United States v. Jonathan Mendoza-Ricardo

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 2020
Docket19-6125
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Jonathan Mendoza-Ricardo (United States v. Jonathan Mendoza-Ricardo) 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
United States v. Jonathan Mendoza-Ricardo, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0352n.06

No. 19-6125

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Jun 15, 2020 DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff-Appellee, ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF JONATHAN MENDOZA- KENTUCKY RICARDO,

Defendant-Appellant.

BEFORE: CLAY, ROGERS, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.

CLAY, Circuit Judge. Defendant Jonathan Mendoza-Ricardo appeals his criminal

conviction after pleading guilty to a conspiracy to distribute large quantities of marijuana. See

21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846. On appeal, Mendoza-Ricardo challenges his detention at a traffic stop

as unreasonable, and thereby seeks to suppress his later confession. For the reasons that follow,

we disagree and affirm Mendoza-Ricardo’s conviction.

I. BACKGROUND

In early February 2019, Bryn Elton—a special agent with Homeland Security

Investigations (“HSI”)—was in Phoenix, Arizona, “conducting surveillance on a suspected

narcotics trafficker.” (Hearing Tr., R. 125 at PageID #397, #400–01.) While monitoring that

suspected trafficker, Agent Elton and her colleagues saw him load what they suspected to be bales

of marijuana into the back of a Toyota Highlander. They decided to follow the Highlander, the

start of what turned into a two-day “trip from hell,” in which the agents were led from state to state

until finally arriving in Kentucky. (Id. at #401–02.) United States v. Mendoza-Ricardo No. 19-6125

When they reached the Lexington area, Elton says the vehicle performed a

“countersurveillance run” in the parking lot of a shopping mall, after which it proceeded to a

residence in Nicholasville, Kentucky, and backed into the driveway. (Id. at #402–03.) The HSI

agents then set up surveillance around the house and began a stakeout. They also asked for support

from local law enforcement, in case they needed uniformed officers to conduct a traffic stop or

otherwise assist the agents with their work. One of the HSI agents, Matthew Hall, met with

Nicholasville Police Department officers, informed them of the operation, and gave them a radio;

the Nicholasville officers agreed to help if they could.

At one point during the stakeout, a white work truck arrived at the house. The two men in

the truck exited the vehicle, took small, grocery-store-type plastic bags from the truck, and walked

into the house without knocking. According to Elton, the house in question appeared to be a stash

house, meaning a location used for storing drugs. Based on her experience and training, drug

dealers will not allow third parties into a stash house, and so it is very likely that anyone entering

the house was involved in the conspiracy.

After spending some time in the house, the two men returned to their truck and started to

drive away. The car drove directly by Elton, who recognized the man sitting in the passenger seat

as Fabian Zavala-Romero, an undocumented immigrant who was suspected of involvement in a

large-scale narcotics operation in the Lexington area. At that point, Elton notified the team over

the radio that Zavala-Romero was in the truck, and that the agents “had probable cause to stop and

detain him for a minimum of those immigration violations, in addition to the suspected narcotics

violations that were going on at that house.” (Id. at #406.) Elton then heard officers and agents on

the radio coordinating a traffic stop of the white truck.

-2- United States v. Mendoza-Ricardo No. 19-6125

Nicholasville officer Jeff Fryman, one of the officers who previously met with Agent Hall,

heard over the radio that a white work truck had left the suspected stash house. He then saw a

white truck near the location reported by the HSI agents and began to follow it under HSI’s

direction. Fryman says he recalls agents mentioning either one or two occupants of the vehicle,

that “one of the men in the vehicle was at least one of the ones that they had been watching,” and

that one of the people in the vehicle was undocumented. (Id. at #424.) Fryman called for marked

patrol units to come assist them with a potential traffic stop, and Agent Hall was also following

behind Fryman but was caught in traffic.

Eventually, HSI directed Nicholasville police to stop the vehicle. According to Fryman,

the stop was “[b]ased on [HSI’s] investigation and the immigration status of one of the occupants.”

(Id. at #425.) Fryman says that officers then stopped the vehicle, spoke with its occupants, and

detained both of them. The two people in the car were ultimately identified as Zavala-Romero—

the man whom Agent Elton recognized earlier—and Jonathan Mendoza-Ricardo, the defendant in

this appeal. Fryman also said that HSI suspected both occupants of the vehicle of involvement in

the drug conspiracy, and specifically asked Fryman to detain both of them, not just Zavala-

Romero.

While Agent Hall had earlier been following the Nicholasville officers, he never made it

to the scene of the traffic stop. Instead, before he got there, he activated his emergency equipment

and raced back to the house; Fryman believes this occurred after radio reports came in of a man at

the stash house trying to flee through a window. Whatever the cause, the Nicholasville officers

were left at the scene alone, which Fryman describes as follows:

After we detained [Zavala-Romero and Mendoza-Ricardo], we pretty much didn’t do anything. We waited. I can’t remember if I talked on the cell phone or the radio to Special Agent Hall because

-3- United States v. Mendoza-Ricardo No. 19-6125

he was the one we had the most conversation with or communication with. But he told us that somebody [else] from HSI was going to be coming to our traffic stop.

(Id. at #427–28.) Fryman says it took ten to fifteen minutes for this other agent to arrive at the

scene, during which the officers were still trying to confirm the identities of Zavala-Romero and

Mendoza-Ricardo.

In his testimony, Fryman also noted the Nicholasville officers’ desire to wait for HSI to

arrive so they could interview the pair themselves:

Q. . . . [B]ased on your training and experience, you typically, if you’re less familiar with the investigation, would you wait for [a different] officer to question suspects?

A. A hundred percent.

Q. That’s just because they’re more familiar with the facts?
A. Exactly.

(Id. at #428.)

Meanwhile, back at the house, agents saw a man exit the home, open up the Highlander,

and start moving black objects, which based on the surveillance in Phoenix, the agents believed

were bales of marijuana. Elton testified that in her experience, once a shipment of drugs reaches a

stash house, many other vehicles may soon arrive to pick up their share of the drugs, and so the

time for the agents to act was shrinking. As a result, the agents decided to secure the house and

moved in to surround it. When they did this, someone tried to jump out of a back window but

returned into the house when he saw other agents. Officers called out for the occupants to surrender

and exit the home, and eventually two men left the house and were taken into custody.

After the two men at the house were detained, HSI agent Brian Patterson, who was then at

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United States v. Jonathan Mendoza-Ricardo, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jonathan-mendoza-ricardo-ca6-2020.