Case Information
*1 Hon. ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge Hon. TERENCE T. EVANS, Circuit Judge Hon. ANN CLAIRE WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appeal from the United States
Plaintiff-Appellee , District Court for the Southern District of Illinois v.
No. 02-CR-30060-DRH JOHN M. WYATT,
Defendant-Appellant . David R. Herndon, Judge .
O R D E R
Pursuant to a conditional plea agreement, John M. Wyatt pleaded guilty to possession with intent to distribute over 100 kilograms of marijuana, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), and was sentenced to 262 months’ imprisonment. Under the plea agreement, Wyatt reserved the right to challenge on appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress under the Fourth Amendment the evidence seized during a search arising from a traffic stop of his rented recreational vehicle (RV). Wyatt argues that after the traffic stop ended the police detained him without reasonable suspicion to conduct a canine sniff of the RV, and that the positive alert by the dog did not give the officer probable cause to search the vehicle. In addition, Wyatt challenges his career offender sentence under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1, as well as the reasonableness of the term imposed. We affirm his conviction and sentence.
I.
We recount from the testimony at the suppression hearing the early morning traffic stop on January 15, 2002, that led to Wyatt’s conviction. At 3:19 a.m., Narcotics Officer Modrusic, working with his canine partner Seer, initiated a traffic stop after spotting an RV traveling at 60 miles per hour in a 55-mile-per-hour zone. As the officer approached the driver, he noticed that a bed visible through a window was elevated to a level “even with the window.” The officer testified that the height of the bed “seemed rather odd.” Wyatt, the driver, identified himself and provided his driver’s license and “vehicle paperwork.” Modrusic testified at the hearing that Wyatt seemed “real nervous” and was “shaking.” Questioning Wyatt about his travel plans, Modrusic learned that Wyatt was returning home to Chicago after spending four or five days in Phoenix, Arizona. According to the officer’s testimony, Wyatt said he rented another car to drive to Arizona and then once in Phoenix he rented the RV to return home. Modrusic thought it “odd” for a person to rent an RV to travel alone from a warmer climate to a colder climate in the middle of winter. Adding to Modrusic’s suspicions, the rental agreement specified the pickup point as Mesa, not Phoenix as Wyatt had claimed; Modrusic was not aware that Mesa is a suburb of Phoenix.
At that point, Officer Modrusic returned to his patrol car and radioed for back-up. The officer told the dispatcher that he felt “something ain’t right” because Wyatt was “shaking like a leaf” and “his story wasn’t panning out.” Then, while running a license check, Modrusic discovered that Wyatt was on probation for what he assumed was a drug offense.
Officer Modrusic’s captain, McKinney, arrived within minutes to act as back- up. Modrusic told him of his suspicions and that he planned to issue Wyatt a warning and then request consent to search the RV. The captain approached Wyatt, who was still in the driver’s seat. Conscious of the camcorder that had been recording the traffic stop from the dashboard of Modrusic’s car, the captain requested that Wyatt walk around to the back of the RV to meet Modrusic. Modrusic testified that he then returned all Wyatt’s documents, issued and explained a written warning for speeding, and advised Wyatt that he was “free to leave.” As Wyatt took one or two steps toward the RV, Modrusic asked if Wyatt “would consent to a search of the vehicle.” Wyatt declined. Wyatt testified at the hearing that he viewed the encounter at this point as a detention. Modrusic then asked whether Wyatt was on probation. According to Modrusic, Wyatt answered that “when he was young and dumb, he got caught running cannabis.” Modrusic followed up with a request to “walk the police canine around the vehicle.” Wyatt’s response is in dispute; Modrusic testified that Wyatt agreed to the canine sniff, but *3 Wyatt testified that he refused. At this point, no more than 10 minutes had passed since Modrusic initiated the stop.
Officer Modrusic retrieved the dog, Seer, from his patrol car and walked the dog around the RV. The dog alerted by scratching in two locations: the seam of the driver’s door and the “passenger rear corner in the back of the vehicle” (which does not seem to be near the bed inside the RV from the officer’s description). Among other skills, Seer is trained in the detection of narcotics, having graduated from a 14-week course at the St. Louis City Canine Police Academy. Modrusic and Seer also attend periodic courses to refresh the dog’s skills. There is no evidence in the record, however, about Seer’s accuracy in detecting narcotics.
Once Seer alerted, Officer Modrusic informed Wyatt that he had probable cause to search the vehicle. Nonetheless, Modrusic wanted to contact the State’s Attorney’s office before conducting a warrantless search. Modrusic testified that Wyatt asked whether he was free to go; Modrusic responded that he was but said the RV would be detained pending an answer from an on-call state’s attorney. Wyatt chose to leave in a taxicab before the search, traveling to the St. Louis airport, rather than the nearby hotel where the officers assumed he would wait.
Officer Modrusic received permission from the state’s attorney to search the RV without a warrant based on the canine alert. In searching the RV, Modrusic and McKinney found 2 large duffels in the RV’s shower and 11 similar duffels under the bed, all filled with bales of marijuana totaling 128 kilograms. After finding the marijuana within 10 minutes of Wyatt’s departure, the officers tracked down Wyatt’s location via the cab company. Wyatt was arrested a week later.
