United States v. Carter ( 1998 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                                                                      No. 94-5753
    EARNEST CARTER, JR.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria.
    T. S. Ellis, III, District Judge.
    (CR-87-17-A)
    Argued: December 5, 1995
    Decided: March 24, 1998
    Before WILKINSON, Chief Judge, RUSSELL, WIDENER,
    MURNAGHAN, ERVIN, WILKINS, NIEMEYER, HAMILTON,
    LUTTIG, WILLIAMS, MICHAEL, and MOTZ, Circuit Judges, and
    HALL, Senior Circuit Judge.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Widener wrote the majority
    opinion, in which Chief Judge Wilkinson and Judges Wilkins, Nie-
    meyer, Hamilton, Luttig, Williams, and Motz concurred. Judge Ervin
    wrote a dissenting opinion, in which Judges Murnaghan and Michael
    and Senior Judge Hall concurred.*
    _________________________________________________________________
    *Judge Russell heard oral argument in this case but died prior to the
    time the decision was filed.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Edward Blair Brown, BROWN & STAMBAUGH, Alex-
    andria, Virginia, for Appellant. William Graham Otis, Assistant
    United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
    ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Helen
    F. Fahey, United States Attorney, John T. Martin, Assistant United
    States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY,
    Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    WIDENER, Circuit Judge:
    The defendant, Earnest Carter, Jr., appeals his conviction after a
    guilty plea. The only issue is the district court's denial of his motion
    to suppress evidence of the cocaine found in his suitcase. We affirm.
    Carter was arrested at Washington National Airport at approxi-
    mately 10:30 p.m. on January 14, 1987 by Federal Aviation Adminis-
    tration police for the theft of a gray-brown Hartman brand suitcase,
    the property of one Thompson. The stolen suitcase and two other
    bags, a black carry-on bag and a gray Skyway brand suitcase with
    tape around it, were in Carter's possession and were taken from him
    at the time of his arrest. Carter had a roundtrip airline ticket showing
    his route from Miami to Washington on January 14 and returning to
    Miami on January 16. He told the police that he was in town to clarify
    a case of mistaken identity with the Washington police. Carter
    claimed that he had picked up the gray-brown Hartman bag by mis-
    take and refused to give consent to the police to search the two other
    bags. The black carry-on bag was opened and inventoried by the
    arresting officer at 12:40 a.m. on January 15, but the gray Skyway
    bag was not opened. Carter appeared before a magistrate in the after-
    noon of January 15 and was released on an unsecured bail bond with
    penalty of $2500. In the meantime, the officers obtained Carter's
    criminal history which showed a prior charge of possession of a con-
    trolled substance with intent to distribute.
    2
    Following his release on bail Carter returned to the airport at about
    4:30 p.m. on January 15 and requested the return of the black bag and
    the gray Skyway bag. He again refused consent to search the gray
    Skyway bag. The black bag was returned to him but the gray Skyway
    bag was held by police. At approximately 12 noon on January 16, a
    sniff dog alerted to the gray Skyway suitcase and the FAA police
    obtained a warrant to search the bag which was found to contain the
    660 grams of cocaine, which form the basis of Carter's conviction.
    Carter was indicted in February 1987 for larceny in violation of 18
    U.S.C. § 661; possession with intent to distribute cocaine in violation
    of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1); interstate travel to promote unlawful activ-
    ity in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1952(a)(3); and failure to appear pursu-
    ant to conditions of release. He had obviously skipped bail, for he
    remained at large until arrested in the summer of 1994. The district
    court denied his motion to suppress the cocaine, finding that the prop-
    erty at issue was properly seized incident to a lawful arrest, that the
    government had a reasonable continuing investigatory interest in the
    property, and that the government did not hold the property for an
    unreasonably long time. Carter pleaded guilty to the failure to appear
    charge, and to the charge of possession of cocaine with intent to dis-
    tribute on the condition that the suppression issue would be preserved
    for appeal. The government dismissed the remaining charges.
    Carter appeals the denial of his motion to suppress, claiming that
    his property was held for an unreasonably long period of time without
    probable cause in violation of the Fourth Amendment. He asserts that
    although the property was lawfully seized at 10:30 p.m. on January
    14, at the time he requested its return, 4:30 p.m. on January 15, there
    was no longer probable cause to believe that it was connected to the
    charge for which he was arrested or any other criminal activity.
    We emphasize that there is no question concerning the validity of
    the search warrant, which was obtained when the sniff dog alerted.
    There is also no question concerning the officers having the sniff dog
    examine the gray Skyway suitcase.
    At the suppression hearing in the district court, Carter's attorney
    stated to the court:
    3
    It has to do with only the timeframe--when he sought the
    release of his suitcase that I'm concerned.
    The warrant, I think, is appropriate. The dog sniff I don't
    think is a search for constitutional purposes, and the rest
    falls in the place after that. It has to do only with their
    refusal to release it when there is no connection and no evi-
    dence that that bag, that suitcase, has anything to do with the
    criminal activity for which Mr. Carter was charged.
    As stated, the only question before us is whether the holding of the
    gray Skyway bag from 4:30 p.m. on January 15 until noon on January
    16 was unreasonable. Weaver v. Williams, 
    509 F.2d 884
    (4th Cir.
    1975) (only unreasonable searches and seizures are prohibited by the
    Fourth Amendment). The facts as found by the district court are not
    challenged and are for the most part stipulated. The reasonableness of
    a search and seizure is a legal conclusion which we review de novo.
