ORDER
This оrder resolves the Motion to Suppress filed by defendant Manuel M. Santil-lan in connection with the seizure of a cell phone from him on November 5, 2007, and his subsequent indictment for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana and possession with intent to distribute marijuana. An evidentiary hearing was conducted on June 30-July 1, 2008. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion to Suppress (Doc. No. 27) is DENIED.
Factual Background
At the evidentiary hearing held in this matter, the evidence consisted of two government witnesses. At approximately 3:00 *1097 p.m. on November 5, 2007, Immigration & Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) Agent Frank Acevedo observed the defendant in the vicinity of Duquesne Road and State Route 82 (hereinafter S.R. 82), in southern Arizona, near Nogales, Arizona. Du-quesne Road extends southeast of S.R. 82 toward the international border with Mexico. Although it is paved for a short distance immediately south of S.R. 82, it then becomes a dirt road.
The defendant was jogging back and forth while speaking on a cell phone. He was paying close attention to traffic in the area, especially traffic along. Duquesne Road. The defendant would never go farther than 100 yards in one direction before turning to go in the opposite direction. While observing the defendant, Agent Acevedo saw a heavy dust trail in the distance, indicating traffic traveling on Du-quesne Road toward S.R. 82. Agent Acevedo observed three trucks emerge from Duquesne Road and enter S.R. 82. The three trucks were traveling in tandem at a high rate of speed and were all full of dust. Through the use of binoculars, Agent Acevedo was able to observe that two of the three trucks had been modified in a manner that suggested they were being used to smuggle drugs. Based upon the behavior exhibited by the defendant and the approaching trucks, Agent Acevedo concluded that the dеfendant was likely a spotter or scout for some type of drug smuggling activity.
Agent Acevedo attempted to follow the trucks, but even at speeds approaching 100 miles per hour, he was unable to catch up with the vehicles. He issued a command to other agents and law enforcement personnel in the area that boards or other devices be utilized to stop the trucks. He then observed the trucks heading back toward Duquesne Road. Agent Acevedo concluded that the truck drivers likely believed that they had been detected by law enforcement and had turned around in an attempt to escape back into Mexico.
In the interim, Agent Eddie Cota had been advised by Agent Acevedo of the defendant’s actions. Agent Cota approached the area of Duquesne Road and S.R. 82 and observed the defendant in that area. The defendant was still walking back and forth on S.R. 82 and talking on the cell phone. Agent Cota approached the defendant, identified himself as a Customs agent, and showed his credentials to the defendant. Agent Cota told the defendant to stop talking on the cell phone. The defendant ignоred Agent Cota’s demand and continued speaking on the cell phone. Agent Cota feared that the defendant would use or was using his cell phone to communicate to the occupants of the three trucks that law enforcement personnel were in the area. When the defendant ignored a second demand to stop talking, Agent Cota removed the phone from the defendant and secured it on his person.
Agent Cota told the defendant to get down on the ground and informed him he was being detained. The defendant asked why he was being detained and assertеd that he was only jogging. When Agent Cota attempted to physically restrain the defendant, the defendant complained that he had a bad back. Eventually, however, the defendant was physically placed on the ground by Agent Cota and told not to move. At that time, Agent Cota walked back to his car to get handcuffs. While on his way he received a radio broadcast from Agent Acevedo, informing him that the vehicles had turned around and were coming back toward Duquesne Road. Agent Cota, who was the senior officer in the investigation, quickly realized that the suspect vehiсles were heading in his direction. Agent Cota knew that civilians would be in the area of S.R. 82, he knew that school was in session nearby, and he therefore *1098 determined that the area needed to be immediately secured, as the vehicles were still traveling at a high rate of speed and posed a. danger to unsuspecting pedestrians and students. Agent Cota advised other law enforcement personnel to block the roadway, secure the bridge, and deploy stop sticks. He quickly returned to his vehicle to join in the chase, but before doing so he told the defendant that he was under arrest, that he was not to leave, and that someone would be back to pick him up:
A As the vehicles were approaching my location, I could hear a lot of tires screeching, vehicle acceleration and what concerned me the most is there was an individual, there was a bridge that kind of separates south river to State Route 82 and there was an individual in the bridge and I was yelling for him to get away from the bridge because there were some vehicles coming towards his location.
