United States v. Stevens ( 2007 )


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  •                                                         United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    F I L E D
    REVISED August 13, 2007
    May 16, 2007
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT             Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    No. 05-41369
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    RAUL JAVIER STEVENS; ALEJANDRO STEVENS
    Defendants - Appellants
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas, Brownsville
    Before KING, GARZA, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
    KING, Circuit Judge:
    Defendants-appellants Alejandro Stevens and Raul Stevens
    challenge their convictions and sentences resulting from the
    discovery by law enforcement agents of approximately 300 pounds
    of marijuana in the backyard shed of the house in which they
    resided.   Because Alejandro Stevens pleaded guilty and failed to
    preserve the right to appeal the district court’s pretrial denial
    of his motion to suppress, we AFFIRM his conviction and sentence.
    We also AFFIRM Raul Stevens’s conviction and sentence, concluding
    that the district court correctly denied Raul Stevens’s motion to
    suppress, that Raul Stevens may not raise an ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim on direct appeal, and that the
    district court did not commit Booker error in imposing his
    sentence.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In the course of investigating narcotics smuggling activity
    in Brownsville, Texas, Special Agent Robert Mossman of the U.S.
    Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) became aware of a
    plan to transport approximately 300 pounds of marijuana out of
    Brownsville.   A confidential informant working with ICE agents
    had two meetings with a woman named Johanna Espinosa in which
    Espinosa and the informant made arrangements for the informant to
    transport the marijuana.   ICE agents observed the meetings and
    listened to the conversations at the meetings through a wire worn
    by the informant.   The first meeting, during which Espinosa
    phoned “George” and then “Raul” for information, revealed that
    the informant would be driving the marijuana to Georgia and that
    he would be paid $10,000 for the job.
    A second meeting occurred the next day when the informant
    met Espinosa and another man, George, to finalize the
    arrangements for transporting the marijuana.   The informant
    brought empty produce boxes in which to pack the marijuana for
    transport.   After meeting with Espinosa, George and the informant
    left the second meeting together in the informant’s car, with
    George driving.   As George drove the car, he engaged in erratic
    -2-
    driving, or “heat runs,” where he made quick U-turns and pulled
    into driveways and parking lots to see if he was being followed.
    After about forty minutes of heat runs, George and the informant
    met two men in a Ford Expedition in a supermarket parking lot.
    The identity of the driver of the Expedition was unknown; he was
    later identified as defendant-appellant Alejandro Stevens.
    Alejandro Stevens assisted George and the informant in
    transferring the produce boxes from the informant’s car to the
    Expedition.   The boxes were to be taken to the marijuana stash
    house to be loaded with the marijuana.
    After loading the boxes into the Expedition, George and the
    informant returned to the original meeting location with
    Espinosa, again engaging in heat runs along the way.   Espinosa
    confirmed that the boxes were being taken to the stash house for
    loading, and she told the informant that she would call him when
    the boxes were loaded.   Meanwhile, ICE agents followed the
    Expedition, which eventually arrived at 2994 Dana (the “Dana
    house”) in Brownsville, Texas, after engaging in heat runs.
    Agents believed that the marijuana was located at the Dana house
    and would be loaded into the empty produce boxes.   A surveillance
    team directed by Agent Mossman watched the Dana house from
    several locations, including the side of the house, an alley
    behind the house, and a school across the street.   That night,
    the surveillance team observed people going back and forth from
    the house to a shed in the backyard.   Agent Mossman terminated
    -3-
    the surveillance at 9:30 p.m. that night.
    Agent Mossman’s team of agents planned to attempt to gain
    consent to search the home the following morning at 9:00 a.m.
    Surveillance agents arrived at the house around 8:00 a.m. and
    notified the “consent team” before 9:00 a.m. that three people
    had left the house in the Expedition.   The surveillance team did
    not know at the time who was in the car, but they later learned
    that the driver was defendant-appellant Raul Stevens and that the
    two passengers were Raul Stevens’s daughter and defendant-
    appellant Alejandro Stevens, his adult son.   Raul Stevens dropped
    off his daughter at a local college.    While the surveillance team
    followed the Expedition, the consent team, including Agent
    Mossman, arrived at the house to attempt to gain consent.    Agents
    believed that there was someone in the house because there was a
    car in the driveway.   However, no one answered the door.
    Agent Mossman, still at the house, remained in radio and
    phone contact with the surveillance team following the
    Expedition.   He ran the Expedition’s registration and learned
    that it was registered to Raul Stevens at the Dana house address.
    The surveillance team told Agent Mossman that the Expedition was
    on 12th Street in Brownsville driving toward the bridge to
    Mexico.   Concerned that the car was driving into Mexico, Agent
    Mossman instructed the surveillance agents to make a traffic stop
    and to ask Raul Stevens if he would consent to a search of the
    Dana house and return to the Dana house to undertake the search.
    -4-
    The Expedition was being followed by Agent Gentry driving one
    unmarked car and Deputy Silva driving another unmarked car.
    Deputy Martinez accompanied Deputy Silva.   As the two officials
    followed the Expedition in their cars, they attempted to avoid
    detection by alternating the lead car position and by
    alternatively turning off the route taken by the Expedition.
