Filed: Nov. 10, 2008
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: 06-3730-cr U.S.A. v. Lopez 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 August Term, 2007 4 (Argued: January 15, 2008 Decided: November 10, 2008) 5 Docket No. 06-3730-cr 6 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X 7 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 8 Appellee, 9 -v.- 10 RICARDO LOPEZ, 11 Defendant-Appellant. 12 13 -X 14 Before: KEARSE, LEVAL, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges. 15 16 Defendant appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern
Summary: 06-3730-cr U.S.A. v. Lopez 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 August Term, 2007 4 (Argued: January 15, 2008 Decided: November 10, 2008) 5 Docket No. 06-3730-cr 6 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X 7 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 8 Appellee, 9 -v.- 10 RICARDO LOPEZ, 11 Defendant-Appellant. 12 13 -X 14 Before: KEARSE, LEVAL, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges. 15 16 Defendant appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern ..
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06-3730-cr
U.S.A. v. Lopez
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3 August Term, 2007
4 (Argued: January 15, 2008 Decided: November 10, 2008)
5 Docket No. 06-3730-cr
6 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X
7 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
8 Appellee,
9 -v.-
10 RICARDO LOPEZ,
11 Defendant-Appellant.
12
13 -------------------------------X
14 Before: KEARSE, LEVAL, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges.
15
16 Defendant appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern
17 District of New York convicting him of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, and
18 possession of two firearms in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime. Defendant contends that the
19 district court made two errors: first, in upholding the warrantless search of his car as an inventory
20 search when (a) it was not governed in all aspects by a standardized police department policy and
21 (b) the officer conducting the search did not make a complete inventory list; and second, in admitting
22 expert testimony by a narcotics detective that cocaine and cutting materials found in defendant’s car
23 were evidence of distribution. The court of appeals (Leval, J.) affirms.
1
1 BRENDAN R. MCGUIRE, Assistant United States
2 Attorney, Southern District of New York (Diane
3 Gujarati, Assistant United States Attorney, of counsel;
4 Michael J. Garcia, United States Attorney, on the
5 brief), New York, NY, for Appellee.
6 COLLEEN P. CASSIDY, Federal Defenders of New
7 York, Inc., Appeals Bureau, New York, NY, for
8 Defendant-Appellant.
9 LEVAL, Circuit Judge:
10 Defendant Ricardo Lopez appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for
11 the Southern District of New York (Sidney Stein, J.) convicting him at a bench trial of possession
12 of cocaine with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(C), and
13 possession of two firearms in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §
14 924(c)(1)(A)(i). The court sentenced Lopez to ten months of imprisonment on the cocaine count,
15 plus a mandatory consecutive term of sixty months on the firearm count, as well as three years of
16 supervised release and a $200 special assessment. Defendant contends that the district court made
17 two errors: first, in finding that the warrantless search of Lopez’s car was justifiable as an inventory
18 search, notwithstanding that the procedure for the search was not governed in all aspects by a
19 standardized police department policy and the officer conducting the search did not make a complete
20 list of the car’s contents; and second, in admitting expert testimony by a narcotics detective that
21 cocaine and cutting materials found in Lopez’s car suggested distribution.
22 We affirm.
2
1 Background
2 I. The Evidence at Trial
3 The evidence presented at Lopez’s trial, seen in the light most favorable to the government,
4 see United States v. Rommy,
506 F.3d 108, 128 (2d Cir. 2007), showed the following.
5 a. Lopez’s Arrest
6 On August 3, 2005, at approximately 3:30 a.m., Police Officer Lorrie Arroyo and Sergeant
7 Stacy Barrett of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”) were patrolling in a police vehicle
8 in the Hunts Point neighborhood of the Bronx, watching out for prostitution and auto theft. They
9 observed a car parked on the right side of Faile Street. Two people were in the car, with the
10 passenger door open and the engine running. The officers slowed as they passed the car and
11 overheard the occupants arguing. They parked their car and got out to investigate. Arroyo
12 approached the driver’s side of the car; Barrett the passenger’s side. The driver, the defendant
13 Lopez, told them he had been arguing with his girlfriend. The passenger identified herself as
14 Griselle Lopez. (Ricardo Lopez and Griselle are neither married to each other nor otherwise related.)
15 Griselle told the police she was just hanging out with her boyfriend. Arroyo smelled alcohol and
16 noticed that the defendant’s eyes were bloodshot and his speech was slurred. She asked him if he
17 had been drinking, and he responded, “Yes, one cup.” Arroyo decided to arrest him for driving while
18 intoxicated. She asked him to step out of the car and frisked him. She found a bulge in his rear right
19 pants pocket, which seemed heavier than a wallet. Arroyo asked him what was in his pocket. He
20 replied that it was a gun. Officer Arroyo then reached into the defendant’s pocket, recovered a
21 handgun and a wallet, and alerted Barrett that the defendant had a gun.
