Lawrence Samuels, Jr., pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute cocaine base (crack cocaine) with a reservation of some appeal rights. He was sentenced to 210 months imprisonment. He argues the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence, failing to allow him to withdraw his guilty plea based on ineffective assistance of counsel and failing to vacate the plea agreement based on the doctrines of mutual mistake of fact and law, public policy and unconscionability. We affirm the denial of the motion to suppress and decline to address the remaining arguments.
I. Background
On March 18, 2004, law enforcement officers Jeffrey Gatwood, Brandon McFadden and William Wolthuis, riding in a single police vehicle, were on patrol in North Tulsa, Oklahoma. 1 Gatwood received a *1189 page from a reliable confidential informant. Gatwood called the informant who told him he had seen a black man in a white El Camino selling crack cocaine in the parking lot of a nearby convenience store on several occasions and that this person was presently at the store. The informant provided the name and location of the store. Upon arrival at the store, the officers observed a black male in a white El Camino (Samuels) and saw another man leave the store and enter the El Camino. Believing a drug transaction was about to occur, the officers activated their vehicle’s emergency lights and blocked the El Camino with their vehicle. Wolthuis approached Samuels, obtained his consent to search the El Camino and patted him dоwn. The officers found a total of 9.35 grams of crack cocaine in the vehicle and $765 in cash on Samuels’s person. The crack cocaine was contained in several small baggies and was found hidden near the brake pedal.
Samuels was indicted for possession with intent to distribute five grams or more of crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(l)(B)(iii). Sam-uels filed a motion to suppress evidence, claiming the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to stop his vehicle in the store’s parking lot. The district court held a hearing on the motion. After he testified, Gatwood approached and spoke to McFadden, who had not yet testified, in violation of the court’s sequestration order. Nevertheless, the district court relied on Gat-wood’s testimony (along with оther evidence) in denying the motion to suppress.
Samuels pled guilty to the indictment pursuant to a plea agreement. However, in reaching the agreement, both the government and Samuels’s attorney failed to appreciate that Samuels was a career offender under the federal sentencing guidelines. As a result, the parties erroneously estimated Samuels’s guideline range аs 100-120 months. Upon reviewing the pre-sentence report, both parties realized their mistake concerning Samuels’s career offender status and the resulting increase in the sentencing range under the guidelines (210-262 months).
Samuels did not seek to withdraw his guilty plea based upon the misunderstanding. Instead, he filed a motion for downward departure based on 18 U.S.C. § 3353(a). The district court suggested the motion for downward deрarture might be more appropriately characterized as a motion for variance and requested briefing from the parties concerning whether their mutual mistake of law 2 constituted grounds for Samuels to withdraw his plea or for a variance. Samuels subsequently filed a motion for variance. 3 In the motion, it was clear he was not seeking to withdraw his plea. At the hearing on the motion fоr variance, defense counsel moved to withdraw as counsel stating he had provided ineffective assistance by failing to correctly advise Samuels about the applicable guideline range. The court denied this motion, concluding: 1) counsel was not ineffective, and 2) there were no grounds for Samuels to withdraw his plea. The court also denied Samuels’s motions for downward departure and variance, ap *1190 plied the career offender enhancement, and sentenced Samuels to 210 months imprisonment.
II. Discussion
A. Denial of Motion to Suppress
At the suppression hearing, Gatwood, McFadden and Wolthuis gave differing accounts of the details of events prior to their encounter with Samuels in the convenience store’s parking lot. Gatwood testified that while on patrol with McFadden and Wolthuis, he received a page from an informant with whom he had worked over the past several years and who had given him twenty-five to thirty reliable tips. Gatwood called the informant with his cell phone. The informant told Gatwood he had seen a black man in a white El Cami-no selling crack cocaine in the parking lot of a nearby convenience store on several occasions and the person was presently at the store. The informant included the name and location of the store. The officers proceeded to the store to investigate the tip. It took them five to ten minutes to get there.
Neither McFadden nor Wolthuis could recall the phone call between Gatwood and the informant. 4 McFadden also testified they did not go to the store with the intent of investigating a tip; rather, they “just happened to be in the area” when Gatwood saw the El Camino and told them to investigate due to his tip. (R. Vol. Ill at 58.) Wolthuis’s testimony was different still. He said Gatwood directed them to the store but was not sure when Gatwood told them to investigate the El Camino and, in particular, could not say whether Gatwood told them to pull into the parking lot upon seeing the El Camino.
Samuels challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress. Specifically, he contends the court should have disregarded Gatwood’s testimony concerning the tip because (1) his credibility was suspect given his violation of the court’s sequestration order and (2) his testimony was not corroborated by McFadden or Wolthuis. Disregarding Gatwood’s testimony, Samuels argues the remaining evidence (McFadden and Wolthuis’s testimony) is insufficient to establish reasonable suspicion to stop his vehicle.
1. Violation of Sequestration Order
Rule 615 of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides: “At the request of a party the court shall order witnesses excluded so that they cannot hear the testimony of other witnesses, and it may make the order of its own motion.” This rule “requires not only that prospective witnesses be excluded from the courtroom, but also that they be prohibited from discussing the case with other witnesses.”
