United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
F I L E D
REVISED SEPTEMBER 12, 2006
September 5, 2006
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
Charles R. Fulbruge III
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Clerk
No. 05-40460
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff – Appellee,
versus
JUAN GERARDO BARRERA,
Defendant – Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
Before KING, STEWART, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges
CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:
Juan Gerardo Barrera (“Juan”) was indicted for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
In the trial court, he moved to suppress the evidence that formed the basis for his arrest, arguing that,
by entering his home without a warrant for his arrest, probable cause, or other lawful authority, law
enforcement officers violated his Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The district
court denied Juan’s motion to suppress and sentenced him to fifty-seven months imprisonment to be
followed by three years of supervised release. Juan appeals, renewing the merits of his previous
motion to suppress and arguing that the law enforcement officers who entered his residence did not
conduct sufficient due diligence and, therefore, had no reasonable belief that his brother Jose
Humberto Barrera (“Jose”) lived at the residence or was inside when they executed the arrest warrant
at Juan’s home. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of the motion to
suppress, holding it was not clearly erroneous.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The following events transpired as a result of a warrant received and executed by Deputy
United States Marshal Alejandro Ramos (“Ramos”) for Jose Barrera; Juan, Jose’s brother and the
subject of this appeal, was never the focus of Ramos’s investigation. Ramos testified at Juan’s
suppression hearing that, on October 9, 2003, he attempted to execute an arrest warrant for Juan’s
brother, Jose, a drug trafficker known to carry a weapon. In compiling research on Jose, Ramos
discovered that Jose’s official address, as reported by his probation officer, was 1222 St. Patrick
Street, the home of Jose’s mother. A visit to that address revealed that Jose no longer lived there.
Ramos later learned that Jose had been arrested earlier that year at 1209 St. Michael Street
(“St. Michael”) and that a bail bondsman through which Jose had made bond confirmed that Jose had
given the St. Michael address as his place of residence. Furthermore, a Laredo police officer told
Ramos that Jose was known to drive an orange Hummer, an orange Corvette or a pearl Escalade and
that after Jose’s Hummer was stolen and recovered, Juan had paid to retrieve it from the impound.
2
After gathering this information, Ramos acted fast,1 relying primarily on his leads and
conducting little further research regarding Jose’s whereabouts. On October 9, 2003, the Laredo
Police Department (“LPD”) advised Ramos that all three vehicles suspected to belong to Jose were
at the St. Michael location. While in route to St. Michael, the LPD informed Ramos that one of the
Barrera brothers had left the residence in the Corvette. Therefore, when Ramos saw the Corvette,
he conducted a traffic stop; the stop revealed that the driver was Mauro Barrera (“Mauro”), the
brother of Juan and Jose. Mauro agreed to accompany Ramos and approximately five other law
enforcement officers back to the St. Michael residence; Mauro explained that the house belonged to
Juan, who was present at the residence, but that he had not seen Jose.
Thereafter, the officers arrived at the residence and surrounded it. There was no answer to
the officers’ knocking on the door, nor did anyone respond to a phone call made by Mauro to the
residence. After approximately fifteen minutes had elapsed, Juan answered the door wrapped in a
towel. He was surprised to see the officers and began backing away from the door with his hand
behind his back. As Juan stepped backwards, Ramos heard something drop, but was unable to see
1
Juan, on the other hand, argues that Ramos’s due diligence and research was conducted and
gathered quickly and sloppily. For example, Ramos testified that he did not personally observe Jose
at the St. Michael address nor did he conduct long-term surveillance. He also did not ascertain the
name of the record owner of 1209 St. Michael prior to searching the residence. Ramos failed to
document in his arrest report the source of the leads/tips he had received about Jose. Furthermore,
the paper license plate on the Hummer did not identify the owner, and Ramos did not call the dealer
that sold the Hummer to ascertain the name of the owner; a subsequent investigation revealed that
the three vehicles were not actually registered to any of the Barrera brothers. As we will explain,
however, viewing the record in the light most favorable to the government, we agree with the district
court that Ramos’s investigation was sufficient.
