Federal Circuits, 5th Cir. (May 28, 1987)
Docket number: 86-1308
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U.S. Supreme Court - United States v. Inadi, 475 U.S. 387 (1986)
U.S. Supreme Court - United States v. Hensley, 469 U.S. 221 (1985)
U.S. Supreme Court - Oregon v. Elstad, 470 U.S. 298 (1985)
U.S. Supreme Court - Wayte v. United States, 470 U.S. 598 (1985)
U.S. Supreme Court - United States v. Sharpe, 470 U.S. 675 (1985)
Ohio Supreme Court - State v. Weis (Ohio 2007)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Cir. - USA vs. Guerrero (5th Cir. 2004)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Cir. - USA vs. Simmons (5th Cir. 1998)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Cir. - USA vs. Banda (5th Cir. 1999)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Cir. - United States of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Santos Menendez Hernandez and Rigoberto Rosal, Defendants-Appellants., 901 F.2d 1217 (5th Cir. 1990) Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Santos Menendez Hernandez and Rigoberto Rosal, Defendants-Appellants.
Scott Young, Warren L. Collins, Jr., Austin, Tex., for Basey.
Robert J. Kuhn, Austin, Tex., court-appointed, for Ponce.David L. Shapiro, Austin, Tex., court-appointed, for Lopez.Thomas Booth, Dept. of Justice, Appellant Section, Cr. Div., Washington, D.C., Helen M. Eversberg, U.S. Atty., Michael R. Hardy, Asst. U.S. Atty., San Antonio, Tex., for plaintiff-appellee.Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas.Before GARWOOD, JOLLY, and HILL, Circuit Judges.GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:Three defendants appeal their convictions, following a joint jury trial, on charges that they conspired to possess more than fifty kilograms of marihuana with the intent to distribute it, and individual charges of drug possession. Appellant Ben Lee Basey (Basey) was stopped by law enforcement officers investigating a burglary in an isolated, rural area of Burnet County, Texas. Basey claims that the stop was unlawful, that his arrest was pretextual, and that he was therefore subjected to an improper search. Basey urges the suppression of all evidence flowing from these events. He also claims that evidence was insufficient to show he possessed the 1,700 pounds of marihuana found in an abandoned van about two miles from the site of his arrest.The other two appellants--defendants Oscar Quirarte Ponce (Ponce) and Armando Jose Lopez (Lopez)--were arrested in a motel in Austin, Texas, some twenty-eight hours after, and about forty miles from the scene of, Basey's arrest. Both attack the sufficiency of evidence linking them to the marihuana conspiracy. Lopez and Ponce each also protest the admission of Basey's postarrest statements on Sixth Amendment grounds and claim that the district court erred in denying their motions for severance. Ponce further complains of the denial of his motion to quash the entire venire on the ground of prior jury service and the admission of Lopez' postarrest statements; and he also challenges the sufficiency of evidence supporting his conviction of possession of marihuana found in a nightstand in the motel room.We determine that the issues raised by Basey and Lopez lack merit and affirm their convictions. We conclude that Ponce was properly convicted of possessing the marihuana found in the motel nightstand and affirm that conviction, but we hold that evidence was insufficient to prove his participation in the charged conspiracy beyond a reasonable doubt, and accordingly reverse his conviction on that count.I.The facts of this case involve events in two locations: Burnet County, where Basey was arrested, and Austin, where Ponce and Lopez were found in a motel.A. Events in Burnet CountyOn the evening of September 5, 1985, a resident of a rural area of Burnet County, David Naumann, reported to the sheriff's office that his house near the town of Spicewood had been burglarized while he was at work that day.1 Two county sheriff's deputies (Reinhardt Reeh and Randy Meeks) were on routine patrol near the town of Marble Falls when they received a message from the office dispatcher advising them to investigate the complaint. Deputy Reeh testified that the dispatcher informed them that "a particularly suspicious vehicle" had been seen in the area by Naumann and his neighbors, "gave a description of the vehicle and gave us the license plate number," and indicated that the car had last been seen heading in the direction of Marble Falls on Double Horn Road. Deputy Reeh said that Naumann had worked for several years at a small store three to four miles from his home and consequently "he knows almost every