OPINION
A federal grand jury indicted Terry Lamont Herbin for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), which prohibits convicted felons from possessing firearms, after the police seized a .38 caliber handgun from the car in which Herbin was a passenger. Herbin moved to suppress the firearm, arguing that narcotics officers violated the Fourth Amendment when they used traffic violations as a pretext to stop the car. The District Court granted the motion and suppressed the weapon. We REVERSE.
I.
On July 3, 2001, several narcotics agents, driving unmarked cars, tailed two vehicles in Johnson City, Tennessee. The first car was driven by Lisa Thompson, and included Herbin in the passenger seat. The second car was driven by Herbin’s brother. In tailing the vehicles, the agents admitted that their primary mission was to pursue a drug-trafficking investigation, not to enforce the traffic laws. The agents acknowledged that they had information that Terry Herbin was in the area for the purpose of distributing narcotics.
The two drivers — Ms. Thompson and Herbin’s brother — soon gave the agents another explanation for stopping the cars. The agents observed both cars run a red light and, later, saw Thompson’s car cross the center line twice. When the two cars eventually pulled into a parking lot, the agents activated their lights and initiated a traffic stop.
As the agents approached the cars, Her-bin’s brother exited the second car as if to flee. The agents drew their weapons and ordered him to stop. One of the agents then reached into Lisa Thompson’s car through the window and removed the key from the ignition. The officers asked Ms. Thompson and Terry Herbin to exit the car in which they were riding and to remain at the scene.
Although Agent Thompson testified that he stopped the vehicles to issue a citation and to determine whether Ms. Thompson was intoxicated (because she had crossed the center fine), the agents never pursued the traffic violations. They did not ask for drivers’ licenses, “run the tags” on the vehicles, perform any field sobriety tests, *809 or issue any tickets. What they did do once they had obtained order over the area was to ask Ms. Thompson for permission to search her car for contraband. Ms. Thompson consented, and the search revealed a loaded .88 caliber handgun beneath the passenger seat in which Herbin had been sitting.
Presumably on the basis of this evidence, a grand jury indicted Herbin for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), which prohibits convicted felons from possessing firearms. Herbin moved to suppress the weapon. A magistrate judge recommended denying the motion because (1) the stop was supported by probable cause that traffic violations had occurred and (2) the driver had consented to the subsequent search of her vehicle.
The District Court disagreed. In its view, “the initial traffic stop in this case was a pretext, [ ] the subsequent detention of the defendant and the officers’ actions were not related to the circumstances justifying the initial stop, and [ ] the search incident to that stop was in violation of the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights.” The Government appealed.
II.
We review the District Court’s legal conclusions de
novo, United States v. Bailey,
This case does not mark a new path. In
Whren v. United States,
Both before and after
Whren,
this Court has adhered to this principle. In
United States v. Bailey,
*810 Measured by these precedents, the District Court’s decision cannot stand. Under Whren and this Court’s cases, the -District Court’s finding that the initial traffic stop was “a pretext” is legally beside the point. No one disputes that the agents had probable cause to stop Ms. Thompson’s car when it ran a red light and twice crossed the center line. Accordingly, the agents had an objectively justifiable basis for stopping the car.
Nor do the officers’ subjective intentions become relevant in assessing the agents’ conduct
after
the initial stop. Her-bin contends that the agents ran afoul of the Fourth Amendment when, without any intention of pursuing the traffic violations, the agents drew their guns on the vehicle occupants, seized the key to Lisa Thompson’s car, and requested her consent to search it. The Supreme Court’s decision in
Ohio v. Robinette,
Here, the circumstances of the stop and detention were within legal limits. Before the agents even had an opportunity to pursue the traffic violations, Herbin’s brother exited the second car as if to flee. Already suspecting Terry Herbin of criminal activity, the agents responded with appropriate caution: They did not ask for drivers’ licenses, run the tags, attempt to perform a field sobriety test, or issue a ticket. They instead drew their weapons, seized the occupants, and removed the key from the ignition of Ms. Thompson’s car. The agents already had authority to seize, at least temporarily, the vehicles and their occupants based on probable cause to believe traffic laws had been violated.
See Atwater v. City of Lago Vista,
Lastly, once the scene was under control, there was nothing unreasonable about asking Ms. Thompson for permission to search her car.
See Robinette,
Because we conclude that the seizure was the product of a lawful traffic stop, followed by the driver’s voluntary consent to a search, we do not address the Government’s alternative argument that Herbin lacked standing to move to suppress the weapon discovered in the car.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the District Court granting Herbin’s motion to suppress, and we REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