    Agent Gentry informed Deputy Silva that he saw the Expedition
    make an illegal lane change while Deputy Silva was driving on
    another street.   However, it was Deputy Silva and Deputy Martinez
    who executed the traffic stop of the Expedition.   They did so by
    turning on the car’s siren, pulling along side of the Expedition,
    showing Deputy Martinez’s sheriff’s badge to the driver, and
    asking him to pull over.
    Deputy Silva approached the car and asked the driver, Raul
    Stevens, for his driver’s license and proof of insurance.     Agent
    Gentry pulled up behind the Expedition as Deputy Silva asked for
    these items.   Without informing him of the traffic violation,
    Deputy Silva then informed Raul Stevens that a customs agent,
    Agent Gentry, wanted to speak to him.   Agent Gentry approached
    Raul Stevens and informed him that they were conducting a
    narcotics investigation, that there were agents at the Dana
    house, and that they thought that there were “things . . . going
    on at his house.”   According to Agent Gentry, he asked for
    consent to search the house, and Raul Stevens consented to the
    search.   Agent Gentry then asked Raul Stevens if he would
    -5-
    accompany him back to the house, and Raul Stevens agreed to do
    so.   Raul Stevens accompanied Agent Gentry to Gentry’s vehicle
    and got in the front seat.   On their way to the house, Agent
    Gentry explained to Raul Stevens that agents believed that there
    were narcotics in the house.   He asked him if his son, Alejandro
    Stevens, was involved in narcotics, and Raul Stevens replied that
    he didn’t know.
    When Raul Stevens arrived at the house with Agent Gentry,
    Agent Mossman was at the house with an additional six officers.
    Agent Mossman told Raul Stevens about what the agents had seen
    during the surveillance of the house and asked for his consent to
    search the house.   At the suppression hearing, Raul Stevens
    denied giving consent, but Agent Mossman and Agent Gentry
    testified that Raul Stevens verbally consented to the search.
    They also testified that when they asked him to sign a consent
    form, he again said that they could search the house but that he
    would not sign anything.   The door to the house was locked, but
    Raul Stevens produced the keys to the house and unlocked and
    opened the door.
    Agent Mossman and Raul Stevens then entered the house.    Raul
    Stevens cooperated in the search, directing Agent Mossman to his
    office, where agents found an AK-47, a small machine pistol, a
    shotgun, three handguns, thousands of rounds of ammunition,
    bullet-proof vests, and laser sights for assisting a shooter in
    focusing on a target.   Agents also found a pound of marijuana in
    -6-
    the office with the guns and six grams of cocaine in Raul
    Stevens’s bedroom.
    While still inside the house, Agent Mossman asked Raul
    Stevens if he could also search the shed in the backyard behind
    the house.   The door from the house to the backyard was locked,
    but Raul Stevens produced the key and unlocked the door so they
    could enter the yard.   Agent Mossman observed two locked doors on
    the shed.    Raul Stevens informed Agent Mossman that both locked
    doors led to the same area within the shed.     Raul Stevens then
    produced the key to the locked shed door and unlocked it.     After
    searching the room in the shed and finding no drugs, canine
    inspectors determined that a piece of plywood was sealing another
    door inside the shed and confirmed that the second external door
    provided entry into this room.   The agents removed the plywood,
    opened the door, and found approximately 306 pounds of marijuana.
    Alejandro Stevens remained at the scene of the traffic stop
    with Deputy Silva and Deputy Martinez when Raul Stevens left with
    Agent Gentry.   According to Deputy Silva, Alejandro Stevens asked
    if he could leave the traffic stop, and Deputy Silva said “no.”
    While Alejandro Stevens waited, he spoke on his cell phone.     He
    then asked Deputy Silva if he could wait inside the Expedition.
    Deputy Silva said “yes,” and Deputy Silva and Deputy Martinez
    waited in the Expedition with him.     After agents at the house
    found the drugs, Agent Mossman told Deputy Silva and Deputy
    Martinez to bring Alejandro Stevens to the house.
    -7-
    Both Raul Stevens and Alejandro Stevens were placed under
    arrest and handcuffed at the house.     They were not given Miranda
    warnings at this time.    Agents placed them in the living room,
    where Raul Stevens sat on a couch about ten feet from Alejandro
    Stevens, who sat in a chair.    Agent Mossman testified that he
    told them, “[I]f you guys want to talk to me, you know where I
    am.”    Agent Mossman waited outside.   Another agent came outside
    and told Agent Mossman that Alejandro Stevens wanted to talk to
    him.    Agent Mossman went inside and asked Alejandro Stevens what
    he wanted to talk about.    Alejandro Stevens said that he could
    tell him where there were stash houses containing thousands of
    pounds of marijuana if Agent Mossman would help him.     Agent
    Mossman asked him where the stash house was, and Alejandro
    Stevens told him it was in Mexico.      Agent Mossman testified that
    Raul Stevens then told him that the cocaine in the bedroom
    belonged to him.    According to Agent Mossman, Raul Stevens made
    this statement voluntarily and not in response to any
    questioning.
    After the search of the house was completed, agents took
    Raul Stevens and Alejandro Stevens to the ICE office, where Agent
    Mossman testified that they were given their Miranda warnings.