person in that community" and was familiar with the vehicles of local residents.The deputies headed towards Naumann's home on Double Horn Road, arriving around 9:00 p.m., some ten minutes after receiving the dispatcher's message, without having spotted the vehicle in question. Deputy Reeh testified that, shortly after the deputies arrived, he heard the sound of a "low-flying aircraft," which he thought was landing at or possibly taking off from an airstrip he knew was on the Blagg ranch about two miles away.Naumann and some of his neighbors met the deputies. Naumann told the deputies that seven firearms were among the missing items, and he and his neighbors said they had seen an unfamiliar car "driving up and down the road" earlier that day. Naumann also reported that just before he arrived home from work that evening and discovered the burglary, he had seen the same car "almost at a stop just down from his gate." Naumann said he had talked to the driver, who claimed to be looking for a woman's house, and that the driver had then driven away on Double Horn Road. Reeh testified that, after the deputies said they had not seen the vehicle, Naumann stated that the vehicle must have gone onto the Blagg Ranch. The record suggests that Naumann had reported the burglary promptly and that only about fifteen minutes elapsed between the time Naumann saw the unfamiliar car near his house on his arrival home from work and the time of the deputies' arrival.About fifteen minutes after the deputies had arrived and while they were conversing with Naumann, a car came down the road from the direction of the Blagg Ranch. A pickup truck was following the car. Naumann told the deputies that he believed that the passing car he was observing--described as a yellow or cream-colored 1980 Ford sedan--was the same one he had seen earlier near his gate just before he discovered the burglary.2The deputies followed and stopped the car. Reeh told the driver, Basey, who had stepped out of the vehicle, that they were investigating the burglary of Naumann's home and asked Basey to produce his driver's license. The license disclosed Basey resided in Arlington, Texas (between Dallas and Fort Worth). Basey explained his presence by claiming he was looking for the home of a woman he had met in a bar, giving a name--Susan Harris--unknown to the officers, and revealed that he had neither directions to nor a phone number for this woman's home. Basey also stated that he had borrowed the car he was driving from a friend.Basey was asked to show proof that he carried adequate liability insurance for the car, which he could not do. Basey was then read his rights and arrested for not complying with Texas' financial responsibility statute, which requires drivers to obtain at least the prescribed minimum levels of liability insurance on vehicles they drive and to carry some proof of this insurance coverage. Deputy Meeks then asked Basey's permission to look into the vehicle's trunk, which Basey granted, and the deputies found that the trunk contained only a spare tire and tire tools. In the passenger compartment, however, the deputies saw two "Handi-Talkie" portable radios and a citizen's band (CB) radio handset, and they observed that at least one radio was set on CB Channel 16 and that a Handi-Talkie radio was tuned to frequency 122.90. Government witnesses later testified that frequency 122.90 is used as an aircraft communications frequency.One of the radios was already switched on, and Deputy Meeks spoke into its microphone and asked if anyone was listening. A voice answered and asked Meeks if he was "the Spiderman." Meeks said that he was and tried to arrange a meeting with the unknown voice, but there was no reply. Another officer was called to take custody of Basey, and a wrecker was summoned to impound his car. Deputies Meeks and Reeh returned to Naumann's home, where they were told that Naumann's neighbors had seen another suspicious vehicle--a white Ford van--in the area. Meeks testified that Reeh told him to continue to search the surrounding area for vehicles that might have been involved in the burglary. Meeks drove towards the Blagg Ranch airstrip and, about two miles from where Basey had been arrested, spotted a white van parked partially hidden in a cluster of cedar trees off the road.The van's windows were open, and its engine was still warm. Four radios were in the front of the van. One or more of the radios were set to CB Channel 16, and a Handi-Talkie radio was tuned to frequency 122.90. At least one Handi-Talkie and one CB were of the same brand and model as those found in Basey's car. The back of the van was stuffed full of baled marihuana, a cargo