Nited States of America v. Terrance Anderson and Cory Landrum, 1

943 F.2d 53
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 4, 1991
Docket90-1242
StatusUnpublished

This text of 943 F.2d 53 (Nited States of America v. Terrance Anderson and Cory Landrum, 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nited States of America v. Terrance Anderson and Cory Landrum, 1, 943 F.2d 53 (6th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

943 F.2d 53

NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
NITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Terrance ANDERSON and Cory Landrum,1
Defendants-Appellants.

Nos. 90-1242, 90-1253.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Sept. 4, 1991.

Before MERRITT, Chief Judge, NATHANIEL R. JONES, Circuit Judge, and WELLFORD*, Senior Circuit Judge.

AMENDED SUPPLEMENTAL PER CURIAM

I. BACKGROUND

On April 12, 1989, drug enforcement agents Riddle, Denton and Gentry, while at the Detroit airport watching passengers disembarking from a Los Angeles flight, observed defendants, Terrance Anderson and Cory Landrum, leave the plane among the last passengers. Anderson and Landrum communicated briefly then parted ways, Anderson going to the bathroom, while Landrum made a phone call.

Riddle followed Landrum and tried to eavesdrop on his phone call. Landrum, however, lowered his voice and turned away. Landrum then walked to the baggage claim area, an out-of-the-way location for passengers not claiming baggage. Landrum proceeded to make another telephone call from this area. Landrum then sat in a chair not far from where Anderson was waiting by the baggage claim conveyor belt. While the two looked in the direction of one another several times, they engaged in no conversation and did not acknowledge one another's presence.

Anderson eventually picked up two bags after most of the rest of the waiting passengers had left the baggage area. After Anderson picked up his bags to leave, Landrum also left the area, without claiming any luggage, and by a separate exit. Riddle and Denton followed Anderson to a taxi stand.

At the taxi stand Riddle and Denton identified themselves as DEA agents and displayed their credentials. Denton asked Anderson for his airline ticket. Anderson showed him a ticket, paid for in cash, in the name of Michael Henderson. When asked for picture identification, Anderson claimed to have lost it. Denton thereupon asked Anderson to give consent to search of his bags. Anderson responded that he did not know of anything in the bags other than clothing, but made no objection. Denton patted Anderson down and shortly thereafter, an agent with a dog, trained to locate suspected drugs by smell, appeared in view. The agent handling the dog called to Riddle to tell him that the dog had "hit" on the bags in question. Riddle then told Anderson that he and the bags were being detained for further investigation, and took Anderson and his bags back into the airport.

Inside, Riddle asked Anderson again for consent to search the luggage. Anderson's response was ambiguous; Riddle pressed for a definite answer. Riddle testified that after initial inconclusive responses, Anderson finally gave permission for the search, which produced ten kilograms of suspected cocaine, money, and clothing. Anderson testified at the evidentiary hearing, however, that he had never given consent to the search, and that prior to the arrival of the dog, he had asked if he might leave, but was not given permission because the agents wanted to search his bags.

Meanwhile, Gentry stopped Landrum inside the airport between the double set of doors leading to the outside. Gentry asked him for his airline ticket which was provided (a one-way ticket from Los Angeles paid for in cash in Landrum's name). Gentry then inquired how long Landrum had been in Los Angeles; the response was that he had been there several days visiting friends. Gentry then asked Landrum why he had no luggage and Landrum responded that he kept his belongings in Los Angeles. After Gentry pursued the interview to request picture identification, Landrum produced a Michigan driver's license in his name. Gentry gave the license to another officer to check for warrants, if any, outstanding on Landrum. Gentry then searched Landrum's person while awaiting this additional information. It was at this juncture that Riddle and Denton discovered the cocaine in Anderson's bags. Both Anderson and Landrum were then placed under arrest.

At the time of his arrest, Anderson had a boarding pass he claimed to have found on the airplane in the name of Kevin M. Anderson. Airline records disclosed that, on the day before, a Kevin Anderson made a reservation on a flight from Detroit to Los Angeles and that this reservation was made about the same time as one was made by a person claiming to be C. Laldrun. The telephone number given by Laldrun was only one digit different from defendant Landrum's telephone number.

Anderson also had a set of car keys for a rental car found parked at Landrum's residence in Detroit. Fingerprints identified as those of Anderson and Landrum were found on the cocaine. In response to questions by agent Riddle, Anderson claimed that he was to receive a phone call giving him directions about where to take the bags.

Upon being indicted for drug offenses, Anderson moved to suppress the evidence discovered by the government agents in the luggage at the airport. The district court, at a suppression hearing, ruled that both the stop and later arrest of Landrum were proper and that there was no constitutional violation in that respect. In Anderson's case, the district court concluded first that the stop of Anderson was proper, and also that Anderson consented to the search of his luggage. It followed that his arrest was also valid. At the trial, Anderson was convicted of transporting 23 kilograms of cocaine. Landrum was acquitted on this substantive offense, but the jury could not reach a verdict on the conspiracy count for either defendant.

In Anderson's case, the prosecutor noted in closing argument that Anderson, when questioned after his arrest, did not give the kind of response one would expect if he were merely an unsuspecting carrier or innocent dupe. These closing remarks were in response to the defendant's theory that he was not connected with a drug organization and did not know that he was carrying drugs. The prosecutor stated that Anderson "was covering up." He added that he did "not recall any testimony from Gentry or anybody else that couriers or mules are not part of the [drug] organization."

Following the trial, resulting in no verdict on the conspiracy charge, Landrum filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that Riddle and Gentry had presented deliberately false testimony during the suppression hearing, having stopped Landrum, not on the basis of a claimed drug courier profile, but rather on the basis of a tip, apparently to the effect that two black males would be arriving on this flight from Los Angeles, one tall, one short, and that the shorter one would be named Cory. Agent Riddle had stated at the evidentiary hearing that he was not working on the basis of a tip. It was later determined that Agent Riddle knew about a vague tip giving no flight number or time and, although other of the agents may have known more particulars, he did not.

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943 F.2d 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nited-states-of-america-v-terrance-anderson-and-cory-landrum-1-ca6-1991.