AMY TOTENBERG, District Judge.
The Court issued an Order on January 13, 2014 [Doc. 80] denying Defendant's Motion to Suppress Evidence [Doc. 13]. This Memorandum sets forth in greater detail the Court's findings and analysis.
As summarized in the Court's prior order, the Magistrate Judge's Report and Recommendation ("R & R") [Doc. 49] recommended the denial of Defendant's Motion. Defendant thereafter filed objections to the R & R's factual and legal findings and recommendations [Doc. 52]. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1), the Court reviews any portion of the R & R that is the subject of a proper objection on a de novo basis and any non-objected portion on a "clearly erroneous" standard. Accordingly, the Court has reviewed the record in this case on a de novo basis, including all videos among other items, and additionally conducted a supplemental evidentiary hearing on November 21, 2013.
After a thorough review of the record, the Court adopts the factual summary set forth in the R & R, subject to the following modifications and exceptions. Specifically, the Court makes the following supplemental findings:
1. On Sunday, June 24, 2012, Douglas County Police Department Justin Manwaring conducted a traffic stop of Defendant Santas Hernandez. The stop was based on Deputy Manwaring's asserted reasonable suspicion or probable cause determination that Hernandez had committed the traffic offense of failing to drive the vehicle "as nearly as practicable entirely within a single lane ... until the driver has first ascertained that such movement can be made with safety[.]" O.C.G.A. § 40-6-48(1). The video and testimony in this case indicate that Ms. Hernandez drove carefully and within speed limits when she was stopped by Deputy Manwaring.
3. Based on its review of the video showing Defendant's driving on June 24, 2012, the Court finds that while the Defendant's vehicle may have touched the marking line of the lane on the second occasion noted by Deputy Manwaring, the car did not veer or do more than touch the marking line. The testimony did not indicate that Hernandez completely or partially crossed into the lane of traffic of another vehicle.
4. Although Deputy Manwaring viewed the first incident not captured in the video as involving somewhat more marked lane touching or "drifting," the Defendant's first lane touching incident as described in his testimony does not materially differ from the second touching incident captured by videotape.
5. Under the above factual circumstances, the Court declines to adopt the Magistrate Judge's determination that the traffic stop was lawfully initiated based on probable cause or reasonable suspicion that Defendant had violated O.C.G.A. § 40-6-48. That statute provides:
O.C.G.A. § 40-6-48(1).
The Court agrees with Judge Evans' recent decision analyzing the Georgia courts' interpretation and application of this traffic standard. United States v. Bryson, 2013 WL 5739055 (N.D.Ga. Oct. 21, 2013). Judge Evans first summarized the standard applicable to assessing the constitutionality of the traffic stop:
Id. at *3. After discussing relevant Georgia case authority, Judge Evans concluded that touching the line "is a factor that may, in combination with other conduct, give rise to probable cause justifying a traffic stop" but that "in the absence of such additional conduct, the mere touching of the white dashed line between two or more clearly marked lanes is insufficient" by itself to provide a basis for law enforcement to stop the vehicle. Id. at *4 (emphasis supplied). In Bryson, as in this case, the defendant's conduct "involved nothing more than touching the lane line on two occasions." Id.
6. Judge Evans found in Bryson, however, that while the defendant's touching of the white dashed line did not give rise to probable cause, the state trooper was justified in stopping the defendant's vehicle because there were "specific articulable facts sufficient to give rise to a reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct" — namely that defendant was driving under the influence. Id. at *5. The Court found that as in Semich,
6. The R & R appears to suggest that Defendant's cash as well as that of all occupants in her car lay openly on top of and outside of their purses. (R & R at 8.) However, the testimony of Officer Manwaring, as clarified at the supplemental
7. Defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to support the Government's claim that Homeland Security Investigations ("HSI") Investigator Yates had reasonable suspicion that Defendant was engaged in prostitution activities. She argues that the HSI investigation had been ongoing for two years and effectively had failed to reveal any concrete evidence — beyond the initial complaint of her niece (a juvenile) to the police that triggered the investigation and evidence that the Defendant regularly traveled with other women from Gwinnett County to Alabama to frequent nightclubs — upon which to base criminal arrest or charges. (Obj. to R & R at 9.) It is true that the HSI investigation did not reveal any direct evidence of prostitution and does not seem to have materially advanced over the two years since it was launched. At the same time, the Defendant's continuing pattern of conduct itself raises an objective basis for reasonable suspicion. If Ms. Hernandez went partying at bars or nightclubs with friends in Alabama only on an occasional basis — several hours away from her home in metropolitan Atlanta — this might well not be sufficient evidence to anchor a police officer's reasonable suspicion of prostitution.