    United States v. Smith, 
    30 F.3d 568
    , 571 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    513 U.S. 1028
    (1994). Carter admits that the bags were seized incident to
    a lawful arrest. At the time of his arrest, he had in his possession the
    gray-brown Hartman bag, the gray Skyway bag with tape on it, and
    the black carry-on bag. He was charged with the theft of the gray-
    brown Hartman bag and claimed that he had picked up the Hartman
    suitcase by mistake. So Carter had in his possession the three suit-
    cases and only claimed the ownership of two of them. It is difficult
    to imagine more probative evidence of Carter's guilt than the three
    suitcases he had in his possession at the time of his arrest when he
    only claimed two of them. And the same would apply to evidence
    tending to show as false Carter's claim that he possessed the Hartman
    suitcase by reason of mistake.
    We find no authority, and Carter offers none, that would obligate
    the officers to return to a criminal defendant charged with the theft,
    admissible evidence seized incident to a lawful arrest for the theft,
    prior to the disposition of the pending criminal charge for which the
    defendant was arrested. To repeat, the seizure of the bags was inci-
    dent to a lawful arrest, not part of an investigatory stop.
    Because the government had the right to retain Carter's gray Sky-
    way suitcase as evidence in connection with the charge of theft of the
    4
    Hartman suitcase, we conclude that the detention of Carter's gray
    Skyway suitcase was reasonable. It had been seized incident to Car-
    ter's arrest, and the government was entitled to keep it to use as evi-
    dence at Carter's trial.
    The judgment of the district court is accordingly
    AFFIRMED.1, 2
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 The government argues that it was also entitled to retain possession
    of the suitcase for investigatory purposes and that the time the bag was
    so kept was reasonable; that there was sufficient reasonable suspicion to
    hold the bag until the sniff dog could examine it; and that in all events,
    the search was in good faith. Those are questions we need not decide.
    2 The position of the dissent, that the government's holding the bag in
    question was unnecessary, for a photograph could have been made of it,
    in our opinion, does not comport with either logic or practicality.
    Coupled with the fact that Carter had both the gray and the Hartman
    suitcases in his possession when stopped is the fact that a simple compar-
    ison of them would have shown to a fact-finder, either court or jury, that
    Carter's stated reason for having the Hartman bag in his possession was
    entirely false. Since the government had in its possession the tangible
    evidence of the inadequacy of Carter's stated defense, no rule of law that
    we know of requires the government to depend on the less effective sub-
    stituted evidence of a photograph. Anyone who has tried to defend a
    moonshiner in the face of the introduction into evidence of Mason jars
    of moonshine, rather than photographs, on a table in plain view of the
    jury will recognize the futility of such an undertaking.
    Not only do reason and practicality compel the conclusion that the
    government was quite within its rights in holding on to the gray suitcase
    until the theft by Carter had been disposed of, that very point was made
    to the district judge at the hearing on the motion to suppress. Although
    the dissent quotes, at some length, different reasons advanced by the
    government for obtaining and keeping the suitcase, it does not quote that
    part of the hearing in the district court in which the very point made in
    the majority opinion was put up to the district judge.
    Mr. Martin: [an assistant U. S. attorney] . . . .
    And I go through those ["other reasons"] at page eight of my
    brief when I talk about the fact that down the road for purposes
    of a theft case, it may very well have been that we would want
    5
    ERVIN, Circuit Judge dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent.
    In this case, this court is asked to address an aspect of Fourth
    Amendment search and seizure jurisprudence that has not previously
    been decided in this circuit. Specifically, we must assess the reason-
    _________________________________________________________________
    to have the other bag because it would help us if the defendant
    were to say I took this bag by mistake. It might be helpful to us
    to be able to have a grey suitcase to show, wait a minute, ladies
    and gentlemen of the jury, he wouldn't take it by mistake by vir-
    tue of the fact that this other bag was there. (A.20-21)
    This, in our opinion, is not "post hoc rationalization" as the dissent
    describes it at p.13, n.4.
    Finally, the district court admitted the drugs into evidence because it
    believed that the time the suitcase was held was not unreasonable under
    the circumstances of this case. The judge said that holding the suitcase
    as "a nexus to the crime" of theft was too narrow a restriction on the gov-
    ernment. As we have demonstrated, despite such narrow restriction the
    government complied with the more stringent standard. So we do not
    have to consider whether or not the more lenient standard of reasonable-
    ness has been met as a separate matter. What we must consider is
    whether the drugs were properly admitted into evidence. And they were,
    because the suitcase all the while was in the legitimate possession of the
    government.
    In the review of judicial proceedings the rule is settled that if the
    decision below is correct, it must be affirmed, although the lower
    court relied upon a wrong ground or gave a wrong reason.
    Helvering v. Gowran, 
    302 U.S. 238
    , 245 (1937).
    It would be wasteful to send a case back to a lower court to rein-
    state a decision which it had already made but which the appel-
    late court concluded should properly be based on another ground
    within the power of the appellate court to formulate.
    SEC v. Chenery Corp., 
    318 U.S. 80
    , 88 (1943).
    Because the drugs were properly admitted into evidence, the decision
    of the district court must be affirmed even if it gave a wrong reason, a
    question we do not decide.
    6
    ableness of the government's continued possession of a person's suit-
    case that was seized initially pursuant to a lawful arrest, once the
    owner has requested the return of his property. Although in this case
    I do not dispute the constitutional legitimacy of the initial seizure of
    the defendant's suitcase or its eventual search, I believe that the pro-
    longed detention of the suitcase, coupled with the authorities' lack of
    diligence in pursuing their investigation, violated the defendant's
    Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures. In
    light of this constitutional violation, I would reverse the district
    court's denial of the motion to suppress.
    I.
    A.