3
1 Meanwhile, Sgt. Barrett had asked Griselle to get out of the car. The sergeant asked for her
2 identification. She replied that it was in the car. Two other officers who had arrived on the scene
3 stood with Griselle while Barrett went to get Griselle’s bag from the car. Sgt. Barrett located a bag
4 near the front passenger seat and asked Griselle if it was hers, and if so, whether the sergeant could
5 look in it for a driver’s license or some other form of identification. Griselle confirmed that it was
6 her bag and gave the sergeant permission to search it for identification. Barrett observed a wallet
7 in the bag. On removing it, she saw a clear glass container of white powdery substance, which she
8 believed to be cocaine. Barrett then arrested Griselle.
9 The defendant and Ms. Lopez were taken to the 41st Precinct station house in separate police
10 cars. Officer Fischer, one of the other officers who had arrived on the scene, took over the
11 defendant’s car and drove it to the station.
12 b. The Searches of Lopez’s Car
13 At the 41st Precinct, Officer Arroyo and Sgt. Barrett conducted an inventory search of the
14 defendant’s car. According to Arroyo’s testimony, inventory searches are standard in the NYPD
15 when a car is seized upon the arrest of an intoxicated driver, both to protect the property of the owner
16 and to protect the police. “[Y]ou have to do a total inventory search of the vehicle,” she testified.
17 “Everything has to come out.” In searching the car, Arroyo found two glassines of cocaine in the
18 middle console between the two front seats, as well as a bottle of liquor in the driver’s side door.
19 From the trunk, the officers removed plastic bags, canvas bags, a beach chair and umbrella, and some
20 audio speakers. Arroyo then found a small green toiletry bag “tucked away” on the driver’s side of
21 the trunk. In it she discovered thirteen glassines of cocaine, as well as cocaine-related paraphernalia:
4
1 a scale, a strainer with cocaine residue, a wooden masher with cocaine residue, two spoons with
2 cocaine residue, more than one hundred empty glassines, and a jar of a white powdery substance that
3 looked like cocaine. The officers then locked the gun, the bottle of liquor, the two glassines from
4 the front middle console, and the green bag with its contents in a desk in their office. They drove
5 the defendant to the 45th Precinct - which was, according to Officer Arroyo, an area hub for alcohol
6 screening - where he was given a breathalyzer test and found to be legally impaired. At
7 approximately 8:00 a.m., he was brought back to the 41st Precinct and returned to his cell. Shortly
8 thereafter, Sgt. Barrett’s shift ended and she went home.
9 Upon returning to the 41st Precinct, Arroyo noticed that Griselle was wearing jewelry.
10 Arroyo asked her if someone could pick up the jewelry for her. Griselle arranged to have her
11 daughter come to the station to get it. The daughter agreed also to take the defendant’s belongings.
12 Arroyo asked another officer, Officer Rivera, to make a list of the jewelry and have the daughter
13 sign for it when the jewelry was handed over to her. Arroyo then went back to Lopez’s car and
14 began to place the contents into large plastic bags to give to Griselle’s daughter. In the process of
15 emptying the car, Arroyo looked in the glove compartment, where she found a loaded .38 caliber
16 gun. Barrett testified that she had opened the glove compartment during the first search of the car,
17 but became distracted when Arroyo asked her for a flashlight and failed to search it. Arroyo returned
18 to the 41st Precinct to voucher the newly discovered gun and then turned over the noncontraband
19 property to Griselle’s daughter.
20 The list created by the officers identified items such as Griselle’s pocketbook and jewelry.
21 The beach chair, the umbrella, the audio speakers, etc. – items which Arroyo considered to be of no
5
1 substantial value – were covered by a general catch-all description: “the belongings from the
2 vehicle.” Officer Arroyo explained that it was her practice to itemize objects in an inventory list only
3 when they are “worth something.” “If I handed off something smaller, say like car items, antifreeze,
4 I wouldn’t make a list, because it is worth nothing.” Sgt. Barrett testified that it was her practice to
5 make a complete list of returned property to be signed by the recipient. Sgt. Barrett testified that a
6 written inventory of seized items - including “noncontraband evidence” - is supposed to be made as
7 part of an inventory search. However, Sgt. Barrett also testified that the absence of a list of
8 “noncontraband property” was not a violation of police regulations.