    After their warnings were read, Alejandro Stevens repeated the
    same information that he told Agent Mossman at the Dana house
    about the stash houses.    Raul Stevens again claimed ownership of
    the cocaine and everything in the house but disclaimed ownership
    -8-
    of the marijuana found in the shed.
    The grand jury indicted Alejandro Stevens and Raul Stevens
    on three counts.    Count One charged each with conspiracy to
    possess with intent to distribute approximately 139 kilograms
    (306 pounds) gross weight of marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C.
    §§ 846, 841(a)(1), and 841(b)(1)(B).    Count Two charged each with
    possession with intent to distribute the same in violation of 21
    U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(B) and 18 U.S.C. § 2.      Count
    Three charged each with possession with intent to distribute a
    quantity exceeding 100 kilograms or more of marijuana within 1000
    feet of a public elementary school in violation of 21 U.S.C.
    §§ 841(a)(1) and 860.
    Alejandro Stevens filed a pretrial motion requesting the
    district court to suppress statements made and physical evidence
    seized at the Dana House.    Raul Stevens also filed a pretrial
    motion to suppress all evidence seized as the result of the
    search of the house and all statements he made after his arrest.
    After a hearing, the district court denied each defendant’s
    motion to suppress.    Alejandro Stevens then pleaded guilty to
    Count Two in exchange for the government dismissing Counts One
    and Three.    This agreement was entered into at Alejandro
    Stevens’s rearraignment hearing without a written plea agreement
    preserving his right to appeal the denial of his motion to
    suppress.    Raul Stevens proceeded to a jury trial and was
    convicted on all three counts.
    -9-
    The district court sentenced Alejandro Stevens to serve a
    term of 110 months in the custody of the Bureau of Prisons and
    five years’ supervised release and ordered a $100 special
    assessment.   On the same day, the court sentenced Raul Stevens to
    serve a total of 274 months in the custody of the Bureau of
    Prisons followed by eight years of supervised release.    Raul
    Stevens’s Presentence Report (“PSR”) reflected a base offense
    level of 28, for which the corresponding sentence range is 87 to
    108 months’ imprisonment.    The PSR recommended enhancements
    resulting in a total offense level of 35, for which the
    corresponding sentencing range is 210 to 262 months’
    imprisonment.   The government moved for an upward departure, and
    the district court did so on the basis of the large cache of
    loaded weapons in the house as well as the proximity of those
    weapons to an elementary school and crosswalk.    The court
    additionally ordered Raul Stevens to pay a $14,000 fine and a
    $300 special assessment.
    Alejandro Stevens now appeals the district court’s denial of
    his motion to suppress.    Raul Stevens likewise appeals the
    district court’s denial of his motion to suppress.    Raul Stevens
    additionally claims ineffective assistance of counsel and
    challenges his sentence on the basis of Booker error.
    II. SUPPRESSION ISSUES
    A.   Standard of Review
    -10-
    In an appeal from the denial of a motion to suppress, we
    review the district court’s factual findings for clear error and
    the district court’s ultimate conclusion as to the
    constitutionality of the law enforcement action de novo.     United
    States v. Chavez-Villarreal, 
    3 F.3d 124
    , 126 (5th Cir. 1993).      If
    a particular suppression argument is not made to the district
    court, however, our review is for plain error.     United States v.
    De Jesus-Batres, 
    410 F.3d 154
    , 158 (5th Cir. 2005).    We view the
    evidence introduced at the suppression hearing in the light most
    favorable to the prevailing party, which in this case is the
    government.   United States v. Santiago, 
    310 F.3d 336
    , 340 (5th
    Cir. 2002).
    B.   Alejandro Stevens’s Motion to Suppress
    Alejandro Stevens argues that the district court erred when
    it denied his motion to suppress because law enforcement
    officials obtained physical evidence from the Dana House and
    statements from him in violation of his Fourth and Fifth
    Amendment rights.   The government responds that Alejandro Stevens
    entered into an unconditional guilty plea and therefore waived
    his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to
    suppress.
    When a defendant enters a voluntary and unconditional guilty
    plea, the plea has the effect of waiving all nonjurisdictional
    defects in the prior proceedings.     United States v. Wise, 179
    -11-
    F.3d 184, 186 (5th Cir. 1999); United States v. Bell, 
    966 F.2d 914
    , 915 (5th Cir. 1992).    That waiver includes any further
    objection to evidence admitted pursuant to a district court’s
    denial of a motion to suppress.    
    Wise, 179 F.3d at 186
    .     A
    defendant may enter a conditional guilty plea, however, and
    preserve the right to appeal a district court’s adverse ruling on
    a pretrial motion.    See FED. R. CRIM. P. 11(a)(2).   Rule 11
    provides that a conditional plea must be made in writing and
    consented to by the prosecution and the district court.       See id.;
    see also 
    Wise, 179 F.3d at 186
    .    Rule 11(a)(2)'s requirements of
    government consent and court approval reflect that a defendant
    has no absolute right to plead conditionally.     
    Wise, 179 F.3d at 187
    .    “The government and the court are free to reject a
    conditional plea for any reason or no reason at all.”        
