United States v. Intha Chanthavong ( 1999 )


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  • UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                                                                     No. 98-4244
    INTHA NOI CHANTHAVONG,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of North Carolina, at Durham.
    N. Carlton Tilley, Jr., District Judge.
    (CR-97-211)
    Argued: March 5, 1999
    Decided: September 8, 1999
    Before TRAXLER and KING, Circuit Judges, and
    LEE, United States District Judge for the
    Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Vacated and remanded by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Bruce Alan Lee, Greensboro, North Carolina, for Appel-
    lant. Robert Michael Hamilton, Assistant United States Attorney,
    Greensboro, North Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Walter C.
    Holton, Jr., United States Attorney, Greensboro, North Carolina, for
    Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. See
    Local Rule 36(c).
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    PER CURIAM:
    Intha Noi Chanthavong ("Chanthavong") appeals his November
    1997 conviction and March 1998 sentence to a term of 87 months in
    the Middle District of North Carolina for possession with intent to
    distribute methamphetamine. He contends on appeal that the district
    court erred in denying his motion to suppress certain evidence. We
    vacate the district court's denial of the motion to suppress the evi-
    dence found in a locked safe in Chanthavong's closet and remand this
    case to the district court for two findings: (1) whether Chanthavong's
    consent to search his room extended to a locked safe in the closet of
    that room; and (2) whether the police officers would have obtained a
    search warrant for the safe had they not obtained the combination
    from Chanthavong.
    I.
    Officer Kevin Chandler ("Officer Chandler") of the Greensboro
    Police Department arrested an individual who later became a confi-
    dential informant. The informant gave Officer Chandler information
    about different people in Greensboro who were allegedly selling nar-
    cotics. Officer Chandler testified during the suppression hearing that
    he found the informant to be reliable based on statements he made
    about a female subject selling drugs in the northern area of Greens-
    boro. Although Officer Chandler learned from the informant the name
    of the subject,1 how she operated, and the times at which she would
    sell drugs, he did not surveil her activities to determine whether the
    informant was reliable. Officer Chandler did, however, conduct water
    and sewer checks, and make FBI, local, and state histories to confirm
    some of the information he received from the informant.
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 On cross-examination at the suppression hearing, defense counsel
    asked Officer Chandler the name of the female subject and he could not
    recall her name.
    2
    On or about July 20, 1997, the informant provided information to
    Officer Chandler that a subject known as "Noi"2 was selling mari-
    juana and cocaine in the High Point Road area of Greensboro, North
    Carolina. The informant also told the police that"Noi" drove a white
    Mazda MPV and a black Acura Legend. Additionally, a Crime Stop-
    pers caller advised the police that there was a man living on May-
    wood Street who operated a white Mazda MPV and sold drugs in the
    High Point Road area. The police corroborated these tips through sur-
    veillance of Maywood Street. The police checked the tag of the
    Mazda and learned that it was registered to Phommy Chanthavong at
    2009 Maywood Street, which is also Defendant/Appellant
    Chanthavong's address. During the surveillance, the police noted that
    people stopped at the house for short periods of time and then left in
    a manner consistent with narcotics trafficking.
    On August 21, 1997, the informant notified police that "Noi"
    would be making a drug delivery in the area of Amber and Fairfax
    Road to a person in a gray Buick Park Avenue car at about 10 p.m.
    The person Chanthavong was scheduled to meet was the informant.
    Nearing 10 p.m., Chanthavong arrived at the above location and the
    police stopped his vehicle, a green Mitsubishi Galant. Officer Allen
    asked Chanthavong to exit the vehicle. After Chanthavong stepped
    out of the car, Officer Allen asked Chanthavong whether he had any
    narcotics on his person. According to Officer Allen, Chanthavong
    replied in the affirmative and said they were in his waistband. Officer
    Allen felt for the drugs and retrieved them from Chanthavong's waist-
    band in the crotch area. Officer Allen placed Chanthavong under
    arrest and asked him if there were any other narcotics on his person
    or in the car. Chanthavong replied no. During a pat down search,
    Officer Allen found $957 on Chanthavong's person. He also looked
    inside the vehicle and found a black ledger with a small bag of mari-
    juana and two small bags of powder cocaine. Officer Allen testified
    that he had consent to search the car because when Chanthavong said
    there were no drugs in the car, he told the officer he could "look
    inside the vehicle, if [he] wanted to." (J.A. at 78).