9 c. Lopez’s Post-Arrest Statements
10 On the day of the arrest at approximately 5 p.m., after receiving Miranda warnings, the
11 defendant made a statement and recounted orally that he bought one of the guns from a “crackhead”;
12 that he found the other one near a nightclub in Manhattan; and that he had the gun that was found
13 on him because “he was selling drugs and he had a beef with some individuals.” He agreed to
14 provide a written statement, in which he provided similar information about the guns and stated that
15 he carried the gun found in his pocket for “self-protection.” He also acknowledged in writing that
16 the drugs found in the trunk of the car belonged to him. He said that he did not want to include in
17 the written statement his earlier oral representation that he had a gun “because he was selling drugs
18 and had a beef with some individuals.”
19 d. Expert Evidence
20 The government called two expert witnesses. Eloisa Dela Isla, a criminalist in the NYPD
21 police lab who tested the drug-related evidence seized from the car, testified that the glassines and
6
1 the drug paraphernalia all tested positive for the presence of cocaine. Billy Ralat, an investigator
2 at the United States Attorney’s Office, testified about the practices of drug users and dealers, and
3 about how drug-related paraphernalia found in Lopez’s trunk are used to prepare and package
4 glassines of cocaine for sale.
5 II. District Court Proceedings
6 Prior to trial, Lopez waived his right to a jury trial and moved to suppress the drugs, drug
7 paraphernalia, and gun recovered from the car, as well as his post-arrest statements. The motion to
8 suppress the evidence found in the search of the automobile was on the ground that the warrantless
9 search could not be justified as an inventory search because the officers did not prepare an inventory
10 list of the items found and did not adhere to any prescribed standard procedure for the conduct of
11 inventory searches. The motion to suppress his statements was on the ground that the delay in
12 arraigning him before a magistrate judge was unreasonable.
13 The court conducted a combined bench trial and evidentiary hearing on the suppression
14 motions. After the trial-hearing, the court denied both motions. As for the delay between Lopez’s
15 arrest and arraignment, the court found that it was reasonable in routine arrest processing. (This
16 ruling is not challenged on appeal.) The court found that the inventory searches were reasonable
17 because Officer Arroyo and Sgt. Barrett searched the car systematically, acted in good faith, and
18 understood the proper purposes of an inventory search. With respect to whether the officers
19 followed a standardized procedure, the district court observed that although “[n]o written rules or
20 regulations were introduced into evidence at the trial . . . both officers, Arroyo and Barrett, testified
21 that such procedures did exist.” Noting the two officers’ slightly different views, the court expressed
7
1 doubt whether the dictates of Department procedure as to how seized property should be listed had
2 been “rigorously followed.” In the absence of any evidence of bad faith on the part of the police, the
3 court concluded that minor deviations from any required listing procedures would not invalidate an
4 inventory search.
5 The court then found Lopez guilty on both counts.
6 Discussion
7 I. The Inventory Search
8 Lopez’s first argument on appeal is that the district court erred in denying his motion to
9 suppress the items seized from the car. Lopez contends that the warrantless search violated the
10 standards of the Fourth Amendment because the government failed to establish that it was a valid
11 inventory search. According to the defendant’s arguments, the search could not qualify as an
12 inventory search because its conduct was not dictated by a standardized policy and because the police
13 did not create a complete inventory list of the objects found. We believe the defendant’s arguments
14 are based on a misunderstanding of Supreme Court precedent.
15 It is well recognized in Supreme Court precedent that, when law enforcement officials take
16 a vehicle into custody, they may search the vehicle and make an inventory of its contents without
17 need for a search warrant and without regard to whether there is probable cause to suspect that the
18 vehicle contains contraband or evidence of criminal conduct. See Illinois v. Lafayette,
462 U.S. 640,
19 643 (1983) (“[An] inventory search constitutes a well-defined exception to the warrant requirement”
20 under the Fourth Amendment (citing South Dakota v. Opperman,
428 U.S. 364 (1976))). This is
21 because “[t]he policies behind the warrant requirement are not implicated in an inventory search, nor
8
1 is the related concept of probable cause.” Colorado v. Bertine,
479 U.S. 367, 371 (1987) (internal
2 citation omitted). Such a search is not done to detect crime or to serve criminal prosecutions. It is
3 done for quite different reasons: (1) to protect the owner’s property while it is in police custody; (2)
4 to protect the police against spurious claims of lost or stolen property; and (3) to protect the police
5 from potential danger.
