United States v. Luis Torres Pimental , 755 F.3d 1095 ( 2014 )


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  •                      FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                        No. 12-50038
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    D.C. No.
    v.                          3:11-cr-00794-
    MMA-2
    LUIS OSVALDO TORRES PIMENTAL,
    AKA Luis Torres,
    Defendant-Appellant.                  OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of California
    Michael M. Anello, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted May 8, 2013
    Pasadena, California
    Filed June 24, 2014
    Before: Harry Pregerson and Raymond C. Fisher, Circuit
    Judges, and Wiley Y. Daniel, Senior District Judge.*
    Opinion by Judge Pregerson
    *
    The Honorable Wiley Y. Daniel, Senior District Judge for the U.S.
    District Court for Colorado, sitting by designation.
    2            UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    SUMMARY**
    Criminal Law
    The panel reversed the denial of a motion to suppress a
    defendant’s incriminating statements, vacated his conviction
    for importation of marijuana, and remanded the case for
    further proceedings.
    The panel held that under the McNabb-Mallory rule, the
    statements the defendant made to a federal agent forty-eight
    hours after his arrest, but before he was presented to a
    magistrate judge, must be suppressed because the four-day
    delay in presenting him to a magistrate was unreasonable and
    unnecessary.
    COUNSEL
    Devin Burstein (argued) and Zandra L. Lopez, Federal
    Defenders of San Diego, Inc., San Diego, California, for
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Steve Miller and Mark R. Rehe (argued), Assistant United
    States Attorneys, San Diego, California, for Plaintiff-
    Appellee.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL                  3
    OPINION
    PREGERSON, Circuit Judge:
    Luis Osvaldo Torres Pimental appeals his conviction
    following a conditional guilty plea to one count of
    importation of over fifty kilograms of marijuana, in violation
    of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 952
     and 960 and 
    18 U.S.C. § 2
    . Torres
    Pimental entered his guilty plea on the condition that he
    retain his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his
    motion to suppress incriminating statements he made to a
    federal agent forty-eight hours after his arrest, but before he
    was presented to a magistrate judge. Torres Pimental now
    seeks reversal of the denial of his motion to suppress.
    Because the delay in presenting Torres Pimental to a
    magistrate was unreasonable and unnecessary, Torres
    Pimental’s statements must be suppressed under Federal Rule
    of Criminal Procedure 5(a), McNabb v. United States,
    
    318 U.S. 332
     (1943), and Mallory v. United States, 
    354 U.S. 449
     (1957). See United States v. Valenzuela-Espinoza, 
    697 F.3d 742
    , 745 (9th Cir. 2012). We REVERSE the district
    court’s denial of Torres Pimental’s suppression motion,
    VACATE the conviction, and REMAND for further
    proceedings. Because we vacate his conviction based on the
    McNabb-Mallory rule, we do not address Torres Pimental’s
    challenge to his conviction based on Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    I. BACKGROUND
    On Friday, January 14, 2011, Torres Pimental, a United
    States citizen with no prior criminal record, entered the
    United States from Mexico through the San Ysidro Port of
    4          UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    Entry. He was the sole passenger in a white Dodge Durango
    driven by Blanca Canales.
    At the Port of Entry’s “pre-primary inspection area,” a
    narcotics inspection dog alerted on the vehicle. At
    approximately 9:25 a.m., United States Customs and Border
    Protection (“CBP”) Officer Gruda was notified of the alert.
    Officer Gruda approached the vehicle and asked Canales
    where she was going. Canales replied that she was on her
    way to Paramount, California. She said the Dodge Durango
    was her uncle’s and that she had driven to Mexico to drop off
    her grandmother.
    Officer Gruda conducted a cursory inspection of the
    vehicle and noticed that the rear passenger seat felt hard. He
    removed the car seat from the top of the rear passenger seat
    and noticed a large lump in the rear seat. He folded up the
    rear passenger seat and discovered cellophane packages
    hidden underneath. At 9:30 a.m., CBP officers arrested
    Canales and Torres Pimental and escorted them to the
    security office in handcuffs.