    After Officer Allen had made the arrest of Chanthavong, Officer
    Chandler arrived on the scene. He asked Chanthavong where he lived
    _________________________________________________________________
    2 "Noi" was later determined to be Defendant/Appellant Chanthavong.
    3
    and Chanthavong gave the 2009 Maywood Street address. Officer
    Chandler asked if there were any drugs there and Chanthavong
    replied in the negative. Officer Chandler asked if he could search the
    home and Chanthavong said yes. At the suppression hearing,
    Chanthavong denied that he gave his consent for the search of the res-
    idence.
    After the police took Chanthavong to the police station, they
    advised him of his Miranda rights and "booked" him. Chanthavong
    stated that he wanted a lawyer. While Chanthavong was being trans-
    ported to the police station, several officers went to the Maywood
    Street residence to conduct a search. With the aid of an interpreter,
    the officers received permission from Chanthavong's parents to
    search Chanthavong's room. Sergeant Crotts and Officers Dodd and
    Swaringen conducted the search of Chanthavong's room. They found
    marijuana, several packages of cocaine, and a small (2-3' x 4') safe
    covered with a blanket which smelled of marijuana. Sergeant Crotts
    called Officer Chandler about the safe. Officer Chandler asked
    Chanthavong the combination to the safe and he gave it to the officer.
    Officer Chandler relayed the combination to Sergeant Crotts who
    opened the safe and found several large packages of marijuana, a
    package of powder cocaine, and a package of methamphetamines. He
    also found two weapons and some jewelry in the safe. Sergeant Crotts
    testified that if he had been unable to determine the combination to
    the safe, he would have opened it through use of force. (J.A. at 95).
    On September 29, 1997, Chanthavong was indicted on a single-
    count indictment for possession with intent to distribute in excess of
    50 grams of cocaine base. On October 27, 1997, Chanthavong was
    indicted on a superseding indictment charging him with possession
    with intent to distribute 394 grams of methamphetamine. On October
    23, 1997, Chanthavong filed a motion to suppress and he filed an
    amended motion to suppress the next day. Judge Tilley of the Middle
    District of North Carolina at Durham conducted the suppression hear-
    ing on November 5, 1997. Judge Tilley denied the motion to suppress.
    On November 17, 1997, pursuant to a written plea agreement wherein
    Chanthavong reserved the right to appeal the adverse ruling on his
    suppression motion, he pled guilty to the charge in the superseding
    indictment--possession with the intent to distribute 394 grams of
    methamphetamine. On March 17, 1998, Chanthavong was sentenced
    4
    to a term of 87 months. Chanthavong filed a timely notice of appeal
    on March 24, 1998.
    II.
    Upon hearing Chanthavong's motion to suppress, the district court
    made several findings of fact and denied the motion. The district court
    found that the officers had probable cause to arrest Chanthavong
    under Draper v. United States, 
    358 U.S. 307
     (1958), based on infor-
    mation from a reliable informant. The district court also held that the
    officers had probable cause to search the house because their surveil-
    lance had indicated activity there consistent with drug sales. Accept-
    ing the officers' testimony of what took place during the stop and
    arrest, the district court found that Chanthavong voluntarily gave
    informed consent to search his room. The district court noted that
    Chanthavong is bright, intelligent, articulate and that it was obvious
    he was no "newcomer to the law." (J.A. at 158). The district court fur-
    ther found that Chanthavong's mother, through the interpreter, gave
    consent for the officers to search the room.