    Bell, 966 F.2d at 916
    .
    Rule 11(h) allows for variance from Rule 11(a)(2)’s
    technical conditional plea requirements when the variance “does
    not affect substantial rights.”    FED. R. CRIM. P. 11(h).    We have
    excused harmless variances under Rule 11(h) where “the record
    clearly indicates that the defendant intended to enter a
    conditional guilty plea, that the defendant expressed the
    intention to appeal a particular pretrial ruling, and that
    neither the government nor the district court opposed such a
    plea.”    United States v. Santiago, 
    410 F.3d 193
    , 197 (5th Cir.
    2005), cert. denied, 
    126 S. Ct. 1565
    (2006); accord Wise, 179
    -12-
    F.3d at 187 (allowing variance from Rule 11(a)(2) when “the
    spirit of [Rule 11(a)(2) is] fulfilled by a clear indication on
    the record of the defendant’s intention to appeal particular
    pretrial rulings, and the acquiescence of both the prosecution
    and the court”).   For example, in Santiago we excused a
    defendant’s variance from Rule 11(a)(2)’s technical requirements
    and permitted an appeal where the record showed that the district
    judge acknowledged the defendant’s reservation several times, the
    government withdrew its initial objections to the defendant’s
    reservation, the government submitted a factual basis sheet with
    handwritten revisions stating that the defendant preserved his
    right to appeal, and the district judge stated at the
    rearraignment hearing that the defendant did not have to refer to
    the factual basis sheet in order to preserve his right to appeal.
    
    Santiago, 410 F.3d at 197-98
    .   By contrast, in Wise we concluded
    that a defendant did not fulfill the “spirit” of Rule 11(a)(2)
    where the defendant’s written plea agreement contained no
    reservation of any kind, at the plea hearing the district judge
    orally reviewed the terms of the unconditional plea agreement,
    and both the defendant and his lawyer confirmed that there was no
    other agreement between the defendant and the government.     
    Wise, 179 F.3d at 187
    .
    Alejandro Stevens concedes that when he pleaded guilty to
    Count Two in exchange for the government’s dismissing Counts One
    and Three, he did not explicitly preserve his right to appeal the
    -13-
    district court’s denial of his motion to suppress in a written
    plea agreement in conformance with Rule 11(a)(2).    He argues,
    however, that the record shows that he has fulfilled the “spirit”
    of Rule 11(a)(2) according to our decisions in Santiago and Wise.
    Alejandro Stevens points to two statements in the record as proof
    of his intention to enter into a conditional plea.    First, in
    response to questioning from the district judge about the genesis
    of the plea agreement at the rearraignment hearing, the
    government’s counsel stated that he “presumed” that Alejandro
    Stevens’s attorney had approached the government about a plea to
    preserve Alejandro Stevens’s right to appeal the ruling on his
    motion to suppress.   Second, Alejandro Stevens’s PSR incorporated
    his post-plea written statement that he “accept[ed]
    responsibility for possession of marihuana seized . . . subject
    to his motion to suppress.”   Alejandro Stevens urges that these
    statements show that he and the government had a common
    understanding that he would appeal and his attorney simply
    “misspoke” when he later stated that there was no limitation on
    the waiver of appeal.
    These two statements, when viewed in light of the
    rearraignment and sentencing hearings in their entirety, are
    insufficient to establish that Alejandro Stevens reached any
    agreement with the government to enter a conditional plea.    To
    the contrary, the record unambiguously shows that Alejandro
    Stevens and his attorney denied that there was a conditional
    -14-
    plea.   Moreover, the record clearly shows that the government and
    the district court never consented to a conditional plea.
    At Alejandro Stevens’s rearraignment hearing, there was a
    misunderstanding among government attorneys as to whether
    Alejandro Stevens would plead to Count Two or Count Three.    In an
    effort to resolve the misunderstanding and proceed with the
    hearing, the district judge questioned the government as to how
    the plea had evolved, and the government recounted its
    “presumption” as to why Alejandro Stevens had approached the
    government to arrange a plea.   The district judge recessed the
    hearing after her questioning failed to resolve the
    misunderstanding.   When the hearing resumed, the district judge
    orally reviewed Alejandro Stevens’s plea agreement and
    specifically asked Stevens, his attorney, and the government
    attorney about the scope of the plea agreement.   All three
    individuals confirmed that the only agreement between the parties
    was that Counts One and Three would be dropped in exchange for
    the plea to Count Two.
    These affirmations establish that despite the government’s
    statement that it “presumed” that Alejandro Stevens approached it
    to discuss preserving his right to appeal, no such agreement
    materialized.   Moreover, at Alejandro Stevens’s later sentencing
    hearing, the district judge directly asked Alejandro Stevens’s
    attorney and the government attorney whether there was a
    limitation on the waiver of appeal, and each attorney answered
    -15-
    “no.”   Alejandro Stevens’s unilateral post-plea statement in the
    PSR cannot overcome the unanimous disclaimer of any agreement
    between Stevens and the government beyond that to drop Counts One
    and Three in exchange for a plea to Count Two.     Because there is
    no indication in the record that the government or the district
    court consented to a conditional plea, we conclude that Alejandro
    Stevens’s plea was unconditional.     Cf. 
