UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
For the Fifth Circuit
No. 97-50650
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
VERSUS
JESUS RODRIGUEZ-RIVAS,
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
For the Western District of Texas
August 17, 1998
Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, JONES, and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges
DUHÉ, Circuit Judge:
Following a bench trial, Jesus Rodriguez-Rivas (“Rodriguez”)
was convicted of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute
marijuana and possession with intent to distribute marijuana. He
appeals his conviction, arguing that the district court erred when
it denied his motion to suppress and admitted evidence (over 700
pounds of marijuana and his contemporaneous statements) obtained
when a Border Patrol agent stopped him without reasonable suspicion
based on articulable facts. We agree. We find a Fourth Amendment
violation and conclude that there were insufficient articulable
facts surrounding the Border Patrol’s stop of Rodriguez’s vehicle
to satisfy the constitutional requirement of reasonable suspicion.
I.
While awaiting the arrival of his partner to open a Border
Patrol checkpoint on U.S. Highway 385 south of Marathon, Texas,
some fifty-plus miles from the border, agent Rodolfo J. Garcia
(“Garcia”) stopped a car with Mexican license plates. The veteran
agent learned that the car’s occupants were Mexican custom agents
and were legally in this country. Because he knew that Mexican
agents sometimes assist in narcotics smuggling, Garcia became even
more alert to traffic.
Highway 385 is a main entrance to Big Bend National Park and
is heavily traveled by tourists. It is also known to be a route
preferred by drug smugglers, allowing them to by-pass the
consistently manned immigration checkpoint on Highway 67. Ten to
fifteen minutes after he had stopped the Mexican customs agents,
Garcia saw a mini-van headed north. Although he had no radar to
accurately record the mini-van’s speed, he perceived it was
traveling “at a high rate of speed.” He noticed that the mini-van
bore no front license plate and that the driver appeared to be
slouched down in his seat. Becoming suspicious, Garcia u-turned
and followed the mini-van. The mini-van had no rear license plate,
only a San Antonio auto dealer’s advertisement. Because he
suspected something was amiss and had no way to verify the mini-
2
van’s registration, Garcia stopped the vehicle for an immigration
check.
Appellant Rodriguez, the sole occupant of the mini-van and a
resident alien, lowered his window to present his papers. Garcia
immediately smelled marijuana. From his position outside the van,
Garcia saw that the center seat of the van had been removed and in
its place was a large Mexican-style blanket covering something. He
readily identified a cellophane-wrapped bundle not covered by the
blanket as typical marijuana packaging. The agent arrested
Rodriguez and read him in Spanish his Miranda rights, which
Rodriguez waived.
In a brief, unsolicited conversation with Garcia, Rodriguez
admitted that he had agreed to drive the van for two men he had met
in Big Bend National Park. He told Garcia he had assumed he would
be transporting illegal aliens. Garcia’s partner arrived a short
time after the arrest with a drug dog. The dog alerted to the
presence of drugs and the Border Patrol agents seized 726 pounds of
marijuana from the mini-van.
Rodriguez moved to suppress all evidence - his statements and
the marijuana -claiming that the stop was an unreasonable seizure
in violation of the Fourth Amendment. He did not argue lack of
probable cause for his arrest and the subsequent search; he argued
only that the evidence was the “fruit of a poisonous tree” and was
therefore inadmissible. The district court denied his motion and
found him guilty of both charges: possession with intent to
3
distribute marijuana and conspiracy to possess with intent to
distribute marijuana. Rodriguez now appeals.
II.
We review the denial of a motion to suppress under two
standards. United States v. Inocencio, 40 F. 3d 716, 721 (5th Cir.
1994). We review de novo determinations of questions of law, such
as whether reasonable suspicion existed to stop a vehicle. United
States v. Nichols, 142 F.3d 857, 864 (5th Cir. 1998). Factual
findings are reviewed for clear error. Id. Additionally, this
court views evidence presented at a suppression hearing in the
light most favorable to the prevailing party. Inocencio, 40 F. 3d
at 721.
III.