- H 5 ' ^ # N<
Q When the vehicle hit the stop stick, did it stop?
A No, it did not.
Q You ran towards your vehicle. What did you do next?
A I ran towards my vehicle and as I got to the trunk I yelled to Mr. Sаntillan that he was under arrest and he was not to leave I was going to send somebody back to pick him up.
Q And what was Mr. Santillan’s reaction?
A He didn’t say anything.
Q And how far were you away from Mr. Santillan?
A I would say no more than 5 feet (RT 7/1/08 at 82). 1
Agent Cota did not handcuff the defendant because there was no agent available to watch him; similarly, he did not place the defendant in his own law enforcement vehicle because doing so would have placed the defendant in grave danger and would have contravened organizational operating policy.
Ultimately the agents succeeded in stopping all three vehicles, but only one alleged driver was apprehended. One of the abandoned trucks was a maroon Dodge. It was found to contain 592.4 kilograms of marijuana and a cell phone. The second abandoned vehicle, a Chevy Tahoe, contained 625.4 kilograms of marijuana and a cell phone. The third vehicle, a red Chevrolet pickup truck driven by defendant Gabriel Noriega-Llanez, contained 586 kilograms of marijuana and three cell phones. After the brief but dangerous pursuit ended, Agents Acevedo and Cota compared the recent phone numbers called and received by the cell phone from the abandoned maroon Dodge truck and defendant’s cell phone. They found that the defendant had used his phone to communicate with someone in the maroon Dodge truck as it was passing through the area of S.R. 82 and Duquesne Road. 2 Another agent had been directed to return to Du-quesne Road and S.R. 82 to pick up the defendant, but when the agent arrived, the defendant was gone. After various failed attempts to arrest the defendant at his residence, he was finally arrested there, pursuant to a warrant, on November 13, 2007.
*1099 Defendant’s Motion to Suppress
The defendant seeks to suppress evidence of thе cell phone seized from him. He maintains that the cell phone was illegally seized and, in any event, the information stored on the phone was illegally retrieved in a warrantless search by federal agents. The defendant argues that no arrest occurred because the defendant was left alone by Agent Cota.
The government contends that an arrest occurred when Agent Cota commanded the defendant to remain at the corner of Du-quesne Road and S.R. 82 and that the cell phone was lawfully seized and searched incident to the lawful arrest. The government also suggests that exigent circumstances warranted the seizure and search of the defendant’s cell phone. Alternatively, the government argues that the inevitable discovery and independent source exceptions to the exclusionary rule permit the admission of the evidence, even assuming the search conducted by the agents was constitutionally infirm.
The Seizure and Arrest of Santillan
Under the Fourth Amendment, “a seizure occurs when a law enforcement officer, by means of physical force or show of authority, in some way restrains the liberty of a citizen.”
United States v. Chan-Jimenez,
The defendant argues that he was nevеr arrested. “The standard for determining whether a person is under arrest is not simply whether a person believes that he is free to leave,
see United States v. Mendenhall,
A warrantless arrest must be supported by probable cause.
United States v. Del Vizo,
The Seizure of the Phone
A seizure of property occurs when “thеre is some meaningful interference with an individual’s possessory interest in that property.”
United States v. Jacobsen,
In this case, whether the plain view or exigency exception is applied, the seizure of the cell phone was justified. As tо plain view, officers had good reason to believe the phone was being used in the furtherance of a drug-trafficking crime and the defendant’s initial recalcitrance only provided further justification under the circumstances, although none was needed. As to exigency, the danger posed to the community was real and immediate. 3 The agents had good reason to believe that the seizure of the phone might alleviate the danger to the community and themselves. The seizure of the cell phone was therefore justified.
The Search of the Phone
A search occurs when “an expectation of privacy that society is prepared to consider reasonable is infringed.”
Jacobsen,
One exception to the search warrant requirement exists when a search is conducted incident to a lawful arrest.
Cupp v. Murphy,
There is authority for the proposition that warrantless searches of cell phones incident to a lawful arrest may be proper.
See United States v. Finley, 477
F.3d 250, 258-260 (5th Cir.2007) (officer’s warrant-less search of dеfendant’s cell phone records and text messages deemed proper as incident to lawful arrest, even though police had transported the defendant to his passenger’s house, because search was “substantially contemporaneous with his arrest”);
United States v. Chan,
In this ease the defendant was arrested and agents searched the incoming and outgoing calls on his cell phone mere minutes after the arrest and seizure of his phone, and as soon as practicable given the high speed chase that had just transpired.
