United States v. Motley

561 F. Supp. 2d 1174, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41032, 2008 WL 2165825
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedMay 21, 2008
Docket2:07-cv-00103
StatusPublished

This text of 561 F. Supp. 2d 1174 (United States v. Motley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Motley, 561 F. Supp. 2d 1174, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41032, 2008 WL 2165825 (D. Nev. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER

LARRY R. HICKS, District Judge.

Presently before the court is Defendant Myron Motley’s Motion to Suppress Evidence (# 17 1 ). The Government filed an opposition to this motion (#24) to which Defendant replied (# 25). On February 17, 19, and 24, 2008, this court held an evidentiary hearing on Defendant’s motion. Following this hearing Defendant and the Government filed post-hearing memoranda (# 32 & 33).

I. Facts and Procedural History

Prior to December 5, 2007, Bill Ames, an employee of the Washoe County Sheriffs Office and task force officer with the Drug Enforcement Agency, surveilled Defendant as part of Ames’s duties. During this period Ames spoke with a confidential informant’s relative, who told Ames Defendant was a cocaine and crack cocaine trafficker who often lived at Harrah’s casino in Reno, Nevada. According to this source, Defendant would live at Harrah’s for weeks at a time but would leave for a few days and return to resume his drug business at Harrah’s. The source also told Ames that Defendant took up to nineteen ounces of powder cocaine at a time and transferred it into rock cocaine. Defendant would then sell the rock cocaine to middlemen, who in turn sold it to consumers.

*1177 On or about November 29, 2007, Ames spoke with Harrah’s director of security regarding two incidents involving Defendant. According to the director, on one occasion Defendant called hotel security to report he had lost the key to his room safe. An employee told Defendant that hotel maintenance would have to remove the safe door because the hotel did not have spare keys to the safes. Upon a maintenance worker’s arrival at Defendant’s room, the worker found the safe was already broken into.

The security director also reported that PBX operators at Harrah’s, where Defendant was currently staying, were suspicious due to the number and times of calls to Defendant in his room. The director also reported that a person whom Defendant associated with was arrested in Har-rah’s for selling crack cocaine.

The security officers also told Ames that three or four years ago Defendant transacted $59,000 with Harrah’s. In 2006, this amount increased to $600,000, and in 2007, Defendant had already transacted $700,000. Moreover, Ames observed that Harrah’s paperwork concerning Defendant, which contained spaces for an employer, made no indication Defendant was employed.

On December 5, 2007, Ames witnessed Defendant’s vehicle leave Harrah’s and drive west on Interstate 80. Ames called California Highway Patrol (“CHP”) Truckee dispatch and requested to speak to an officer about obtaining a stop of Defendant’s vehicle. Ames then spoke with David Solari, a sergeant with CHP. Ames told Solari that there was a vehicle traveling towards Truckee, California that was possibly connected with narcotic transactions or a large amount of cash.

Ames also spoke with CHP Officer Jim Manion while Manion was at the CHP Truckee office. Ames told Manion that Defendant would be traveling west on 1-80 in a gold Jeep Cherokee and that Ames believed there were drugs in Defendant’s vehicle. Ames asked Manion to stop the vehicle if he had a chance but also told Manion to develop his own independent probable cause. At this court’s suppression hearing, Ames explained he asked Manion to develop his own probable cause in order to “wall out” DEA’s investigation from the CHP’s involvement.

Prior to his departure from the office, Manion asked Solari to contact Officer Jerry Jacobs, a CHP Truckee-area canine handler, in the event someone stopped Defendant’s vehicle. Several minutes after Solari’s conversation with Ames, Solari spoke with Jacobs and told him to retrieve Spirit, a CHP dog trained in illegal drug detection, from Jacobs’s home and also listen to his radio for any stop of Defendant’s vehicle.

Manion traveled to 1-80 and waited for Defendant’s vehicle to pass by. As Man-ion saw Defendant’s vehicle approach, Manion noticed there was a large object suspended from the driver’s rear view mirror. After Defendant passed Manion, Manion pulled out from his vantage point, caught up to Defendant, and drove alongside Defendant’s vehicle.

From this position Manion noticed that the vehicle’s driver-side window was tinted. Based upon his knowledge of the California Vehicle Code, Manion concluded that the driver’s side window was illegally tinted. Manion also observed that the object hanging from the rear view mirror was a placard about the size of a placard for a disabled person or perhaps larger. 2 Manion believed the placard violated the California Vehicle Code’s prohibition on driving while an object obstructs or re *1178 duces the driver’s clear view. Based upon these perceived violations, Manion pulled over Defendant’s vehicle at 11:35 a.m.

After approaching Defendant’s vehicle and conversing with Defendant, Manion discovered that Defendant’s registration was expired, and he had no proof of insurance. Manion then directed Officer Graham — who had arrived at the scene shortly after the stop — to write Defendant a citation for two violations: object from rear view mirror obstructing driver’s view and no proof of insurance. At 11:49, Manion ran a warrants check on Defendant in Placer and Contra Costa counties. After discovering Defendant had a possible alias, Manion also ran a DMV check and a warrant cheek on that name.

Approximately forty minutes after the initial stop, at 12:15 p.m., Jacobs arrived at the scene with Spirit. At this point Man-ion and Defendant were discussing the citation by Manion’s vehicle. After arriving, Jacobs directed Spirit to sniff the exterior of Defendant’s vehicle. While sniffing near the vehicle’s passenger door, Spirit stood up on his hind legs and put his head into the front passenger-side window. Spirit then continued to sniff the exterior of the vehicle but stopped at the lower right corner of the seam between the driver and passenger door. At this location, Spirit took a deep sniff and began to paw aggressively at the lower rear-corner of the seam. This was interpreted by Jacobs as a definite drug alert.

It took approximately five minutes for Jacobs to inspect Defendant’s vehicle with Spirit. After observing Spirit’s alert, Jacobs asked Defendant if there was any marijuana in his vehicle. Defendant responded that there was not. Jacobs then asked Defendant if there were any other drugs in the vehicle. Defendant responded that there was no marijuana in the vehicle.

Jacobs then conducted a warrantless search of Defendant’s vehicle and found what he believed were cocaine and crack cocaine. After this discovery, Defendant asked Manion what Jacobs was putting into bags. Manion responded that he was advised it was rock cocaine. In response, Defendant said, “it’s not rock, it’s powder, man.”

The Defendant was thereafter arrested by Manion and was transported to the county jail in Truckee. While en route, Defendant made statements about acquiring cocaine in Reno and how he was buying cocaine everywhere he could. 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
561 F. Supp. 2d 1174, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41032, 2008 WL 2165825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-motley-nvd-2008.