UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
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No. 93-1175

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Appellee,

v.

PEDRO INFANTE-RUIZ,

Defendant, Appellant.

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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

[Hon. Hector M. Laffitte, U.S. District Judge]
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Before

Stahl, Circuit Judge,
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Aldrich and Campbell, Senior Circuit Judges.
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Laura Maldonado Rodriguez, Assistant Federal Public Defender,
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with whom Benicio Sanchez Rivera, Federal Public Defender, was on
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brief for appellant.
Jose A. Quiles-Espinosa, Senior Litigation Counsel, with whom
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Charles E. Fitzwilliam, United States Attorney, was on brief for the
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United States.


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January 25, 1994
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CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge. Defendant-
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appellant Pedro Infante Ruiz was indicted in the United

States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico for

having knowingly received while a fugitive from justice a

firearm transported in interstate commerce. 18 U.S.C.

922(g)(2) and 924(a). After the district court denied a

motion in limine to suppress evidence, Infante entered a plea

of guilty, with his plea being conditioned on the outcome of

an appeal of the court's evidentiary ruling. Infante duly

appealed, and we now reverse the district court's denial of a

motion to suppress and vacate appellant's conviction.

I.

On October 8, 1991, Infante and two associates were

driving a rented 1991 Mazda 626 in the vicinity of Parguera,

Lajas, Puerto Rico, when they stopped to buy food at a local

eatery. Officers of the Puerto Rico police were following

the car, looking for an opportunity to arrest Infante on an

outstanding warrant from Florida on federal narcotics

charges. After the car stopped, the officers surrounded the

vehicle and placed Infante under arrest. Infante resisted

but was eventually restrained and placed inside a nearby

unmarked squad car.

One of the arresting officers, Sergeant David

Padilla Velez, asked the driver of the car, a Felipe de la





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Paz, for consent to search the vehicle. De la Paz verbally

gave his

consent, and Sgt. Padilla searched the passenger compartment.

Sgt. Padilla then asked de la Paz for the key to the car's

trunk. Although Sgt. Padilla did not explicitly ask for de

la Paz's consent to search the trunk, de la Paz handed over

the key to the trunk in response to the request and stood by

without objection as the trunk was being searched.

Two briefcases, one brown and one black, were

inside the trunk. De la Paz, upon inquiry by Sgt. Padilla,

said that he was the owner of the brown briefcase. Sgt.

Padilla opened and searched the brown briefcase, apparently

without objection by de la Paz.

Sgt. Padilla then asked de la Paz who owned the

black briefcase. De la Paz answered that it belonged to

Infante. Without expressly asking for de la Paz's consent,

but without any express objection from him, Sgt. Padilla then

opened the unlocked briefcase belonging to Infante. Inside

were various documents belonging to Infante, as well as items

belonging to de la Paz and others. Also inside was a loaded

.22 caliber Derringer pistol.

Infante was later charged with knowingly receiving

while a fugitive from justice a firearm transported in

interstate commerce. De la Paz and the other passenger were

not arrested.



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Infante moved to suppress the gun, arguing that it

had been seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment. In an

oral ruling, the district court denied the motion to

suppress. The defendant later pleaded guilty to the charge,

reserving his right to appeal from the court's denial of his

motion to suppress. We now hold that the search of Infante's

briefcase was unlawful and that the pistol should have been

suppressed.

II.

The district court upheld the warrantless search of

Infante's briefcase on four grounds: (1) Infante's lack of

privacy interest in the suitcase; (2) probable cause; (3) a

finding that the weapon would have been inevitably

discovered; and (4) the drivers' consent. In reviewing a

district court's denial of a suppression motion, we uphold

its findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous.