However, the persistence of Defendant's continued pattern of travel to nightclubs in Alabama with other women over a period of two years — a pattern consistent with the complaint filed by her niece — changed to some degree the factual posture of the investigation. Based on the totality of circumstances, Investigator Yates had a reasonable basis for suspicion that Defendant was traveling out of metropolitan Atlanta on a regular basis in order to engage in prostitution, rather than merely for socializing purposes. It was therefore reasonable for him to conclude that these circumstances would authorize Defendant's brief Terry detention when she was driving her van with other women back to Atlanta from a nightclub in Montgomery, Alabama. See United States v. Bautista-Villanueva, 524 Fed.Appx. 476, 478 (11th Cir.2013) (holding that "[t]he principal components of a determination of reasonable suspicion or probable cause will be viewed from the standpoint of an objectively reasonable police officer.") (citing United States v. Chanthasouxat, 342 F.3d 1271, 1276 (11th Cir.2003)).
8. While HSI Investigator Yates held such a reasonable suspicion, there is no direct evidence that Deputy Manwaring was familiar with the details or even outline of the HSI investigation of Ms. Hernandez's conduct. In finding that Manwaring could legitimately briefly stop and detain Defendant's vehicle based on reasonable suspicion, independent of the purported traffic violation, the R & R erroneously assumed that HSI Investigator Yates had been in communication with Manwaring. (R & R at 4, 19.)
Officer Manwaring testified that his stop of the Defendant was solely based on Hernandez's purported traffic violation, though he indicated an awareness some that some other investigation was ensuing. "If she didn't commit a traffic violation, we would have let her just leave Douglas County ... the only — the only time that we would stop the car is if the vehicle was committing a traffic violation or a[sic] equipment violation. We don't stop a vehicle just because of a different investigation." (Id. at 35.) In response to the Court's follow-up question, "you understood at that point that you didn't have authority to do it based on suspicion as to any other type of conduct?" Deputy Manwaring answered: "Yes, ma'am. That's why I stopped her for failure to maintain lane. It wasn't for whatever other investigation was going on." (Id. at 36.)
Still, the totality of testimony adduced through both evidentiary hearings suggests that Manwaring had received at least some minimum amount of information indicating that the Douglas County Police Department had been asked to assist federal HSI agents in their investigation. This is also a reasonable inference because Deputy Yount was working as Manwaring's partner on June 24th, the day of the traffic stop, though the Court notes that they worked in separate cars. (Id. at 33.)
These circumstances are sufficient to trigger the collective knowledge doctrine. Yates and Yount, the officers with knowledge of the investigation here, in effect directed Manwaring, who was aware of a bare minimum of information of the facts of the federal investigation, to conduct a traffic stop if feasible based on Yates' reasonable suspicion of Defendant's prostitution activity. See United States v. Kapperman, 764 F.2d 786, 791, n. 5 (11th Cir.1985) (relying on Whiteley v. Warden, 401 U.S. 560, 91 S.Ct. 1031, 28 L.Ed.2d 306 (1971) in finding that the fact that the task force officers who ordered the stop by radio had reasonable suspicion to believe defendant was carrying drugs satisfies the Terry requirements for an investigative stop); United States v. Rodriguez-Alejandro, 664 F.Supp.2d 1320, 1335 (N.D.Ga. 2009) (Thrash, J.) ("Where the investigative stop is performed by an officer at the direction of other officers, the Court must examine the collective knowledge of all of the officers in determining whether there existed reasonable suspicion.").
Based on the foregoing, the Court concludes:
Based on its independent review of the totality of the record, the Court