    The events in this case took place within a forty-eight hour period,
    beginning on the evening of January 14, 1987. At 10:30 p.m., Officer
    Michael Young of the Federal Aviation Administration Police (FAA)
    stopped Earnest Carter in a terminal at Washington National Airport
    based on the officer's suspicion that Carter had stolen a greyish-
    brown Hartman suitcase he was carrying. Unable to produce a bag-
    gage claim ticket for the suitcase in question, Carter was arrested and
    charged with larceny. Carter had in his possession at the time of arrest
    two other pieces of luggage--a small black bag and a larger, grey
    Skyway suitcase. Officer Young seized those bags, as well as Carter's
    round trip ticket from Miami to Washington, D.C. Carter does not
    contest the constitutional legitimacy of this initial seizure, which
    occurred pursuant to a lawful arrest.
    It is most useful to divide the remaining events into two sections.
    The first of these periods covers the authorities' actions from the time
    of Carter's arrest at 10:30 p.m. on January 14 until 4:30 p.m. the next
    day, when Carter requested that his luggage be returned. The second
    time period, and the one most critical to Carter's constitutional claim,
    is the period between 4:30 p.m. on January 15, and 12:00 noon on
    January 16, when officers obtained the probable cause necessary to
    conduct a search of Carter's Skyway suitcase. At the time of Carter's
    arrest, FAA officers asked Carter to consent to a search of the two
    bags that Officer Young had seized during the arrest. FAA authorities
    informed Carter that without his consent, a search warrant would be
    7
    obtained. Carter refused to consent to a search. Within two hours, and
    without a search warrant having been obtained, FAA officers con-
    ducted an inventory search of Carter's small black bag. For reasons
    unexplained in the record, the officers chose to search the black bag,
    but not Carter's larger piece of luggage. The search of the black bag
    revealed nothing of any significance.
    On January 15, while Carter was attempting to post bond on the
    theft charge, the FAA's investigation slowed down. Early in the day,
    Officer Young went to the United States Attorney's office to prepare
    a complaint on the theft charge. Young had been instructed by Detec-
    tive Leach, who was heading the investigation, to inquire about
    obtaining a search warrant for Carter's Skyway bag. For some unex-
    plained reason, Young never made such an inquiry. At 4:00 p.m.,
    Detective Leach learned for the first time that no progress had been
    made in obtaining a search warrant. By this point, nearly eighteen
    hours had passed since Carter had been arrested.
    At 4:30 p.m. on January 15, Carter returned to National Airport
    having just posted a $2,500 unsecured bond and sought the return of
    his two pieces of luggage. Detective Leach returned the small black
    bag to Carter that had been searched the night before. The detective
    was unwilling, however, to return the Skyway suitcase. Again, Carter
    declined to consent to a search of that piece of luggage. Thirty min-
    utes after Carter's visit to National Airport, Detective Leach placed
    a phone call to obtain an application for a search warrant and learned
    that it would not be possible to obtain a warrant until the next day,
    January 16. Sometime later on the fifteenth, Detective Leach learned
    from an Assistant United States Attorney that a warrant would be
    issued only if airport authorities brought in narcotics dogs to sniff the
    Skyway bag. According to the U.S. Attorney's Office, without a dog
    alerting to the piece of luggage, there would not be probable cause to
    justify the issuance of a warrant.
    Although Detective Leach knew of the dog-sniff requirement by
    the end of the day on the fifteenth, agents from the Drug Enforcement
    Agency did not bring a narcotics detector dog to the FAA police sta-
    tion to sniff the Skyway suitcase until noon on January 16. Nineteen-
    and-one-half hours after Carter had requested the return of the Sky-
    way suitcase, the narcotics dog alerted to that piece of luggage. Carter
    8
    concedes that from then on, the authorities had probable cause to
    obtain a search warrant, which was secured three hours later. With
    search warrant in hand, authorities opened the Skyway bag and found
    637 grams of cocaine.
    The following month, in February 1987, Carter was charged in a
    four-count indictment, the most substantial charge being possession
    with intent to distribute cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).1
    This case comes to us much later, because Carter managed to evade
    authorities for seven years before being apprehended in the summer
    of 1994. At that point, pending trial on the four-count indictment,
    Carter filed a Motion to Suppress the cocaine found in the Skyway
    suitcase on the ground that the government's delay in obtaining a
    search warrant constituted an unreasonable seizure of Carter's belong-
    ings.
    B.
    After conducting a hearing on the motion, the district court con-
    cluded that the forty-eight hour period between Carter's initial arrest
    for theft and the authorities' discovery of cocaine was not an unrea-
    sonably long period of time for the government to retain Carter's
    property. United States v. Carter, 
    859 F. Supp. 202
    (E.D. Va. 1994).
    The court began its analysis by drawing the important distinction
    between the challenge leveled by Carter and the more typical consti-
    tutional claim that arises under the Fourth Amendment. The court
    noted that the issue presented was not whether the eventual search of
    the Skyway bag was unconstitutional. Police dogs had detected the
    odor of drugs and a search warrant had been properly issued. Even
    more important, the district court recognized that whether an uncon-
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 As part of a plea agreement, Counts I and III of the indictment, which
    pertained to larceny (18 U.S.C. § 661) and to travel in interstate com-
    merce with intent to promote, manage, establish, carry on and facilitate
    the promotion, management, establishment and carrying on of an unlaw-
    ful activity (18 U.S.C. § 1952(a)(3)) were eventually dismissed. Carter
    pled guilty to Count IV of the indictment, which charged him with fail-
    ing to appear after having been released on conditions of recognizance
    in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 3146(a)(1). This appeal relates solely to Car-
    ter's conviction under Count II for illegal possession of cocaine.