United States v. Sanchez, 943 F.2d 110, 112 (1st Cir. 1991);
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United States v. Cruz Jimenez, 894 F.2d 1, 7 (1st Cir. 1990).
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The court's ultimate conclusion, however, is subject to

plenary review, Sanchez, 943 F.2d at 112; United States v.
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Curzi, 867 F.2d 36, 42 (1st Cir. 1989), as "[f]indings of
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reasonableness . . . are respected only insofar as consistent

with federal constitutional guarantees." Ker v. California,
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374 U.S. 23, 33 (1963). We will, "where necessary to the

determination of constitutional rights, make an independent



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examination of the facts, the findings, and the record so

that [we] can determine for [ourselves] whether in the

decision as to reasonableness the fundamental i.e.,
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constitutional criteria . . . have been respected." Id.
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at 34.

Applying these principles, we discuss in turn each

of the grounds for upholding the search offered by the

district court.

A. Infante's Privacy Interest in the Briefcase
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The district court found that Infante had no

privacy interest in the briefcase and concluded that the lack

of such an interest provided a sufficient basis to deny the

suppression motion. The district court found that Infante

had left the unlocked briefcase in the trunk of the Mazda for

a period of some days, even when he was not a passenger, and

that he allowed de la Paz and others to place possessions of

their own inside it. The district court found that the

briefcase "was not under the control of the defendant" and

that Infante had no Fourth Amendment privacy rights that

could have been violated by its search.

While the district court cited no authority, the

best analogy we could find for the district court's reasoning

is California v. Greenwood, 486 U.S. 35 (1988). There, the
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police searched without a warrant the contents of garbage

bags left at the curb outside the defendants' home. The



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Court held that the defendants "exposed their garbage to the

public sufficiently to defeat their claim to Fourth Amendment

protection." Id. at 40. It was "common knowledge," said the
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Court, that garbage bags left for pick up are "readily

accessible to animals, children, scavengers, snoops, and

other members of the public." Id. (footnotes omitted). The
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defendants were considered to have left their refuse "in an

area particularly suited for public inspection and . . .

consumption, for the express purpose of having strangers take

it." Id. at 40-41 (internal quotation omitted).
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The facts in this case, however, are clearly

distinguishable from Greenwood. Storing items inside a
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closed briefcase inside a locked car trunk did not reveal a

willingness on the part of Infante to "expose" such items to

the public. Moreover, nothing in the circumstances indicated

that Infante had abandoned the briefcase, relinquished

authority over it, or left it open to "public inspection and

consumption." De la Paz's identification of the briefcase as

belonging to Infante indicated that, among his friends, the

case was still believed to belong to Infante. While there is

evidence that Infante's confederates felt entitled to place

items of their own within it, he did nothing to indicate its

availability to the public generally nor did his actions

betray an intention to forego an owner's normal right to

exclude those he wished to exclude. By the time of the



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search, Infante himself was once more a passenger in the car

carrying his briefcase.

We think it is clear, therefore, that Infante did

not repudiate his privacy interest in the briefcase by

placing it in the trunk of the Mazda. While he indicated a

willingness to share access with a few friends, he in no way

opened the case to public access. We therefore hold that

Infante had a privacy interest in the briefcase and that the

district court's finding to the contrary was in error.

B. Probable Cause
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The district court also concluded that the search

was justified by probable cause. It is now established that

if the police have probable cause to believe that either a

vehicle or a container within a vehicle contains contraband,

evidence of crime, or other matter that may lawfully be

seized, no Fourth Amendment violation occurs when the police

open and search the container without a warrant. United
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States v. Ross, 456 U.S. 798 (1982); California v. Acevedo,
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111 S. Ct. 1982 (1991). The district court found here that

because Infante was a federal fugitive and that the other

occupants were allegedly under suspicion for trafficking in

drugs, the police officers could have reasonably believed

that the car's occupants were "dangerous people" and that

contraband or weapons would be in the automobile. The





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district court supported its finding by saying it was

"conventional wisdom" that "drug traffickers carry weapons."

