United States v. Keith Forbes

181 F.3d 1, 1999 WL 315796
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 2001
Docket98-2302
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 181 F.3d 1 (United States v. Keith Forbes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Keith Forbes, 181 F.3d 1, 1999 WL 315796 (1st Cir. 2001).

Opinion

STAHL, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-appellant Keith Forbes appeals his convictions for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, both in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841. He claims that the court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence seized during a warrantless search of his automobile. We vacate the order denying the motion to suppress and remand for further proceedings.

I.

After a warrantless search of his automobile, Forbes, a Jamaican immigrant, *3 was arrested and charged with two counts of violating 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1). During a hearing on July 2, 1998, the district court denied Forbes’s motion to suppress evidence derived from the search. Forbes pleaded guilty to the two counts, but reserved the right to appeal the court’s order denying his motion to suppress. The court sentenced Forbes to, inter alia, 57 months’ imprisonment.

Because the facts are in dispute, and because this appeal largely turns on whether the court made improper factual findings, we recite both the government’s and Forbes’s versions of the facts as they emerged during the suppression hearing, followed by the court’s findings.

A. The Government’s Version

Rhode Island State Trooper Terrence Pendergast, the officer who conducted the search in question, testified as follows. On April 1, 1998, Forbes was driving a black BMW with Massachusetts plates and tinted windows northbound on Route 95 near West Greenwich, Rhode Island. Pender-gast clocked Forbes driving seventy-five miles per hour in a sixty-five miles per hour zone. After noting that Forbes was speeding, Pendergast followed directly behind Forbes in a marked police car without turning on his lights or siren. Forbes then began shifting from lane to lane without putting on his turn signal. At this point,' Pendergast put on his lights and pulled Forbes over.

Pendergast walked to the car, and Forbes lowered the driver’s side window. Pendergast saw smoke coming from the window and smelled burning marijuana. When he asked Forbes if he had any more marijuana in his possession, Forbes replied, “No. I don’t have any more marijuana. I had just finished smoking a roach.” Pendergast took Forbes’s license and registration, and ran a criminal history check on them. The check showed Forbes’s .papers to be valid and did not reveal that Forbes had a criminal record, 1 but Pender-gast nonetheless retained the documents.

Pendergast next asked Forbes if he would consent to a search of the vehicle, and Forbes acquiesced. Although Pender-gast had written consent forms in his cruiser, he did not give Forbes one. Pen-dergast did not think he needed written consent, or for that matter, any consent, because he believed he had probable cause to search the vehicle anyway.

Pendergast asked Forbes to step out of the car, did a Terry frisk of his person, and removed a pack of rolling papers and a wallet from his pockets. After another officer arrived, Pendergast searched Forbes’s vehicle. Pendergast saw what appeared to be at least a dozen marijuana seeds in the ashtray.

Pendergast then asked Forbes how to open the trunk,’ and Forbes replied that you need to use the car key. 2 Pendergast removed the key from the car, handed Forbes the key, and asked him to open the trunk. Forbes willingly did so. Within the trunk were two zipped duffel bags, which smelled of unburned marijuana and acetone. 3 Pendergast unzipped and searched the bags. The first duffel bag contained cocaine. After finding the cocaine, Pendergast handcuffed Forbes and read him his Miranda rights. Pendergast then opened the second duffel bag, which contained marijuana. Pendergast drove Forbes back to the police station.

B. Forbes’s Version

• Forbes’s version of the events in question is decidedly different. Forbes was *4 not driving seventy-five miles per hour; he knew that the overpass where Pendergast was waiting was a common speed trap, so he was careful at that section of the highway. Nor did Forbes swerve from lane to lane. After being pulled over, Forbes asked Pendergast why he had been stopped, and Pendergast replied that his windows were too dark.

Pendergast initially asked Forbes for his license and registration. Pendergast took the papers to check them and, returning to the car, asked Forbes to step out of the car. Pendergast frisked Forbes, and then asked him whether he had any drugs or weapons. Forbes answered, “No.” Forbes did not ever smoke marijuana in the car and had not smoked marijuana that day. He had, however, smoked a cigar in the car that morning, and there was an empty cigar packet on the floor of the car.

Pendergast then told Forbes to wait in his car, and Pendergast returned to his cruiser. A second police car arrived. Pendergast told Forbes to back up his car, leave his key in the ignition, and again step out of the car. Pendergast searched Forbes’s pockets (removing the wallet and the rolling papers), and subsequently began to search Forbes’s car without asking for, or receiving, consent. Forbes testified that he never would have consented to a search of the car, because he knew that there were drugs in the trank. After completing his search of the car, Pendergast took Forbes’s key and opened the trunk.

Supporting Forbes’s version of events, a laboratory test performed on the contents of Forbes’s ashtray revealed no traces of drugs. Nor did there appear to be “seeds” of any kind in the ashtray; the toxicologist’s report made no reference to seeds, and Pendergast admitted during the hearing that he could not discern any seeds in the toxicologist’s exhibit, which was taken from the ashtray.

C. The District Court’s Findings

In making its findings, the district court explicitly stated that

if I was just looking at a cold record here, I wouldn’t believe the Government’s version .... But I must say after listening to the testimony of Trooper Pendergast, and observing him when he testified, the version as difficult as it may seem to believe on paper, seems to me to be credible as related by him.

The court believed that Pendergast “smelled what he thought was burning marijuana,” though the smell may not have actually been marijuana. Similarly, the court stated that, although “based on the evidence that’s been presented, there probably were not marijuana seeds in the ash tray[,][t]hat doesn’t mean that Trooper Pendergast might not have thought he saw them.” The court also found that it was Forbes who opened the trunk of the car. Most importantly for present purposes, the court determined that Forbes voluntarily gave his consent to the search.

Yet despite the court’s contention that it found Pendergast to be credible, the court called into question or rejected some major parts of Pendergast’s testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 F.3d 1, 1999 WL 315796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-keith-forbes-ca1-2001.