Opperman, 428 U.S. at 369; see also
Bertine, 479 U.S. at 372. The service
6 of these objectives is wholly independent of whether the contents of the car figure in any way in a
7 criminal investigation or prosecution.
8 The Supreme Court has, however, recognized the danger to privacy interests protected by the
9 Fourth Amendment if officers were at liberty in their discretion to conduct warrantless investigative
10 searches when they suspected criminal activity, which searches they would subsequently justify by
11 labeling them as “inventory searches.” See Florida v. Wells,
495 U.S. 1, 4 (1990). Accordingly, the
12 Court has stressed the importance, in determining the lawfulness of an inventory search, that it be
13 conducted under “standardized procedures.” See
Bertine, 479 U.S. at 374 & n.6; Lafayette,
462 U.S.
14 at 648;
Opperman, 428 U.S. at 374-75. In Bertine, the Court upheld the lawfulness of the inventory
15 search, concluding that, “as in Lafayette, reasonable police regulations relating to inventory
16 procedures administered in good faith satisfy the Fourth Amendment, even though courts might as
17 a matter of hindsight be able to devise equally reasonable rules requiring a different procedure.”
479
18 U.S. at 374. Our court has noted that a consideration in determining the reasonableness of an
19 inventory search is whether the officials conducting the search “act[ed] in good faith pursuant to
20 ‘standardized criteria . . . or established routine.’” United States v. Thompson,
29 F.3d 62, 65 (2d Cir.
21 1994) (quoting
Wells, 495 U.S. at 4).
9
1 Lopez contends that the search of his car in this case failed to conform to these requirements.
2 According to his argument, the testimony of Officer Arroyo and Sgt. Barrett showed that there is no
3 standardized procedure in the New York City Police Department. Barrrett testified that it was proper
4 procedure to list all items found in an impounded vehicle. Officer Arroyo said it was her practice
5 to list only items of value, grouping others under a general catch-all. Arroyo added, “Some cops
6 don’t make any list at all, some cops may list everything. It is not written anywhere that we have to
7 make any type of a list.” Because the search conducted in his case under Officer Arroyo’s direction
8 did not result in a complete list of the contents of the car, Lopez argues further that the search
9 necessarily failed to meet the requirement that the objective of the search must be to produce an
10 inventory.
11 In our view, the argument misunderstands the Supreme Court’s requirements. It is true,
12 without doubt, that the Court has stressed the need for a standardized policy. The Court has made
13 it clear that a standardized policy is required so that inventory searches do not become “a ruse for
14 a general rummaging in order to discover incriminating evidence.”
Wells, 495 U.S. at 4. The
15 evidence adduced at the trial satisfied this standard. The unchallenged testimony of both Officer
16 Arroyo and Sgt. Barrett established that there is a uniform standardized policy in the New York City
17 Police Department to do a complete inventory search of the contents when a car is impounded.
18 Arroyo testified, “[Y]ou have to do a total inventory of the vehicle. Everything has to come out.”
19 Sgt. Barrett confirmed that it is the responsibility of the officer to conduct an inventory search of an
20 impounded car in order “to see if there were any items that needed to be safeguarded.” This
21 evidence was unchallenged and was credited by the district court. Accordingly, the purposes of the
10
1 Supreme Court’s requirement of a standardized policy were satisfied.
2 The lack of standardization that serves as the basis of Lopez’s argument concerns whether
3 the inventory list produced must include an itemization of every object found in the car, or whether
4 items of small value may be omitted or grouped under a general category. We do not understand the
5 Supreme Court’s requirement of a standardized policy to extend to this issue because it has no bearing
6 on the reason for the requirement of standardization. A standardized policy is needed to ensure that
7 inventory searches do not become “a ruse for a general rummaging in order to discover incriminating
8 evidence.”