    Officer Gruda drove the vehicle to the “secondary
    inspection area” for further inspection. At 10:00 a.m., CBP
    Officer Alves inspected the vehicle.           Officer Alves
    discovered and seized 37 packages containing approximately
    71.25 kilograms (156.75 pounds) of marijuana hidden in the
    rear doors, quarter panels, passenger seat, middle seat, and
    third row seat of the vehicle. Three of the packages were
    discovered in the front passenger seat, where Torres Pimental
    had been sitting. The packages were in vacuum-sealed bags
    wrapped in dryer sheets and cellophane.
    UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL                  5
    Department of Homeland Security Special Agent Shelly
    Aradanas, who worked at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, was
    notified about the drugs found in Canales’s vehicle. At 11:52
    a.m., Torres Pimental was brought to an interview room
    where Agent Aradanas read him his Miranda rights. Agent
    Aradanas asked Torres Pimental if he understood his rights
    and asked him to initial each of the rights on a pre-printed
    Advisement of Rights form. Torres Pimental wrote his
    initials next to each of the rights and signed the form,
    agreeing to answer questions without an attorney present.
    Agent Aradanas then asked Torres Pimental where he was
    driving. Torres Pimental shook his head, indicating “no.”
    She asked him what he was doing in Mexico. Torres
    Pimental again shook his head, indicating “no.” At 11:54
    a.m., two minutes after the interview began, Torres Pimental
    stated: “I think it would be better if I wait for an attorney.”
    Agent Aradanas stopped questioning Torres Pimental and
    terminated the interview at that time.
    At about 12:42 p.m., Agent Aradanas began to interview
    Canales, and advised her of her Miranda rights. Canales
    acknowledged her rights and agreed to answer questions
    without an attorney present. Canales initially denied
    knowledge of the marijuana found in the vehicle. After
    Agent Aradanas said she did not believe Canales’s story,
    Canales stated that she knew the car contained marijuana and
    that she and Torres Pimental together had planned the
    marijuana smuggling venture. Canales stated that she did not
    know where they were delivering the marijuana, but she
    thought they were going to the Los Angeles area. She stated
    that she knew she would be compensated with money, but she
    had not negotiated a payment amount. Canales also said that
    two other men went down to Tijuana with Canales and Torres
    Pimental. Those men, she said, drove back in a separate car,
    6            UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    which had also been pulled into the secondary inspection area
    at the San Ysidro Port of Entry at the same time she and
    Torres Pimental had been pulled into the secondary lot.
    At 5:00 p.m., Agent Aradanas signed a complaint against
    Torres Pimental and Canales, stating that Torres Pimental and
    Canales “knowingly and intentionally import[ed]” marijuana
    into the United States. Agent Aradanas faxed the complaint
    and a one-and-a-half page affidavit to United States
    Magistrate Judge Peter C. Lewis in San Diego. Judge Lewis
    signed the complaint at 8:14 p.m.
    Earlier that day, there was a magistrate court calendar for
    Rule 5 presentment at the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of California in San Diego, located just
    seventeen miles, or about twenty-two minutes, from the San
    Ysidro Port of Entry where Torres Pimental was being held.1
    The calendar began at 2:00 p.m. — four-and-a-half hours
    after Torres Pimental was arrested and over two hours after
    his interrogation at the Port of Entry ended. Agent Aradanas
    knew that if Torres Pimental was not brought to the court for
    presentment that day, he would not go to court or be
    appointed an attorney until the following Tuesday because of
    a three-day holiday weekend. Nevertheless, neither Agent
    Aradanas, nor any other agent, drove Torres Pimental the
    short distance to the San Diego courthouse for his initial
    appearance that day.