United States v. Greschner,
Because Gatwood violated Rule 615, we review the court’s decision to admit his testimony for an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Johnston,
2. Lack of Reasonable Suspicion to Stop
When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we review factual matters for clear error and questions of legal reasonableness
de novo. United States v. Riccardi,
The Fourth Amendment еxtends to brief investigatory stops of persons and vehicles.
Whren v. United States,
“A confidential tip may justify an investigatory stop if under the totality of the circumstances the tip furnishes both sufficient indicia of reliability and sufficient information to provide reasonable suspicion that criminal conduct is, has, or is about to occur.”
United States v. Leos-Quijada,
Here, even though it was not corroborated by either McFadden or Wolthuis, the district court сredited Gatwood’s testimony that 1) a confidential informant paged him while he was on patrol with
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McFadden and Wolthuis, 2) the informant told him he had observed a black male selling crack cocaine out of a white El Camino in the parking'lot of the convenience store on several occasions and this individual was presently in the El Camino' in the store’s parking lot, and 3) this informant had provided him with accurate information twenty-five to thirty times in the past, resulting in ten to twenty arrests. We see no reason to disturb this credibility determination.
7
United States v. Alexander,
Gatwood’s testimony regarding the confidential informant’s past reliability established the reliability of the tip.
See Leos-Quijada,
B. Failure to Allow Samuels to Withdrаw Plea Based on Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
At the hearing on the motion for variance, defense counsel moved to withdraw because he believed he had rendered ineffective assistance of counsel. The court denied the motion to withdraw, finding counsel was not ineffective and there were no grounds for Samuels to withdraw his plea. Samuels argues the court erred in nоt allowing him to withdraw his plea based on his counsel’s ineffectiveness. We do not reach this claim. Because Samuels did not move to withdraw his plea, the issue is waived.
Callahan v. Poppell,
As part of this issue, Samuels attempts to assert an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, but we decline to address the issue. “Ineffective assistance of counsel claims should be brought in collateral proceedings, not on direct appeal. Such claims brought on direct appeal are presumptively dismissible, and virtually all will be dismissed.”
United States v. Galloway,
C. Failure to Vacate Plea Agreement Based on Mutual Mistake, Public Policy and Unconscionability
Samuels claims the district court erred in nоt vacating the plea agreement based on the parties’ failure to consider his
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career offender status at the time they negotiated the agreement.
9
Again, we do not reach this issue because Samuels never requested the district court to vacate the plea agreement.
10
Callahan,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We recite the facts in light most favorable to the government. It is so entitled because it рrevailed in a contested hearing which involved fact finding, including witness credibility.
. Samuels argues mistake of fact and law. We agree with the district court; it was a mistake of law. Both attorneys were aware of Samuels' prior convictions, they simply failed to appreciate the legal significance of those convictions.
. A departure occurs “when a court reaches a sentence above or below the rеcommended Guidelines range through application of Chapters Four or Five of the Sentencing Guidelines.”
United States
v.
Atencio,
. Gatwood admitted the other officers should have witnessed his side of the telephone conversation because they were in thе vehicle with him at the time he received the tip.
. McFadden testified: "I didn’t hear or understand what [Gatwood] was saying .... or pay any attention to what he was saying. [I heard him say] [something about Officer ... Wolthuis and us were together, and that's all I understood him to say.” (R. Vol. III at 56-57.) Gatwood denied making such a statement and testified he told McFadden his testimony was required and asked him if he wanted him to watch his belongings.
. Interestingly, Samuels does not challenge the admission of McFadden's testimony, although McFadden, having not yet testified, was most at risk of being influenced by a violation of the sequestration order.
. Samuels makes the curious argument that the district court should not have determined Gatwood’s testimony credible unless it was corroborated by other witnesses. Although it is true that corroboration may bolster offered testimony, corroboration is generally not necessary for the court to find testimony credible.
See Medichem,
S.A. v.
Rolabo, S.L.,
. The district court suggested that the officers’ observation of a black man in a white El Camino in the parking lot of the store corroborated the tip, lending it some additional indi-cia of reliability. If that is true, it is only marginally so. The only information the officers corroborated about the tip before making the stop in this case was information that was plainly visible to any passerby. As the Supreme Court explained:
An accurate description of a subject’s readily observable location and appearance is of course reliable in this limited sense: It will help the police correctly identify the person whom the tipster means to accuse. Such a tip, however, does not show that the tipster has knowledge of concealed criminal activity. The reasonable suspicion here at issue requires that a tip be reliable in its assertion of illegality, not just in its tendency to identify a determinate person.
Florida v. J.L.,
However, the court’s comments do not affect the outcome here. Because the court credited Gatwood’s testimony about the informant’s reliability, the tip did not have to be corroborated as to the allegation of illegal conduct to have the indicia of reliability that would support reasonable suspicion. ■ See id.
. In similar circumstances, where the рlea agreement was made with knowledge that an estimated sentence is non-binding on the court, we found a defendant could not avoid the agreement based on a mutual mistake in calculating the sentencing guideline range or via an analogy to the doctrine of frustration of purpose.
United States v. Ahlenius,
. On appeal, Samuels does not challenge the district court’s disposition of motions his counsel actually made, i.e., the motions for downward departure and for variance.