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what it was. Officer Jorge Medina of the LPD (“Medina”) then advised Juan to step to the side and
to identify the item that was dropped.2
At that point, Officers Medina and Chavez entered the residence without seeking permission
and retrieved the firearm from the floor. Juan was cooperative; he made no attempt to close the door
and gave Ramos permission to search his residence. His consent, however, was sought by Ramos
after the officers had already entered the residence. Juan also advised the officers that Jose was in
Cancun, Mexico. A search of Juan’s residence did not lead the officers to Jose; however, the officers
observed what was later determined to be $10,000 on Juan’s bed and a closed briefcase containing
a firearm inside a closet in the bedroom. At that point, Ramos asked Juan if he was on probation or
had a criminal history and Juan advised Ramos that he was on probation for attempted murder.
Before that conversation, Ramos was unaware that Juan had a felony conviction. Ramos then
notified ATF Agent David Martinez3 that weapons had been found at Juan’s residence and continued
searching Juan’s residence.
Thereafter, Juan was indicted for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He moved to
suppress the evidence that formed the basis for his arrest, arguing that, by entering his home without
a warrant for his arrest, probable cause, or other lawful authority, law enforcement officers violated
his Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. At the suppression hearing, Medina
testified that it was he who told Ramos that Jose previously had been arrested at the St. Michael
residence, and that he did so prior to the search of the residence in October 2003. Medina also
explained that he had not observed Jose at that address since his arrest in May 2003. Moreover,
2
Juan testified at trial that he responded that the item was a firearm.
3
Martinez executed an arrest warrant for Juan on June 10, 2004.
4
Medina stated that when Juan opened the door, Medina identified himself and Juan began to back
away from the door with his right hand next to his right leg. Though Medina explained that he did
not see what Juan held in his hand, he testified that he believed Juan had moved back because he was
wearing a towel, until he heard a “clank.” Medina testified that, at that point, he stepped inside the
doorway to recover the firearm for safety purposes.
During Ramos’s testimony at the suppression hearing, he pointed out, in addition to the
factual occurrences at Juan’s residence, that he was aware that the presence of a handgun inside a
residence alone is not a sufficient basis to justify entering a residence; however, Ramos explained that
because he had an arrest warrant for an individual, he actually did not need permission to enter the
residence. Therefore, Ramos clarified his statement, stating that his asking permission to enter Juan’s
residence was not required by law but instead was a personal practice and if Juan had not given him
permission to search his home, Ramos would have searched it anyway. Finally, Ramos testified that
when he entered the residence, he: (1) did not believe that there was a possibility that any evidence
would be removed or destroyed if he had to wait for a search warrant; (2) was not in hot pursuit of
a suspect; and (3) did not believe that there was an immediate risk to the officers based on activity
inside the residence.4
The district court ultimately denied the motion to suppress, even though it found that Juan
did not give the officers consent to enter his residence and no exigent circumstances justified entry
into the residence. It held that the arrest warrant for Jose was sufficient to allow the officers to enter
Juan’s residence. The court reasoned that because Ramos had received information that (1) on or
4
Medina also made similar statements, agreeing that hot pursuit, officer safety, or destruction of
evidence was not an issue in this case.
5
prior to October 9, 2003, Jose had been arrested at the St. Michael location; (2) a bail bondsman had
reported that Jose previously had listed the St. Michael location as his residence; (3) Jose’s other
known address was no longer valid; and (4) a Laredo police officer had advised that vehicles known
to be used by Jose were present at the St. Michael location, it was reasonable for Ramos to believe
that it was highly probable that Jose resided at and might be found at the St. Michael address.
