ROBERT E. WIER, Magistrate Judge.
The Court addresses motions to suppress filed by Defendants Salas and Mejia-Palacio. DE ##18, 20 (Motions). Defendants stand indicted for aggravated cocaine and heroin trafficking, DE #24 (Superseding Indictment), and face a particular count of aggravated possession with intent to distribute cocaine based on alleged May 18, 2017, conduct. Id. at 2 (Count 3). The motions address a traffic stop and warrant on that date, and the United States filed a consolidated response. DE #30 (Response). The similar arguments and common factual field logically prompted a joint evidentiary hearing. DE #40 (Minute Entry Order).
Having considered the testimony, the state warrant materials, and the full federal record, the Court
The pre-hearing briefs focused on the facts of the May 18, 2017, traffic stop of Defendants on Versailles Road in Lexington. The Lexington Police Department (LPD) stopped Defendants, who operated a Jeep, which pulled a trailer eventually found to conceal six kilograms of cocaine in the axle. Counsel contested both the bases for the stop and raised stop elongation as an issue, under Rodriguez v. United States, 135 S.Ct. 1609 (2015). The sequence of argument would undercut the propriety of a crucial dog sniff and thus excise sniff results from a state warrant that ultimately led to the full and fruitful trailer search.
The Court heard testimony
The Government clearly established
3) no improper elongation under either stop theory; 4) a valid dog sniff; and 5) probable cause supporting the trailer search, as captured and reflected in the legitimate state warrant. There simply is no infirmity in the efforts of police regarding this search and consequently no suppression basis.
The hearing witnesses told a consistent and unopposed story
The stop was not the result of incidental patrol. The FBI had been working with a known CI, a person SA Van Aelstyn considered reliable and truthful based on previous interactions.
Police observed the vehicle exit the lot and turn onto Versailles Road, headed in the direction of the suspected destination. The FBI tailed but did not stop the vehicle. Rather, Lexington Officer Duane and KSP Trooper Leavell parked together beside Versailles Road some distance from the Super Mercado. The vehicle passed and the officers entered the road. In the period before the stop, multiple officers observed that the towed trailer had no operational brake lights. [R. at 2:11:40-12:10; 2:20:20-20:35.] At least two officers, including Duane, saw the vehicle abruptly (and without signal) change lanes in front of other traffic. [R. at 2:12:10-25; 2:19:30-20:20.] Duane activated his lights and pulled the vehicle over in a commercial lot (the O'Reilly Auto Parts store) on Versailles Road. Trooper Leavell pulled in behind Duane and the stopped Jeep within 90 seconds.
Officer Duane approached the vehicle to secure license and registration. He obtained the IDs of both occupants, driver Gerardo Mejia-Palacio and passenger Hector Salas. The vehicle had a Tennessee registration and Mejia-Palacio an Arizona license (though with the novelty of a listed residential address in Tennessee). [R. at 2:22:30-23:00.] Salas had a California identification card. In a 2-3 minute exchange, Duane learned that the pair purported to be in Lexington to do "drywall work" on their "Aunt's house." [R. at 2:24:05-25:00.] Neither occupant had an address for the aunt and only knew she lived "downtown." Id. The Jeep contained no hand tools for drywall work (indeed, no tools of any type), and the trailer carried only a large compressor laid on its side.
Duane then spent 5-7 minutes in his car checking the registration and running the IDs for "wants and warrants." [R. at 2:59:00-3:01:15.] This is SOP for Duane. Id. He noticed the Tennessee address oddity for Mejia-Palacio and found a non-extraditable California weapons warrant for Salas. Duane then returned to the Jeep and had the occupants exit so that Trooper Leavell could have his dog sniff the exterior of the Jeep and trailer. He testified this took about 1 minute and that the dog quickly alerted for narcotics. Mejia-Palacio then, when questioned, revealed "personal use" drugs in the passenger area, which police quickly found in three places and in varying small quantities. Authorities effected arrest of both. In sum, Duane put the dog alert at 12-14 minutes after the stop; this squared with SA Van Aelstyn's second-hand timeline, which put the stop at 13:34 and the dog alert at 13:48.
