PER CURIAM:
Timothy Wilson and Luis Ahorrio were tried and convicted of possession with the intent to distribute, and conspiracy to distribute 280 grams or more of cocaine base. Their indictment and eventual conviction stemmed from a routine traffic stop during which a narcotics detection dog alerted to the presence of contraband in their vehicle. Wilson and Ahorrio appeal their convictions arguing, among other things, that the district court erred in denying their motions to suppress evidence obtained in the ensuing search of their car. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
On July 23, 2010, Ahorrio drove from his home in Queens, New York to meet Wilson at his home in southern New Jersey. From there, they rode south in a rented Toyota Corolla.
As they travelled through Worcester County, Maryland, they passed Corporal Howard Kennard of the Maryland State Police, who was monitoring traffic on that stretch of U.S. Route 113. Cpl. Kennard—accompanied by Trooper First Class Dana Orndorff and Camo, a narcotics detection dog—stopped Wilson and Ahorrio after observing their vehicle exceeding the speed limit and following another vehicle too closely.
Cpl. Kennard approached the vehicle and began the usual traffic-stop formalities. In the process, Cpl. Kennard observed that Wilson and Ahorrio both appeared nervous and that the driver of the car, Ahorrio, was not listed on the vehicle's rental agreement.
Trooper Orndorff subsequently approached the car and began conversing with Ahorrio while Cpl. Kennard spoke with Wilson. Both men stated that they were traveling to watch drag races, but they gave different geographic destinations: Wilson indicated that they were traveling to North Carolina while Ahorrio said they were driving to Georgia.
Cpl. Kennard then asked Ahorrio for permission to conduct a canine scan of the vehicle. Ahorrio replied that the officers would need to ask Wilson. Trooper Orndorff then instructed Wilson to exit the vehicle, retrieved Camo, and began the scan, concluding when Camo alerted at the front driver's-side door. Trooper Orndorff then informed Cpl. Kennard of the alert and rewarded Camo with a toy on the side of the road.
Cpl. Kennard then began to search the vehicle, where he ultimately found clear Ziploc bags containing 327.9 grams of a substance containing cocaine base. Those small bags were contained within a larger white plastic bag, concealed within a brown paper Burger King bag, and hidden beneath the front passenger-side seat. The outer Burger King bag also contained a receipt bearing the address of a Burger King located less than a half mile from Ahorrio's residence in Queens. Cpl. Kennard then ordered Ahorrio and Wilson to the ground and arrested them.
Ahorrio and Wilson were charged in a single indictment with conspiracy to distribute and possession with intent to distribute 280 grams or more of cocaine base in violation of 21 U.S.C. § § 841 & 846. Both defendants moved to suppress the evidence found during the search of their vehicle. Wilson argued, in particular, that Camo's alert was so unreliable that it could not have given the officers probable cause to believe that narcotics were actually present in the car.
The government provided records of Camo's 81 prior field scans, as well as information about his training and certification. While the results of his training and evaluation exercises indicated that Camo was highly reliable—he falsely alerted in training only once—his field records told a different story. Of the 81 field scans Camo had performed, he had alerted in all but four. But of the 77 scans where Camo alerted, in only 24 did officers actually locate any narcotics.
The government argued that in the 53 cases where Camo alerted but no narcotics were found, the odor of drugs may nonetheless have lingered in the car. Moreover, the government argued that in twenty of those cases there was direct evidence that drugs or drug users had recently been present in the car. The district court adopted these conclusions and held that Camo's training and certification were sufficient to establish his reliability. It therefore denied Wilson's and Ahorrio's motions to suppress.
The case then proceeded to trial, at the conclusion of which Wilson and Ahorrio were convicted on both counts. They were each sentenced to ten years' imprisonment.
In considering a district court's denial of a motion to suppress, we review its legal conclusions de novo and its factual determinations for clear error.
Accordingly, we affirm the district court's denial of the motions to suppress on the ground that the officers are entitled to the good faith exception to the suppression remedy. We therefore need not decide whether Camo's alerts were, in fact, sufficiently reliable to give the officers probable cause to search the vehicle.
At the time of the search, we had indicated that a narcotics detection dog was per se reliable if it had completed an adequate training program and obtained the appropriate certifications. Addressing this issue in an unpublished opinion, we stated that evidence of the dog's "training and certification was enough by itself to establish [his] reliability so that his positive alerts for controlled substances established probable cause."
"For exclusion to be appropriate, the deterrence benefits of suppression must outweigh its heavy costs."
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For the foregoing reasons, Wilson's and Ahorrio's convictions and sentences are