later determined to weigh some 1,700 pounds. Additional officers were called to the scene and the van was impounded.Basey was taken to and processed at the Burnet County jail. His effects taken into police custody when he was booked included his personal telephone book, which listed the name Armando Lopez, and two scraps of paper, one containing the numbers "441 0143" and "115," the other the name "Danielle Ann Fields." The next day, September 6, Basey was arraigned on state drug charges and again advised of his constitutional rights. Around noon, Burnet County Sheriff's Department criminal investigations officer Bob Simpson interrogated Basey.3 Simpson also contacted the federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) for assistance in investigating the case and provided officers from these agencies the originals and copies of the documents found in Basey's possession.About 5:30 p.m. on the same day as Simpson's interrogation, DEA Agent Javier Pena administered Miranda warnings to Basey again and questioned Basey after informing him that no specific promises of help were being offered. Basey described the general scheme of marihuana trafficking without stating whether he was involved in it. He said the marihuana came from Guadalajara, Mexico, and that a large organization with a ground crew of seven or eight people had brought between forty to fifty tons of marihuana into the United States during each of the preceding four or five years. He named the alleged head of the group and two members, none of whom were defendants in this case.B. Events at the Austin MotelOn the evening of September 6, after Basey's interrogation, Robert Nesteroff, a Texas DPS narcotics investigator specializing in aircraft narcotics smuggling investigations, dialed the "441-0143" number found on Basey and reached a "Super 8" motel located in Austin, approximately forty miles southeast of the site of Basey's arrest. Nesteroff visited the motel at about 10:30 p.m. and learned that room 115 was registered in the name of an Eddie Martinez, from Fort Worth. In the motel parking lot, Nesteroff noticed a silver Chevrolet pickup truck and, in the truck's bed, a large fuel tank, an electric fuel pump with hoses, and spare auto batteries. Nesteroff testified that he could smell "a very strong odor of aviation fuel coming from the tank." Nesteroff claimed that he could recognize the odor of aviation fuel because he worked around aircraft every day, a proposition the defendants did not challenge.Nesteroff recorded the license plate number of the truck and then walked by room 115, where he detected "a very strong odor of burning marihuana emanating from the room" and heard laughter and more than one voice. Nesteroff sought the help of Austin police, obtained a search warrant from a state district judge, and returned with Austin police officers to execute the warrant at about 1:00 a.m. on September 7. At that time, the Chevrolet truck was no longer in the motel parking lot.The agents arranged for the desk clerk to call room 115 and to induce an occupant to leave the room. As the officers waited outside the door, appellant Lopez emerged. The officers detained him and entered the room. In the initial search of the room, the officers found about twenty-five grams of marihuana (nine-tenths of an ounce) in a drawer of the nightstand located between the room's two beds. Lopez was then arrested. The agents searched Lopez and found a small plastic envelope containing a trace of suspected cocaine in his pants' pocket, $10,000 (mostly $10 and $20 bills) stuffed into his socks, and several business cards with numbers and addresses written on them, including Basey's home address.The agents also awakened and arrested the room's only other occupant, appellant Ponce, who had been asleep in one of the room's beds. Ponce was told to dress, and the clothing he selected was searched before he was allowed to put it on. The officers found $1,070 (mostly $10 and $20 bills) and a piece of paper containing, among other things, the name of Danielle Fields (plus address and telephone number) and the telephone numbers of Basey and Lopez, in a pocket of the trousers Ponce indicated were his.The officers informed Lopez and Ponce of their Miranda rights, instructing Ponce in Spanish when it became apparent he did not speak English. During their search of the room, the officers found the following additional items: a small block of suspected hashish in a suitcase which carried the name of a person not in the room; a backpack five feet from the bed Ponce was in containing a .45 caliber automatic pistol, a notebook with radio directional frequencies, navigational charts for Texas