that Hall did not advise him of his right not to consent, that he was taken to a relatively secluded place (the patrol car) for no reason, that a German Shepherd was in the back seat of the patrol car, that Hall told Urbina neither that he suspected he was a drug courier nor why he wanted to search the vehicle, that Urbina was not requested to aid the search, that Urbina did not assist the search, that Urbina was not told that he could revoke his consent at any time, and that there was no visible evidence of contraband.
We conclude that adequate evidence supports the district court’s conclusion that Urbina’s consent was voluntarily given, and we see no convincing evidence to the contrary. The interior of a police patrol car on the shoulder of a public highway during the day is not a secluded location.
Chaidez,
Even if Urbina was unaware of his right to withhold or revoke consent, this is another case in which “other considerations set out in
Chaidez
overwhelmingly favor the district court’s finding” that Urbina’s consent was voluntary.
United States v. Thompson,
*310
Urbina also argues that the evidence should have been suppressed because the patrolmen exceeded the scope of his consent when they used force to open his auxiliary gas tank. We measure the scope of consent under the Fourth Amendment using a standard of objective reasonableness, considering what an objectively reasonable person would have understood the consent to include.
United States v. Fleck,
B.
Urbina next argues that the district court erred by not granting a mistrial when the government, in its opening statement, made dramatic reference to Urbina’s flight from police in a stolen car following his arrest. We recognize the trial court’s broad discretion in controlling the direction of opening statements and closing arguments, and we will not reverse .that court’s decision absent a showing.of abuse of discretion.
United States v. Conrad,
The record indicates that the district court, in response to Urbina’s motion in limine, had told the parties off the record at a conference in chambers that it would not allow the government to discuss certain details of Urbina’s flight. The government apparently misunderstood the court’s decision and described some details of the flight, such as the speed of the chase, at the start of its opening statement. Urbina objected. After a discussion with counsel, the court indicated that it may not have been as specific about the ruling as it should have been. Urbina moved both for a mistrial and for a curative instruction to the jury. The district court declined to grant a mistrial but instructed the jury to disregard the statements. The court also clarified that the government would be permitted to discuss Urbina’s acquisition of the car and his flight, but could not talk about the speeds at which Urbina drove during his flight or mention that he was convicted of fleeing by vehicle and reckless driving in Indiana state court.
Assuming,
arguendo,
that the prosecutor’s comments were improper, Urbina still must establish that the comments prejudicially affected his substantial rights so as to deprive him of a fair trial. To determine the effect of alleged prosecuto-rial misconduct, we consider the cumulative effect of the misconduct, the strength of the evidence against the defendant, and
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the curative actions taken by the district court.
United States v. Flores-Mireles,
C.
trict court erred in admitting the government’s expert testimony regarding his “unknowing courier” defense and repeated testimony about his flight. We review the district court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.
Fleck,
Mark Hooten of the Drug Enforcement Administration to testify,
inter alia,
that in his experience he had never seen a drug dealer entrust as large a quantity of drugs as were found in Urbina’s auxiliary gas tank to a courier who was not aware of what he was transporting. Urbina argues that this evidence was inadmissible under Federal Rule of Evidence 704(b), which prohibits experts from stating an opinion as to whether the defendant had the requisite mental state for the crime charged, and that the government improperly sought through this evidence to establish Urbina’s guilt by showing that his characteristics matched the profile of a knowing drug courier.
See United States v. Vasquez,
Expert testimony “to the effect that drug traffickers do not typically use couriers who are unaware they are transporting drugs” is permissible where one theory of the defense is that the defendant was unaware of the presence of the drugs.
Id.
(internal quotation omitted). In this case, one of Urbina’s defenses was that he did not know that the cocaine was present in the gas tank. We have also held generally that “[a] district court has discretion to allow law enforcement officials to testify as experts concerning the modus operandi of drug dealers in areas concerning activities which are not something with which most jurors are familiar.”
United States v. Brown,
Urbina also objects to the admission of testimony about his flight from law enforcement agents in' the course of an attempted controlled delivery following his arrest. According to Urbina, the district court allowed unnecessarily cumulative evidence on the issue, such that the chase was unduly emphasized to the jury. Evidence of flight is generally admissible, because it is probative of a defendant’s consciousness of guilt.
United States v. Hankins,
III.
Urbina argues that the district court erred by rejecting his argument that
Blakely v. Washington,
The district court denied Urbina’s Blakely objection regarding his criminal history score, but declined to include the adjustments for obstruction of justice and reckless endangerment during flight when calculating the offense level. The court explained:
[T]his is a very difficult decision for me to make because I heard the evidence and I have absolutely no doubt in my mind what Mr. Urbina did. He took the car, he drove the wrong way on the interstate, drove at a high speed. All of that came in as evidence at trial. There was absolutely no evidence in opposition to that. It was basically undisputed. And it’s clear to me what happened. And I have no doubt that had we submitted that to the jury, they would have found the same thing. But we didn’t. And Blakely, by my interpretation, puts me in a position where if I’m following Blakely and the guidelines, at that point I have to deny the enhancements.
(S. Tr. at 15). The presentence investigation report included the enhancements in its calculation and recommended a sentencing range of 324 to 405 months. In light of its interpretation of
Blakely,
however, the district court calculated a total offense level of 32 (without the adjustments), and a criminal history of VI, resulting in a sentencing range of 210 to 262 months. Based on this court’s decision in
United States v. Mooney,
No. 02-3388, slip op. (8th Cir. July 23, 2004),
vacated,
No. 02-3388,
We agree with the parties that resen-tencing is warranted. Since Urbina was sentenced, the Supreme Court decided
Booker,
which declared the guidelines “effectively advisory,” but which permits judicial fact-finding and application of guideline adjustments, so long as the sentencing
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range is not binding on the sentencing court.
United States v. Killingsworth,
$ ‡ ‡ ‡
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Urbina’s conviction, but vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing in light of Booker.
