United States v. Pore
This text of 328 F. Supp. 2d 591 (United States v. Pore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM
On August 2, 2004, the Court issued a brief Order denying Defendant Tysheem Pore’s (“Pore”) Motion to Suppress Evidence. The Court now writes to further explain its ruling.
I. BACKGROUND
This case involves a thirteen-minute traffic stop on Route 95 in Cecil County, Maryland. On August 25, 2003, Trooper Howard Kennard (“Kennard”) of the Maryland State Police observed Pore make an unsafe lane change, among other traffic violations. When Kennard activated his siren, the video camera mounted to his patrol car automatically began recording. 1
Pore’s minivan stopped on the right hand shoulder of the highway and Ken-nard parked behind it. Kennard walked up to the passenger’s side of the van and informed Pore that he had been driving unsafely. In a courteous tone, Kennard asked Pore for his driver’s license and vehicle registration. As Pore, who was *593 highly nervous, struggled to retrieve his Virginia driver’s license from his wallet, Kennard noticed a New York license. He asked Pore for that document as well. As he spoke with Pore, Kennard smelled a strong odor of air freshener coming from inside Pore’s van.
Kennard returned to his patrol car and began “calling in” Pore’s information. His suspicions raised, Kennard requested a K-9 unit to perform a drug scan. Sergeant Michael Lewis (“Lewis”) of the Maryland State Police, who was Kennard’s supervisor, overheard the call. Because he was nearby, Lewis decided to provide assistance. The videotape shows Lewis briefly speaking with Pore. 2 While Kennard was completing his check on Pore’s documents, Trooper George Butler of the Maryland State Police arrived with Lobo, a certified drug-detection dog. Without speaking to Butler, Kennard gestured with his hand, signaling Butler to conduct a scan. Lobo alerted twice, at the rear end and at the front passenger side of the van.
The Maryland State Police officers found cocaine, crack cocaine, heroin, and a handgun in a secret compartment in Pore’s car. Pore moved to suppress the evidence. On July 9, 2004, the Court held an eviden-tiary hearing. Because of the unavailability of witnesses, the hearing was continued to July 27th and 29th, with oral argument on the 30th During the hearing, the Government called the following witnesses:
(i) Kennard, who was also the arresting officer;
(ii) Lewis, who has considerable knowledge and training in drug transportation, traffic stops, and secret compartments; and
(iii)Butler, who, at the time of the stop, had trained and worked with Lobo for approximately one year.
Pore did not testify, but he called a Maryland State Police K-9 officer, Trooper Colleen McCurdy. Pore also introduced into evidence several factual stipulations and a number of other exhibits.
II. ANALYSIS
There are two issues: (i) whether Trooper Kennard had reasonable articula-ble suspicion to stop Pore; and (ii) whether there was probable cause to search Pore’s van.
The Court finds that Kennard validly stopped Pore for traffic violations, including speeding, following too closely, and an unsafe lane change. Once Pore had pulled to the side of the road, Kennard had a reasonable length of time in which to conduct a routine traffic stop. See United States v. Rusher, 966 F.2d 868, 876 (4th Cir.1992) (finding that requesting a driver’s license and vehicle registration, running a computer check, and issuing a citation falls within the proper investigative scope of a routine traffic stop).
Kennard was in the process of calling in Pore’s Virginia driver’s license and New York license (which was, in fact, a suspended learner’s permit), when his observations established probable cause to conduct a search of Pobe’s van for drugs. 3 Pore was highly nervous. He was breathing heavily and his muscles were tense. *594 Because Pore’s hands were shaking badly, Pore used his teeth to extract his license from a plastic sleeve in his wallet. 4 Ken-nard’s observations were corroborated by Lewis, who testified that Pore’s chest was palpitating and his right carotid artery was visibly pulsating. Kennard testimony that he smelled the strong odor of air freshener is corroborated by pictures showing pine tree shaped air fresheners hanging from the rear view mirror of Pore’s van. 5 Lewis also testified that he smelled a strong air freshener odor when he spoke with Pore.
After Kennard called for a K-9 scan, Trooper Butler and Lobo promptly arrived. 6 Butler testified that the dog alerted, and the tape shows Butler rewarding Lobo by throwing Lobo his toy, rubbing Lobo’s ears and head, and praising the dog. The defense mounted a spirited attack on the probative value of Lobo’s alert. Pore challenged the reliability of drug sniffing dogs in general and Lobo in particular, and sought to discredit Butler’s testimony that Lobo had, in fact, alerted.
While resourceful, this attack is unavailing. Lobo is a certified and well-trained K-9 capable of detecting even a faint odor of drugs. An alert ■ does not necessarily mean that drugs are present in a car, the dog will alert to the residual odor that remains for a time after drugs have been removed. 7 An alert is, nonetheless, a significant factor in the probable cause equation.
Lobo’s scan of the car and his alert are not plain to see from the video tape. The camera’s view of Lobo was partially obscured by the front of the patrol car. The defense interprets the tape as showing that Butler either mistook Lobo’s equivocal behavior as an alert, or that Butler fabricated an alert as a pretext for searching Pore’s car.
The Court rejects these contentions. At the time of the instant scan, Butler and Lobo were an established team, and they had trained and worked together for a year. 8 Butler sent Lobo around the car *595 twice to give Lobo an opportunity to make a careful observation. It is improbable that Butler would misinterpret Lobo’s behavior.
Butler also lavishly praised and rewarded Lobo for alerting. It is unlikely that Butler would have been willing to subvert Lobo’s training and performance by rewarding him when no reward was due. It is also unlikely that Butler would have been willing to confuse Lobo in order to search a car that, the dog, despite his powerful sense of smell, had given a clean bill of health. 9
In deciding suppression motions, a Court must look at the facts as they existed before the drugs were discovered.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
328 F. Supp. 2d 591, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15682, 2004 WL 1789911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-pore-mdd-2004.