and Mexico, and numbers that reflected a flight route between Zacatecas, Mexico, and Fort Worth, Texas.4 Additional flight charts for Texas and Mexico were found in a suitcase near the foot of the bed Ponce was in, and most aviation charts found in both locations bore the stamp of a Fort Worth pilot's shop.While the search progressed, the television set which had been on at low volume when the officers first entered the room continued to operate. A news report about Basey's arrest and the Burnet County marihuana seizure came onto the television, and Lopez asked agents to turn the volume up and was attentive to the broadcast. While Lopez and Ponce were being transported to jail, Lopez asked Nesteroff, "How did you find us?" Nesteroff told Lopez about the telephone number in Basey's possession, and Lopez said, "It figures."The government traced the title records of the various vehicles involved in this case and provided testimony at trial that the Chevrolet truck at the motel and the marihuana-laden Ford van were purchased from the same Forth Worth area seller by the same buyer, Stephen Lee. The seller of these vehicles also owned the car which Basey was driving when he was arrested and testified that the car had been rented under the name "Basye" to a man who did not look like defendant Basey. There was no significant defense evidence.5II.A. The Suppression HearingBasey filed a pretrial motion to suppress evidence, which the other defendants joined, claiming (1) that the deputies' initial investigatory stop of Basey's car was not supported by reasonable suspicion; (2) that the radios seized from the car should be suppressed because they were taken without probable cause or, alternatively, during a pretextual field inventory; and (3) that statements Basey made after his arrest were tainted by the illegality of his arrest. During argument on the motion, Basey's attorney conceded that no motion was made to suppress evidence relating to the van or any of its contents, and stated that he believed Basey lacked standing to challenge the admission of that evidence.The district judge denied Basey's motion on all points raised except his motion to suppress statements Basey made to Officer Simpson (see note 3, supra ). Findings on the motion to suppress, filed one month after trial, state in pertinent part:6"The stop and subsequent arrest of Ben Lee Basey was based on the reasonable suspicion of Officer Ray [sic ] and Officer Meeks that Mr. Basey was engaged in criminal activity, since a vehicle which matched the description of Mr. Basey's vehicle was seen leaving the scene of a burglary moments earlier...."The Court finds that Officers Ray [sic ] and Meeks asked Mr. Basey for proof of liability insurance on the vehicle he was driving and when he was unable to provide any proof, Mr. Basey was arrested. The Court finds the officers acted in good faith in arresting Mr. Basey for failure to provide proof of liability insurance.... Subsequent to Mr. Basey's arrest, the officers searched his vehicle and discovered several two-way radios. These items were properly seized by the officers as the search was incident to Mr. Basey's arrest.... Additionally, the officers had probable cause to believe the vehicle contained evidence of a crime. Consequently, the Court holds that the arrest of Mr. Basey was lawful and the subsequent search of his vehicle was likewise lawful." (Citations omitted.)B. The TrialBasey, Ponce, and Lopez--and no others--were jointly tried on a superseding indictment and found guilty by a jury. All three were convicted of conspiring to possess with intent to distribute the more than fifty kilograms of marihuana found in the abandoned van. In addition, Basey was further found guilty of possessing that same marihuana with the intent to distribute it. Ponce was also convicted of simple possession of the 0.9-ounce of marihuana in the motel nightstand. And Lopez was also found guilty of simple possession of both the 0.9-ounce of marihuana and the cocaine residue.7III.We examine the issues raised on appeal by each party in turn.A. Basey's Contentions on AppealThe resolution of Basey's complaints on appeal depends upon four central issues: (1) the deputies' legal justification for stopping Basey's car and arresting him; (2) the admissibility of the abandoned van and its contents; (3) the admissibility of statements Basey made to Agent Pena; and (4) the sufficiency of evidence supporting Basey's conviction on the substantive offense of possessing the marihuana found in the abandoned van.1. Legality of the Investigatory Stop and Subsequent ArrestBasey asserts that the deputies' investigatory stop of his car was not supported