The court found it inconsequential that, in hindsight, the information that Jose lived at the
residence may have been incorrect, even though Jose had not been seen at the residence since May
2003. The court stated that “what makes the search or entry into the home valid was the fact that
they were executing a valid arrest warrant, although for someone else, but once they have a legal right
to enter the home and they talked to [Juan], and he admits that he had possession of the gun and had
dropped the gun and they find the gun, I think one thing leads to another and validates legally
whatever flowed from that.” The district court also denied Juan’s motion to reconsider the motion
to suppress, essentially reiterating its previous ruling.
After a stipulated bench trial, the court found Juan guilty of possession of a firearm by a
convicted felon. A probation officer prepared a Presentence Report (PSR) setting Juan’s base offense
level at 24. After reducing Juan’s base offense level by three levels for acceptance of responsibility,
Juan’s total offense level of 21 and criminal history category of III yielded a guidelines range of
imprisonment of 46 to 57 months of imprisonment. The district court sentenced Juan to 57 months
of imprisonment to be followed by three years of supervised release. Juan filed a timely notice of
appeal.
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DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
When reviewing a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, this court reviews questions
of law de novo and factual findings for clear error. United States v. Dortch, 199 F.3d 193, 197 (5th
Cir. 1999). This court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the party who prevailed in
the district court. Id.
Furthermore, the court should review the district court’s determination that law enforcement
officers had an objectively “reasonable belief” that the individual mentioned in the arrest warrant
resided at and was presently within a particular residence. United States v. Route, 104 F.3d 59, 62
(5th Cir. 1997). Like “reasonable suspicion” or “probable cause” the requirement that an officer have
a “reasonable belief” is not a finely-tuned standard. See Ornelas v. United States, 517 U.S. 690, 696
(1996) (explaining that those terms are “commonsense, nontechnical conceptions that deal with the
factual and practical considerations of everyday life on which reasonable and prudent men, not legal
technicians, act”). “Reasonable belief” can only be ascertained through a weighing of the facts in the
record, as it is a “fluid concept[] that takes [its] substantive content from the particular contexts in
which the standard[] [is] being assessed.” Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 232(1983).
B. Whether Ramos had a Reasonable Belief that Jose Resided at the St. Michael Address
Juan renews his challenge of the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress, arguing that
the law enforcement officers who entered his residence had no reasonable belief that Jose lived at the
residence, nor that he was present within the residence. He further contends that the officers did not
perform sufficient due diligence to form a reasonable belief that Jose lived at the residence and any
inference the officers could have drawn from the facts amount to nothing more than a mere
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assumption. He asserts that, absent exigent circumstances, the Fourth Amendment’s protection
against unreasonable searches and seizures demands that law enforcement seek a warrant prior to
entering the home of a third party for whom a warrant has not been issued. Finally, he explains that
because the officers did not seek a warrant to search his residence, the evidence obtained is the
product of an unlawful warrantless search and should have been excluded.
The Government states that the district court’s decision is correct and Ramos’s investigation
did create a reasonable belief because (1) Ramos was told that Jose had been arrested at St. Michael,
(2) Jose’s bail bondsman told Ramos that Jose had given St. Michael as his address, and (3) the
officers eliminated the possibility that Jose lived at 1222 St. Patrick Street by going there and learning
that he no longer lived there, the officers established a basis for the reasonable belief that Jose resided
at 1209 St. Michael. The Government also explains that the officers had a reason to believe that Jose
was in the house because the officers were told that several vehicles owned and used by Jose were
parked in the vicinity of the St. Michael address on October 9, 2003, and “common sense supports
the deputy’s formulation of a reasonable belief that the subject of his arrest warrant would be in the
dwelling around which his expensive vehicles were parked.” Thus, it argues that because the officers
had reason to believe that the subject of their arrest warrant resided and was inside of the St. Michael
address, their entry into the dwelling and search of the premises did not “run afoul of the Fourth
Amendment.”
The Supreme Court has “consistently held that the entry into a home to conduct a search or
make an arrest is unreasonable . . . unless done pursuant to a warrant” except when exigent
circumstances are present. Steagald v. United States, 451 U.S. 204, 211-12 (1981). Furthermore,
the Court has stated that “for Fourth Amendment purposes, an arrest warrant founded on probable
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cause implicitly carries with it the limited authority to enter a dwelling in which the suspect lives when
there is reason to believe the suspect is within.” Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573, 603 (1980).