    Bell, 966 F.2d at 917
    (concluding that there was no conditional plea where there was no
    written agreement to preserve an issue for appeal, no express
    acquiescence by the government, and no statement by the district
    judge approving a conditional plea); 
    Wise, 179 F.3d at 187
    (concluding that there was no conditional plea where district
    court orally confirmed that the written plea agreement which
    contained no reservation was the entire agreement between the
    parties).
    Because Alejandro Stevens pleaded guilty and failed to
    preserve his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his
    motion to suppress, we affirm his conviction and sentence.
    C.   Raul Stevens’s Motion to Suppress
    Raul Stevens contends that the district court erred in
    denying his motion to suppress evidence and statements.    First,
    he denies ever consenting to the search and contends that the
    search is illegal on that basis.    Second, he asserts that even if
    he did consent, his statement of consent was given pursuant to
    -16-
    police questioning while he was in custody but before his Miranda
    warnings were read to him.    He argues that because his Miranda
    warnings had not been read to him before he was asked for
    consent, his statement granting consent is inadmissible.     Third,
    he asserts in the alternative that any consent was given while he
    was illegally detained, and therefore his consent was not the
    product of his free will.
    1.   Consent to Search
    Raul Stevens first denies consenting to the search of the
    Dana house and urges that all physical evidence seized during the
    warrantless search is therefore inadmissible.     The issue of
    whether a defendant consented to a search is a question of fact
    to be determined by the totality of the circumstances.      United
    States v. Harrison, 
    918 F.2d 469
    , 473 (5th Cir. 1990).     Our
    review is thus for clear error.     
    Id. “Where the
    judge bases a
    finding of consent on the oral testimony at a suppression
    hearing, the clearly erroneous standard is particularly strong
    since the judge had the opportunity to observe the demeanor of
    the witnesses.”     United States v. Solis, 
    299 F.3d 420
    , 436 (5th
    Cir. 2002) (quoting United States v. Kelley, 
    981 F.2d 1464
    , 1470
    (5th Cir. 1993)).    A factual finding is clearly erroneous if,
    although there is evidence to support it, after viewing the
    record we are “left with the definite and firm conviction that a
    mistake has been committed.”     United States v. U.S. Gypsum Co.,
    -17-
    
    333 U.S. 364
    , 395 (1948).
    The district court found that Raul Stevens voluntarily
    consented to the search of his home while on the front porch of
    the Dana house.   Raul Stevens denies that he gave agents consent
    to search his home.   He does not challenge the voluntariness of
    his consent but rather disputes the fact of consent.   Beyond his
    own denial of consent, the only evidence that he points to in
    support of his argument is the fact that he refused to sign a
    consent form authorizing the search of his home.
    The district court did not clearly err in concluding that
    Raul Stevens granted consent to search his home.   The district
    court credited the testimony of Agents Mossman and Agent Gentry.
    Agent Mossman testified at the suppression hearing that he
    requested consent from Raul Stevens while on the porch of the
    home and that Raul Stevens verbally agreed to the request.    Agent
    Mossman further testified that he then asked Raul Stevens to sign
    a consent form, but Raul Stevens responded that he would not sign
    a form.   Nevertheless, Raul Stevens repeated his verbal consent.
    According to Agent Mossman’s testimony, Raul Stevens then used
    his house key and opened the locked front door of the house.
    After they entered the home together, Raul Stevens assisted
    officers in locating weapons in the office.   They walked through
    the home to the back door, and Raul Stevens unlocked the back
    door so that officers could access the backyard.   Finally, Agent
    -18-
    Mossman testified that Raul Stevens used his keys again to open
    the locked door of the backyard shed.
    Agent Gentry, who drove Raul Stevens from the traffic stop
    to the Dana house, provided testimony consistent with that of
    Agent Mossman.   Agent Gentry testified that he was on the front
    porch of the house when Agent Mossman requested consent and that
    Raul Stevens gave consent to the search.   Agent Gentry also
    testified that after being asked to sign a consent form, Raul
    Stevens replied, “[Y]ou can search the house, but I’m not signing
    anything.”   Agent Gentry further testified that both the door to
    the home and the backyard shed were locked and that Raul Stevens
    produced the keys for each locked door and accompanied the agents
    as they entered the home.
    Accordingly, the record shows that the district court did
    not clearly err in concluding that Raul Stevens consented to the
    search of his home.
    2.   Admissibility of Statements Granting Consent to Search
    In Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 444 (1966), the Supreme
    Court held that in order to preserve the Fifth Amendment’s
    privilege against self-incrimination, law enforcement officials
    must inform a suspect in custody of his right to remain silent,
    that any statement he makes may be used as evidence against him,
    and that he has a right to retain counsel or have counsel
    appointed for him.    Statements obtained during a custodial
    -19-
    interrogation without the benefit of adequate warnings under
    Miranda are generally inadmissible.   Missouri v. Seibert, 
    542 U.S. 600
    , 608 (2004).   An individual is “in custody” for purposes
    of Miranda “when placed under formal arrest or when a reasonable
    person in the suspect's position would have understood the
    situation to constitute a restraint on freedom of movement of the
    degree which the law associates with formal arrest.”   United
    States v. Bengivenga, 
    845 F.2d 593
    , 596 (5th Cir. 1988) (en
    banc).