    9
    stitutional seizure had occurred would not turn on the authorities'
    handling of the matter during the first eighteen hours that the Skyway
    bag was seized, but rather on the nineteen-plus hours from the time
    Carter requested the return of his luggage until the time the dogs were
    brought in to sniff the suitcase.
    Relying on United States v. Premises Known as 608 Taylor Ave.,
    Apartment 302, 
    584 F.2d 1297
    (3d Cir. 1978), and Sovereign News
    Co. v. United States, 
    690 F.2d 569
    (6th Cir. 1982), cert. denied, 
    464 U.S. 814
    (1983), the district court attempted to"balance the govern-
    ment's interests in holding the property against the owner's right to
    use the property."2 Carter , 859 F. Supp. at 204. According to the dis-
    trict court, where the government has a "continuing interest" in the
    property, lawfully seized property need not be returned immediately
    to the owner. 
    Id. at 205.
    The government need only be sure that it
    does not hold the property for an "`unreasonable time' without taking
    some action with regard to the property." 
    Id. Here, the
    district court defined the government's"continuing inter-
    est" in terms of an alleged "ongoing criminal investigation" that was
    proceeding as to whether Carter was a drug trafficker. 
    Id. The sum
    and substance of the authorities' suspicions regarding possible narcot-
    ics violations was the fact that Carter had been arrested previously for
    possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute,3 that
    Carter possessed a round-trip ticket from Miami--a known "source
    city" for drugs--with only a two day stay in Washington, D.C., and
    that the Skyway suitcase was wrapped with several pieces of tape,
    even though the suitcase's locking mechanisms were apparently in
    working condition. 
    Id. at 204
    n.3.
    Having concluded that enough suspicion existed to justify a contin-
    ued investigation on the part of FAA authorities, the district court
    _________________________________________________________________
    2 Unlike the district court, I do not find the Third and Sixth Circuits'
    decisions particularly instructive. Those cases were decided under Rule
    41(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, and I have not found
    an instance in which either circuit has extended those holdings to a case
    similar to the one before us today.
    3 Airport authorities never learned whether Carter had been convicted
    on that previous charge.
    10
    undertook a very brief consideration of the reasonableness of "[t]he
    total elapsed time [forty-eight hours] between the time of the initial
    seizure of the suitcase and the issuance of the search warrant." 
    Id. at 205.
    Importantly, the district court never distinguished, for purposes
    of its reasonableness analysis, between the period before Carter
    requested the return of his luggage and the period after such a request
    had been made. An independent inquiry was never made into the rea-
    sonableness of the nineteen hours between 4:30 p.m. on January 15
    and 12:00 noon on January 16.
    In an alternative holding, the district court ruled that even if the sei-
    zure were determined to have violated the Fourth Amendment, "the
    cocaine found in the suitcase is nonetheless admissible under the
    `good faith exception.'" 
    Id. (citing United
    States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
    (1984)). The court relied exclusively on the Eighth Circuit's deci-
    sion in United States v. White, 
    890 F.2d 1413
    (8th Cir. 1989), cert.
    denied, 
    498 U.S. 825
    (1990), offering that case as an example in
    which the exclusionary rule was not permitted to prevent the admis-
    sion of evidence where officers had had a good faith basis for seizing
    a person's property at an airport. 
    Id. at 1419.
    The district court rea-
    soned that because it is constitutionally permissible to seize property
    in the possession of an arrestee, the officers had acted in good faith
    in assuming that their continued holding of the property for "less than
    24 hours before Carter's request for the return of the property" did not
    contravene the Fourth Amendment. 
    Carter, 859 F. Supp. at 206
    .
    Notably, the district court did not conduct a separate "good faith"
    inquiry into the officers' motives for holding the Skyway suitcase for
    the additional nineteen hours after Carter had made a formal request
    for the return of his luggage.
    Facing the prospect of the cocaine being admitted as evidence
    against him, Carter entered into a plea of guilty as to the possession
    charge. The guilty plea was made on the condition that the suppres-
    sion issue would be preserved for appeal. Carter received a sixty-
    month sentence for his § 841(a)(1) conviction and an additional one
    month for having violated 18 U.S.C. § 3146(a)(1). Following sentenc-
    ing, Carter filed a timely notice of appeal.
    II.
    Like the district court, I begin by noting that the question presented
    in this case is substantially different from the questions typically pres-
    11
    ented in Fourth Amendment search and seizure cases. First, Carter is
    not claiming that he was unlawfully seized when officers first
    approached him on January 14. See Florida v. Royer, 
    460 U.S. 491
    ,
    497 (1983) (plurality opinion) (holding that "law enforcement officers
    do not violate the Fourth Amendment by merely approaching an indi-
    vidual on the street or in another public place, by asking him if he is
    willing to answer some questions, by putting questions to him if the
    person is willing to listen, or by offering in evidence in a criminal
    prosecution his voluntary answers to such questions"). Second, Carter
    does not dispute that it was within the powers of FAA authorities to
    seize his luggage at the time of his arrest on January 14. Once the
    validity of the arrest is established--something in this case that Carter
    does not dispute--the subsequent seizure of luggage was "unexcep-
    tionable as permissible incidents to a valid arrest." United States v.
    Lehmann, 
    798 F.2d 692
    , 695 (4th Cir. 1986). Finally, Carter is not
    challenging the legitimacy of the January 16 search of the Skyway
    suitcase. Once the narcotics dogs alerted to the Skyway bag, probable
    cause existed and a search warrant was properly issued. Carter's case
    is less common--one in which the sole complaint is that the defen-
    dant's property was seized for an unreasonably long period of time,
    despite efforts on his part to get it back.