by reasonable suspicion and was therefore unlawful. Consequently, he claims, all evidence discovered as a result of that stop, his subsequent arrest, and the search of the car he was driving is tainted and should be suppressed. This evidence includes the radios found in his car, the papers found on him, and the items found with Ponce and Lopez when they were arrested after the telephone and room numbers taken from Basey were traced. The district court ruled that the stop was a proper one based on reasonable suspicion, that the arrest of Basey was lawful, and that the search of his vehicle was a proper search incident to a custodial arrest. The issue of the propriety of the stop and arrest, and of the search of the car, is dispositive of three of Basey's complaints on appeal.A district court's factfinding on a motion to suppress is reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard, United States v. Duckett, 583 F.2d 1309, 1313 (5th Cir.1978), as are the district court's findings of historical facts on the issue of reasonable suspicion, United States v. Merkt, 764 F.2d 266, 274 (5th Cir.1985) (per curiam). The ultimate determination of reasonableness in investigatory stop cases is, however, a conclusion of law. Cf. Adams v. Williams, 407 U.S. 143, 92 S.Ct. 1921, 32 L.Ed.2d 612 (1972); United States v. Miranda-Perez, 764 F.2d 285 (5th Cir.1985).Under Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct. 1868, 20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968), and its progeny, a temporary investigative stop (a seizure of the person, id. at 18778) is proper if the stop is based on reasonable suspicion9 "that criminal activity may be afoot," id. at 1884.10 The Terry rationale also permits the investigatory detention of a vehicle. E.g., United States v. Cortez, 449 U.S. 411, 101 S.Ct. 690, 694-95, 66 L.Ed.2d 621 (1981). The legality of a vehicle search which takes place after the investigatory stop is a question separate from the issue of whether the stop was permissible. Accordingly, we address first the propriety of the deputies' stop of Basey's car and, then, the events which followed the investigatory detention--Basey's arrest and the subsequent search of the car. (a) The Investigatory Stop of Basey's CarIn Adams, supra, 92 S.Ct. at 1924, the Supreme Court rejected the theory that "reasonable cause for a stop and frisk can only be based on the officer's personal observation" and held, instead, that the proper issue was whether the information which formed the basis of a police officer's actions possessed "indicia of reliability." Id. As in Adams, the deputies in this case acted on information from a citizen they knew; in Adams, although the informant was not reporting a crime of which he was the victim, the Supreme Court suggested that a victim's report of a crime may be inherently reliable. Id. We observe that citizen reports of criminal activity have been deemed inherently reliable in the decisions of other Circuits11 and in Texas Terry-stop cases.12 As the Supreme Court also observed in Adams, a citizen reporting a crime to the police may be exposed to criminal liability for making a false complaint. 92 S.Ct. at 1923 & n. 2. We note that Texas law provides for such sanctions,13 and conclude that here the deputies were entitled to act upon information they received from the police dispatcher and from Naumann and his neighbors. We determine that the record clearly shows that the totality of the information available to the deputies justified a reasonable suspicion that Basey may well have been involved in the burglary of Naumann's home and that their subsequent investigatory stop of his car was accordingly proper.The evidence indicates that area residents had seen Basey's car aimlessly wandering back and forth on the little-traveled, rural roads earlier that day;14 that Naumann saw Basey's car close to his home shortly before Naumann discovered the burglary; that Naumann's curiosity was stirred to the degree that he asked Basey to explain his presence; that Basey's actions aroused the suspicions of either Naumann or his neighbors to the point that the vehicle's license plate number had apparently been recorded even before the burglary was discovered; and that the burglary report included a description and tag number for Basey's car.The "reasonable suspicion" standard does not require that officers have probable cause to believe the person they stop is guilty, or that the circumstances be such that there is no reasonable hypothesis of innocent behavior.15 We conclude that the facts here afforded the deputies a "particularized and objective basis for suspecting the particular person stopped of criminal