William 0. Trigg challenges a standard set forth by this court in our disposition of his earlier interlocutory appeal. In this opinion we revisit the topic of pretextual arrests presented with familiar facts and issues. “William Trigg was charged with one count of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) after a search incident to a traffic arrest revealed the presence of 53 grams of cocaine in his coat pocket.”
United States v. Trigg,
I.
In our opinion issued in Trigg’s interlocutory appeal we discussed fully the facts of this case.
Trigg,
Trigg sought to suppress the cocaine pri- or to trial alleging that the police effected the traffic arrest as a pretext to search for narcotics. The district court agreed that the arrest was pretextual and granted Trigg’s motion to suppress the evidence; the government appealed. This court acknowledged that “[t]he district judge did not have the benefit of a controlling precedent on this important issue and considered a variety of factors which we deem to be irrelevant in granting defendant’s suppression motion.”
Trigg,
II.
William Trigg does not dispute the proposition that a fourth amendment analysis requires the application of an objective standard. Rather, he takes issue with the exclusion by this court of a factor which he believes should be considered. Specifically, Trigg believes that conformance to usual police practices must be factored into an objective analysis of the reasonableness of an arrest. We disagree. As we indicated in Trigg, the “usual practices” approach is directed to the arbitrary exercise of police power and designed to operate as a check on the abuse of discretion by officers. Id.
While examination of usual police practices may be useful in analyzing an officer’s abuse of discretion in effecting a custodial arrest, such a factor has been rejected by the Supreme Court as one to be considered in the objective analysis of reasonable arrests.
See United States v. Villamonte-Marquez,
III.
For the reasons stated above, we reaffirm that the objective standard we adopted in Trigg does not permit consideration of usual police practices and AffiRM *1066 the order subsequently entered by the district court.