Leavell confirmed most of Duane's account. Leavell was on the scene immediately, merely awaiting Duane's indication to present the vehicle to his dog, Bako. The Trooper believed he ran Bako around the vehicle within 5-7 minutes of the stop, a quicker sniff than Duane reported. [R. at 3:25:30-25:45.] Per standard protocol before a sweep, Duane had removed the occupants. Bako alerted both to the driver's side door seam and, aggressively, to the underside of the trailer. Per Leavell, Bako literally was trying to crawl under the trailer at the axle area. [R. at 3:26:00-28:00.] He deemed each alert by Bako to positively signal the current or recent presence of narcotics.
After the alert, police searched the full vehicle—this included a hard and thorough look at the Jeep, the compressor, and the trailer itself. The fortuity of the stop location gave police access to some tools loaned from O'Reilly's, which Duane and others used in the search. Ultimately, the on-site search yielded nothing beyond the personal use quantities. Knowing the vehicle would be moved, and expecting a need to cut into the trailer
The stop was part of a broader drug investigation by the FBI. Both the particulars of the investigation, and the specifics of the scene, justified the May 18 stop of Mejia-Palacio and Salas.
As to the vehicular concerns, the Sixth Circuit requires that probable cause support the stop of a vehicle for a completed civil infraction. United States v. Rios, 830 F.3d 403, 429 (6th Cir. 2016) ("In order to effect a traffic stop, an officer must possess either probable cause of a civil infraction or reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.") (quoting United States v. Lyons, 687 F.3d 754, 763 (6th Cir. 2012)). Duane and others saw the vehicle operate without functioning brake lights on the trailer and witnessed the Jeep abruptly change lanes without signaling. Either infraction (KRS §§ 189.380; 189.050-.055) would carry only a fine. See KRS §§ 189.990; 189.993. Certainly, and with no contradictory proof, the direct observations of Officer Duane, corroborated by other involved authorities, establish probable cause
The Court alternatively finds that Duane, in the circumstances, could have stopped the Jeep anyway, as a part of the drug investigation. Terry principles
Once the stop occurred, Duane secured additional information strongly signaling further cause for suspicion and continuing scrutiny. The occupants had travelled a significant distance and came from drug source locations. (Tennessee is not far, of course, but Mejia-Palacio carried an Arizona license; Salas is a Californian.) The men purported to be in Kentucky for "drywall work" but carried only a large, prone compressor. They were there to work for their aunt, but most curiously, they had no address for her despite being minutes from downtown Lexington. Duane observed the rehearsed nature of the suspects' responses, and he was highly skeptical of the drywall tale.
The Court carefully assessed the particulars of the K-9 involvement. Under either stop analysis, Bako timely played his part.
The defense premised most of its arguments on whether police elongated the stop unnecessarily in violation of Rodriguez principles. A valid stop lasts only as long as its justified mission, and Defendants argue that Duane, to accommodate the K-9 involvement, dragged the stop out beyond the time reasonably needed to take care of the traffic infractions. See Rodriguez, 135 S. Ct. at 1616 (reiterating that stop "prolonged beyond" completion of stop mission is "unlawful" and noting "critical question, then, is not whether the dog sniff occurs before or after the officer issues a ticket . . . but whether conducting the sniff `prolongs'—i.e., adds time to—`the stop.'").