activity," United States v. Gordon, 722 F.2d 112, 113-14 (5th Cir.1983), and that they acted on "articulable facts," Miranda-Perez, supra, at 287, and that this constitutes reasonable suspicion.The Terry rationale does not, of course, support stopping a vehicle merely because it is a stranger to the officers and the neighborhood. See United States v. Beck, 602 F.2d 726, 729 (5th Cir.1979). Nor does the fact that an unsolved crime occurred justify stopping every vehicle for miles around for several hours after the crime is discovered. In the circumstances of this case, however, we hold that the deputies' stop of Basey's car was a proper investigatory stop of an identified vehicle that had been seen near and was later stopped close to the scene of a recent crime.16 (b) The Legality of Basey's ArrestA stop founded on reasonable suspicion of criminal activity permits detaining a motorist briefly to request identification, an explanation of the suspicious conduct which led to the stop (here, Basey's repeated appearances near the scene of the recent burglary), and permission to search. Cf. United States v. Sharpe, 470 U.S. 675, 105 S.Ct. 1568, 1575-76, 84 L.Ed.2d 605 (1985) (upholding stop in which officer asked driver to produce driver's license and vehicle registration, and requested permission to search); Berkemer v. McCarty, 468 U.S. 420, 104 S.Ct. 3138, 3150-51, 82 L.Ed.2d 317 (1984) (in Terry stops, an "officer may ask the detainee a moderate number of questions to determine his identity and to try to obtain information confirming or dispelling the officer's suspicions"); 3 W. LaFave, supra, Sec. 9.2, at 36 (citing cases).The deputies asked Basey to produce his driver's license, which he did, and to explain his presence in the area, which he attempted to do. After Basey stated that he had borrowed the car he was driving from a friend, the deputies asked Basey to show evidence of liability insurance coverage. Although Basey showed proof of coverage for three other vehicles, it is uncontroverted that he had no such proof for the car he was then driving.17 The district court found that Basey was taken into custodial arrest at this time and that the vehicle was then searched.Basey's claim is that the arrest for failure to show liability insurance was "a mere excuse for the officers to search for and seize articles in the car." Basey asserts the deputies arrested him primarily to retain control over him while they investigated the burglary, and that his arrest for inability to show liability coverage therefore was merely pretextual.18Basey's focus on the officers' motive for the arrest misperceives the proper issue. "[A]lmost without exception in evaluating alleged violations of the Fourth Amendment the Court has first undertaken an objective assessment of an officer's actions in light of the facts and circumstances then known to him." Scott v. United States, 436 U.S. 128, 98 S.Ct. 1717, 1723, 56 L.Ed.2d 168 (1978) (emphasis added). As the Scott opinion explained,"[T]he fact that the officer does not have the state of mind which is hypothecated by the reasons which provide the legal justification for the officer's action does not invalidate the action taken as long as the circumstances, viewed objectively, justify that action." 98 S.Ct. at 1723.Thus, our inquiry must address whether an " 'objective assessment of the officer's actions in light of the facts and circumstances confronting him at the time' " supports the legality of his actions, Maryland v. Macon, 472 U.S. 463, 105 S.Ct. 2778, 2782, 86 L.Ed.2d 370 (1985) (emphasis added; citation omitted), and not "the officer's actual state of mind at the time the challenged action was taken," Id. The district court concluded Texas' financial responsibility statute permits police to arrest a driver if that driver cannot show proof of insurance coverage for the car he is driving. Basey has not challenged this conclusion, nor questioned the constitutionality of the Texas statute. The sole question Basey raises is whether the existence of an ulterior motive--namely to further investigate the burglary--will taint or invalidate an otherwise lawful arrest. As Scott plainly states, the unchallenged premises that the deputies had probable cause to and could lawfully arrest Basey for violation of the Texas financial responsibility statute, and that the arrest was in fact made on that basis, render irrelevant any inquiry into the deputies' above-referenced alleged ulterior motivation.19 (c) The Search of Basey's CarUnder New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454, 101 S.Ct. 2860, 2864, 69 L.Ed.2d 768 (1981), "when a policeman has made a lawful custodial arrest of the occupant