    With regard to Chanthavong's statement at the police station about
    the combination of the safe, the district court decided to suppress the
    statement because Chanthavong had been advised of his Miranda
    rights and had requested an attorney. The district court refused to sup-
    press the evidence from the safe, however, on the grounds that it
    would have been discovered inevitably due to the strong odor of mari-
    juana emanating from the safe. The district court found that the offi-
    cers had probable cause to procure a warrant to search the safe and
    that perhaps they had consent to open it by any means necessary. The
    district court declined to make that finding, though, because it was
    already admissible based on the inevitable discovery doctrine.
    The primary issue on appeal is whether the motion to suppress was
    denied in error, premised on the argument that the search of
    Chanthavong's person, vehicle, residence, and safe were improper.
    III.
    Chanthavong's argument on appeal centers on the contention that
    the police did not have probable cause to arrest him and that there was
    5
    no reasonable suspicion to stop him because Officer Chandler did not
    determine whether the informant was reliable before arresting
    Chanthavong. Thus, Chanthavong asserts that the fruits of the search
    of his person, vehicle, and residence should have been suppressed.
    With respect to the evidence found in the safe, Chanthavong claims
    that it should have been suppressed because he had invoked his right
    to counsel and all interrogation, including the question about the com-
    bination to the safe, should have ceased. Chanthavong also argues that
    the inevitable discovery doctrine should not have been applied in this
    case.
    The standard of review for legal conclusions is de novo and factual
    findings are upheld unless clearly erroneous. United States v. Rusher,
    
    966 F.2d 868
    , 873 (4th Cir. 1992).
    A.
    An anonymous tip, corroborated by independent police investiga-
    tion may result in probable cause for a warrantless arrest. Illinois v.
    Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 243-44 (1983); United States v. Porter, 
    738 F.2d 622
    , 625 (4th Cir. 1984); see also United States v. Miller, 
    925 F.2d 695
    , 699 (4th Cir. 1991); United States v. Perrin, 
    45 F.3d 869
    , 871-
    73 (4th Cir. 1995). The corroboration of the tip may occur in the sur-
    veillance of the subject just prior to arrest rather than through several
    instances of observing the subject. See, e.g. , United States v. Sinclair,
    
    983 F.2d 598
     (4th Cir. 1993); United States v. McNatt, 
    931 F.2d 251
    (4th Cir. 1991). In both Sinclair and McNatt, this Court held that
    when the police observed a suspect matching the description and per-
    forming the acts that an informant advised them of prior to the event,
    there was probable cause to arrest. In McNatt , the trial judge ques-
    tioned the agent about the reliability of information the informant had
    provided previously. 
    931 F.2d at 254
    . The agent corroborated many
    details of the informant's information and thus found that the infor-
    mation was reliable. 
    Id.
     The district court held that the officers acted
    on probable cause. 
    Id.
    The same result is warranted here. Viewing the totality of the cir-
    cumstances confronting the officers, the informant's tips, which were
    substantially corroborated, established probable cause to arrest the
    defendant without a warrant. During the suppression hearing, Officer
    6
    Chandler testified that he found the informant's information trustwor-
    thy because previously the informant had given him verifiable infor-
    mation about a female subject who sold drugs and about the drug
    operation on Maywood Street. Both tips proved to be reliable. The
    informant's prior information proved to be reliable and was a suffi-
    cient basis for Officer Chandler to rely on the informant's tips. See
    Draper v. United States, 
    358 U.S. 307
    , 313 (1958) (finding that the
    officer had verified every facet of the informant's tips except one and
    had reasonable grounds to believe the unverified information would
    likewise be true); Sinclair, 
    983 F.2d at 602
     (upholding probable cause
    where suspects matched in at least four particulars the description the
    officer received from the informant); McNatt, 
    931 F.2d at 254
    (upholding probable cause where officer confirmed two tips and had
    a statement from an informant about a cocaine sale). Officer Allen
    had probable cause to stop Chanthavong based on the tips from the
    informant, the Crime Stoppers' tip, the ensuing surveillance of
    Chanthavong's street, and his observation of Chanthavong arriving at
    the location of the planned drug transaction with the informant.
