Yolanda Campbell was convicted on one count of a two-count indictment after she entered a conditional plea of guilty in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama. Count two of the indictment charged the defendant, along with two named codefendants, 1 with conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute approximately 102.8 pounds of marijuana in violation of Title 21 U.S.C. § 846. Campbell filed a motion to suppress the evidence, alleging the discovery of the marijuana was the result of an illegal search and seizure by officers of the Montgomery Police Department. After hearing evidence at two separate hearings, the district court denied the motion to suppress. Thereafter, Campbell entered a plea of guilty reserving her right to appeal the district court’s denial of the motion to suppress the evidence. We reverse.
I Background
On March 8, 1989, agent Gregg Thompson of the Montgomery Police Department, Narcotics Division, received information from a confidential informant concerning the delivery to Montgomery of approximately 150 pounds of marijuana. The confidential informant related to Thompson that he had been working with a woman named ■“Yoli” who, accompanied by three armed Mexican males, would bring the marijuana to Montgomery. The following day, March 9, 1989, at approximately 10:55 P.M., the confidential informant told Thompson that a white-green Chevrolet pickup truck with a camper shell bearing Texas license plates would arrive in Montgomery via Highway 80 West between 11:30 P.M. and 1:00 A.M. The informant also stated that the vehicle would stop at the Union 76 Truck Stop on Southwest Boulevard. Thompson immediately notified his department of this information and proceeded to the truck stop.
Around 12:15 A.M. on the morning of March 10, 1989, a pickup truck matching the description provided by the confidential informant arrived at the Union 76 Truck Stop. Once the truck stopped, approximately six unmarked police cars and ten officers surrounded the vehicle. The ten officers in civilian clothes but wearing raid jackets approached the pickup with their weapons drawn. The appellant, her two small children and the two codefendants were ordered out of the truck, searched and arrested. At least one of the officers visually inspected the interior of the vehicle but found no contraband. The truck and the defendants were then taken to the police station. The two children were turned over'to the local juvenile authorities.
At the police station the defendants were separated and questioned individually. At 1:27 A.M. the appellant, the owner of the vehicle, signed a consent to search the truck after Thompson began filling out an application for a search warrant. He never completed the application because Campbell signed the consent form. 2 Soon after-wards the officers brought in a narcotics-sniffing dog but this dog failed to detect any sign of illegal drugs in the truck. Confident that contraband was hidden somewhere in the truck, the department called for another trained dog owned by the Alabama State Patrol. At 2:55 A.M., not long after it arrived, the second dog picked up the scent of the marijuana near the rear bumper and alerted the officers. The officers removed the bumper and discovered a false bottom in the bed of the pickup where they found the marijuana.
II Discussion
The denial of a motion to suppress the evidence is reviewed as a mixed question of law and fact. To overturn the denial of the motion, the appellant must show that the district court clearly erred in its findings of fact, but in the application of the law to these facts, an appellate court exercises
de novo
review. In reviewing a ruling on a suppression hearing, we must construe the
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facts in the light most favorable to the party prevailing in the district court.
United States v. Alexander,
A search without a warrant based on probable cause is illegal, unless the government can show that it falls into one of those limited exceptions recognized by law.
Alexander,
In determining if there was probable cause to arrest the defendants, the district court applied the totality of circumstances test articulated in
Illinois v. Gates,
In
Amorin,
hours before he was arrested, the defendant showed a confidential informant two green duffle bags full of cocaine.
Amorin,
The court also held that exigent circumstances justified the search of the car. Id.
Police had been unable to obtain a search warrant at the time the defendant loaded the car with cocaine. At the time of arrest, the defendant had walked to the driver’s side of the car and was about to embark on the delivery of the cocaine. Officers wisely chose to conduct an arrest at this moment rather than risk the potential of a high speed chase once the defendant had gotten into the car. Id.
The court stated that the search of the car was “more closely analogous to a vehicle stop on the open freeway.” Id.
In a recent case decided by the United States Supreme Court, the Court held that an anonymous tip corroborated by independent police work only “exhibited sufficient indicia of reliability to provide reasonable suspicion to make an investigatory stop.”