of an automobile, he may, as a contemporaneous incident of that arrest, search the passenger compartment of that automobile" (footnote omitted). Belton makes it plain that such a search will be upheld even if it occurs after an occupant placed under arrest is out of the vehicle and even if it discloses evidence relevant to a previously undiscovered crime rather than a weapon or evidence of a crime known before the search occurred. See 101 S.Ct. at 2862.Because the trial court concluded that the search of Basey's car was incident to his lawful arrest, and because we agree with that conclusion and uphold the search on that ground, we do not reach the questions of whether, absent the arrest, the deputies would have had probable cause to search Basey's car under the automobile exception to the warrant requirement, or whether they could have done so in a "vehicle frisk" as part of a Terry stop.20Basey also contends that, even if the deputies discovered the radios during a proper search of the passenger area, Deputy Meeks' use of one radio after Basey's arrest was improper and, further, that the radios were seized without probable cause and not in the course of an inventory of the contents of the vehicle. Basey further argues that evidence at trial about the broadcast and the radios themselves should have been suppressed.Even assuming that Meeks' brief use of the radio, without turning it on or changing the channel, amounted to a seizure, which we doubt, Belton is nonetheless dispositive of this issue. As Belton held, a vehicle search incident to a lawful arrest can extend even to containers located in the car's passenger compartment, not because "the arrestee has no privacy interest in the container," but because "the lawful custodial arrest justifies the infringement of any privacy interest the arrestee may have." If the initial arrest is lawful, "a search incident to arrest requires no additional justification." 101 S.Ct. at 2864. Belton also implicitly approves the minimal "seizure" that occurs when officers briefly handle a container during the search. We view the momentary handling of the radio in Basey's car as well within that implicit approval and conclude that Meeks' use of the radio was proper as part of the Belton search of the vehicle's passenger compartment. Furthermore, we do not view Belton as having been in any way narrowed by Arizona v. Hicks, --- U.S. ----, 107 S.Ct. 1149, 94 L.Ed.2d 347 (1987).Apart from the fact that Belton clearly approves an additional intrusion on privacy during a vehicle search incident to an arrest, Hicks mandates suppression only when the police conduct challenged "produce[d] a new invasion of [a defendant's] privacy." In Hicks, officers entered the defendant's apartment under the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement to investigate a shooting. An officer noticed expensive audio equipment, seemingly out of place in the defendant's "squalid and otherwise ill-appointed" apartment, and moved some of the stereo components in order to find and check the serial numbers. The Court held this "did not amount to a seizure" but that physically handling the equipment in such a way as to discover otherwise concealed information thereon was a separate search which, unless the items examined were within the scope of the officers' justification for entering the dwelling, required probable cause or other independent legal basis because of the additional privacy interest invasion involved.In this case, in contrast, even if we were to regard Meeks' broadcast (or reception) over the channel to which the already turned on radio was set as a separate search, it was not itself an additional intrusion on any reasonable privacy interest Basey might assert. No "private" channel of Basey's was involved, and Basey had no privacy interest in any broadcast Deputy Meeks or any other similarly situated person might send out into the public airwaves over the same channel, or in any broadcasted response thereto.21 Consequently, Hicks does not require suppression of the evidence arising from Meeks' use of the radio found in Basey's car.22We conclude that these facts do not invoke the concerns of Hicks and that Belton supports treating the deputy's broadcast over the radio as part of the vehicle search. Moreover, in any event Basey had no privacy interest in the public airwaves broadcast sent and received by Meeks on the radio. In addition, Deputy Meeks' brief use of the radio was clearly not the seizure which allowed the radios to be used as evidence at trial. That seizure occurred when the police decided to impound the car and all its contents.Finally, because Basey's arrest was lawful, the