    1
    Under Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure 5(a)(1)(A), “[a] person
    making an arrest within the United States must take the defendant without
    unnecessary delay before a magistrate judge, or before a state or local
    judicial officer[,] unless a statute provides otherwise.”
    UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL                7
    Instead, after Torres Pimental’s interrogation ended at
    11:54 a.m., Agent Aradanas kept him in custody in a San
    Ysidro Port of Entry holding cell because no beds were
    available at the Metropolitan Corrections Center (“MCC”) in
    downtown San Diego. Torres Pimental remained in custody
    at the Port of Entry from Friday morning until the MCC had
    space available on Sunday morning.
    During his detention at the Port of Entry that Friday and
    Saturday night, Torres Pimental slept on the floor of the
    holding cell with nine to twelve other arrestees. He was
    given a blanket for only part of the time he was detained
    there, even though the air conditioning was turned on and the
    holding cell was cold.
    Nearly forty-eight hours after his arrest, Torres Pimental
    was driven to the MCC on Sunday, January 16, 2011, by
    DHS Agent Sabas Torres. Agent Aradanas transported
    Canales to the MCC in a separate vehicle at the same time.
    The drive from the Port of Entry to the MCC took fifteen to
    twenty minutes.
    During the drive, Torres Pimental asked Agent Sabas
    Torres how long his sentence would be. Agent Sabas Torres
    told Torres Pimental that he did not know the facts of Torres
    Pimental’s case and did not know how long Torres Pimental’s
    sentence would be. The agent told Torres Pimental about the
    factors that impact a sentence generally, including the point
    system, criminal history, declarations given at the time of
    arrest, case agent reports, and government recommendations.
    Agent Sabas Torres informed Torres Pimental that
    “defendants are given their time to explain their side of the
    story during questioning,” but that “sometimes people don’t
    8          UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    take that seriously.” He said it was “difficult for an agent to
    . . . talk to the defendant after he gets appointed counsel . . .
    because they now have an attorney. It’s difficult to set up a
    meeting.” He told Torres Pimental that “if you don’t speak
    to the agents right away then you don’t get another
    opportunity to speak to them for a while.” Agent Sabas
    Torres explained that defendants “get less time” if they
    “make a statement.” Agent Sabas Torres told Torres
    Pimental that “it happens a lot that people don’t cooperate
    and they get more time.”
    Because of Agent Sabas Torres’s statements, Pimental
    “felt [he] had to make a statement admitting guilt or else [he]
    was going to have to stay in jail for a long time.” When they
    were less than a minute from the MCC, Torres Pimental
    asked if he could speak with Agent Aradanas. Agent Sabas
    Torres informed Torres Pimental that “everything you say has
    to be voluntary, okay. We cannot ask you questions.” Torres
    Pimental responded, “Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, it’s volunt[ary].”
    When both vehicles arrived at the MCC, Agent Sabas
    Torres told Agent Aradanas that Torres Pimental wanted to
    speak to her. Agent Aradanas approached Torres Pimental
    and asked, “What’s up?” Torres Pimental told Agent
    Aradanas to ask him what she wanted to know. Without
    reminding him of his Miranda rights, Agent Aradanas asked
    Torres Pimental how much he was going to get paid for the
    marijuana, where he was taking the drugs, who hired him,
    and if he knew what was in the car. Torres Pimental
    confessed that he was going to be paid $1,500; he was going
    to Lynwood, California; a person named Ruben hired him;
    and he knew marijuana was in the car. Agent Aradanas
    advised Torres Pimental to tell his attorney that he asked to
    talk to her, then she took him inside the MCC for processing.
    UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL                           9
    On Tuesday, January 18, 2011, four days after he was
    arrested, Torres Pimental was brought to a magistrate judge
    for the first time. Counsel was appointed and bail was set.
    He was released on bond several days later.
