United States v. Clifford Jerome Miller and Kathelyn Vandraiss Miller, United States of America v. Clifford Jerome Miller

608 F.2d 1089, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 9291
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 28, 1979
Docket78-2274, 78-1737, 78-1978 and 78-1979
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 608 F.2d 1089 (United States v. Clifford Jerome Miller and Kathelyn Vandraiss Miller, United States of America v. Clifford Jerome Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Clifford Jerome Miller and Kathelyn Vandraiss Miller, United States of America v. Clifford Jerome Miller, 608 F.2d 1089, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 9291 (5th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

*1092 COLEMAN, Chief Judge:

This is a government appeal, 18 U.S.C., § 3731, 1 from the suppression of (1) tangible evidence found in the Miller automobile and (2) Miller’s confessions after he had been arrested and arraigned for having a false driver’s license and an expired automobile inspection sticker. The District Court first suppressed a pistol, rifle, and a portfolio found in the Miller automobile. Later, it suppressed all use of Miller’s correct identity and three confessions which, while voluntary, were thought to be “fruits of the poisonous tree”.

I

The Indictments

On January 9, 1978, Clifford Miller, a previously convicted felon, was indicted in the Pecos Division of the Western District of Texas for possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C., § 1202(a) Appendix. 2 On January 19, 1978, Clifford Miller and Kathelyn Miller were jointly indicted in the El Paso Division of the Western District for conspiracy to defraud the United States by filing a false social security claim in violation of 18 U.S.C., § 286. 3 Count two of the same indictment charged Kathelyn Miller with the completed substantive offense, in violation of 18 U.S.C., § 287, 4 and Clifford Miller with aiding and abetting that offense. A third indictment was filed in the El Paso Division on March 2,1978, charging Clifford Miller and Kathelyn Miller with mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C., § 1341. 5

*1093 II

The Astonishing Facts

On November 18, 1977, officers of the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) set up a routine license and vehicle registration checkpoint adjacent to a Border Patrol checkpoint, a lighted area, on Highway 67, about five miles south of Marfa, Texas. All cars traveling in either direction were stopped for the purpose of checking driver-licenses and motor vehicle registration, a procedure apparently approved in Delaware v. Prouse, 440 U.S. 648, 99 S.Ct. 1391, 59 L.Ed.2d 660 (197,9).

Officers at the checkpoint were DPS Officers (Agents) Greer, Kilpatrick, and Maxwell, along with a state highway patrolman, the county sheriff, and several other officers. The checkpoint was set up at noon and operated for twenty-four hours.

Around 8 o’clock p. m., after dark, a 1969 Chrysler, with other cars behind it in the same traffic lane, was stopped in regular traffic. It was driven by an individual who ultimately turned out to be Clifford Jerome Miller. His wife, Mrs. Kathelyn Miller, was also riding on the front seat. The automobile carried Texas license plates and displayed an expired safety inspection sticker.

Miller showed Agent Maxwell a New Mexico temporary driver’s permit, made out to Joseph Rosenfeld, specifying a date of birth and social security number. The document was only a carbon copy of the original and it carried no picture. When Agent Maxwell asked Miller to state his name, birthday, and social security number, Miller said his name was “Rosenfeld” and gave the date of birth listed on the permit. However, he recited a completely different social security number to that appearing on the permit.

Maxwell requested that Miller step to the rear of the vehicle, where he was asked to repeat the information recorded on the temporary license, whereupon he gave the same response. This, of course, alerted the officers to the likelihood that there was something rotten in Denmark.

When asked about the ownership of the Chrysler, Miller stated that he had just purchased it in south Texas from Alfred Phipps. Suspiciously enough, he could provide no bill of sale or other document evidencing that transaction. Whereupon, Maxwell called Officer Greer, who was then checking the first car behind Miller’s, to run a National Crime Information Center (NCIC) check on the permit and the automobile. While Miller was with Greer, and while the dispatcher was being contacted by radio for the desired reports, Maxwell drove the Miller Chrysler off the pavement, out of the highway traffic lane. He parked it at the end of the Border Patrol van, on the shoulder of the road, so that it would not obstruct moving traffic and halt the ongoing checks of other vehicles. Mrs. Miller remained in the car, sitting where she had been, on the passenger side of the front seat. Upon getting into the car for the purpose of moving it off the road, Maxwell saw a Colt’s pistol and holster between the bucket seats, only partially covered with a pillow. He unloaded the pistol and took it to Officer Greer in order that an NCIC check might also be run on it.

When the. NCIC reports came in, Greer told Maxwell that the vehicle was reported as registered to Alfred Phipps, of Alice, Texas, and that there was nothing in the computer on the temporary driver’s license. *1094 While all this was going on Miller volunteered that he had “purchased the pistol somewhere up North, and that there was a 30.06 riñe in the back seat that he [Maxwell] could check, also ”.

When Maxwell went back to the car to pick up the rifle he saw a plastic identification holder over the sun visor which, upon examination, contained credit cards issued to an oil company. Without stopping to pick up the rifle, Maxwell took these cards to Greer and then returned for the rifle. When he got back with the rifle he found out that “Rosenfeld” was now claiming to be Phipps. However, “Rosenfeld” gave different “middle names” for Phipps. He said that he had been arrested for DWI in Wyoming, that his driver’s license had been taken away from him, that he knew he couldn’t get a driver’s license using his real name, so he used the name Joseph Rosen-feld to get the New Mexico license. Greer testified that there was a credit card slip with the cards, signed that day with a “Phipps” signature. This signed credit slip was what caused “Rosenfeld” to start claiming that he, in fact, was Phipps. However, the credit card incident is of no materiality to this appeal as Miller has not been indicted on that subject.

In the face of the credit card development, Maxwell went back to the car, where the lady passenger insisted that the driver’s name was Rosenfeld, which Maxwell, of course, knew to be untrue.

The NCIC reported that the rifle had been stolen in El Paso and that the credit cards were also stolen. Upon receipt of that information, Greer arrested “Rosen-feld-Phipps” and gave him his Miranda warnings.

When Maxwell asked the lady passenger for the second time about the identity of the driver of the car and she insisted that he was Rosenfeld, Maxwell looked in the back seat and saw a plastic portfolio behind the driver’s seat which, it turned out, contained several sets of identification and a blue diary. He next searched the trunk of the vehicle, the back seat, and two footlockers on top of the car. Nothing found in the trunk or in the footlockers seems to have been of any evidentiary importance.

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Bluebook (online)
608 F.2d 1089, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 9291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-clifford-jerome-miller-and-kathelyn-vandraiss-miller-ca5-1979.