Wells, 495 U.S. at 4. While the Supreme Court referred to the need for a standardized
9 policy, we do not think the Court meant that every detail of search procedure must be governed by
10 a standardized policy. We doubt, for example, that the Court intended a requirement of standardized
11 policy as to the order in which different parts of the car are searched, or whether officers performing
12 the search need to report the results on a standardized form, or whether the search should be
13 conducted by the officers responsible for the impoundment decision. A standardized policy
14 governing those questions would do nothing to safeguard the interests protected by the Fourth
15 Amendment. Nor do we think the Court intended to require uniformity as to whether insignificant
16 items of little or no value must be explicitly itemized. Once again, departmental uniformity on that
17 issue would have no bearing on protecting the privacy interests of the public from unreasonable police
18 intrusion. On the other hand, when a police department adopts a standardized policy governing the
19 search of the contents of impounded vehicles, the owners and occupants of those vehicles are
20 protected against the risk that officers will use selective discretion, searching only when they suspect
21 criminal activity and then seeking to justify the searches as conducted for inventory purposes. As
22 we understand the Supreme Court’s objective, this is the kind of issue the Supreme Court had in mind
11
1 in requiring that an inventory search be governed by a standardized policy. The evidence offered by
2 the government and accepted by the district court satisfied that requirement.
3 Nor do we find merit in Lopez’s argument that the failure to itemize each object found in the
4 car, instead of covering items of lesser value under a general catch-all category of “personal
5 belongings,” is incompatible with the Supreme Court’s warning that “inventory searches should be
6 designed to produce an inventory.”
Wells, 495 U.S. at 4. The search did produce an inventory. The
7 concept of an inventory does not demand the separate itemization of every single object. A
8 conventional family automobile is likely to contain a bunch of road maps, pens and a notepad, a bottle
9 opener, packs of chewing gum or candy, clip-on sunshades, a pack of tissues, a vanilla-scented
10 deodorizer, DVDs and children’s games, a baby bottle and a soiled baby blanket, an old sock, a
11 sweater, windshield cleaning fluid, jumper cables, a tow rope, a tire iron and jack, a first aid kit, and
12 emergency flares, not to mention empty candy wrappers and wads of chewed gum. That an officer
13 might use a catch-all to cover objects of little or no value in no way casts doubt on the officer’s claim
14 that the purpose of the search was to make an inventory. It would serve no useful purpose to require
15 separate itemization of each object found, regardless of its value, as a precondition to accepting a
16 search as an inventory search. Such an obligation would furthermore interfere severely with the
17 enforcement of the criminal laws by requiring irrational, unjustified suppression of evidence of crime
18 where officers, conducting a bona fide search of an impounded vehicle, found evidence of serious
19 crime but, in making their inventory, failed to distinguish between the maps of Connecticut and New
20 York, or failed to list separately the soiled baby blanket or a pack of gum. Imposing a requirement
21 to identify each item separately, regardless of lack of value, would furthermore add considerable
22 administrative burden without in any way advancing the purposes of the Fourth Amendment to
12
1 protect the public from “unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV.
2 Finally, noting the Supreme Court’s statement in Bertine that “reasonable police regulations
3 relating to inventory searches administered in good faith satisfy the Fourth Amendment . . . ,”
479
4 U.S. at 374, Lopez argues that in his case the procedures were not administered in good faith because
5 the officers were motivated by the expectation of finding criminal evidence in his car. We believe
6 this also misunderstands the Court’s explanations. The Fourth Amendment does not permit police
7 officers to disguise warrantless, investigative searches as inventory searches. See
id. at 371-72.
8 However, the Supreme Court has not required an absence of expectation of finding criminal evidence
9 as a prerequisite to a lawful inventory search. When officers, following standardized inventory
10 procedures, seize, impound, and search a car in circumstances that suggest a probability of
11 discovering criminal evidence, the officers will inevitably be motivated in part by criminal
12 investigative objectives. Such motivation, however, cannot reasonably disqualify an inventory search
13 that is performed under standardized procedures for legitimate custodial purposes. See Opperman,
14 428 U.S. at 369; see also
Bertine, 479 U.S. at 372. Under the Supreme Court’s precedents, if a search
15 of an impounded car for inventory purposes is conducted under standardized procedures, that search
16 falls under the inventory exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment,
17 notwithstanding a police expectation that the search will reveal criminal evidence. If good faith is
18 a prerequisite of an inventory search, the expectation and motivation to find criminal evidence do not
19 constitute bad faith.