The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches
and seizures. U.S. Const. amend. IV. This amendment, however,
does not expressly preclude the use of evidence obtained in
violation of its directive. Arizona v. Evans, 514 U.S. 1, 10
(1995). Preclusion is a judicially created remedy whose deterrent
effect safeguards against future Fourth Amendment violations.
United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 906 (1984). We apply this
judicial exclusionary rule only where its remedial objectives are
thought most effective. Id. at 908. Where “the exclusionary rule
does not result in appreciable deterrence, then, clearly, its use
. . . is unwarranted.” United States v. Janis, 428 U.S. 433, 454
4
(1976).
The Supreme Court has addressed this Fourth Amendment right
directly with regard to investigatory stops by roving Border Patrol
agents away from the border, such as we consider here. See United
States v. Brignoni-Ponce, 422 U.S. 873 (1975). Agents have
authority to stop only when they “are aware of specific articulable
facts, together with rational inferences from those facts, that
reasonably warrant suspicion that the vehicles contain aliens who
may be illegally in the country.” Id. at 884. The Supreme Court
later clarified that the agents’ suspicion may go beyond smuggling
undocumented aliens and extend to a reasonable suspicion that the
particular vehicle they stop is engaged in criminal activity.
United States v. Cortez, 449 U.S. 411, 421-22 (1981). By imposing
the reasonable suspicion standard, the Supreme Court sought to
avoid subjecting residents of the area under patrol to potentially
unlimited interference with use of the highways, solely at the
discretion of Border Patrol officers. Brignoni-Ponce, 422 US. at
882.
We are cautioned to take the totality of the circumstances
into account when we make a determination of reasonable suspicion.
Cortez, 449 U.S. at 417. No single factor is determinative, but
each case must be assessed on the totality of the circumstances
known by the agent and on the agent’s experience in evaluating the
circumstances. Inocencio, 40 F. 3d at 722. We receive guidance in
this assessment from the factors identified in Brignoni-Ponce, 422
5
U.S. at 884-85. These include:
(1) known characteristics of a particular
area,
(2) previous experience of the arresting
agents with criminal activity,
(3) proximity of the area to the border,
(4) usual traffic patterns of that road,
(5) information about recent illegal
trafficking in aliens or narcotics in the
area,
(6) behavior of the vehicle’s driver,
(7) appearance of the vehicle, and
(8) number, appearance, and behavior of the
passengers.
Under this test, if there is no reason to believe that the
vehicle has come from the border, the remaining factors must be
examined charily. United States v. Pallares-Pallares, 784 F. 2d
1231, 1233 (5th Cir. 1986). When the stop occurs a substantial
distance from the border, this element is missing. United States
v. Melendez-Gonzalez, 727 F. 2d 407, 411 (5th Cir. 1984). In
Inocencio we determined that vehicles traveling more than 50 miles
from the border are usually a “substantial distance” from the
border. Inocencio, 40 F. 3d at 722, n. 7 (internal quotes
omitted). A stop 60 miles from the Mexican border, we have found,
was not near enough to the border to justify a belief that the
vehicle originated from the border. Melendez, 727 F. 2d at 411.
Because Rodriguez was stopped more than 50 miles from the
border, we examine most carefully the remaining Brignoni-Ponce
factors. Even when we do so in a light most favorable to the
prevailing party on the motion to dismiss, Inocencio, 40 F. 3d at
721, our review of the record demonstrates that, in the totality of
6
the circumstances, agent Garcia lacked sufficient articulable facts
to satisfy the reasonable suspicion standard.1
The record reveals that U.S. Highway 385 is frequently used by
smugglers in an attempt to avoid the regularly-manned checkpoint on
U.S. Highway 67. This fact was well-known to Garcia, who has
arrested many drug and alien smugglers along that highway during
his eight-plus year tenure with the Border Patrol. He was also
well-acquainted with the usual traffic in the area and could
recognize many of the locals and the ranch and park employees, as
well as the typical tourists who visit the park. The highway,
however, serves as the main entrance to a popular national park2
where most visitors arrive by car.
