Stеphen Plummer entered a conditional plea of guilty to one count of possessing a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). He entered the conditional guilty plea after the district court denied his motion to suppress evidence and statements obtained as a result of a warrantless search of his car. 1 On appeal, Plummer argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
On March 25, 2003, Corporal John A. Sampietro, Jr. of the Missouri State Highway Patrol received a dispatch report that an ambulance crew was following a small car with a single occupant-a white male-traveling westbound on U.S. Highway 60. It was reported that the driver of the car, later identified as Plummer, was driving erratically from lane to lane and apрeared to be smoking a marijuana cigarette. As he was driving east on Highway 60, Trooper Sampietro located a car fitting the description in the report heading west on Highway 60 with an ambulance following behind. Trooper Sampietro crossed the highway and began heading west. Plum-mer then turned into the parking lot of a convenience store on Highway 60 and parked behind the store. Troоper Sampie-tro pulled in behind Plummer’s car in the parking lot. The ambulance crew indicated to Trooper Sampietro that he had correctly identified the car.
As Plummer walked toward thе store entrance, Trooper Sampietro got out of his patrol car, identified himself as a highway patrol officer, and asked Plummer for his license. Without saying anything, Plum-mer got back into his car and leaned toward the passenger’s seat. At that point, Trooper Sampietro saw a rifle lying across the passenger’s seat and told Plummer to get out of the car. Plummer complied, and Trooper Sampietro told Plummer that he needed to see his driver’s license. Again, without saying anything, Plummer reached into the car toward the passen *908 ger’s seat where the rifle was lying. Trooper Sampietro drew his service weapon, pointed it at Plummer, and told him to get out of the car and not to get back in. Plummer replied that he was trying to get his driver’s license. Trooper Sampietro told Plummer not to get back in the car because there was a weapon in the car. Plummer responded that the rifle was not loaded.
After Plummer got out of the car, Trooper Sampietro reholstered his weapon and called for back-up officers. He took the rifle from the passenger’s seat and discovered it was loaded. After the backup officers arrived, Trooper Sampietro made a protective search of the car, checking for additional weapons. 2 He found a utility knife in a storage compartment on the driver’s-side door and а machete and a set of digital scales on the back seat. Trooper Sampietro noticed white residue and “green material” consistent with marijuana residue on the scales and utility knifе. Trooper Sampietro arrested Plum-mer, handcuffed him, read him his Miranda rights, and conducted a thorough search of his car.
Underneath the front passenger’s seat, Trooper Sampietro found a Colgate shaving cream can with a false bottom. Hе unscrewed the can and found several bags containing methamphetamine and marijuana. He also found scorched aluminum foil and $1,700 in cash in Plummer’s pocket. Plummer told Trooper Sampietro that he had the cash because he was in financial difficulty. On the way to jail, Plummer admitted that he had been smoking marijuana while driving. Plummer also told Trooper Sampietro that he had a history of drug use аnd that he was back on drugs because of a disagreement with his girlfriend.
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Plummer only challenges Trooper Sampietro’s initial search of his car for additional weapons. Plummer dоes not challenge either Trooper Sampietro’s initial investigative stop based on the report of the ambulance crew or Trooper Sampietro’s more thorough searсh of the car and search of his person after finding the machete, utility knife and scales. Plummer’s only argument is that the district court erred in denying his suppression motion because Trooper Sampietro’s initial search of the car was not based on officer safety, and therefore, all of the evidence subsequently obtained was “fruit of the poisonous tree” seized in violation of his Fourth Amеndment rights. “When reviewing a denial of a motion to suppress, we examine the factual findings underlying the district court’s conclusion for clear error and review de novo the ultimate question of whether the fourth amendment has been violated.”
United States v. Terry,
In
Terry v. Ohio,
The test for reasonableness is an objective one.
United States v. Cummins,
As noted above, Plummer’s only argument on appeal is that Trooper Sampie-tro’s initial search of the car for additional weapons was not a permissible protective search because it was not based on officer safety. More specifically, he contends that Trooper Sampietro could not have been concerned for his safety because by the time he conducted the search, he had re-holstered his gun and back-up officers had arrived аt the scene. Plummer’s argument improperly focuses on whether Trooper Sampietro was actually motivated by concern for his own personal safety when he searched Plummer’s car for additional weapons. Plummer’s argument has no merit because, as we discussed above, a police officer’s subjective motivation is irrelevant to our Circuit’s objective reasonаbleness analysis.
Based on the “specific and articulable facts” surrounding Trooper Sampietro’s search of Plummer’s car for additional weapons and the “rational inferences frоm those facts,” we conclude that the search was reasonably warranted.
See Long,
The legal discovery of the machete and the utility knife and digital scales with white and green residue supported Trooper Sampietro’s warrantless search of the remainder of Plummer’s car under the “automobile exception” to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement.
See Rowland,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the district court’s denial of Plum-mer’s suppression motion and affirm Plum-mer’s conviction.
Notes
. The Honorable Scott O. Wright, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri, adopting the report and recommendation of the Honorable James C. England, United States Magistrate Judge for the Western District of Missouri. The Honorable Richard E. Dorr, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri, acceptеd Plummer's conditional guilty plea and sentenced him.
. The record is unclear as to Plummer’s exact location while Trooper Sampietro waited for back-up and while he conducted a protective search of Plummer’s car. However, we do know that Plummer was not handcuffed during that time. As noted below, he was not handcuffed until after he was arrested.