    The district court found that Chanthavong consented to the search
    of his person, his car, and his residence. Whether Chanthavong volun-
    tarily consented to the searches is a factual question which the Court
    reviews for clear error. United States v. Lattimore, 
    87 F.3d 647
    , 650
    (4th Cir. 1996). The denial of the motion to suppress is not reversible
    unless the factual findings are clearly erroneous. Chanthavong has not
    demonstrated that the findings are error.
    A police officer may conduct a search of an area without a warrant
    and without probable cause if the person in control of the area volun-
    tarily consents to a search. Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 
    412 U.S. 218
    ,
    219 (1973). To determine whether consent is voluntary, the Court
    must consider the totality of the circumstances. 
    Id. at 227
    ; Lattimore,
    
    87 F.3d at 650
    . Appropriate factors to consider include the age, matu-
    rity, education, intelligence, and experience of the accused as well as
    the conditions under which the consent was given, such as the offi-
    cer's conduct, the number of officers present, and the duration, loca-
    tion, and time of the encounter. See Lattimore , 
    87 F.3d at 650
    .
    The record supports the district court's finding that Chanthavong
    voluntarily consented to the search of his car and residence. As the
    7
    district court found, Chanthavong is "bright, intelligent, articulate, . . .
    and no newcomer to the law." (J.A. at 158). At the time of the arrest,
    Chanthavong was nineteen years old and had taken classes at the
    Guilford Technical Community College. Nothing in the record indi-
    cates that Chanthavong's consent was involuntary or that the environ-
    ment was coercive or intimidating. In fact, Chanthavong volunteered
    that he had drugs on his person and told the officer he could "look
    inside the vehicle, if [he] wanted to." (J.A. at 78).
    The Court therefore concludes that the district court did not err in
    finding that Chanthavong voluntarily consented to the search of his
    car and his room. The Court holds that any evidence found therein,
    except for the contents of the locked safe, are therefore admissible. As
    a result, the Court affirms the district court's denial of the motion to
    suppress as to that evidence.
    B.
    The district court found that the search of the safe was unlawful
    due to the fact that the officers obtained the combination for the safe
    by questioning Chanthavong without counsel present after
    Chanthavong had invoked his right to have an attorney present.
    Despite the inadmissible statement, the district court held that the
    contents of the safe inevitably would have been discovered based on
    finding that there was a strong odor of marijuana emanating from the
    safe and that the officers had probable cause to procure a warrant to
    search the safe, and perhaps consent to search the safe.
    Without more, the district court's finding that the officers had
    probable cause to procure a warrant to search the safe is not a suffi-
    cient basis on which to invoke the inevitable discovery doctrine.
    Because the district court failed to make a finding on the scope of
    Chanthavong's consent to search his room, in particular whether the
    consent included the locked safe, and on whether the police officers
    would have procured a search warrant for the safe had they not ille-
    gally obtained the combination from Chanthavong, we vacate the
    denial of the motion to suppress as to the evidence found in the
    locked safe and remand for the aforementioned findings.
    Under the inevitable discovery doctrine, information obtained by
    unlawful means is nonetheless admissible if the government can
    8
    establish by a preponderance of evidence that the information ulti-
    mately or inevitably would have been discovered by lawful means.
    Nix v. Williams, 
    467 U.S. 431
     (1984). The inevitable discovery doc-
    trine is an exception to the exclusionary rule. The rationale behind the
    exception is that where evidence inevitably would have been discov-
    ered by lawful means, the exclusionary rule should not be applied
    because the goal of deterrence is so attenuated. 
    Id. at 444
    . The fact
    that makes the discovery inevitable must "arise from circumstances
    other than those disclosed by the illegal search itself." United States
    v. Thomas, 
    955 F.2d 207
    , 211 (4th Cir. 1992) (deciding not to apply
    the inevitable discovery doctrine where only the illegal search itself
    led to the discovery of the stolen bank money).
