Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
Aftеr losing a motion to suppress evidence found in the trunk of his ear, appellant Warren Turner entered a conditional plea of guilty to one count of possession with intent to distribute fifty grams or more of cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(l)(A)(iii). As part of his plea agreement, Turner preserved his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion tо suppress. The issue presented on this appeal is whether United States Park Police officers lawfully searched the trunk in which the evidence was found. We conclude that they did and affirm the district court’s denial of appellant’s motion to suppress.
I
On December 6, 1995, United States Park Police Officer William Sepeck stopped Mr. Turner’s car because it did not have a license plate on its front bumper. As Officer Sepeck approached the car, Turner rolled down the window, and the officer noticed a strong odor of burnt marijuana emanating from inside. Officer Sepeck asked Turner to produce his driver’s license and registration. Turner produced a temporary registration, but could not produce his license.
Looking through Turner’s open window, Officer Sepeck saw torn pieces of cigar tobacco in Turner’s lap, on the seat between Turner’s legs, and on the floor at Turner’s feet. In the officer’s experience, these observations were consistent with marijuana use. He believed they indicated that a hollowed out cigar “blunt” had been used as a receptacle for smoking marijuana. Through another window, Sepeck also observed on the floor directly behind Turner’s seat a clear *19 plastic bag of green, weed-like material, which he believed to be marijuana itself.
Based on these observations, Officer Se-peck asked Turner for his car keys. After obtaining the keys, Sepeek tossed them to a sеcond officer who had arrived on the scene, and asked that officer to search the car’s trunk for more marijuana. When the second officer discovered there was no trunk key on the ring, Officer Sepeek asked Turner to take off his shoes. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Officer Sepeek testified that in his experience, when a trunk key is missing, it oftеn is concealed on the person’s body, including in his shoes. Tr. at 12. As Officer Sepeek predicted, the trunk key was in the sole of Turner’s left shoe. The second officer then searched the trunk, finding $825 in small bills and a 62-gram chunk of cocaine base (“crack”).
Appellant moved to suppress the evidence found in the trunk. He argued that the traffic stop leading to the search had been pretextual, and that the search had been made without a warrant. At the close of the suppression hearing, Turner largely abandoned the pretext argument, and asserted instead that the shoe search that produced the trunk key had been conducted without probable cause. The government argued that the car had not been stopped on pretext; that the key was found as part of a lawful search incident to arrest; and that the trunk search came within the scope of warrantless automobile searches authorized by the Supreme Court in
United States v. Ross,
II
On appeal, Turner does not renew the arguments he made below. Instead, he argues that the search of his trunk exceeded the scope of warrantless searches authorized in
Ross,
because the officers lacked probable cause to believe there would be contraband in the trunk.
1
The government argues that, because Turner failed to raise this particular Fourth Amendment challenge in the district court, the court’s ruling should be affirmed unless it was “plain error” — that is, an error “so obvious and substantial” or so “serious and manifest that it affects the very integrity of the trial process.”
See In re Sealed Case,
While conceding that he did not make this particular challenge below, Turner argues it was sufficient that he moved for suppression of the evidence based on the absence of a warrant. Once he did so, Turner contends, it was the government’s burden to show the search came within the scope of warrantless searches authorized by
Ross,
not his burden to show it did not. Appellant’s Reply Br. at 1 (citing
United States v. Hough,
This dispute over the appropriate standard of review need not detain us, however, as we find no error, plain or otherwise, in the district court’s determination.
Ill
In
Carroll v. United States,
On appeal, the government relies on three pieces of evidence to establish probable cause: the smell of burnt marijuana emanating from the car, the pieces of torn cigar paper arrayed around Turner, and the ziplock bag of green weed material found on the floor behind his seat. Government’s Br. at 11-12.
2
The government argues that these three pieces of evidence, together with Officer Seрeck’s experience and training in traffic and narcotics enforcement, formed a “totality of circumstances” sufficient to meet the requirements of probable cause: that is, “a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime [would] be found,”
Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S.