Payton, however, did not define the “reason to believe” standard it discussed; this court in Route,
104 F.3d at 62, nonetheless, distinguished5 it from the standard for probable cause and adhered to the
articulation of the test for “reasonable belief” set forth in United States v. Woods, 560 F.2d 660 (5th
Cir. 1977). In Woods, this court determined that “[r]easonable belief embodies the same standards
of reasonableness [as probable cause] but allows the officer, who has already been to the magistrate
to secure an arrest warrant, to determine that the suspect is probably within certain premises without
an additional trip to the magistrate and without exigent circumstances.” Woods, 560 F.2d at 665
(quotation and citation omitted). Furthermore, we held that courts should review the reasonableness
of an officer’s judgment. Id.
In Route, police officers executed a valid arrest warrant for the defendant, Route, outside of
his residence. 104 F.3d at 61. During the arrest of a co-defendant, for whom officers also had a valid
arrest warrant, officers found evidence incriminating Route inside the residence. Id. at 61-62. Route
challenged the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence seized from the residence.
5
Federal and state appellate courts that have addressed the reason to believe standard set forth in
Payton have disagreed as to whether that standard should be explicitly characterized as equivalent
to the probable cause standard. United States v. Gorman, 314 F.3d 1105, 1111-15 (9th Cir. 2002)
(concluding reasonable belief standard in Payton embodies the same standard of reasonableness
inherent in probable cause); Valdez v. McPheters, 172 F.3d 1220, 1224-25 (10th Cir.1999)
(criticizing Ninth Circuit authority that had required showing of probable cause to believe defendant
resided at location where arrest warrant executed); Green v. State, 78 S.W.3d 604, 612 (Tex. Ct.
App. 2002) (distinguishing reasonable belief and probable cause). The disagreement among the
circuits has been more about semantics than substance; the courts that distinguish the terms have done
so because “probable cause” is a term of art. Route, 104 F.3d at 62. Even though they may
distinguish the reasonable belief standard from probable cause, they also define the “reason to believe
standard” as requiring that the officers reasonably believe that “the suspect is probably within” the
premises. Id. (emphasis added).
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Id. This court held that the search of Route’s residence was supported by a valid arrest warrant for
the co-defendant and by the officer’s reasonable belief that the co-defendant lived at the residence and
was within the residence at the time of entry. Id. at 62-63. This court concluded that the arresting
officer had performed sufficient due diligence in concluding that the co-defendant lived at the
residence because the co-defendant’s credit card applications, water and electricity bills, vehicle
registration, and mailing address confirmed that he lived at the residence. Id. This court further
concluded that the officer’s reasonable belief that the co-defendant was within the residence at the
time of entry was confirmed by the presence of a vehicle in the driveway and noise from a television
inside the residence. Id. at 63.
Route offers a standard for determining the amount of due diligence required to support a
reasonable belief that a defendant lives at and is present within a residence. It is the sole published
Fifth Circuit precedent addressing the issue; the courts in United States v. Bervaldi, 226 F.3d 1256
(11th Cir. 2000), and United States v. Lovelock, 170 F.3d 339 (2d Cir. 1999), however, have dealt
with such issues in the same manner.