    Raul Stevens urges that his right to receive Miranda
    warnings was triggered at the traffic stop when he was questioned
    by Agent Gentry.   He argues that Deputy Silva detained him
    pursuant to a pretextual traffic stop and that he was taken into
    custody at the point that Deputy Silva “surrendered” him to Agent
    Gentry for questioning.   He further argues that any statement of
    consent made at the Dana house is inadmissible because it was
    given while he was in custody and pursuant to questioning by
    Agent Mossman, but without the benefit of Miranda warnings.     He
    contends that because the statement consenting to the search is
    inadmissible, the illegal drugs and weapons discovered during the
    subsequent search of his home and backyard shed are inadmissible
    as fruit of the poisonous tree.1   The government responds that
    1
    Raul Stevens’s argument mentions in passing that he
    claimed ownership of the cocaine found in the bedroom before
    being given his Miranda rights. However, he develops no argument
    for the exclusion of this statement, and in particular, advances
    -20-
    Miranda warnings were not applicable at the traffic stop because
    the traffic stop was legitimate and, under Berkemer v. McCarty,
    
    468 U.S. 420
    , 439-40 (1984), questioning a person at a routine
    traffic stop is not “custodial interrogation” triggering the
    right to Miranda warnings.   The government further argues that
    Raul Stevens consented to the search before he left the traffic
    stop and was not “in custody” when he arrived at the Dana house
    because he voluntarily left the traffic stop with Agent Gentry.
    Because Raul Stevens raises his Miranda-based argument for
    the suppression of his statement of consent for the first time on
    appeal, we review for plain error.    Under the plain error
    standard of review, we make three initial determinations:
    (1) whether the district court committed error; (2) whether the
    error is “clear and obvious”; and (3) whether the error affects
    substantial rights.   United States v. Avants, 
    278 F.3d 510
    , 514
    (5th Cir. 2002) (citing United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 732
    (1993)).   If these three conditions are satisfied, we have
    discretion to reverse the district court if we conclude that the
    error “seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity, or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings.”    
    Olano, 507 U.S. at 732
    (quoting United States v. Young, 
    470 U.S. 1
    , 15 (1985)); see also
    no argument that the admission of the statement affected his
    substantial rights under the Olano framework. Inadequately
    briefed issues are deemed abandoned. United States v. Charles,
    
    469 F.3d 402
    , 408 (5th Cir. 2006) (citing Dardar v. Lafourche
    Realty Co., 
    985 F.2d 824
    , 831 (5th Cir. 1993)).
    -21-
    
    Avants, 278 F.3d at 514
    .
    Assuming arguendo that Raul Stevens was “in custody” for
    Miranda purposes when he consented to the search, under the first
    prong of plain-error review, we consider whether the court erred
    by admitting evidence seized pursuant to that consent.         We
    conclude that it did not.
    The failure of officials to give Miranda warnings before
    asking for consent does not prohibit the use of a defendant’s in-
    custody statements granting consent to a search.        See United
    States v. Garcia, 
    496 F.2d 670
    , 675 (5th Cir. 1974); see also
    United States v. Dancy, 
    861 F.2d 77
    , 80 (5th Cir. 1988) (holding
    that Miranda warnings are not required to validate in-custody
    consent searches).    A statement granting “consent to a search
    . . . is neither testimonial nor communicative in the Fifth
    Amendment sense.”    WAYNE R. LAFAVE, JEROLD H. ISRAEL, & NANCY J. KING,
    CRIMINAL PROCEDURE § 3.10 (4th ed. 2004).   As we explained in
    Garcia, a statement of consent is properly scrutinized under the
    Fourth Amendment rather than the Fifth Amendment2:
    In   a   fifth   amendment   context   a
    defendant’s statements, in and of themselves,
    present the potential constitutional evil.
    For purposes of the fourth amendment . . . it
    is an unreasonable search that is to be
    condemned, not the use of the defendant’s
    2
    Raul Stevens does not argue that his consent was not
    valid under a Fourth Amendment voluntariness standard. Rather,
    he narrowly argues that his statement of consent is inadmissible
    under the Fifth Amendment because he had not received his Miranda
    warnings.
    -22-
    statements proving consent to a search.      A
    search and seizure produces real and physical
    evidence, not self-incriminating evidence.
    Our task under the fourth amendment is to test
    the reasonableness of a search and exclude
    evidence   procured   unreasonably.   .  .   .