    Chanthavong argues that the district court erred in admitting the
    contents of the safe under the inevitable discovery doctrine because
    the doctrine may be invoked only in circumstances wherein the offi-
    cers would have discovered the evidence by other lawful means.
    Chanthavong argues that under United States v. Allen, 
    159 F.3d 832
    (4th Cir. 1998),3 the mere fact that the officers have probable cause
    to get a search warrant, without more, does not support use of the
    inevitable discovery exception. Chanthavong claims that Sergeant
    Crotts' testimony that he would have broken the safe open had he not
    learned the combination shows unlawful rather than lawful means.
    Chanthavong contends that the officer would not have sought a search
    warrant because he did not indicate as such during his testimony.
    In Allen, a panel of this Court reviewed the inevitable discovery
    doctrine and discussed its application. The facts of the case involved
    a defendant who was arrested for possession of marijuana and crack
    cocaine. 
    159 F.3d at 834
    . During a stop in Greensboro, North Caro-
    lina, a police officer asked the defendant, who had been traveling by
    bus, if he would permit the officer to search his knapsack. 
    Id.
     Accord-
    ing to the officer, the defendant consented to the search. 
    Id.
     When
    asked, he told the officer that he did not have any other bags on the
    bus. 
    Id.
     In the knapsack, the officer found a clear plastic bag with a
    substance later identified as marijuana. 
    Id.
     The defendant tried to
    _________________________________________________________________
    3 Allen was decided after the district judge in the instant case made his
    ruling on the motion to suppress.
    9
    leave the bus, but he was arrested, handcuffed, and given his Miranda
    warnings. 
    Id. at 835
    .
    The officers questioned other passengers and identified the owners
    of all the bags on the bus except for one--a large black duffel bag.
    
    Id.
     The officer treated the bag as abandoned, searched it, and found
    a package of crack cocaine and a train ticket belonging to Anthony
    Washington. 
    Id.
     The defendant had given that name to another officer
    there, but later denied ownership of the duffel bag or the knapsack.
    
    Id.
    The defendant moved to suppress evidence obtained from the
    search of the duffel bag and statements made to the police about that
    evidence after the arrest. 
    Id. at 834
    . The district court denied the
    motion to suppress, concluding that the cocaine in the duffel bag inev-
    itably would have been lawfully discovered. Id . at 838. The district
    court based this conclusion on the officers' testimony that they would
    not have left an unattended, unidentified bag on the bus and that the
    drug detection dog was available at the bus terminal for purposes of
    assistance if necessary. 
    Id.
     The district court held that there was
    ample evidence that the officers would have discovered the crack
    cocaine through the use of the drug detection dog despite the findings
    that the officers did not have consent to search the baggage and that
    there was no abandonment of the baggage before the search. 
    Id.
    On de novo review, this Court held that the district court erred in
    denying the motion to suppress. 
    Id. at 843
    . The Court concluded that
    the cocaine inside a duffel bag found on a bus would not have been
    discovered inevitably without an illegal search where the officer
    could have used a drug detection dog to establish probable cause, but
    did not. 
    Id. at 840
    . The Court held that the district court's inevitable
    discovery holding was flatly inconsistent with the court's abandon-
    ment findings. 
    Id. at 840
    . The district court found no evidence that the
    defendant was asked if he had any other baggage on the bus besides
    the backpack that officers searched with the defendant's consent and
    in which they found contraband. 
    Id.
     Yet, the district court credited the
    officer's testimony that if the defendant had not made the statement
    to her that he had no other bags, she would have run a drug detection
    dog over the unclaimed duffel bag. 
    Id.
     The Court found that it was
    impossible to conclude that the officer inevitably would have used a
    10
    drug detection dog if the defendant had not disclaimed ownership of
    any other bags when it was uncontroverted that, in fact, she did not
    call for a drug detection dog and the district court found no evidence
    that the defendant disclaimed ownership of other bags. 