    As a final preliminary matter, it must be determined which portion
    of the forty-one hours between Carter's arrest and the search of his
    Skyway suitcase is subject to constitutional scrutiny. I do not under-
    stand Carter as complaining about the initial delay from 10:30 p.m.
    on January 14 through 4:30 p.m. on January 15. It was not until late
    afternoon on the fifteenth--after he had spent the better part of a day
    in custody and in front of a magistrate judge seeking to be released
    on bond--that Carter was even in a position to request that his bags
    be returned to him. As a result, Fourth Amendment concerns were not
    triggered until January 15, at 4:30 p.m., when Carter requested the
    return of his luggage. Likewise, Fourth Amendment concerns could
    not have extended beyond 12:00 noon on January 16, when the DEA
    narcotics dogs sensed an odor of drugs coming from the Skyway bag,
    thus providing authorities with probable cause to obtain a search war-
    rant. Hence, the constitutional examination involves the nineteen-and-
    one-half hour period between 4:30 p.m. on the fifteenth and 12:00
    noon on the sixteenth.
    12
    Carter maintains that the government can only justify holding on
    to seized property once an owner has requested its return by demon-
    strating that its "continuing interest" in the seized property relates to
    the crime for which the arrestee was initially arrested. Under such a
    theory, unless the FAA officers could have articulated a reason for
    detaining the Skyway suitcase that related to their investigation of
    Carter's theft,4 Carter would have been entitled to his suitcase as soon
    as he requested its return. Like the district court, I find Carter's for-
    mulation of the rule too narrow. 
    Carter, 859 F. Supp. at 205
    n.6. The
    government's "continuing interest" in the luggage need not be directly
    related to the crime for which the defendant was arrested. Assuming
    that the "continuing interest" is distinct from the initial basis for
    arrest, it must then be determined what constitutes a reasonable
    amount of time for the authorities to continue to hold on to the seized
    property. While the officers need not return the property immediately
    _________________________________________________________________
    4 I find wholly unavailing the government's admittedly post hoc ratio-
    nalization that the continued seizure of the Skyway could have proved
    useful in undermining Carter's claim that he had picked up the Hartman
    suitcase by accident, because it looked like his own Skyway suitcase. At
    the suppression hearing, government counsel admitted that Detective
    Leach's decision not to give Carter the Skyway had nothing to do with
    the perceived value the suitcase might have had in a subsequent prosecu-
    tion on the theft charge:
    "[W]hat he [Detective Leach] had in his mind at the time was
    that the defendant had just come in from Miami, a known drug
    source for a quick stay, that the defendant had a prior drug arrest,
    that the zippered bag looked suspicious, because it had tape on
    the outside of it."
    Joint Appendix, at 19-20. Counsel further conceded that had FAA author-
    ities only been interested in the Skyway for the purpose of bolstering
    their case against Carter on the theft charge, they could just as easily
    have taken a photograph of the suitcase and returned the bag to Carter.
    Whether producing the Skyway at trial would have been necessary is
    doubtful. While it certainly is possible for someone to mistake another
    person's suitcase for his own and to walk off accidentally with the wrong
    piece of luggage, it strains credulity to believe that Carter had forgotten
    how many pieces of luggage he had brought with him on his trip. At the
    time he was stopped by Officer Young, Carter was attempting to leave
    the airport with his Skyway and the similar Hartman.
    13
    upon the arrestee's request, as Carter suggests, I take exception to the
    length of time the district court was willing to allow the seizure to
    continue without a finding of probable cause.
    I will assume, for purposes of discussion, that there existed a rea-
    sonable basis for suspecting Carter of illegal activity beyond the theft
    of the Hartman suitcase.5 When such suspicion exists, under United
    States v. Place, 
    462 U.S. 696
    (1983), authorities may briefly detain
    a person's luggage for the purpose of conducting a limited investiga-
    tion of that person's property.6 In Place, the Court specifically upheld
    _________________________________________________________________
    5 While Carter's arrest for theft and prior arrest on drug possession
    charges may have given the police some basis to suspect further illegal
    activity, I am less inclined to read much, if anything, into the fact that
    Carter's Skyway was wrapped with several pieces of tape even though
    there was apparently no damage to the suitcase's zippers or locking
    mechanisms. The notion that reasonable suspicion can be gleaned from
    the fact that Carter had flown into Washington, D.C. from Miami and
    that he was staying for only two days is even less plausible. I do not dis-
    pute the fact that Miami, along with many other major metropolitan cen-
    ters throughout this country, has substantial drug problems, but the idea
    of law enforcement authorities conducting investigations based on the air
    travel of a suspect is dubious at best, particularly when the destinations
    are in fairly reasonable proximity to one another. Cf. United States v.
    Alpert, 
    816 F.2d 958
    , 960-61 (4th Cir. 1987) (noting that "[s]mall parts
    of the drug courier profile may not always, standing alone, provide the
    reasonable, articulable suspicion necessary to justify a Terry-stop"); see
    also United States v. Gooding, 
    695 F.2d 78
    , 83 (4th Cir. 1982) (rejecting
    notion that a drug courier profile alone, which included defendant's
    arrival from New York--a source city for drugs--could create a reason-
    able and articulable suspicion); but cf. United States v. Erwin, 
    803 F.2d 1505
    , 1510 (9th Cir. 1986) (including in list of suspicious activity the
    fact that defendant had flown 4,000 miles round-trip from Alaska to San
    Francisco--"a known drug-source city"--in a two day period).