Garcia’s experience also familiarized him with the practice of
the use of a lead car to warn a following vehicle carrying
contraband of the presence of law enforcement officers. He was
aware that Mexican customs officials sometimes participated in this
practice, and became more alert to passing traffic after he had
stopped a vehicle occupied by such officials. Nothing in the
record, however, indicates that the customs officials could contact
and warn another vehicle. Garcia did not see a C.B. radio, a
walkie-talkie, or a cellular phone in the officials’ car.
From his Border Patrol work, Garcia also knew that smugglers
1
See also United States v. Jones, 1998 WL 432635 (5th Cir. (Tex)).
2
Judicial notice has been taken that in 1975 Big Bend National
Park admitted some 331,000 visitors.
7
wait for a shift change to drive past a check point. Usually the
stations are unmanned during this period; smugglers run a lesser
risk of discovery when traveling at that time. Because Garcia’s
check point had not been consistently manned before the stop in
question, we do not find the time of the stop particularly relevant
in creating reasonable suspicion.
When Rodriguez’s mini-van approached Garcia’s marked Border
Patrol vehicle, the agent was alerted to the possibility of
criminal activity for several reasons. The mini-van appeared to
Garcia to be traveling “at a high rate of speed,” although the
speed limit on U.S. Highway 385 is 70 miles per hour. A second
reason Rodriguez raised agent Garcia’s suspicion was his posture in
the vehicle; he seemed to be slouched low in his seat. Garcia’s
experience was that this posture is typical for someone trying to
avoid identification. We note, however, that Rodriguez was only
5'7" tall.
Coupling this posture with the possibility that the Mexican
customs agents he had stopped some 15 minutes earlier could have
been lookouts for a smuggler, Garcia attempted to identify the
vehicle registration. He saw no front license plate on the mini-
van, although Texas requires one. He then made a U-turn to follow
the mini-van. Garcia saw that there was no rear license plate and
no temporary tag; the mini-van displayed only an advertisement for
a San Antonio auto dealer. Based on the foregoing events and his
observations, Garcia suspected that the van could be carrying
8
illegal aliens. Only then did he stop the mini-van to verify its
registration and the driver’s immigration status.
We recognize also, however, that U.S. Highway 385 serves as a
major entrance to Big Bend National Park and that the record
reveals no evidence of communication between the two vehicles
Garcia stopped. Although the lack of required vehicle tags is a
factor to consider in determining the reasonableness of the stop,
we note that the absence of Texas license plates alone does not
authorize a Border Patrol agent to stop a vehicle. Considering
those facts, as well as Rodriguez’ height and the absence of
evidence of a speed limit violation, we find that, when viewed in
the aggregate, the Border Patrol agent did not articulate facts
clearly sufficient to create a reasonable suspicion that Rodriguez
was engaged in illegal activity.3 Since we find that the stop of
3
Garcia’s testimony at the motion to suppress supports this
finding. At the time of this stop Garcia was under the impression
that the appropriate standard was mere suspicion not reasonable
suspicion. Until he was corrected by the Assistant U.S. Attorney,
this eight-year plus veteran agent testified to the following:
The law states that we may stop any
conveyance, any vehicle on mere suspicion that
we suspect that there are illegal aliens on
board. That is the law that we operate on....
And when questioned by the court, “You say under your regulations,
if you have a mere suspicion that a vehicle is being used for alien
smuggling, you can stop it?”, Garcia responded, “Oh, yes, sir...
those are within the confines of the law. That is how we operate.”
Later, responding to the court’s inquiry as to the need for
probable cause or mere suspicion to make a stop, Garcia explained
that “mere suspicion can vary from either one person or numerous
persons, sir.” He characterized the mere suspicion that led him in
9
Rodriguez’s mini-van was unlawful, the evidence obtained from the
stop is the “fruit of a poisonous tree” and was improperly
admitted.
III.
Because we find error in the district court’s denial of the
motion to suppress, we reverse and vacate Rodriguez’s conviction
and remand.
REVERSED, CONVICTION VACATED AND REMANDED.
ENDRECORD
this case to suspect Rodriguez of alien smuggling as the type of
vehicle driven. But he then testified “we have apprehended alien
[sic] smuggling loads in various vehicles. It can be small cars,
large cars, old vans, new vans, ...just anything on wheels can be
used to smuggle illegal aliens... There is no set profile.”