But in order for probable cause to search to exist,

the officer must have reasonably trustworthy information of

supporting facts and circumstances such as would persuade a

person of reasonable caution to believe the search is

justified. 3 Charles Alan Wright, Federal Practice and

Procedure: Criminal 2d 662 at 579 (1982). Certainty is not

required. Id. But in the absence of supporting facts, the
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officer's suspicion or personal belief that probable cause

exists is not enough. Id. at 582. Thus it was not enough
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here that the suspected vehicle contained persons with

serious drug trafficking records. There had to be particular

facts indicating that, at the time of search, the vehicle or

a container within it carried contraband, evidence of crime,

or other seizable matter. Id. at 2664.
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The government conceded at oral argument that the

police officers who conducted the search had no concrete

information that Infante and his friends were transporting

drugs or weapons at the time of the stop. The probable cause

standard could not be satisfied merely by dependence on

"conventional wisdom" or by the "dangerous" reputation of

Infante and his associates.1 See United States v. Harris,
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1. A related argument for upholding the search, which the
government did not press below and waived on appeal, was that
the search was justified as incident to Infante's lawful

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403 U.S. 573, 582 (1971) (suspect's reputation, standing

alone, is insufficient to support probable cause).








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arrest under the warrant. New York v. Belton, 453 U.S. 454,
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457, 460 (1981). Under Belton, when a police officer makes a
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lawful custodial arrest of the occupant of an automobile, the
officer may, "as a contemporaneous incident of that arrest,"
search the car's passenger compartment and any containers
found within it. Id. at 460-61 & n.4. The "passenger
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compartment" has been interpreted to mean those areas
reachable without exiting the vehicle and without dismantling
door panels or other parts of the car. See Wayne R. LaFave &
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Jerold H. Israel, Criminal Procedure 3.7 at 277 (1984).
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The Belton doctrine has thus been extended to allow
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warrantless searches of the rear section of a station wagon
and the trunk area of a hatchback, when these areas are
accessible from inside the vehicle. United States v. Pino,
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855 F.2d 357, 364 (6th Cir. 1988) (station wagon), cert.
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denied, 493 U.S. 1090 (1990); United States v. Russell, 670
______ _____________ _______
F.2d 323, 327 (D.C. Cir.) (hatchback), cert. denied, 457 U.S.
____________
1108 (1982).

The Supreme Court in Belton expressly excluded trunks
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from its holding, 453 U.S. at 460-61 n.4, as the Court may
have assumed that all car designs were such as to prevent
passengers from reaching into the trunk from the back seat
and seizing a weapon or evidence there. In the instant case,
however, the vehicle was a 1991 Mazda 626 sedan, which
appears to have had a divided rear seat permitting one or
both segments to be lowered, allowing direct access to the
trunk from the passenger compartment. See Road Test: Sedans,
___ _________________
56 Consumer Reports 475 (1991). If this was the design,
there may have been little difference for purposes of the
Belton doctrine between a trunk of the Mazda and the rear
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portion of a station wagon or the rear compartment of a
hatchback. But as the government failed to make this
argument either below or on appeal, and as the record is
entirely without evidence as to how accessible the Mazda's
trunk may have been to persons seated within the car, we do
not reach the novel question of whether Belton should be
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extended in this way.


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C. Inevitable Discovery
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As a third ground for denying the suppression

motion, the district court found that the Derringer pistol

would have been inevitably found. According to the district

court, because the Mazda was a rental car, the officers would

have taken custody of the car, and the car would have had to

be inspected before the vehicle was returned. The gun

inevitably would have been found in the inspection of the

vehicle. On the present record, however, this argument is

unsupported and must be rejected.

The inevitable discovery doctrine, an exception to

the exclusionary rule, applies when "the government can prove

that the evidence would have been admitted regardless of any

overreaching." Nix v. Williams, 467 U.S. 431, 447-48 (1984).
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The government bears the burden of showing, by reference to

"demonstrated historical facts" and by a preponderance of the

evidence, that the information or item would inevitably have

been discovered by lawful means. Id. at 444-45 & n.5.
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Furthermore, to be permissible under the Fourth

Amendment, warrantless inventory searches must be conducted

according to standardized procedures. South Dakota v.
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Opperman, 428 U.S. 364, 372-75 (1976); Colorado v. Bertine,
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479 U.S. 367, 374 n. 6, 375 (1987); Florida v. Wells, 495
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U.S. 1, 4-5 (1990). Any "discretion [must be] exercised

according to standard criteria and on the basis of something



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other than suspicion of criminal activity." Bertine, 479
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U.S. at 375.