    6 The Supreme Court's decision in Place is far more relevant to the out-
    come of this case than was suggested by the district court. See 
    Carter, 859 F. Supp. at 204
    n.4 (citing Place only for the proposition that a "dog
    sniff is not a Fourth Amendment `search'"). I recognize that, on first
    glance, there appears to be a substantial distinction between the seizure
    in this case and the one in Place, but after careful consideration I find
    that Place is appropriately applied in this instance. The government dis-
    14
    the constitutional legitimacy of using narcotics detection dogs to
    ascertain whether luggage contains contraband. Relying on its deci-
    sion in Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    (1968), the Court carved out another
    exception to the probable cause requirement for limited seizures and
    held that the detention of personal effects is governed by the same
    standards as the seizure of a person in possession of those goods.
    _________________________________________________________________
    tinguishes Place on the ground that Carter's luggage was initially seized
    incident to a lawful arrest, whereas Place--although suspected of illegal
    activity--had not been arrested prior to the seizure of his luggage. The
    fact that Carter had attracted the attention of airport police by stealing
    someone else's suitcase plays a critical role in defining the amount of
    time that authorities could hold on to Carter's luggage, but only up until
    that point when Carter was released on bond and requested the return of
    his luggage. By 4:30 p.m. on January 15, authorities could not articulate
    a basis for keeping the Skyway as part of their investigation into the prior
    evening's theft. At best, the officers then were only suspicious of other
    criminal activity.
    The government relies too heavily on the fact that FAA authorities ini-
    tially seized Carter's property pursuant to a lawful arrest. At the motions
    hearing, government counsel argued that "[t]he fact of the lawful seizure
    places the reasonable period of time in a much more expansive frame-
    work [than would otherwise be the case under a scenario such as the one
    in Place]." Joint Appendix, at 24. In front of this court, the government
    continued to distance itself from Place by claiming that a reasonable
    period for retaining a bag after it has been lawfully seized is longer than
    that which constitutes a "reasonable period" under Place. In fact, the
    government contends that the seizure of property incident to an arrest
    allows the government a certain amount of time to"simply sit back and
    think about it." The government ignores the fact that it had eighteen
    hours to "sit back and think" about its investigation.
    Had Carter claimed that the initial eighteen hour seizure of his prop-
    erty violated the Fourth Amendment, there would be no basis for our
    assessing the reasonableness of the officers' actions in light of Place. I
    recognize that Place does not address the detention of property seized
    incident to a lawful arrest. In this case, however, we are not evaluating
    the initial seizure, but the continued seizure of Carter's belongings once
    he requested the return of his luggage after having been released on
    bond. At that point, I believe that this case fell squarely back within the
    parameters of Place.
    15
    
    Place, 462 U.S. at 700-01
    , 705; United States v. McFarley, 
    991 F.2d 1188
    , 1191 (4th Cir.) (recognizing that under Place, the "same rea-
    sonable suspicion which must justify a brief stop and search of the
    person must also form the basis for a detention of luggage for the pur-
    pose of conducting a dog sniff"), cert. denied, 
    114 S. Ct. 393
    (1993).
    Place rejected the government's contention that seizures of prop-
    erty are necessarily less intrusive than seizures of the person. A . . .
    "detention of luggage within the traveler's immediate possession . . .
    intrudes on both the suspect's possessory interest in his luggage as
    well as his liberty interest in proceeding with his itinerary." 
    Place, 462 U.S. at 708
    . The Court analogized the situation involving the sei-
    zure of luggage to the situation in which the person himself is seized:
    when the police seize luggage from the suspect's custody,
    . . . the limitations applicable to investigative detentions of
    the person should define the permissible scope of an investi-
    gative detention of the person's luggage on less than proba-
    ble cause.
    
    Id. at 708-09.
    As in the Terry context, it is possible for officers to
    exceed the time limits of an investigatory stop with respect to per-
    sonal property. As we noted in United States v. Alpert, 
    816 F.2d 958
    ,
    961 (4th Cir. 1987), "[t]he applicable brevity requirements for investi-
    gatory seizures of luggage are no different from those for seizures of
    persons in many cases."
    In analyzing a stop based on reasonable suspicion, the intrusiveness
    of the stop is the "critical threshold issue," 
    Place, 462 U.S. at 722
    , and
    we have held that the "duration or brevity of the stop is a key consid-
    eration in determining . . . [the stop's] intrusiveness." 
    Alpert, 816 F.2d at 961
    . In Place, ninety minutes elapsed between the officers' initial
    detention of the defendant and his luggage and the"sniff test" by
    trained narcotics dogs. The detention of the defendant's luggage for
    that amount of time, when the defendant had not been arrested, but
    had been stopped based only on the officer's suspicion that he may
    have been involved in criminal activity, was ruled excessive. 
    Id. at 709-10.
    In making such a determination, the Place Court took into
    account "whether the police diligently pursue[d] their investigation,"
    and thereby minimized any intrusion on the traveler's Fourth Amend-
    16
    ment rights. 
    Id. at 709;
    Alpert, 816 F.2d at 962
    . In arriving at the con-
    clusion that the ninety-minute detention of Place's luggage
    constituted an unreasonable seizure, the Court expressly noted the
    lack of diligence on the part of the officers in securing the necessary
    narcotics dogs. 
    Place, 462 U.S. at 709
    . The fact that ninety minutes
    had transpired before the dogs were brought to sniff the luggage was
    less critical than the fact that the officers had not made a sufficient
    effort to minimize the intrusiveness of the detention. 
    Id. at 703.
    Two years after its decision in Place, the Court reiterated the
    importance of police diligence in the investigatory process. United
    States v. Sharpe, 
    470 U.S. 675
    (1985). The Sharpe Court construed
    Place as follows:
    [T]he rationale underlying that conclusion[that the deten-
    tion was unreasonable] was premised on the fact that the
    police knew of respondent's arrival time for several hours
    beforehand, and the Court assumed that the police could
    have arranged for a trained narcotics dog in advance and
    thus avoided the necessity of holding respondent's luggage
    for 90 minutes.