10
EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
A person might think that a drug smuggler should be
featured on the TV program, “America’s Dumbest Criminals”, for
transporting nearly a half ton of marijuana in a vehicle with no
license tags. As it turns out, however, this drug smuggler may be
among America’s smartest criminals, because under today’s ruling,
he will be let go. Not only that, he should receive a reward from
the other smugglers along the Rio Grande who will take this opinion
to heart and also remove the license plates from their trucks and
vans. I dissent.
Not to be misunderstood, I agree that a multi-factor test
governs whether a border patrol agent had reasonable suspicion to
justify stopping a vehicle near the border. United States v.
Brignoni-Ponce, 422 U.S. 873, 884-85, 95 S. Ct. 2574, 2582 (1975);
United States v. Inocencio, 40 F.3d 716, 722 (5th Cir. 1994). The
majority have properly cited that test. In my view, the following
factors4 fulfill the reasonable suspicion test: Highway 385 emerges
from Big Bend National Park and is a road regularly used by drug
and alien smugglers to avoid the permanent border patrol checkpoint
on Highway 67; the appellant was traveling around the time of the
4
All of these factors are listed in the district court’s
careful opinion as grounds for reasonable suspicion except that the
Mexican Customs’ officials’ car preceded appellants’ van by 10-15
minutes.
11
shift change, when there was a higher probability that no one would
be manning the checkpoint;5 the driver was a Hispanic male; Agent
Garcia had minutes before stopped Mexican customs agents who have
been known to escort vehicles containing contraband; the driver was
slouched in his seat, as, in the Agent’s experience, people trying
to avoid identification often are;6 and, the driver was traveling
at a perceived high speed. Most important, there were no proper
identifying license plates on appellant’s van.
Although all of these factors were considered by Agent
Garcia, what could be more telling than the lack of vehicle license
plates? Why would anyone emerging from the wilderness of Big Bend
National Park fail to have license plates, unless to escape
identification? The majority attempts no innocent explanation for
appellant’s failure to have license plates; instead, the majority
simply state that Agent Garcia had no authority, as a Border Patrol
agent, to stop the driver for that traffic violation. This is
correct but irrelevant for two reasons.
5
The majority believe that the timing is irrelevant since the
Highway 385 checkpoint was irregularly staffed. But Agent Garcia
testified that he and his colleagues will work a full shift at that
checkpoint when assigned to it, and one shift runs from 7 a.m. to
3 p.m. The district court thus correctly found that Agent Garcia
was reasonably concerned by the time of day in which appellant was
traveling.
6
The majority discount the driver’s slouching because he was
“only 5'7" tall” and therefore might not be visible above the
driver’s seat. I disagree. Much shorter drivers are clearly
visible if they sit upright. Agent Garcia’s observation, found
credible by the district court, should not be disbelieved at the
appellate level.
12
First, the appellant had no constitutional right not to
be stopped while driving along in blatant violation of traffic
laws. The Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule is intended to combat
unconstitutional actions by law enforcement officers, but its
premise is the violation of a person’s reasonable expectation of
privacy. A person has no reasonable expectation that he will not
be stopped for driving without license plates. By analogy, a man
involved in a barroom brawl would have no constitutional privacy
claim, and hence no ground for suppression, merely because he is
arrested by an off-duty school-crossing guard rather than the local
beat cop. See, e.g., Fields v. City of South Houston, 922 F.2d
1183, 1188 (5th Cir. 1991) (question of officer’s authority to
arrest in § 1983 case turns on constitutional standard and not on
Texas law governing arrest). The proper question is not whether
Agent Garcia had authority to arrest for traffic violations but
whether Agent Garcia had a reasonable suspicion of illegal
smuggling activity based on all the conduct he saw.