Alabama v. White,
_ U.S. _, _,
Soon after the call two police officers proceeded to the apartment complex and placed building 235 under surveillance. Not long after the department received the information, White left the 235 building with nothing in her hands. She entered the station wagon described by the informant and began driving the most direct route to Dobey’s Motel, the destination described by the informant. At 4:18 P.M., about an hour and eighteen minutes after the police received the call, she was stopped short of the motel.
Id.
at _,
Comparing these circumstances to
Illinois v. Gates,
• [3] Here, we must first decide if there was probable cause to search Campbell’s pickup truck when it was stopped at the Union 76 Truck Stop. Probable cause exists “ ‘when the facts and circumstances would lead a reasonably prudent [person] to believe that the vehicle contains contraband.’ ”
United States v. Wilson,
The totality of the circumstances do not suggest that the Montgomery police had probable cause to arrest the defendants, much less search the vehicle when
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they first encountered it at the truck stop. The district court found that the confidential informant was not reliable, but still found that the officers had probable cause to arrest the occupants of the pickup based on reliability of the information provided by the informant. The key to the district court’s conclusion was that the informant provided the police with the approximate time of the vehicle’s arrival and the location where it would stop. Campbell concedes that when the agents observed the pickup truck enter the Union 76 Truck Stop “they had
reasonable suspicion
to conduct a valid investigatory stop under
Terry v. Ohio,
Thus, under the holding of
Alabama v. White,
_ U.S. _,
After an initial fruitless search of the occupants and the pickup truck, the defendants and the truck were taken to the police station. The government maintains that at most it was a brief detention, but the district court found that at that moment an arrest had been made and that probable cause existed to support the arrest.
At no point prior to the 2:55 A.M. discovery of the marijuana did the police have any incriminating evidence to justify holding Campbell and the other defendants. They had been detained almost three hours before the marijuana was discovered. At 1:27 A.M. Campbell signed a consent to search form. 3 After executing the form the police brought in a trained dog which failed to find the cocaine. Not until a second dog, owned by the Alabama State patrol, arrived did the police discover the marijuana.
Thus, the district court erred as a matter of law in finding that probable cause and exigent circumstances existed at the time the defendants were arrested. The court contradicted itself when it found that the confidential informant was unreliable and then based its conclusion of probable cause on the information provided by that informant. The exigent circumstances ceased to exist after the police made a cursory search of the occupants and the vehicle at the truck stop. Based on the district court’s findings of fact, the most the police could have had at the truck stop was “a reasonable suspicion” that Campbell was carrying drugs. After they searched the occupants and the vehicle at the truck stop even that dissipated.
There remains the question of whether the consent, if it was in fact given, cured the illegal arrest. The marijuana must be suppressed as fruit of an illegal arrest unless Campbell’s consent to search was “both (1) voluntary, and (2) not the product of the illegal detention.”
United States v. Robinson,
As stated earlier the district court did not make a finding of whether the consent was voluntary. Even if the consent was voluntary, the record is developed in sufficient detail to enable us to decide the issue of whether the consent was the product of an illegal arrest. 4 We conclude *798 that the consent was tainted by the illegal arrest and, as a consequence, the marijuana must be suppressed.
First, Campbell and the others were arrested at the truck-stop without probable cause. Next, she was taken to the station, separated from her children and the others, and repeatedly questioned until she agreed to sign the consent form. She was taken into police custody at approximately 12:15 A.M. and detained by the police until she was charged at 2:55 A.M. Third, there were no substantial intervening events to cure the taint of the illegal arrest.
Accordingly, the district court’s denial of Campbell’s motion to suppress the evidence is
REVERSED.
Notes
. The codefendants, Miguel Ramirez and Ricardo Ramirez, are not parties to this appeal.
. Campbell disputes that she voluntarily consented to the search but claims she only signed the consent form in the hope that the officers would stop questioning her after she had requested an attorney. ROA Vol. 2, pp. 89-90.
. The district court did not reach or decide whether the consent was voluntary. Even if it was voluntary, the question now is whether it was tainted by the illegal arrest.
. The court in
United States v. Robinson,