    
    Sharpe, 470 U.S. at 684-85
    . In contrast to the lack of prompt police
    action in Place, the twenty minute detention in Sharpe was justified
    in light of the fact that police had been acting"in a swiftly developing
    situation." 
    Id. at 686.
    Furthermore, the twenty minute detention was
    primarily the fault of the suspect, whose "actions contribute[d] to the
    added delay about which he complains." 
    Id. at 687-88.
    Against the backdrop of Place and Sharpe , we articulated a list of
    circumstances to be considered when evaluating the intrusiveness of
    a seizure for Fourth Amendment purposes. In Alpert, we included
    among those circumstances (1) the duration of time the suspect is
    delayed by the stop; (2) whether the police acted diligently; (3)
    whether the detention of the subject of the search was unnecessarily
    prolonged; (4) whether the authorities made it absolutely clear that
    they planned to reunite the suspect and his possessions at some future
    time, and how they planned to do it; and (5) the importance of the
    governmental interest alleged to justify the 
    intrusion. 816 F.2d at 964
    (citations to Place and Sharpe omitted). When considered in light of
    17
    these criterion, the officers' actions--specifically those taken beyond
    the point at which Carter requested that his luggage be returned to
    him--were not reasonable.7
    With respect to the first of the Alpert criteria, I reject Carter's inti-
    mation that the court need only determine whether his belongings
    were detained for longer than the ninety minute period held excessive
    in Place. The Place Court "decline[d] to adopt any outside time limi-
    tation for a permissible Terry stop," 
    id. at 709,
    focusing instead on
    whether the seizure was "so minimally intrusive as to be justifiable
    on reasonable suspicion." 
    Place, 462 U.S. at 709
    ; see also 
    Royer, 460 U.S. at 500
    (holding that "the investigative methods employed should
    be the least intrusive means reasonably available to verify or dispel
    the officer's suspicion in a short period of time"). While the Court had
    "never approved a seizure of the person for the prolonged 90-minute
    period involved here," 
    Place, 462 U.S. at 709
    -10, I recognize that it
    is possible for officers to act with due diligence, yet exceed ninety
    minutes in conducting an investigation. I note, however, that virtually
    all courts upholding seizures of property have done so where the
    detention lasted for less than ninety minutes. See, e.g., 
    Frost, 999 F.2d at 741
    (80-minute detention of suitcase for sniff test reasonable when
    police acted diligently); 
    McFarley, 991 F.2d at 1194
    (38-minute
    detention of luggage reasonable when taken directly to dog sniff test-
    ing and investigation conducted diligently); United States v. Withers,
    _________________________________________________________________
    7 Although my attention in this case focuses on the time period begin-
    ning at 4:30 p.m. on January 15, when Carter first requested the return
    of his luggage, I cannot ignore that earlier that day Detective Leach had
    asked Officer Young to inquire about obtaining a search warrant for the
    Skyway bag. It is reasonable to assume that had Officer Young made
    such an inquiry, he would have discovered what Detective Leach was
    eventually told at the end of the day on the fifteenth--that a warrant
    would not be issued unless narcotics detection dogs were brought in to
    sniff the suitcase. In making my evaluation, I must also consider briefly
    one other aspect of the officers' conduct prior to Carter's 4:30 p.m.
    request. Although I believe Carter overemphasizes the importance of the
    officers not finding any contraband in the black bag that had been inven-
    toried at 12:40 a.m. on January 15, the fact that the bag was cleared
    should have had some impact on the diligence with which the officers
    continued their investigation, since it was certainly possible that the Sky-
    way suitcase also would fail to produce any contraband.
    18
    
    972 F.2d 837
    , 843 (7th Cir. 1992) (15- to 20-minute detention of sus-
    pect's luggage for sniff test reasonable); United States v. Glover, 
    957 F.2d 1004
    , 1012 (2d Cir. 1992) (30-minute detention of luggage rea-
    sonable); United States v. Cooper, 
    873 F.2d 269
    , 275 (11th Cir.) (per
    curiam) (35-minute detention of luggage reasonable when officers
    diligently pursued investigation, found dog to perform sniff test, and
    obtained search warrant as soon as practicable), cert. denied, 
    493 U.S. 837
    (1989); United States v. Quinn, 
    815 F.2d 153
    , 157-58 (1st Cir.
    1987) (20-minute delay reasonable given diligence of police); 
    Erwin, 803 F.2d at 1509
    (45-minute delay from time defendant stepped off
    flight until police-trained dog detected drug odor from defendant's
    day pack was not unreasonable for constitutional purposes); but see
    
    Respress, 9 F.3d at 488
    (10-hour detention of luggage reasonable con-
    sidering late hour and time needed to prepare affidavit and have it
    reviewed in order to obtain search warrant). Similarly, when the
    detention of luggage has equalled or exceeded 90-minutes, courts
    have generally held such seizures unconstitutional without probable
    cause. See, e.g., United States v. Scales, 
    903 F.2d 765
    , 769 (10th Cir.
    1990) (seven hour delay found to have gone beyond the "brevity"
    required for a Place seizure); United States v. Cagle, 
    849 F.2d 924
    ,
    927 (5th Cir. 1988) (90-minute detention rendered seizure sufficiently
    intrusive); Moya v. United States, 
    761 F.2d 322
    , 327 (7th Cir. 1984)
    (three hour seizure of shoulder bag unreasonable); United States v.