213, 238,
Turner does not dispute the legality of the manner in which any of these pieces of evidence came to the officer’s attention. Nor does he dispute that these facts established probable cause to believe additional marijuana might be found elsewhere in the passenger compartment of the car, or that if another kind of evidence (for example, a larger quantity of narcotics) had been found in the passenger compartment, it could have constituted probable cause to believe additional contraband might be found in the trunk. Appellant’s Br. at 6. Turner argues, however, that the observations made by Officer Sepeck constituted evidence of nothing more than personal use of marijuana, and that a person who uses rather than distributes drugs would keep them within his control, either on his person or in his immediate vicinity, and not in his trunk. Id. at 6-7. Hence, he contends, in this case there was no probable cause to believe additional drugs would be found in the trunk.
The line appellant seeks to draw is too fine. While it may be true that evidence of narcotics distribution would constitute even stronger cause to believe additional contraband had been secreted in the trunk, the evidence in this case was sufficient to establish a “fair probability” that Turner might have hidden additional drugs not necessary for his current consumption in areas out of plain sight, including the trunk of the car. The testimony of Officer Sepeck at the suppression hearing, based on his experience in narcotics and traffic enforcement, supports that conclusion. Tr. at 11, 24-25.
Those federal courts that hаve considered the “personal use” argument have rejected it, and have upheld trunk searches on evidence similar to that found here.
See United States v. Loucks,
Although the Supreme Court has not considered this question directly, it did consider a similar set of facts in
Robbins v. California,
In
Robbins,
the Supreme Court held that the opaque plastic packages should not have been opened without a warrant,
IV
Turner acknowledges that there are “no federal cases supporting [his] position that have the same facts.” Appellant’s Br. at 11. He contends, however, that two cases are “close.”
Id.
at 11-12 (citing
United States v. Nielsen,
In
United States v. Nielsen,
In the second case cited by appellant,
United States v. Seals,
This same distinction is at the heart of the language in
Ross
to which appellant draws our attention. Although in
Ross
the Court found that the police “had probable cause to search respondent’s entire vehicle,”
In
California v. Acevedo,
the Supreme Court returned once again to this distinction between probable cause to believe contraband is in a specific location, and probable cause to believe that it may be in some unknown location within a vehicle. While upholding the warrantless seizure of a bag in a trunk, the
Acevedo
Court stated that the “facts in the record reveal that the police did not have probable cause to believe that contraband was hidden in any other part of the automobile and a search of the entire vehicle would have been without probable cause and unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment.”
Unfortunately for Turner, his case is not comparable to the dicta of
Seals, Ross
or
Acevedo.
Here, “suspicion was not directed at a specific container,”
Ross,
Notes
. Turner also challenges what he believes to be the district court's holding that thе search of his trunk was authorized by another exception to the warrant requirement, the "search incident to arrest” doctrine, an exception which is limited to a car's passenger compartment.
See New York v. Belton,
. Before actually opening the car’s trunk, Officer Sepeck also learned a fourth fact — that Mr. Turner had hidden the trunk key in his shoe. If we were to consider that fact here, it would greatly simplify the probable cause determination, as it points suspicion directly at the trunk. But the government does not rely on the trunk key’s location as part of the probable cause for the search, apparently because it thinks it fatal that the key was not discovered until after the officer had formulated an intent to search the trunk and after he had been thwаrted by the key’s absence. Because this issue was not presented, we do not decide whether the government was correct in concluding that it could not rely on the key, and instead limit ourselves to considering only the three pieces of evidence proffered to us.
. In
Sanders,
the Court also noted that, although there was probable cause to search the suitcase, that probable cause existed before the suitcase was placed inside the automobile. Hence, the Court said, the automobile exception did not apply and a warrant was required. Subsequently, in
California v. Acevedo,
. This case is different from the circumstances discussed in Ross for another reason as well. Here, the question is not just whether probable cause to believe there are drugs in one part of a car can provide probable cause to believe they may be in another, but whether an actual finding of drugs in one location supplies probable cause to believe there may be additional drugs in another.
