United States v. Darrell Hunt

               NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
                          File Name: 17a0673n.06

                                         No. 16-2329

                         UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                            FILED
                              FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT                           Dec 05, 2017
                                                                          DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                   )
                                            )
       Plaintiff-Appellee,                  )
                                            )        ON APPEAL FROM THE
v.                                          )        UNITED STATES DISTRICT
                                            )        COURT FOR THE WESTERN
DARRELL CHRISTOPHER HUNT,                   )        DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
                                            )
       Defendant-Appellant.                 )        OPINION
                                            )

BEFORE: NORRIS, MOORE, and STRANCH, Circuit Judges.

       ALAN E. NORRIS, Circuit Judge. Defendant Darrell Hunt entered into a conditional

guilty plea to one count of drug trafficking, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), for which he received a

sentence of 180 months of imprisonment. On appeal, he challenges the denial of his motion to

suppress evidence stemming from a traffic stop.

                                                I.

       This prosecution arose from an investigation into heroin trafficking conducted by the

West Michigan Enforcement Team (“the Team”). On September 2, 2015, the Team applied for,

and received, a search warrant for “GPS/precision locator information for the cellular phone

number 231-220-7228, for 9/1/2015 through 10/01/2015 and subscriber information including

but not limited to MSID, ESN call detail records, incoming and outgoing call records with tower

information, text message setup information for the time period September 1, 2015 through

October 1, 2015.”
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                                                                                   No. 16-2329

       Detective Kyle Hall submitted an affidavit in support of the application. According to the

affidavit, Hall supervised two controlled drug purchases made by a confidential informant two

weeks before the search at issue. The informant told Hall that he had “contact on multiple

occasions with an individual known . . . as ‘Brick.’” He went on to identify Brick as defendant,

and indicated that defendant would travel fortnightly to Chicago in order “to pick up large

quantities of heroin and cocaine.” The same informant provided the cell phone number listed in

the search warrant, which he said belonged to defendant.

       The affidavit went on to state that defendant was currently on parole for a prior drug

trafficking offense. At the subsequent suppression hearing, defendant’s parole officer testified

that a condition of parole was that defendant would not leave Michigan without permission. A

second condition of parole obliged defendant to give law enforcement officers consent to search

when requested.

       The search and seizure at issue occurred in the early hours of September 13, 2015.

Michigan State Trooper Christopher Boven received word from the Team that defendant’s cell

phone was in the Chicago area. Using tracking data authorized by the search warrant, a Kia

Sportage was followed into Michigan. It contained defendant and his wife, An Nett, his adult

daughter, Mercedes, and her minor children. According to Detective Hall’s suppression hearing

testimony, defendant stopped at a gas station in Grand Haven, Michigan where his daughter took

the wheel. Trooper Boven trailed the vehicle at the request of the Team and eventually pulled it

over at 12:34 a.m. for a lane violation. A dashboard camera recorded the stop and some, but not

all, of the subsequent events.

       Before pulling defendant’s car over, Trooper Boven learned from the Team that a K-9

unit was on the way. Ottawa County Sheriff’s Deputy Jeremy Osbun and his police dog, Zino,


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arrived at the site of the stop within ten minutes. Before Deputy Osbun arrived, Trooper Boven

and his partner, Andrew Rothermal, approached defendant’s car. Trooper Boven explained to the

driver, Mercedes Hunt, that she had been pulled over for a lane violation and asked whether she

had had anything to drink. According to his suppression hearing testimony, Ms. Hunt told him

that they were coming from Chicago where they had attended a baby shower. Trooper Boven

returned to his cruiser after collecting everyone’s identification and ran the information through

two law enforcement databases to check for outstanding warrants and to confirm that Mercedes

Hunt was a valid driver. Defendant contends that Trooper Boven entered the information slowly

in order to prolong the traffic stop until the canine unit arrived, which it did shortly after he

finished processing the licenses.