    Therefore, Miranda’s ratio decidendi which was
    enunciated to strengthen the fifth amendment’s
    function in preserving the integrity of our
    criminal trials should not be superimposed
    ipso   facto    to   the    wholly   different
    considerations in fourth amendment 
    analysis. 496 F.2d at 675
    .   Other courts considering the question have
    similarly concluded that statements of consent are not
    testimonial within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment.3
    Further, the instant case is unlike United States v. Green,
    
    272 F.3d 748
    , 752 (5th Cir. 2001), where we held that asking an
    arrested defendant to disclose the location of firearms and open
    3
    See, e.g., United States v. McClellan, 
    165 F.3d 535
    ,
    544 (7th Cir. 1999) (“[A] request for consent to search is not an
    interrogation within the meaning of Miranda because the giving of
    such consent is not a self-incriminating statement.”) (internal
    quotations omitted); United States v. McCurdy, 
    40 F.3d 1111
    , 1118
    (10th Cir. 1994) (“An officer's request to search a defendant's
    automobile does not constitute interrogation invoking a
    defendant's Miranda rights.”); People v. Thomas, 
    12 Cal. App. 3d 1102
    , 1110-11 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970) (“The fact that the search
    leads to incriminating evidence does not make the consent
    testimonial.”); see also United States v. Payne, 
    119 F.3d 637
    ,
    643-44 (8th Cir. 1997) (“Miranda rights affect the integrity of
    the truth finding process in a criminal trial, but Fourth
    Amendment rights go to the right of privacy and to be left alone.
    As the purposes of the two protections are different, it would be
    unreasonable to require Miranda warnings before a request for
    permission to search. Instead, the fact that Miranda warnings
    were not given will simply be a factor to consider under the
    voluntariness test.” (internal citations omitted)); but see
    Oregon v. Williams, 
    432 P.2d 679
    , 683 (Or. 1967) (“In effect, the
    request to search is a request that defendant be a witness
    against himself which he is privileged to refuse under the Fifth
    Amendment.”).
    -23-
    cases containing those firearms after he had been given his
    Miranda warnings and had requested counsel was “custodial
    interrogation” resulting in testimonial acts inadmissible under
    the Miranda doctrine.    In this case, there were no such
    testimonial acts, even where Raul Stevens produced the key to the
    Dana house and unlocked the door.      The record shows that Raul
    Stevens gave verbal consent and unlocked the door to the house in
    response to Agent Mossman’s request to search the house.      This is
    unlike the request in Green to disclose the location of firearms,
    which was a question likely to elicit an incriminating response.
    
    Id. Accordingly, we
    conclude that the district court did not err
    in admitting the evidence seized in the search of the Dana house
    pursuant to Raul Stevens’s un-Mirandized statement of consent.
    Even if, arguendo, there was error, it was not “clear and
    obvious.”
    3.    Consent Pursuant to an Illegal Detention
    Finally, Raul Stevens asserts that even if he did consent to
    the search, his consent was not voluntary if it was given
    pursuant to an illegal detention.      “Consent to search may, but
    does not necessarily, dissipate the taint of a fourth amendment
    violation.”    
    Chavez-Villarreal, 3 F.3d at 127
    .    Raul Stevens
    asserts in conclusory fashion that he was illegally detained and
    that there were no intervening circumstances between his illegal
    -24-
    detention and his statement of consent to remove the taint of the
    illegal detention.   The reasonableness of a traffic stop is a
    conclusion of law, 
    Harrison, 918 F.2d at 473
    , and because Raul
    Stevens raised the legitimacy of the traffic stop below, our
    review is de novo, 
    Chavez-Villarreal, 3 F.3d at 126
    .
    The reasonableness of traffic stops and investigative
    detentions of motorists who are suspected of criminal activity is
    analyzed under the framework established in Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    (1968).   See United States v. Sharpe, 
    470 U.S. 675
    , 682
    (1985) (applying Terry analysis to stop of vehicles suspected of
    transporting drugs); 
    Harrison, 918 F.2d at 472
    (applying Terry
    analysis to night-time stop of vehicle driving without lights
    after it was observed driving away from rural airstrip where
    airplane suspected of carrying illegal drugs had landed); United
    States v. Valadez, 
    267 F.3d 395
    , 397-98 (5th Cir. 2001) (applying
    Terry analysis to stop of vehicle for two suspected traffic
    violations).   Under Terry, we determine the reasonableness of an
    investigative stop by examining: (1) whether the officer’s action
    of stopping the vehicle was justified at its inception, and (2)
    whether the officer’s actions were reasonably related in scope to
    the circumstances that justified the stop.   
    Terry, 392 U.S. at 19-20
    ; 
    Valadez, 267 F.3d at 398
    .
    Raul Stevens raises two arguments for why his detention was
    illegal.   Raul Stevens first articulates that his detention was
    unlawful because the initial traffic stop based on the illegal
    -25-
    lane change was pretextual.    But it is well established that
    “[s]o long as a traffic law infraction that would have
    objectively justified the stop had taken place, the fact that the
    police officer may have made the stop for a reason other than the
    occurrence of the traffic infraction is irrelevant for purposes
    of the Fourth Amendment.”     Goodwin v. Johnson, 
    132 F.3d 162
    , 173
    (5th Cir. 1998) (emphasis added) (citing Whren v. United States,
    
    517 U.S. 806
    (1996)).   The district court credited Agent Gentry’s
    testimony and concluded that the traffic stop was objectively
    reasonable because Raul Stevens made an illegal lane change.     The
    record supports this conclusion, and at oral argument Raul
    Stevens admitted that he did not dispute that he changed lanes
    illegally.   Therefore, his first argument has no merit.