    Id.
    In discussing the inevitable discovery doctrine, the Court ruled that
    the "existence of probable cause for a warrant, in and of itself and
    without any evidence that the police would have acted to obtain a
    warrant, does not trigger the inevitable discovery doctrine any more
    than probable cause, in and of itself, renders a warrantless search
    valid." 
    Id. at 841
    . The Court explained that the inevitable discovery
    doctrine may apply where additional routine or factually established
    investigative steps would inevitably lead to discovery of the evidence
    without undertaking any search. Id.4 The Court also noted that the
    inevitable discovery doctrine may apply where "the facts indicate
    another search inevitably would have occurred and would inevitably
    have uncovered the evidence, and that search falls within an excep-
    tion to the warrant requirement." Id."[W]hen evidence could not have
    been discovered without a subsequent search, and no exception to the
    warrant requirement applies, and no warrant has been obtained, and
    nothing demonstrates that the police would have obtained a warrant
    absent the illegal search, the inevitable discovery doctrine has no
    place." 
    Id. at 841
    .
    After correctly finding that Chanthavong's statement providing the
    combination was inadmissible because it was obtained through ques-
    tioning without counsel present after Chanthavong had invoked his
    right to counsel, the district court refused to suppress the contents of
    the safe and held them admissible under the inevitable discovery doc-
    trine. The district court found that the contents of the safe would inev-
    itably have been discovered based on findings that: (1) there was a
    _________________________________________________________________
    4 The Court pointed to United States v. Melgar, 
    139 F.3d 1005
     (4th Cir.
    1998), as a decision which exemplified this situation. In Melgar, the
    Court held the admission of the defendant's statements harmless error.
    
    Id.
     at 1016 n.3. The Court acknowledged that the defendant revealed his
    illegal alien status during illegal interrogation without counsel present,
    but held that the government inevitably would have discovered the
    defendant's status by running a routine computer check on a false identi-
    fication card that had been lawfully obtained before interrogation. 
    Id.
    11
    strong odor of marijuana emanating from the safe; and (2) the officers
    had probable cause to procure a warrant to search the safe. The dis-
    trict court declined to make a finding about whether the officers had
    consent to open the safe by any means necessary.
    The district court did not make sufficient findings to apply the
    inevitable discovery doctrine to this case. To employ the inevitable
    discovery exception, the government must establish by a preponder-
    ance of the evidence that the information ultimately or inevitably
    would have been discovered by lawful means. Nix , 
    467 U.S. at 461
    .
    Here, the government did not show that the contents of the safe would
    have been discovered by lawful means. The contents of the safe could
    not have been discovered without a subsequent search. Thus, to apply
    the inevitable discovery doctrine, the district court had to find that the
    subsequent search of the safe was lawful. Allen discussed several
    ways to demonstrate that the search was lawful, including: (1) finding
    an exception to the warrant requirement such as an inventory search
    or search incident to arrest; (2) finding that additional routine or fac-
    tually established investigative steps would inevitably lead to discov-
    ery of the evidence without a search; or (3) finding that the discovery
    of the evidence was inevitable due to a subsequent search that
    required a warrant and that the police had probable cause to obtain a
    warrant but failed to do so, if there is evidence that the police would
    have obtained the necessary warrant absent the illegal search. Allen,
    
    159 F.3d at 841
    .
    The district court did not premise its application of the inevitable
    discovery doctrine on the consent exception to the warrant require-
    ment. Although the district court found that Chanthavong voluntarily
    consented to a search of his car and room, the district court did not
    find specifically that Chanthavong's consent to search his room
    extended to the locked safe therein.5 The district court specifically
    stated that it did not have to make a finding about whether the police
    officers had consent to open the safe by any means whatever. (J.A.
    at 160). To the contrary, the district court needs to make a specific
    _________________________________________________________________
    5 But see United States v. Wager , 
    165 F.3d 913
    , No. 97-4499, 
    1998 WL 789182
     (4th Cir. Nov. 13, 1998) (unpublished disposition) (affirming the
    finding that Wager voluntarily consented to search of the room and the
    wall safe).