       Once Deputy Osbun arrived, Trooper Boven explained the situation to him to “keep him

in the loop” and for officer safety. He also turned off the dashboard camera. According to his

testimony, he did so to prevent information about the confidential informant from coming to

light in case the stop revealed no drugs. After speaking with Deputy Osbun, however, Trooper

Boven apparently forgot to restart the dashboard camera and, as a result, there is no footage of

the search of the car. In total, twenty minutes elapsed before the camera was restarted.

       Trooper Boven asked Mercedes Hunt for permission to search the car. She declined. The

officer then explained that they would perform a canine search and “depending on what the dog

indicated or didn’t indicate, we’d get them on their way momentarily.” The dog alerted for the

presence of drugs on the rear passenger-side compartment door area.

       After the alert, Trooper Boven told defendant that the dog had detected narcotics and

requested that he step out of the car. Defendant asked if he could speak to Boven behind the

patrol car. Once there, he told the officer that the car contained both heroin and cocaine. At that


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point, defendant was handcuffed. At approximately the time that the search of the car was

beginning, Trooper Boven noticed that the dashboard camera had not been restarted and turned it

back on.

       Other officers from the Team had arrived while the dashboard camera was turned off.

They later helped to transport the car’s occupants to the Muskegon Police Department for

questioning. Eventually, Mercedes Hunt, her two minor children, and defendant’s wife were

released. Defendant was arrested and detained. In the course of questioning, defendant admitted

that the drugs found in the car were his and that no one else knew of them.

       Defendant filed a motion to suppress evidence. It raised the following arguments: 1) that

there was insufficient reasonable suspicion to conduct the canine sniff; 2) there was insufficient

evidence of the the reliability of the dog sniff, in part because of the missing dashboard camera

footage; 3) the search warrant used to obtain defendant’s cell phone information was invalid

because lacked information concerning the reliability of the confidential informant; and

4) defendant’s statements implicating himself were coerced and therefore should be excluded.

                                               II.

       On appeal from the denial of a motion to suppress, “we review the district court’s

findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo.” United States v. Hurst,

228 F.3d 751, 756 (6th Cir. 2000). In doing so, the evidence must be considered “‘in the light

most likely to support the district court’s decision.’” Id. (quoting United States v. Navarro–

Camacho, 186 F.3d 701, 705 (6th Cir. 1999)).

1. Validity of the Search Warrant

       In his affidavit supporting the search warrant, Detective Hall made the following

statements: a confidential informant had recently made two controlled purchases for the Team


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and was supervised by Hall; the informant told Hall that he knew defendant “travels to Chicago

at least once every other week to pick up large quantities of heroin and cocaine” and is known by

the nickname Brick; the informant provided Hall with a cell phone number he said was used by

defendant; Hall verified that defendant was currently on parole for a 2013 drug trafficking

offense. Defendant contends that the affidavit was insufficient on its face because it failed to tie

the confidential informant to defendant. There is no allegation that the informant bought drugs

from defendant, nor is there any information about how he knew that defendant was making trips

to Chicago.

       The district court reasoned that the relatively recent interaction between Hall and the

confidential informant was enough to demonstrate the informant’s reliability. Moreover, the

court found the requested warrant to be a “comparatively noninvasive way to find out if there

was truth and validity to what the confidential informant was saying about Mr. Hunt traveling

between Chicago and West Michigan.” In short, the affidavit established probable cause.

       Probable cause exists when an issuing magistrate finds a fair probability, given the

totality of the circumstances, that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular

place. United States v. Williams, 544 F.3d 683, 686 (6th Cir. 2008); Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S.

213, 238 (1983). In our view, Detective Hall’s affidavit satisfies this deferential standard. First,

the reliability of the confidential informant was based upon two recent interactions with Hall in

which Hall entrusted the informant with “buy” money, and the informant returned with the

narcotics as instructed. Second, Hall determined that defendant was on parole for a drug

trafficking crime, which is precisely the activity that the informant accused defendant of

engaging in. And, third, there is a “nexus” between the trips to Chicago to purchase drugs and

the location of defendant’s cell phone, the number of which the informant provided.