    Second, at oral argument, Raul Stevens argued that his
    detention became unreasonable (and therefore illegal) under
    Terry’s second prong because the basis for the traffic stop was
    the illegal lane change but the subsequent actions of the
    officers were not reasonably related to the illegal lane change
    justifying the stop.    His argument, however, ignores the district
    court’s conclusion that the stop was independently valid under
    Terry because officers were aware of sufficient articulable facts
    to form a reasonable suspicion that the Expedition was involved
    in criminal activity apart from the illegal lane change.    Giving
    a pretextual traffic violation as the reason for a stop does not
    invalidate an otherwise justified stop.     Cf. Harrison, 918 F.2d
    -26-
    at 472 (stopping vehicle for articulated reasons of driving above
    speed limit and without lights was not illegal where officer
    independently had reasonable suspicion that vehicle was
    trafficking drugs).   Important to our decision is the fact that
    Raul Stevens does not argue under Terry’s first prong that
    officers did not have reasonable suspicion to justify the stop
    based on their surveillance of the Dana house and the meetings
    between Espinosa, Alejandro Stevens, and the informant.   Even
    more important is the fact that he does not argue under Terry’s
    second prong that the subsequent actions of the officers exceeded
    the scope of this independent justification for stopping the
    vehicle.   Inadequately briefed issues are deemed abandoned.
    
    Charles, 469 F.3d at 408
    (citing 
    Dardar, 985 F.2d at 831
    ).
    Concluding that none of Raul Stevens’s arguments for
    suppression is availing, we affirm the district court’s denial of
    his motion to suppress.
    III. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
    Raul Stevens claims, for the first time on appeal, that he
    was denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of
    counsel at trial when his attorney failed to raise the violation
    of his right to be given Miranda warnings during custodial
    interrogation.   He also raises a number of other errors he
    contends his attorney made to support his argument that his
    attorney failed to achieve an objective standard of
    -27-
    reasonableness under the standard set forth by Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 669 (1984).
    As a general rule, we do not review Sixth Amendment claims
    of ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal unless they
    were adequately raised in the trial court.     United States v.
    Gibson, 
    55 F.3d 173
    , 179 (5th Cir. 1995).    Because the trial
    court is the proper place to develop the record necessary for the
    resolution of ineffective assistance of counsel claims, only in
    “rare cases where the record allow[s] us to evaluate fairly the
    merits of the claim” will this court resolve ineffective
    assistance issues on direct appeal.     United States v. Palmer, 
    122 F.3d 215
    , 221 (5th Cir. 1997).
    Raul Stevens concedes he did not raise his ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim at trial.    Nevertheless, he urges
    that this is one of those “rare cases” where the record allows us
    to evaluate the merits of his claim.    We disagree.   Where a claim
    of ineffective assistance of counsel has not been raised below,
    the exception to our general rule of non-review is typically
    satisfied only where the actual claim was raised and developed in
    a post-trial motion to the district court.     Compare 
    Gibson, 55 F.3d at 179
    (granting an exception to the general rule of non-
    review on direct appeal because the defendant’s post-trial
    motions in the district court raised allegations of trial
    counsel’s deficiencies), with United States v. Wallace, 
    32 F.3d 921
    , 930 (5th Cir. 1994) (dismissing ineffective assistance of
    -28-
    counsel claim on direct appeal even where the claim was mentioned
    at trial because the record was not sufficiently developed), and
    United States v. Gonzalez, 
    436 F.3d 560
    , 581 (5th Cir. 2006)
    (dismissing ineffective assistance of counsel claim on direct
    appeal even where record showed counsel’s failure to object
    because actual claim had not been raised and developed below).
    In this case, the record is not sufficiently developed with
    respect to Raul Stevens’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim
    to justify an exception to our general rule of non-review.
    Accordingly, we deny relief on Raul Stevens’s present ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim without prejudice to his right to
    pursue the claim in collateral review.
    IV. SENTENCING
    The district court imposed enhancements to Raul Stevens’s
    sentence for obstruction of justice, his role in the offense, and
    for committing the offense while on supervised release.   Relying
    on United States v. Booker, 
    543 U.S. 220
    (2005), Raul Stevens
    objected to these enhancements below and now re-urges that the
    district court violated the Sixth Amendment by enhancing his
    sentence based on facts not found by the jury beyond a reasonable
    doubt.
    Booker error occurs when the sentencing judge bound by
    mandatory United States Sentencing Guidelines (“Guidelines”)
    increases the defendant’s sentencing range based on facts not
    -29-
    found by the jury or admitted by the defendant.     United States v.
    Mares, 
    402 F.3d 511
    , 518 (5th Cir. 2005), cert. denied, 126 S.
    Ct. 43 (2005).    But under Booker, “with the mandatory use of the
    Guidelines excised, . . . [t]he sentencing judge is entitled to
    find by a preponderance of the evidence all the facts relevant to
    the determination of a Guideline[s] sentencing range.”    
    Id. at 519.
       Raul Stevens was sentenced under the post-Booker advisory
    Guidelines system, and the record indicates that the district
    judge was aware of the Guidelines’ advisory nature.    There was
    therefore no Booker error in Raul Stevens’s sentencing.
    V. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, Alejandro Stevens’s and Raul
    Stevens’s convictions and sentences are AFFIRMED.
    -30-