    Puglisi, 
    723 F.2d 779
    , 790-91 (11th Cir. 1984) (two hour and twenty
    minute detention of luggage rendered seizure unreasonable). The few
    instances in which courts have upheld seizures far exceeding ninety
    minutes are readily distinguishable from the present case. See Segura
    v. United States, 
    468 U.S. 796
    (1984) (19-hour seizure of contents of
    apartment based on probable cause, rather than mere reasonable sus-
    picion); United States v. Van Leeuwen, 
    397 U.S. 249
    (1970) (26-1/2
    hour seizure of mailed package allegedly containing gold coins did
    not trigger type of possessory and liberty interests attached to per-
    sonal luggage of a traveler).
    In each of the cases cited above, the degree of diligence with which
    the officers proceeded was as or more important than the number of
    minutes taken to complete the sniff tests. See 
    Place, 462 U.S. at 709
    (instructing that courts must "take into account whether the police
    diligently pursue[d] their investigation"); 
    Alpert, 816 F.2d at 964
    (including "diligence" as second of five bases for evaluating reason-
    19
    ableness of prolonged seizure). In the instant case, Detective Leach
    learned of the "sniff test" requirement by the end of the day on Janu-
    ary 15, yet dogs were not brought in until noon on January 16. Impor-
    tantly, the government concedes that dogs could have been brought
    in more quickly. At no point, however, has the government offered
    an explanation as to why it took nineteen hours for narcotics detection
    dogs to be brought to FAA offices to sniff Carter's Skyway bag.
    Under the third prong of Alpert, I believe that the detention of the
    Skyway was unnecessarily prolonged.
    Nothing about the handling of Carter's luggage from the time he
    requested its return strikes me as reasonable. On its face, a nineteen-
    and-one-half hour delay triggers substantial suspicions about the effi-
    cacy with which the officers conducted their investigation. The gov-
    ernment has provided no basis for concluding that FAA authorities
    acted in a diligent fashion or to believe that the sniff test could not
    have been conducted twelve to eighteen hours sooner. Therefore, I
    believe that the prolonged detention of Carter's belongings consti-
    tuted an unreasonable seizure under the Fourth Amendment.
    III.
    I do not accept the argument that the cocaine found in Carter's
    Skyway bag is nonetheless admissible under the "good faith excep-
    tion" to the exclusionary rule first articulated in United States v. Leon,
    
    468 U.S. 897
    (1984). Leon is simply not applicable to this case. The
    Leon Court substantially modified the Fourth Amendment's exclu-
    sionary rule by holding that the rule should not be applied to bar the
    use in the prosecution's case-in-chief of evidence obtained by officers
    acting in reasonable reliance on a search warrant issued by a detached
    and neutral magistrate, but ultimately found to be invalid. 
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 905-25
    . The practical effect of Leon has been to enable prose-
    cutors to preserve cases that would have otherwise failed for lack of
    evidence. I refuse to extend Leon's "good faith exception" beyond its
    limited holding. According to the Leon Court, the exclusionary rule
    was designed to "deter police misconduct rather than to punish the
    errors of judges and magistrates." 
    Id. at 916.
    As such, the Court found
    that "[p]enalizing the officer for the magistrate's error, rather than his
    own, cannot logically contribute to the deterrence of Fourth Amend-
    ment violations." 
    Id. at 921.
    Other circuits have rejected the govern-
    20
    ment's attempt to extend Leon beyond the context of defective search
    warrants. 
    Scales, 903 F.2d at 768-69
    ; United States v. Vasey, 
    834 F.2d 782
    , 789-90 (9th Cir. 1987). In Scales, the Tenth Circuit confronted
    a similar misapplication of Leon by a district court:
    The specific holding of Leon does not apply to the facts
    of this case, nor is the rationale behind it present here. When
    the DEA agents seized the suitcase and held it for more than
    twenty-four hours before obtaining a search warrant, they
    were not acting pursuant to a warrant subsequently deemed
    invalid. The "illegality" which arguably existed here was not
    a function of the agents' good faith reliance on a presump-
    tively valid warrant. Moreover, the search of the suitcase
    after the search warrant was issued does not prevent us from
    evaluating the agents' behavior prior to that 
    time. 903 F.2d at 768
    . As in Scales, the prolonged detention of Carter's
    Skyway bag was not based on the issuance of a warrant. In fact, it was
    not until after the dogs had alerted to the Skyway that FAA authorities
    attempted to obtain a warrant. The errors made by FAA authorities
    cannot be blamed on a defective warrant, and Leon is reserved for
    cases in which search warrants are later determined to have been
    invalid. See, e.g., United States v. White, 
    890 F.2d 1413
    (8th Cir.
    1989).
    IV.
    An individual's Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreason-
    able seizures cannot be eviscerated by the fact that the detention of
    his property began as a legitimate seizure incident to a lawful arrest.
    There is nothing reasonable about the nineteen-and-one-half hour
    delay from the time Carter requested the return of his property until
    FAA authorities finally conducted a sniff test of his luggage. The gov-
    ernment, in effect, has asked that we overlook Place, so that it can be
    given a greater length of time to investigate other possible crimes
    wholly unconnected to the one for which Carter was arrested. Sanc-
    tioning such a theory would denigrate the meaning of the Fourth
    Amendment. Unwilling to subvert further an amendment once
    regarded as a bedrock of our civil liberties, I would hold that the
    cocaine found in Carter's luggage was the fruit of an unconstitutional
    21
    seizure. As such, I believe that the district court committed reversible
    error by denying Carter's motion to suppress and that the plea agree-
    ment Carter entered is invalid.
    For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion
    affirming the judgment of the district court.
    I am authorized to state that Judge Hall, Judge Murnaghan and
    Judge Michael join in this dissent.
    22