The government cites United States v. Mancera-
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Londo o, 912 F.2d 373, 375-77 (9th Cir. 1990), in support of
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its argument here. In Mancera-Londo o, the Ninth Circuit
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upheld a warrantless search of several suitcases found in a

rented station wagon, after the arrest of two suspects who

had been using the car to transport drugs. The court held

that it was "legitimate" for the DEA agents involved in the

arrest to take custody of the vehicle after the arrest of the

two suspects, as apparently no one else was available to

return the car to the rental company. Id. at 376.
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The agents in Mancera-Londo o testified that after
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a rented vehicle is seized, the DEA's standard policy was to

return the car to the rental agency after "a complete

inventory of the car." The policy, though oral only, was,

according to testimony, identical to the policy found in the

DEA Manual regarding the search of cars seized for

forfeiture. Id. at 375-76. Also, the agents testified that
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DEA policy required searching of all closed containers. Id.
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at 376. See also Wells, 495 U.S. at 4-5 (in order to justify
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searching closed containers during an inventory search,

officers must be acting pursuant to a specific policy

regarding closed containers).





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In the present case, however, the record is barren

of evidence that would support the district court's finding

that the discovery of the gun was inevitable. First, the

government has not met its burden of showing that the

officers could have taken "legitimate custody" of the vehicle

but for the discovery of the gun, see United States v.
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Jenkins, 876 F.2d 1085, 1089 (2d Cir. 1989), and that the
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officers indeed would have taken such custody inevitably.

See United States v. Silvestri, 787 F.2d 736, 744 (1st Cir.
___ _____________ _________

1986) (noting that a "basic concern" in inevitable discovery

cases is whether both the discovery of the legal means and

the use of that means are truly inevitable), cert. denied,
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487 U.S. 1233 (1988). In Mancera-Londo o, both persons
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connected with the vehicle were arrested. Here, however,

only Infante a passenger was arrested. Insofar as

appears, the police were not compelled by the mere discovery

and arrest of Infante to seize the car within which he was

riding and return it to the rental company. There was no

testimony, and no evidence otherwise, that the car would have

been impounded or seized if the gun had not been found, or

that without impoundment the car would have otherwise

remained on the side of a public highway or city street. See
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United States v. Ramos-Morales, 981 F.2d 625, 626 (1st Cir.
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1992), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 2384 (1993).
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Second, the government failed to introduce any

evidence that their actions were controlled by established

procedures and standardized criteria, as required by

Opperman, Bertine, and Wells, supra. No officer testified
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that a policy dictated that they seize the car, search its

contents including closed containers, and return it to the

rental agency. The government did not introduce into

evidence a written policy to that effect, nor did any officer

testify that an oral policy or established routine existed.

Though no officer testified that regulations

directed the making of an inventory search, one officer did

testify that certain regulations governed how inventory

searches were to be conducted when they in fact were

performed. The officer testified that the regulations

required the officers to keep a list of everything seized

from the vehicle. When asked if he had followed such

regulations in this case, however, the officer testified that

he had not. The inventory list that was introduced at trial

did not list the gun.

In the absence of specific evidence of standardized

procedures making inevitable the seizure of the car, the

search of the trunk, and the opening of the closed briefcase,

and in light of the fact that the officers on the scene

failed to comply with the established regulations that did

exist, we hold that the government failed to carry its burden



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of showing that the gun would have been inevitably

discovered.

D. Consent
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The government argues on appeal that the evidence

and the court's findings indicate that the driver of the

Mazda, de la Paz, consented to the search of Infante's

briefcase. While there was no evidence that de la Paz

consented to a search of Infante's briefcase specifically,

the district court felt it "a reasonable conclusion that when

the police searched the trunk or asked permission to Freddie

[de la Paz] to open the trunk . . . there was consent to open

the trunk . . . ." From this the government would have us

infer de la Paz's consent to search Infante's closed

briefcase located within the trunk. While the question is

close, we are unable to find that de la Paz consented to the

briefcase search.