Wyatt moved to suppress the marijuana, arguing that Officer Modrusic did not have reasonable suspicion to detain him beyond the completion of the traffic stop. The district court denied Wyatt’s motion in an oral opinion. Bypassing the question whether Modrusic had reasonable suspicion to detain Wyatt beyond the traffic stop, the court found the post-stop encounter to be consensual and Wyatt to have consented to the canine sniff. Finding it “obvious” that as a “convicted felon” Wyatt “is savvy to search and seizure rules,” the court believed that Wyatt thought the dog would not alert to narcotics because it was a cold night and the marijuana was “bundled up” inside the vehicle. Given, then, the positive alert by the dog and the advice of the state’s attorney, along with Modrusic’s other bases for reasonable suspicion—Wyatt’s extreme nervousness, the higher-than-usual bed, renting one vehicle to travel to Phoenix and an RV to return, identifying Phoenix instead of Mesa, and Wyatt’s probationary status and prior offense of “running marijuana”—the court concluded that the officer had probable cause to search the vehicle.
Before the preparation of the presentence report and sentencing, the
Supreme Court decided
Blakely v. Washington
,
At sentencing the district court adopted the probation officer’s
recommendations and sentenced Wyatt to 262 months under the guidelines. The
court first relied on
United States v. Bryant,
II.
On appeal Wyatt first challenges the denial of his motion to suppress. He
contends that Officer Modrusic intended from the beginning of the traffic stop to
search his RV for narcotics and that, because the scope of the stop exceeded its
pretextual justification, the stop violated the Fourth Amendment. In addition,
Wyatt contends that Modrusic detained him “at least a few seconds, if not a few
minutes” beyond the completion of the traffic stop without reasonable suspicion or
his consent. In reviewing the district court’s factual findings for clear error and its
legal conclusions de novo, we give special deference to the district court that heard
the testimony and had the best opportunity to observe the witnesses at the
suppression hearing.
United States v. Jackson
,
The scope and duration of a traffic stop must be reasonably related to its
initial purpose.
United States v. Brown
,
As an initial matter, Wyatt’s argument that Officer Modrusic’s subjective
intent vitiated the reasonableness of the search warrants little discussion.
Modrusic had probable cause to initiate a traffic stop because Wyatt had
undisputedly committed a traffic violation by speeding, and so Modrusic’s subjective
intent is irrelevant for purposes of Wyatt’s Fourth Amendment argument.
See, e.g.,
Whren v. United States
,
The real issue is whether Modrusic’s request to search the RV after he
completed the traffic stop by issuing a warning was a further detention requiring
reasonable suspicion or a consensual encounter.
See Ohio v. Robinette
, 519 U.S.
33, 35 (1996) (recognizing possibility of consensual encounter following completion
of traffic stop in holding that officer does not have to inform driver that he is free to
go)
; Moore
,
In any event, even if Officer Modrusic’s questioning amounted to a seizure,
he had reasonable suspicion to detain Wyatt further in order to investigate whether
Wyatt was transporting narcotics. Modrusic listed the following factors as
contributing to his reasonable suspicion: (1) Wyatt’s nervousness, (2) the unusual
height of the bed visible through the RV window, (3) Wyatt’s exchange of a rental
car with a rental RV for his return trip from Phoenix, (4) his driving alone in an RV
back home to a colder climate, and (5) his prior criminal history. In the face of this
list, Wyatt’s attempts to explain away his shaking by citing the cold weather and
characterizing the other grounds as “specious,” do little to deflect the specter of
reasonable suspicion. This is because Wyatt never confronts the most suspicious
*6
factors Modrusic cited: the unusual height of the bed when considered along with
the one-way rental of a type of vehicle favored for transporting large quantities of
drugs.
See United States v. Salzano
,
Given the existence of reasonable suspicion, we need not address Wyatt’s
challenge to the district court’s finding that he consented to the dog sniff of the RV
exterior. A canine sniff of the exterior of a vehicle that reveals no information other
than the location of narcotics does not implicate any separate Fourth Amendment
concerns; Wyatt need only be lawfully detained.
See Illinois v. Caballes
, 125 S. Ct.
834, 838 (2005);
United States v. Gregory,
In a final effort to suppress the seized marijuana, Wyatt asserts that, even if the canine sniff did not violate the Fourth Amendment, the dog’s positive alerts to *7 drugs did not provide probable cause to search the RV. Probable cause was lacking, Wyatt contends, because the government failed to establish that the dog, Seer, was sufficiently trained and had an accurate track record in detecting narcotics. To shore up his claim that Seer was not reliable, Wyatt points to the dog’s alerting to sites in the RV where drugs were not found (the driver’s door and the rear passenger corner).
Wyatt’s reliance on the absence of information in the record about Seer’s
accuracy is not enough to overcome the generally accepted principle that a positive
alert from a well-trained dog is enough for probable cause.
See, e.g., Dortch,
199
F.3d at 197 (dog’s positive reaction to narcotics establishes probable cause);
United
States v. Thomas
,
Wyatt also does not succeed in his sentencing arguments. Wyatt first makes
the familiar argument that escape should not be categorically classified as a crime
of violence for purposes of the career offender guideline. We have previously
rejected Wyatt’s contention because of the ever-present potential for escape to
become violent.
See, e.g., United States v. Howze
,
In addition, Wyatt would be hardpressed to establish a
Booker
error. The
district court properly anticipated the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Booker
by
recognizing that the guidelines may be advisory and imposing an alternative
*8
sentence (which happened to be the same as its guidelines’ sentence).
See Booker
,
Accordingly, we AFFIRM Wyatt’s conviction and sentence.