    12
    finding about the scope of Chanthavong's consent in order to deter-
    mine if the consent to search exception to the warrant requirement
    applies and correspondingly, to determine whether the inevitable dis-
    covery doctrine applies to validate the unlawful search of the safe.6
    See Allen, 
    159 F.3d at 841
     ("The doctrine also may apply where the
    facts indicate another search inevitably would have occurred and
    would inevitably have uncovered the evidence, and that search falls
    within an exception to the warrant requirement.").
    The district court made no finding that additional routine or factu-
    ally established investigative steps would inevitably lead to discovery
    of the evidence without a search.
    Third and finally, the government produced no evidence that the
    police would have obtained the necessary warrant absent the illegal
    search of the safe. Officer Crotts testified that if Chanthavong had not
    given him the combination to the safe, the officers would have opened
    it by force. Officer Crotts did not state whether he would have
    attempted to obtain a search warrant for the safe. The officers did not
    obtain a warrant to search the safe and used the combination illegally
    obtained from Chanthavong. Thus, there is no evidence demonstrating
    that the police would have obtained a warrant absent the illegal
    search. The district court premised its application of the inevitable
    discovery doctrine on the finding that the police officers had probable
    cause to search the safe. The inevitable discovery doctrine does not
    apply where the police officers had probable cause to conduct a
    search but simply failed to obtain a warrant. If such evidence were
    admitted notwithstanding the unexcused failure to obtain a warrant,
    simply because there was probable cause, then there would never be
    any reason for officers to seek a warrant. See United States v. Mejia,
    
    69 F.3d 309
    , 320 (9th Cir. 1995). As stated in Allen, the "inevitable
    discovery doctrine cannot rescue evidence obtained via an unlawful
    search simply because probable cause existed to obtain a warrant
    when the government presents no evidence that the police would have
    obtained a warrant. Any other rule would emasculate the Fourth
    _________________________________________________________________
    6 Because Allen was decided after the district judge denied the motion
    to suppress, he did not have the benefit of the Allen opinion to determine
    exactly what findings needed to be made to apply the inevitable discov-
    ery doctrine to this case.
    13
    Amendment." Allen, 
    159 F.3d at 842
    . What makes a discovery inevi-
    table is not probable cause alone; it is probable cause plus a chain of
    events that would have led to a warrant or another justification inde-
    pendent of the search. United States v. Brown , 
    64 F.3d 1083
    , 1085
    (7th Cir. 1995).
    The Court recognizes that at some point the police officers were
    going to determine what was in the safe, especially since there was
    an odor of marijuana and drugs had already been found on
    Chanthavong, in his car, and in other parts of his room and closet.
    However, this supports the conclusion that the police officers had
    probable cause to obtain a warrant to search the safe. That is just not
    sufficient under Allen. The district court must make a finding about
    whether an exception to the warrant requirement applies and whether
    the police officer would have obtained a warrant. Neither of those
    conclusions were made in this case. The district court did not decide
    whether the consent to search specifically applied to the locked safe
    or whether the police officers would have obtained a warrant. Thus,
    under Allen, the district court must make those findings before apply-
    ing the inevitable discovery doctrine to admit the evidence illegally
    obtained from the locked safe.
    IV.
    In sum, the district court properly found that the police officers had
    probable cause to stop and arrest Chanthavong based on the infor-
    mant's tips. However, the district court may not use the inevitable dis-
    covery doctrine to admit the contents of the safe without making the
    requisite findings under Allen. To that extent, we vacate the district
    court's denial of the motion to suppress and remand the case for find-
    ings consistent with this opinion. In all other respects, the Court
    upholds the district court's denial of the motion to suppress.
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    14