United States v. Vanness

342 F.3d 1093, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 17820, 2003 WL 22024852
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 26, 2003
Docket02-2008
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 342 F.3d 1093 (United States v. Vanness) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Vanness, 342 F.3d 1093, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 17820, 2003 WL 22024852 (10th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

HOLLOWAY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal involving a denial of a suppression motion. Vanness pleaded guilty and was sentenced to concurrent terms of 33 months in prison and three years of supervised release for possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. Brief of Appebant (Attachment: A at 1-3). In his plea agreement, Vanness reserved his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence. II R. (Doc. 88 at 2). Defendant’s primary contention on appeal is that the evidence should have been suppressed because the stated reason for the traffic stop was violation of a local noise ordinance which, he contends, is unconstitutionally vague and overly broad.

I

BACKGROUND

On November 15, 1999, at about 10:25 p.m., Officer Jerry L. Belyeu, a pobce officer for the Town of Bernalillo, New Mexico, was assisting another officer on a traffic stop when he heard very loud music. Ill R. 26-27, 30-81. (Transcript of *1095 6/13/01 proceedings). Officer Belyeu estimated that he was approximately 150 yards 1 from Vanness’ vehicle when he first heard the music and observed the car. Ill R. 31 (Belyeu stated that he actually heard the music for between three to five seconds before he saw Vanness’ vehicle. Id.). Belyeu later conducted two tests, with a laser and with his car’s odometer, which indicated that he was 450 to 500 feet away from Vanness’ car when he first heard the music and observed the vehicle. Id. at 31-33.

Officer Belyeu testified that he could hear Vanness’ car radio “over normal conversation between myself and somebody standing next to me. I could hear it over my police radio.” Ill R. 33 (Transcript of 6/13/01 proceedings). Subsequently, Be-lyeu pulled Vanness’ vehicle over, id., in an area which was within approximately fifteen to twenty yards of some residences and close to the grounds of a school. Id. at 48-49.

After pulling Vanness over, Officer Be-lyeu approached Vanness’ vehicle, where Vanness was sitting in the driver’s seat and Shauna Kelley was seated next to him in the front passenger’s seat. Belyeu testified that he identified himself and told Vanness he was being stopped because his radio was playing extremely, unreasonably loud. Ill R. 34-35. Officer Belyeu also testified that he asked Vanness whether there was something wrong with Vanness’ vehicle. Id. at 35. Vanness replied that his stereo and one of his speakers were malfunctioning and that he was attempting to find a location where he could work on the car. Id.

Officer Belyeu then asked for Vanness’ driver’s license, registration, and insurance. Id. at 36. Vanness, according to Belyeu, said he did not have one because his wallet had been stolen in Utah. Id. He then told Officer Belyeu that his name was Michael D. Herrera. Officer Belyeu told Vanness that he was parked in an area known “as being a high-traffic area for narcotics”, id. at 37-38, and then asked “ ‘Do you have anything in this vehicle I should be aware of, weapons, drugs, anything like that?’ ” Id. at 40. Vanness, according to Officer Belyeu, stated that Belyeu was welcome to search his car. Id.

Officer Belyeu checked with his dispatch office whether a “Michael D. Herrera” was licensed in either Utah or New Mexico and learned that there was no record on file of a license in either state. Ill R. 40-41. At this time, Officer Belyeu requested back up and Officers Palmer and Munk arrived soon thereafter. Id. at 41. According to Belyeu, Vanness provided Officer Palmer with a different spelling of the name “Michael D. Herrera” and told him he had a driver’s license in New York, but again a records check revealed no such license. Id. at 42. Belyeu also testified that Vanness told Officer Palmer that he was welcome to search the vehicle. Id. at 43.

Officers Belyeu and Palmer subsequently searched Vanness’s car and found seven knives, a small tin box with “[r]esidue of a green leafy substance which” Officer Be-lyeu “believed to be marijuana,” and a “bag with a white powdery substance.” Ill R. 43-44 (Transcript of 6/13/01 proceedings). 2 Officer Munk observed “a very large speaker in the back” of the *1096 vehicle “which was taking up most of the rear area of the vehicle, a very large base-type [sic] speaker” consistent with the noise that was emanating from the vehicle. Ill R. 95. Officer Palmer discovered Vanness’s wallet, which contained his suspended Colorado driver’s license, in Kelly’s jacket. Ill R. 44-45. The government says that defendant was then arrested for “interference with officer” or concealing his identity. Id. at 46.

On March 29, 2001, Vanness filed a motion to suppress all the evidence seized from the vehicle he was driving on the grounds that the “initial stop and seizure of the defendants was unconstitutional as there was no reasonable suspicion that the defendants had violated the unreasonable noise ordinance 2-1-7 because there is no such ordinance in the town of Bernalillo” and “[i]n the alternative, if the court finds ordinance 2-1-7 ... to be a valid ordinance in the town of Bernalillo, the same ordinance is unconstitutionally vague and overbroad, and does not warrant good-faith reliance by any law enforcement officials.” I R. (Doc. 48). The government opposed Vanness’s motion.

The district judge issued an order denying Vanness’s motion to suppress evidence based on the reasons the judge “stated on the record” at a hearing on June 13, 2001. Brief of Appellant (Attachment C: Order denying suppression of evidence). During this hearing, the district judge found credible the police officers’ testimony that they heard music from Vanness’s car from 450 feet away and that Vanness consented to the search of the car. Ill R. 137-38 (Transcript of 6/13/01 proceedings). The judge also found that the testimony of Vanness and Kelley, which contradicted the police officers’ testimony, was not credible. Id. at 142. The judge held that the noise prohibition of Section 2-1-7 of Town of Bernalillo Ordinance No. 62 was “valid and not unreasonably vague or over-broad.” Id. at 139. The judge found that “[t]he ordinance does not, in my opinion, encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement, and I find that the officer initially stopped the Defendant because of the loud noise coming from his vehicle.” Id. at 139-40.

Conceding that he did not know what Vanness’ citation was issued for, 3 the district judge stated that “the vehicle was stopped, according to the police officers, for unreasonable noise, and there was certainly reasonable ground to believe that the ordinance that has been used by both the Government and the Defense in this case, 2-1-7, was being violated.” Id. at 140. The district judge cited this court’s unpublished decision United States v. Briscoe,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
342 F.3d 1093, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 17820, 2003 WL 22024852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-vanness-ca10-2003.