4
The search of the phone was roughly contemporaneous with the arrest. Furthermore, the agents knew that other suspects were still at large, had heard transmissions indicating that weapons were being prepared by the smugglers and their cohorts, and had good reason to believe that the suspects had been in contact with the defendant. The agents thus had a valid concern that more incoming calls to the defendant’s cell phone could destroy evidence that was then located on the cell phone’s recent contacts lists.
5
Because
*1103
this was a search clearly conducted as part of a “continuous series of events closely connected in time to the arrest,”
see McLaughlin,
A warrantless search may also be justified by exigent circumstances. Exigent circumstances are “those circumstances that would cause a reasonable person to believe that entry ... was necessary to prevent physical harm to the officers or other persons, the destruction of relevant evidence, the escape of the suspect, or some other consequence improperly frustrating legitimate law enforcement efforts.”
United States v. Brooks,
A warrantless search of a seized cell phone, which rеsults in the retrieval of a record of incoming calls to that phone, may be justified by exigent circumstances.
See United States v. Parada,
*1104 In 'this case, the agents clearly-had reason to bеlieve that access to the defendant’s cell phone was necessary to preserve safety and prevent the destruction of evidence. The search was limited in scope, as agents accessed only the recent contacts, or the incoming and outgoing calls. The search of the cell phone was therefore also permissible pursuant to the exigent circumstances exception.
Inevitable Discovery and Independent Source
Even if the search of the defendant’s cell phone does not qualify as a search incident to lawful arrest or as a search authorizеd due to exigent circumstances, the evidence would still be admissible under the inevitable discovery and independent source exceptions to the exclusionary rule. Illegally obtained evidence is admissible if the government proves by a preponderance of evidence that “the tainted evidence would inevitably have been discovered through lawful means.”
United States v. Ramirez-Sandoval,
In this case, the evidence originally obtained from the defendant’s cell phone would inevitably have been discovered or would have been obtained from an independent source. The cell phone recovered from the abandoned maroon Dodge truck was lawfully seized by the agents. Through a search of that cell phone conducted pursuant to standard procedure in cases of this nature, the defendant’s phone number and his use of the phone to communicate with smugglers in the drug transport vehicles at the time of the chase would inevitably have been discovered. 8 The phone number and its use were also discovered through an independent source-the lawfully seized cell phone in the abandoned maroon Dodge truck (still other independent sources would have been subpoenas of any of the other numerous phones lawfully seized (either through abandonment or incident to lawful arrest) after the chase ended).
Conclusion
Accordingly,
*1105 IT IS ORDERED that the defendant’s Motion to Suppress (Doc. No. 27) is DENIED.
Notes
. As no official transcript has yet been prepared, the Court’s citations tо the transcript of the Motion to Suppress Hearing refer to the Court Reporter’s original, unedited real time ("RT”) version. Any finalized transcript may contain slightly different page and/or line numbers.
. The agents did not search the address books or any text messages in the phones; they simultaneously compared the recent calls made and received by the phones.
. For example, testimony elicited from Agent Cota revealed that the individual on the bridge actually had to hang off the structure to avoid the fleeing trucks, because he did not otherwise have enough time to get out of the way.
. Q If your initial contact with Santillan you were initially receiving information about him was at 4:00, when do you think this is happening? Is it two hours later?
A No, sir.
Q When is it happening?
A I would say I don’t know, I wasn’t keeping track of time. Just when the chase ended, I mean it was minutes. I know it wasn't hours. (RT 7/2/08 at 23).
. The defendant’s reliance on
United States v. Park,
. It must be remembered that this search was conducted expeditiously after a high speed chase, when suspects and danger still lurked; this was no mere wide-ranging investigatory search conducted at leisure by the officers. For the crucial distinction between the two situations,
see generally Thornton v. United States,
. The Parada Court further found that the retrieval of numbers from the memory of the cell phone did not violate the ECPA, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510(4), 2511(1), as the stored numbers did not constitute a "communication” subject to the requirements of the Act.
. The defendant argues that
United States v. Mejia,