papers taken from him during the booking search were also properly admitted as evidence, and the leads which were developed from those papers--most notably resulting in the arrest of Ponce and Lopez--were not tainted by any police misconduct. The papers found on Ponce and Lopez were therefore found as the result of lawful police conduct and were properly found to be admissible.Accordingly, we conclude that the district court was correct in admitting all evidence discovered through the stop of Basey's car, his arrest, and the vehicle search.2. Admissibility of Evidence Associated with the Abandoned VanOn appeal, Basey contends that the van was discovered solely because of his improper stop and arrest, and that the marihuana and radios found therein are therefore tainted and should have been suppressed. As noted above, however, Basey did not mention the van or its contents in his pretrial suppression motion, although he did object to the admission of this evidence at trial. Motions to suppress evidence "must be raised prior to trial," Fed.R.Crim.P. 12(b), 12(b)(3), and a failure to raise such a motion in a timely manner constitutes a waiver of objection, Rule 12(f). Basey did not ask the court to conduct a suppression hearing on this issue. Finding that no miscarriage of justice resulted from the admission of this evidence,23 we will not consider the merits of this issue not properly raised below. See United States v. Harrelson, 705 F.2d 733, 738 (5th Cir.1983).3. Admissibility of Basey's Statements to Agent PenaBasey was arrested on the night of September 5. He was first questioned by Burnet County Sheriff's Department Officer Simpson about fifteen hours later, on September 6, after Basey was arraigned before a state magistrate that morning on state drug charges. Officer Simpson testified at the suppression hearing that Basey initially insisted that he would not give any information at all unless he were promised help.24 Later that day, Simpson again met with Basey, this time joined by DPS investigator Nesteroff. The district court concluded that, at some time during these sessions, Simpson indicated he would help Basey with the charges then facing him if Basey offered information about the drug trafficking organization. Later that same evening, Basey was questioned again, this time by DEA Agent Pena,25 who at the outset of the interview advised Basey of his Miranda rights and told Basey that he would make no specific promises of help but would inform the United States Attorney if Basey provided useful information.26 Agent Pena testified at trial that Basey described in general terms the drug trafficking organization which had brought in the vanload of marihuana, stating that the organization had been active for four or five years, that the marihuana came from Guadalajara, and that a ground crew with seven or eight members was involved. The following morning, Simpson again questioned Basey, and Basey made further statements to Simpson. The district court ordered Basey's statements to Simpson suppressed on the ground that they were induced by improper promises.27Basey moved to suppress all of his postarrest statements and now argues on appeal that admitting statements he made to Pena was improper. We view Basey's argument as being founded on two alternate grounds: first, that these statements were obtained through an illegal arrest; or, second, that even if the arrest was lawful, improper police conduct after the arrest tainted the statements.28 Having already concluded that Basey's stop and arrest were lawful, we consider only the theory that postarrest misconduct tainted Basey's statements. The district court decided that Officer Simpson's interrogation was improper. We accept that ruling, arguendo. Basey contends on appeal that "[t]he expectations created by Officer Simpson's conduct could well have carried over to Investigator Pena's interrogation, despite the intervening Miranda warnings."The question we address is whether Basey's statements to Agent Pena were acquired " 'by exploitation of [some police] illegality or instead by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint,' " United States v. Parker, 722 F.2d 179, 184 (5th Cir.1983) (quoting Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471, 83 S.Ct. 407, 417, 9 L.Ed.2d 441 (1963)), and whether, if some taint arose from Simpson's conduct, that taint had been attenuated before Basey gave information to Pena.Whether this attenuation has occurred depends on the facts of the particular case. United States v. Miller, 608 F.2d 1089, 1102 (5th Cir.1979), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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