Second, even if appellant had some constitutional right
to be arrested only by a traffic law enforcement officer for
driving without license plates, that violation may nevertheless be
pertinent to the multifactor reasonable suspicion standard.7 One
7
Border Patrol agents often rely on the commission of relevant
traffic violations as one ground of reasonable suspicion. See
United States v. Garza, 544 F.2d 222, 224 n.3 (5th Cir. 1976) (“The
turn from an incorrect lane is relevant not to show violation of
traffic laws but to show peculiar driving patterns which support
the officers suspicion that aliens might have entered the United
13
must credit Agent Garcia’s common sense and his eight-plus years of
experience when he inferred that the lack of legally-required
plates, taken together with the other suspicious circumstances,
suggested the possibility of alien or contraband smuggling.
Surely, the absence of license plates in that location is as clear
an indicator of an intent to elude identification as if the
appellant had suddenly sped up on seeing a border patrol car.
Appellant may as well have hoisted a flag saying, “Escape attempt
underway!”
To ignore the absence of license plates, as the majority
have essentially done, is a serious error. From now on, brazen
smugglers can simply breeze by border patrol agents after removing
their license plates. They will thus successfully hinder law
enforcement and investigation8 without any chance that
countermeasures can be taken.
Part of the majority’s unreasonable conclusion seems
directed at Agent Garcia’s failure to adhere to the niceties of
legal language during his testimony. The majority footnotes his
confusion between “mere suspicion” and “reasonable suspicion”. Too
States illegally. Naturally, as in the present case, the two may
be related.”); see also United States v. Espinoza-Santill, 976 F.
Supp. 561, 565-66 (W.D. Tex. 1997) (traffic violation is a factor
a Boarder Patrol officer may consider in development of reasonable
suspicion).
8
Agent Garcia testified that he could not identify the van
without license tags, and a post-arrest attempt to identify it
through the vehicle identification number (VIN) was also fruitless.
14
much is made of this error even for a footnote. As the majority
knows, no suspicion is required for routine border or functional-
equivalent searches,9 while reasonable suspicion is the basis for
stops by roving border patrols like this one. Brignoni-Ponce, 422
U.S. at 884, 95 S. Ct. at 2582. Agent Garcia became momentarily
confused and then explained the distinction correctly. The whole
point of his testimony, however, was to outline the multiple
grounds on which he had a reasonable suspicion that appellant was
engaged in criminal activity. Even more telling, the district
court, which witnessed the testimony, made no mention of Agent
Garcia’s verbal mis-step in his findings. If the district court
did not consider this exchange significant in judging the witness’s
credibility, neither should we.
The Supreme Court has made it clear that “the relevant
inquiry is not whether particular conduct is innocent or guilty,
but the degree of suspicion that attaches to particular types of
non-criminal acts.” United States v. Sokolow, 490 U.S. 1, 10, 109
S. Ct. 1581, 1587 (1989) (quoting Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213,
243-44 n.13, 103 S. Ct. 2317, 2335 n.13 (1973)). Not only does
this case involve a congeries of arguably “innocent”--but certainly
suspicious--circumstances, but in addition, the patently illegal
act of driving without license tags under circumstances that
9
United States v. Cardenas, 9 F.3d 1139, 1147-48 (5th Cir.
1993) (citing United States v. Montoya de Hernandez, 473 U.S. 531,
538, 105 S. Ct. 3304, 3309 (1985)); see also 8 U.S.C. § 1357.
15
advertised the appellant’s desire to evade identification by law
enforcement agents. Taking these facts together, there was more
than reasonable suspicion of illegal conduct.
A final word is in order about the government’s
presentation of this case. The government argued in the district
court, but not in this court, that Agent Garcia’s actions should be
approved under the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule.
This court has applied the good faith exception to a Border Patrol
stop under similar circumstances. United States v. DeLeon-Reyna,
930 F.2d 396, 399 (5th Cir. 1994) (en banc). In DeLeon-Reyna, an
officer’s reasonable but mistaken belief that a truck bore false
license plates was held innocuous under the good-faith exception.
Here, as in DeLeon-Reyna, the agent’s misperception about the
significance of a traffic violation was reasonable and made in good
faith. The government should be chastised for not raising this
plainly controlling issue in defense of its conviction and our
citizens’ safety from illegal drug importation.
I respectfully dissent.
16