United States v. Judith Ann Huguenin (97-5152) and William A. Martin (97-5160)

154 F.3d 547
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 19, 1998
Docket97-5152, 97-5160
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 154 F.3d 547 (United States v. Judith Ann Huguenin (97-5152) and William A. Martin (97-5160)) 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. Judith Ann Huguenin (97-5152) and William A. Martin (97-5160), 154 F.3d 547 (6th Cir. 1998).

Opinions

CONTIE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MOORE, J., joined. KENNEDY, J. (pp. 563-565), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.

OPINION

CONTIE, Circuit Judge.

Defendants-appellants Judith A. Hugue-nin and William A. Martin appeal the denial of their joint motion to suppress evidence obtained after a search and seizure at ah automobile checkpoint. Following their conditional pleas of guilty for possession with intent to distribute marijuana, defendants challenged the constitutionality of police procedures used to stop motorists exiting off a Tennessee highway upon warning that motorists are approaching a nareotics/DUI checkpoint. Because we conclude that the procedures used by law enforcement officers were unconstitutional, we REVERSE the denial of the defendants’ motion to suppress.1

I.

On March 19, 1996, defendants Judith Hu-guenin and William Martin were each indicted on one count of possessing with the intent to distribute marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(B). The charges stemmed from defendants’ detention at a drug/DUI checkpoint at the Airport Road exit off Interstate 40 in Roane County, Tennessee. •

On March 14, 1996 at approximately 4:30 p.m.,, Ms. Huguenin and Mr. Martin were traveling eastbound on Interstate 40. Mr. Martin was driving, and Ms. Huguenin was in the front passenger’s seat. In Roane County, Tennessee, they passed two large, square signs with the words “DRUG-DUI ENFORCEMENT CHECK POINT % MILE AHEAD.” One sign was on each side of the road. Mr. Martin turned onto an exit ramp for Airport Road about 150-200 yards or a quarter mile after the signs. When a driver exits at Airport Road, the end of the long exit ramp is not immediately visible as the ramp curves and bears to the left. When Mr. Martin drove up the exit ramp, there were four orange cones oh the side of the road near the turn at the end of the exit. Two were on each side-the first two approximately three to four feet from the intersection, the next two approximately fifteen to twenty feet from the first. The checkpoint was at the end of the exit at a stop sign.

Officer Dennis Worley of the Roane County, Tennessee Sheriffs Department had established this checkpoint as a “ruse” to stop motorists who chose to exit off the highway after viewing the signs warning of an upcoming DUI/narcotics checkpoint on the highway. Although the two signs posted on eastbound 1-40 read “DRUG-DUI ENFORCEMENT CHECK POINT £ MILE AHEAD,” the. officers had no checkpoint in place on the highway. Instead, Officer Wor-ley set up the checkpoint at the end of the Airport Road exit ramp,-, which is the first exit available to motorists after the posted signs! but is not frequently used, because no services are offered at that exit. Motorists could not see the officers at the roadblock at the end of the ramp until they came around the curve — approximately 50 to 100 yards into the uphill exit ramp. After a motorist gets off at the exit, there is no place to turn around to avoid the checkpoint as it is illegal to back down an exit ramp in Tennessee.

[550]*550The checkpoint had been authorized by the Roane County Sheriffs Department, which had established a policy in December 1994 regarding the proper procedures for setting up and running a narcotics/sobriety checkpoint. The ostensible goal of the policy was “to remove impaired drivers from our highways as safely as possible with due regard to the safety of the public and the officer(s).” The procedure used at the checkpoint was for an officer to approach the motorist at the stop sign. No set questions were asked. It was left to the discretion of the officer whether or not to ask the motorist his reasons for exiting at Airport Road. Depending on the response, the officer would question the motorist further or allow the vehicle to proceed.

On average, it took an officer operating . the checkpoint approximately ten to fifteen seconds to determine whether a driver was intoxicated. While the checkpoint was in operation, the county’s drug dog, King, was always present. There was, however, never a breathalyzer at the checkpoint. Although the checkpoint’s main operator had asked for a breathalyzer, none had been provided. Objects seized at the checkpoint were subject to forfeiture. The money raised through forfeiture went into the county’s drug fund, which “funds narcotics enforcement,” and into the D.A.R.E.2 program.

Officer Worley had utilized this “ruse” sixty-five times at the Airport Road exit prior to May 14, 1996. On that day, the roadblock operated from 1:30 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. At 4:30 p.m., five law enforcement officers were present: Sheriffs Deputy Dennis Worley, Reserve Officers Joe Brock, Steve Halcolmb, and Jason Halcolmb, and an unidentified Highway Patrolman.3 Each officer was in uniform and armed. With the men were five vehicles: a marked sheriffs car, a marked Highway Patrol car, two unmarked law enforcement cars, and a D.A.R.E. trailer.

When defendants exited at Airport Road on April 14, 1996, a sign normally posted to inform motorists about the purpose of the checkpoint was absent from the ramp. Officer Joe Brock, a volunteer reserve officer with no specific training in detecting intoxicated drivers, approached their vehicle. He indicated that there was no set procedure for stopping cars, and he just happened to be there when defendants drove up. It was left up to Brock’s discretion on how to question motorists. He decided that when the vehicle’s license plate revealed out-of-state tags, he would ask the motorist his or her reason for using the exit. Because defendants’ vehicle displayed Wyoming tags, Brock informed defendants that they had been stopped at a Roane County drug/DUI checkpoint and asked defendant Martin, the driver, why he had exited at Airport Road.

When Mr. Martin replied that they were in search of gasoline, Officer Brock looked at the gas gauge and saw that it indicated a full tank. Officer Brock did not notice anything that indicated that Mr. Martin had been drinking and did not ask him if he had been drinking. He detected no alcohol on his breath and noticed no other indicators of intoxication. After Officer Brock had spoken to defendants for approximately one to two minutes, Officer Worley approached the car, and Officer Brock backed away.

Officer Worley addressed defendants through the driver’s window. He also told [551]*551them that they had entered the Roane County Sheriffs Department’s drug/DUI checkpoint, and that the officers were looking for individuals who were driving under the influence or transporting illegal drugs. Officer Worley also noticed that defendants’ ear had Wyoming tags. He testified that Mr. Martin gripped the steering wheel and did not look at him at all during the conversation. He testified that Ms. Huguenin looked at him, but was shaking and nervous. He asked whether Mr. Martin needed help because he had exited at a ramp where no services were located. When Mr. Martin informed him that he pulled off to fill his gas tank, Officer Worley accused him of lying, and Mr. Martin did not respond. Officer Worley then asked for consent to search the van, which was denied.

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Bluebook (online)
154 F.3d 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-judith-ann-huguenin-97-5152-and-william-a-martin-ca6-1998.