Bervaldi contains facts analogous to Juan’s case and to Route; it is also illustrative of the
applicable “reasonable belief” standard. In Bervaldi, police officers tried to execute a search warrant
at Bervaldi’s residence–but Bervaldi was not the subject of the warrant; Deridder was. 226 F.3d
1258. The officers decided to execute the warrant and knocked on Bervaldi’s door for about ten
minutes; finally, someone opened the door approximately a foot wide and when the officers identified
themselves and noticed that the person peering behind the door had the same physique as Deridder,
the officers kicked in the door. Id. Though they did not discover Deridder inside, they did detect the
smell of marijuana as they conducted a protective sweep of the premises. When questioned about
10
the odor, Bervaldi consented to a search of his premises and showed the officers the sixty pounds of
marijuana hidden in the kitchen cupboard, after which a few of the officers left to secure a search
warrant. When they returned with a search warrant, a search was conducted that resulted in the
discovery and seizure of, among other things, seventeen sealed baggies of marijuana, one kilogram
of cocaine, three bags of cocaine cutting agent, $53,483 in cash and a semiautomatic pistol and rifle
with ammunition. Id. at 1259. Bervaldi sought to suppress the evidence during his trial asserting that
the officers did not have a reasonable belief that Deridder resided at Bervaldi’s residence; the district
court granted the motion. Id. at 1259, 1262. It weighed the evidence and found that even though
the officers had searched vehicle registration records and determined that Deridder’s car was in the
vicinity of the residence, Bervaldi’s presentation of utility records as well as a warranty deed with his
name on it was more compelling. Id. at 1262. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit reversed deeming the
evidence, particularly the presence of Deridder’s vehicle in the vicinity of Bervaldi’s house as well
as officers observing the subject leaving Bervaldi’s house during surveillance, sufficient to amount
to a reason to believe that Deridder resided and was inside the house upon the execution of the
warrant. Id. at 1263-69.
Furthermore, as the district court noted, the Second Circuit’s holding in Lovelock offers
support for the district court’s denial of Juan’s motion to suppress. 170 F.3d 339. In Lovelock, New
York City police officers attempting to execute an arrest warrant for a person other than Lovelock,
discovered in an attic apartment at 744 East 229th Street in the Bronx a variety of paraphernalia for
the creation of counterfeit checks and the falsification of credit cards and cellular-telephone
identification numbers. Id. at 341. An officer involved in the search testified that the warrant was
for the arrest of Jon Williams, who had violated his probation, and it listed Williams’s “residence
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address” as “744 E 229th St.,” “Bronx, N.Y.” Id. The officers believed this address to be Williams’s
address, and explained that violations of probation normally include accurate information because the
defendant must report to his probation officer regularly and must notify the officer of any change of
address. Id. at 341-42. When the officers arrived at the residence listed on the warrant, they showed
a picture of Williams to a tenant on the first floor of the apartment building; the tenant identified the
person in the picture as living in the attic of the building. Id. at 342. The officers made the same
inquiry to a second floor tenant, who also responded that the man in the picture stayed upstairs. Id.
The officers then went up to the attic, where they found the door slightly ajar and therefore believed
that Williams either was inside or had learned that the officers were there and was fleeing through a
rear exit. Id. Knowing that Williams had been convicted of criminal possession of a weapon, the
officers entered the attic apartment without knocking or announcing themselves. Id. They found no
persons in the apartment, but in the center of the floor in the main room they saw numerous electronic
devices, including computers, printers, copying machines, and cellular telephones, and “all kinds of
checks that were already written and blank checks.” Id. The officers promptly placed calls to the
computer fraud unit, the Bronx District Attorney’s Office, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and
the United States Secret Service. Id. Two officers then remained in the apartment while others went
outside to maintain surveillance of the building. Id. One officer, looking out the window, saw
Lovelock arrive at the building some three hours later; the officer recognized Lovelock from a picture
within the apartment. Id. Without knowing his name, the officers arrested Lovelock when he entered
the apartment. Id.
Prior to trial, Lovelock moved to suppress the physical evidence, as well as certain statements
he made to the officers, on the ground that he was a resident of the apartment and the officers’ entry
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into the apartment was unlawful. Id. He argued that the officers did not have a reasonable belief that
Williams was inside of the residence because the officers did not contact Williams’s probation officer
to confirm the address, they did not contact postal employees to confirm if any recent deliveries were
made to that address for Williams, and they did not attempt to cross-check that address against listed
telephone numbers to determine whether Williams had a telephone listed to him at that address. Id.