The evidence shows that de la Paz had access to the

briefcase for several days and that de la Paz's property was

co-mingled with Infante's inside the briefcase. It appears,

therefore, that de la Paz had sufficient authority over the

briefcase to consent to its search if he in fact had chosen

to do so. See Frazier v. Cupp, 394 U.S. 731 (1969) (owner of
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duffel bag, in allowing friend to use bag jointly and in

leaving it at friend's house, assumed risk that friend would

consent to its search); United States v. Matlock, 415 U.S.
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164 (1974) (search of diaper bag in bedroom closet

permissible when based on consent of one with common

authority over bedroom); cf. United States v. Welch, 4 F.3d
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761, 764 (9th Cir. 1993) (one occupant of rental car had no

authority to consent to search of another occupant's purse

where there was no evidence of joint access to or shared

control over the purse).

It was not reasonable, however, for the police

officers to have believed that de la Paz gave his consent to

the search of Infante's briefcase. Under Florida v. Jimeno,
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500 U.S. 248, ___, 111 S. Ct. 1801, 1803 (1991), a Fourth

Amendment violation occurs when it is not "objectively

reasonable" under the circumstances for a police officer to

believe that the scope of a suspect's consent permitted the

officer to open a particular container within a car. In

Jimeno, the driver's general consent to search the vehicle
______

was found sufficient to authorize the search of a paper bag

on the floorboard containing cocaine. The Court held that it

was objectively reasonable for the officer to believe that

the suspect's general consent to search the car included his

consent to search containers within the car that might

contain drugs. Id. at 1804. The Court noted that the
___

officer had informed the suspect that he was under suspicion

for carrying narcotics, and that the suspect had not placed

any explicit limitation on the scope of the search. Id.
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The instant case is distinguishable on its facts

from Jimeno. Unlike Jimeno, Sgt. Padilla did not notify de
______ ______

la Paz that he was looking for drugs, making it somewhat more

difficult to impute to de la Paz consent to search every

container within the car that might contain drugs. Moreover,

Infante's briefcase was secured inside the locked trunk

rather than lying on the floorboard. Cf. id. at 1804 ("It is
___ ___

very likely unreasonable to think that a suspect, by

consenting to the search of his trunk, has agreed to the

breaking open of a locked briefcase within the trunk, but it

is otherwise with respect to a closed paper bag.").

Still, were the above the sole distinctions, Jimeno
______

would seem to allow a finding of consent. Infante's arrest

warrant related to drug-dealing and de la Paz' furnishing of

the keys to the trunk is consistent with granting permission

to search within the trunk. What leads us to hold that the

scope of de la Paz's consent did not include defendant's
___

briefcase, is that de la Paz's general permission to search

the car and its trunk was qualified by de la Paz's further

statement to the officer, before the latter opened and

searched the briefcase, that the briefcase belonged to

Infante. Even though Infante was nearby, handcuffed in the

squad car, the police officers never sought his permission to

search his briefcase. We do not think that it was

"objectively reasonable," in these circumstances, for the



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officer to believe that de la Paz's prior consent to search

the vehicle and its trunk encompassed opening that particular

briefcase, later clearly identified by de la Paz as belonging

solely to another nearby passenger. De la Paz's

identification of the briefcase as belonging to another

nearby passenger suggested precisely the contrary. See
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Jimeno, 111 S. Ct. at 1804 ("A suspect may of course delimit
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as he chooses the scope of the search to which he

consents."). At very least, the scope of de la Paz's consent

was ambiguous an ambiguity that could have been but was

not clarified by further inquiry of de la Paz, Infante or

both.





























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III.

As none of the grounds offered to uphold the search

of the briefcase survives analysis, appellant's motion to

suppress the fruits of the search should have been granted.

The district court's denial of appellant's motion to suppress

is reversed and the judgment vacated. The defendant may

withdraw his plea of guilty below.

So ordered.
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