Looking (artificially) only at the vehicular justifications, the Court observes that Leavell was on-site almost immediately. He had been staged with Duane as the Jeep first passed. Leavell waited for Duane's signal to search, which happened after Duane verified information, accessed his computer, and police removed the occupants. Bako swept the vehicle no more than 12-14 minutes after the stop. Duane stated his typical stop duration, involving only a suspected traffic issue—from actual stop to termination post-ticket—is 15-20 mins. Although Duane handwrites citations, nothing indicates he is unreasonably slow in his manner or protocols. Further, Duane took entirely proper steps to verify information, checking the driver's credentials and the car for current registration and querying any "wants or warrants." See id. at 1615 (listing as within traffic stop mission "ordinary inquiries" to include "checking the driver's license, determining whether there are outstanding warrants against the driver, and inspecting the automobile's registration and proof of insurance"). Duane spent less than 3 minutes with the occupants, then 5-7 minutes in his cruiser running the IDs. Nothing in the conduct or chronology indicates a measurable elongation of the stop to accommodate the K-9. Duane obviously would, on a typical stop chronology, have been writing a ticket during the period when Leavell swept the scene with Bako.
Further, and critically, the stop did not involve only the illegal brake lights and lane change. As the Court has recounted, the real focus of the day was the expected narcotics load. Given the reasonable suspicion of that, and the justified investigatory stop, any slight delay in activating Bako is of no moment. United States v. Davis, 430 F.3d 345, 354-55 (6th Cir. 2005) ("[T]he police had reasonable suspicion to detain Davis for the additional approximately thirty to forty-five minutes it took for the police to bring the first drugsniffing dog to the scene and have the dog check the vehicle for the presence of narcotics."); United States v. Zuniga, 613 F. App'x 501, 505 (6th Cir. 2015) (affirming denial of dogrelated motion to suppress when the "total length of the traffic stop was thirty minutes"). The elements of the stop, information gleaned from the occupants, and the backstory reasonably warranted a dog sniff; Leavell promptly performed that step, an act that occurred within 15 minutes of the stop. Again, this was reasonable and justified, independent of the regulatory issues. United States v. Bah, 794 F.3d 617, 629 (distinguishing Rodriguez because officers "had reasonable suspicion to continue [party's] detention" independent of traffic stop).
Finally, the Court deems the warrant unassailable.
Part of the defense theory is to invalidate the sniff, which would remove a key piece of the warrant basis. Because the Court rejects that predicate, the argument fails. The sniff by Bako was proper. His alert to the Jeep and trailer provides probable cause, and the warrant application captures and relies on that cause. Since the application quite properly included the information, there is no basis for eliding the application and no basis for assailing the warrant.
Based on the analysis and findings stated, there is no basis for suppression in this case.
The Court directs the parties to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1) for appeal rights concerning this recommendation, issued under subsection (B) of that statute. The parties should consult the aforementioned statute and Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 59(b) for specific appeal mechanics. The objection period will be as stated in the Rule and statute, subject to any particular schedule set by Judge Reeves. Failure to object in accordance with the Rule waives a party's right to review.
The Court perceives utterly no argument for suppression under developed good faith exception standards in this Circuit. See, e.g., United States v. Brummett, No. 5:13-135-DCR, 2014 WL 2118265, at *6-*8 (E.D. Ky. May 21, 2014) (explaining the standard, including the balancing test required). Salas, Jr., makes a conclusory attempt to characterize the affidavit as bare bones. DE #18-1 at 5. However, Defendant's argument requires a prior finding that information contained in the affidavit was unconstitutionally obtained. See id. As previously discussed, that argument is unavailing. Thus, although the Court finds no constitutional infirmity with law enforcement's actions here, it alternatively sees no basis to order suppression as a remedy on these facts. See also, e.g., United States v. Evers, 669 F.3d 645, 654 (6th Cir. 2012) (holding the suppression was inappropriate where, as here, the affidavit was not so `bare bones' or the warrant so `facially deficient' that the executing officers could not have relied on them); United States v. Garcia, 496 F.3d 495, 507 (6th Cir. 2007) (distinguishing between the remedy for a general search (suppression of all evidence) and the unlawful seizure of particular items during an otherwise valid search (suppression of only the unlawfully seized evidence)).