20 In the present case, while the officers may well have had an investigative motivation to search
21 Lopez’s car, the circumstances called for the impoundment of his car, as Lopez was arrested for
22 driving it while intoxicated, and the impoundment required the conduct of an inventory search. We
13
1 find no reason to doubt that the Supreme Court’s standards for the conduct of a warrantless inventory
2 search were fully satisfied. We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of the motion to suppress
3 the evidence found in the impounded car.
4 II. The Expert Testimony
5 Lopez’s second argument on appeal is that the district court wrongly admitted the testimony
6 of Billy Ralat, an investigator at the United States Attorney’s Office, who testified that the drug
7 paraphernalia seized from Lopez’s car constituted evidence of distribution. We conclude that the
8 district court’s admission of the investigator’s testimony was entirely proper.
9 We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s decision to admit expert testimony.
10 Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael,
526 U.S. 137, 158 (1999). Expert testimony based on “scientific,
11 technical, or other specialized knowledge” is admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence, “in the
12 form of an opinion or otherwise,” so long as the witness is “qualified as an expert” and “(1) the
13 testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles
14 and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the
15 case.” Fed. R. Evid. 702. Furthermore, otherwise admissible expert testimony “is not objectionable
16 because it embraces an ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of fact,” unless the witness is
17 testifying to the presence or absence of a “mental state” that is “an element of the crime charged or
18 of a defense thereto.” Fed. R. Evid. 704. This court has repeatedly found that the operations of
19 narcotics dealers are a proper subject for expert testimony. See, e.g., United States v. Simmons, 923
20 F.2d 934, 946 (2d Cir. 1991).
21 Ralat testified to his qualifications at trial and in the voir dire. He had been a criminal
22 investigator with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for three years, following a twenty-year career as a
14
1 member of the NYPD, seventeen of which he spent investigating narcotics cases. At the end of his
2 tenure with the NYPD, Ralat was one of about a hundred first-grade detectives. He stated that he was
3 familiar with the practices of cocaine users and dealers, had made undercover purchases of narcotics,
4 and had executed search warrants in apartments where drug distribution was taking place. Ralat had
5 served as an expert witness in narcotics cases on seven prior occasions.
6 Over Lopez’s objection, the district court granted the government’s application to qualify
7 Ralat as an expert in the practices of drug users and dealers, noting Ralat’s extensive experience
8 investigating narcotics with the NYPD, and stating that “his specialized knowledge would assist me
9 to understand the evidence or determine a fact in issue.” Ralat subsequently testified, inter alia, that
10 the items found in Lopez’s green bag constituted “basically a small distribution kit,” explaining that
11 “you have everything that you need to basically break [cocaine] down, cut it, and then rebag it for
12 resale.” He concluded that the items were more consistent with drug distribution than personal use.
13 Ralat also said that street level dealers commonly carry guns to protect their drugs, their drug profits,
14 and themselves from drug robbers.
15 Lopez contests the admission of Ralat’s testimony on two grounds: (1) that it was not based
16 on any reliable methodology or data, and (2) that it improperly provided a conclusion as to Lopez’s
17 intent in violation of Rule 704(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. Both arguments are without
18 merit.
19 First, Rule 702 explicitly permits a witness to testify as an expert on the basis of “knowledge,
20 skill, experience, training, or education.” The district court qualified Ralat as an expert precisely on
21 the basis of the “knowledge, skill, [and] experience” accumulated during his seventeen years as a
22 NYPD detective investigating drug cases. Ralat then related important background information on
15
1 why a wooden masher, a metal strainer, two spoons, a scale, and more than one hundred empty
2 glassines would be stored together and how they would be used as tools for a drug dealer. Ralat made
3 it clear that his opinions were not only based on “what people tell me,” but rather also on “what I have
4 seen over years and years of being involved in investigating narcotics.” A detective with nearly two
5 decades’ experience investigating drug crimes is well qualified to give such expert opinion. There
6 was no error in qualifying Ralat as an expert under Rule 702.
7 Second, Ralat did not testify as to Lopez’s intent. Rather, he merely stated that, based on his
8 experience as a drug investigator, the drugs and paraphernalia found in Lopez’s car were more
9 consistent with distribution than personal use. The question – whether Lopez had the requisite intent
10 to distribute – was clearly left to Judge Stein as the trier of fact. Thus, contrary to Lopez’s argument,
11 Ralat’s testimony did not run afoul of Rule 704(b).
12 Conclusion
13 The district court made no error in admitting evidence seized from the inventory search of
14 Lopez’s car, nor in admitting the contested expert testimony. We affirm the judgment of conviction.
16