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2. The Length of the Stop

       Defendant next argues that the search violated the Fourth Amendment because the

officers extended the stop beyond the time required to investigate the traffic violation in order to

conduct a canine sniff. The district court determined that the delay was not excessive, relying

upon United States v. Collazo, 818 F.3d 247, 257-58 (6th Cir. 2016), in which we countenanced

a traffic stop that exceeded twenty-one minutes based on the totality of the circumstances. Here,

the district court observed that the canine unit appeared within ten minutes of the stop, the car’s

paperwork, which was a rental, did not include any of the passengers as authorized drivers, and

the GPS information indicated that defendant had been out-of-state, which was prohibited by the

terms of his parole. While these factors might individually have an innocent explanation, the

court found that “from a law enforcement perspective all that adds up . . . to a reasonable

suspicion for an extension, which . . . wasn’t very long anyway.”

       We affirm based upon the reasoning of the district court.

3. Does the Lack of Dashboard Camera Footage Taint the Canine Search?

       As mentioned earlier, Trooper Boven turned off the dashboard camera when Deputy

Osbun arrived. The United States Supreme Court has explained that, when assessing probable

cause to conduct a search subsequent to a positive canine alert for narcotics, a flexible “totality

of the circumstances” test applies. Florida v. Harris, 568 U.S. 237, 244 (2013). A defendant

must have the opportunity to challenge evidence of the dog’s reliability, however, whether by

cross-examination of its handler or by introducing his own fact or expert witnesses. Id. at 247.

       Defendant contends that the lack of a visual record of the search undermines his ability to

challenge the legitimacy of the canine alert to narcotics. First, there are no records maintained of

the dog’s prior performance in the field. Second, Deputy Osbun recalled up to six false alerts at


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the suppression hearing, which defendant contends is a significant number given that dogs are

deployed only when the presence of drugs is suspected. Third, the lack of dashboard camera

footage makes it nearly impossible for defendant to challenge whether Deputy Osbun’s

interaction with the dog may have influenced its subsequent alert. Finally, defendant

characterizes the missing video footage as “spoliation” for which the government must be held

responsible.

          The district court thought otherwise with respect to spoliation, which “requires something

more than failing to capture all the information you would have the ability to capture.” Rather,

spoliation contemplates destruction or loss of evidence that has already been created. With

respect to Deputy Osbun’s testimony, the district court noted that the deputy testified about how

he conducted searches in general and in this case specifically. Defendant had the opportunity to

cross-examine Deputy Osbun about his method and thereby challenge the legitimacy of the

search.

          The missing footage is concerning but not fatal to the search. Harris relies on a

commonsense, totality of the circumstances test. As the district court observed, defendant had the

opportunity to question Deputy Osbun about his method of conducting canine searches, thereby

satisfying Harris, 568 U.S. at 247. In our view, defendant had sufficient opportunity to contest

the canine search and it was therefore properly considered in the probable cause determination.

4. Were Defendant’s Statements Involuntary?

          The final issue raised by defendant concerns the statements that he made concerning his

ownership of the drugs in question. He argues that those statements were involuntary because

they were made to exculpate his family members, motivated in part by officers’ threats to call

child protective services on his daughter.


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       The district court found that “the record . . . suggests that Mr. Hunt was comfortable

enough with his situation, nervous though he may have been, to ask the officer ‘Can we move to

the back of the car? I want to talk to you privately.’” The court reasoned that such behavior was

that of a person who is trying “to cut the best deal and position himself in the best way he can,

protecting his family at the same time.” In short, the court found “no testimony to . . . indicat[e]

that any of that happened in a coercive way.” Our independent review of the record supports this

conclusion. At the time that defendant offered his initial inculpatory statements, he knew that the

drugs, which he had placed in his car without the knowledge of his family members, had been

detected. While he may have offered his statements in part to ensure that his family members

were not implicated in drug trafficking, the record does not indicate that defendant’s statements

were coerced.

                                                III.

       The judgment is affirmed.




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