The district court denied the motion to suppress, noting that “‘[a]gents may enter a suspect’s
residence, or what they have reason to believe is his residence, in order to effectuate an arrest warrant
where a reasonable belief exists that the suspect is present.’” Id. The Second Circuit affirmed,
holding that “the totality of the information possessed by the officers gave them no reason to doubt
that Williams was then a resident of the attic apartment.” Id. at 344.
Additionally, in reaching its conclusion, the Second Circuit in Lovelock distinguished the facts
in its case from the facts presented in the Supreme Court’s Steagald, 451 U.S. 204 (1981), decision.
170 F.3d at 344. In Steagald, Drug Enforcement Agents (“DEA”) sought to execute a six-month-old
arrest warrant. 451 U.S. at 206. A confidential informant advised the agents that the subject of the
warrant could be located at a telephone number; the DEA used the phone number to secure an
address for the subject of the arrest warrant. Id. Two days later, eleven agents went to the address
given to them by the phone company, drew their weapons at two men standing outside of the house,
and eventually searched them. Id. When neither of the men proved to be the subject of the arrest
warrant, several agents went into the house for a more thorough search for the subject of the arrest
warrant. Id. Instead, the officers ran across a substance they believed to be cocaine; at that point,
an officer was dispatched to secure a search warrant. Id. Officers did not stop searching the house,
however; the search continued, even while the officer was working to obtain the warrant. Id. at 206-
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07. Eventually, the officers discovered approximately forty-three pounds of cocaine. Id. at 207. The
defendants moved to suppress the evidence and the district court denied this motion finding that the
arrest warrant allowed entry into the house and the subsequent search. Id. This court affirmed. Id.
The Supreme Court, however, concluded the search was unreasonable because an arrest warrant
“carries with it the limited authority to enter a dwelling in which the suspect lives when there is a
reason to believe the subject is within” and the evidence in the case suggested otherwise. Id. at 214
n. 7. Accordingly, the Lovelock court explained that its facts differed from Steagald in that the
evidence in Lovelock did suggest that the suspect lived and was within the residence at the time of
the execution of the warrant. 170 F.3d at 344.
Likewise, the facts of this case are also distinguishable from Steagald, as Ramos’s
investigation provided him with a concrete reason to believe Jose resided and was within the St.
Michael address; the evidence did not support a belief that Jose was a mere guest at Juan’s residence.
Accordingly, Juan’s case falls in line with the facts presented in Route, as well as our sister circuits’
decisions in Bervaldi and Lovelock. Thus, we affirm, holding that the district did not clearly err in
denying Juan’s motion to suppress the evidence discovered at his residence while Ramos was
executing a warrant for Jose.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Government, Ramos’s visit to the St.
Michael address was in accordance with the “reasonable belief” standard, as he had received
information from Medina, a member of the LPD, that: (1) Jose had been arrested at the St. Michael
address and had given the address as his place of residence in May 2003; (2) he had also given the
same address as his place of residence to a bail bondsman; and (3) cars known to be driven by Jose
were at the residence. Specifically, consistent with Route and Bervaldi, Ramos reasonably relied on
14
information that cars known to be driven by Jose were at the St. Michael residence as support for
executing the warrant there. Moreover, as the Government argued, that both Juan and Mauro
vehemently denied that Jose was present within the St. Michael residence likely raised a “red flag”
that they were “covering” for their brother and that Jose actually was within the residence.
We recognize the expectation of privacy one enjoys when inside his home; nonetheless, we
agree with the district court in this case, holding that Ramos surpassed the threshold requirements
for the “reason to believe”standard in executing the arrest warrant for Jose in a timely fashion. The
district court did not err in denying the motion to suppress, as Ramos performed due diligence
sufficient to support a finding that he reasonably believed that Jose lived at the St. Michael residence
and was inside the residence during the execution of the warrant. Accordingly, viewing the evidence
in the light most favorable to the Government, we affirm the district court’s denial of the motion to
suppress.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
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