    Torres Pimental was indicted by a grand jury on one
    count of conspiracy to import marijuana and one count of
    importation of marijuana. He moved the district court to
    suppress the statements he made to Agent Aradanas on
    Sunday, January 16, because: (1) the delay in presenting
    Torres Pimental to a magistrate was unreasonable, and his
    statements made nearly forty-eight hours after his arrest must
    be suppressed under the rule announced in McNabb v. United
    States, 
    318 U.S. 332
     (1943), and Mallory v. United States,
    
    354 U.S. 449
     (1957);2 and (2) the statements were taken in
    violation of Miranda and were not made voluntarily.
    The district court denied the motion to suppress after
    conducting an evidentiary hearing.
    After the district court denied the motion to suppress,
    Torres Pimental pleaded guilty — pursuant to a conditional
    plea agreement — to one count of importation of marijuana
    in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 952
     and 960 and 
    18 U.S.C. § 2
    .
    He was sentenced to twelve months and one day in custody
    and three years’ supervised release. He timely appeals the
    denial of his motion to suppress.
    2
    Under the McNabb-Mallory rule, a confession is inadmissible if it is
    “given after an unreasonable delay in bringing [an arrested person] before
    a judge.” Corley v. United States, 
    556 U.S. 303
    , 306 (2009).
    10         UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    II. DISCUSSION
    Torres Pimental argues that his incriminating statements
    must be suppressed because of an unnecessary or
    unreasonable delay under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure
    5(a) and the McNabb-Mallory rule. We agree.
    We review de novo a denial of a motion to suppress, but
    the underlying factual findings are reviewed for clear error.
    United States v. Amano, 
    229 F.3d 801
    , 803 (9th Cir. 2000).
    We review for clear error a district court’s finding that a
    delay in bringing a defendant before a magistrate judge was
    reasonable. United States v. Liera, 
    585 F.3d 1237
    , 1242 (9th
    Cir. 2009).
    A. The McNabb-Mallory Rule
    Under Rule 5(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal
    Procedure, “[a] person making an arrest within the United
    States must take the defendant without unnecessary delay
    before a magistrate judge . . . .” The McNabb-Mallory rule
    “generally renders inadmissible confessions made during
    periods of detention that violate the prompt presentment
    requirement of Rule 5(a).” Corley v. United States, 
    556 U.S. 303
    , 309 (2009) (quoting United States v. Alvarez-Sanchez,
    
    511 U.S. 350
    , 354 (1994)) (alterations omitted). Under the
    McNabb-Mallory rule, an arrested person must be brought
    “before a judicial officer as quickly as possible so that he may
    be advised of his rights and so that the issue of probable cause
    may be promptly determined.” Mallory, 
    354 U.S. at 454
    .
    Although the arrestee may be “‘booked’ by the police[,] he is
    not to be taken to police headquarters in order to carry out a
    process of inquiry that lends itself, even if not so designed, to
    eliciting damaging statements to support the arrest and
    UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL                 11
    ultimately his guilt.” 
    Id.
     The rule thus requires an arrested
    person be brought before a magistrate judge without
    unreasonable delay.
    Congress enacted 
    18 U.S.C. § 3501
    (c) in response to the
    McNabb-Mallory rule. See Valenzuela-Espinoza, 
    697 F.3d 742
    , 748 (9th Cir. 2012). Section 3501(c) “provides a six-
    hour ‘safe harbor’ period during which a confession will not
    be deemed inadmissible solely because of a delay in
    presentment to a magistrate.” 
    Id.
     (citing Liera, 
    585 F.3d at 1242
    ). The six-hour limitation under § 3501(c) does not
    apply, however, where “the delay in bringing [the defendant]
    before [a] magistrate judge . . . beyond such six-hour period
    is found by the trial judge to be reasonable considering the
    means of transportation and the distance to be traveled to the
    nearest available such magistrate judge.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 3501
    (c).
    Following the enactment of § 3501, the Supreme Court
    “reaffirmed the applicability of the McNabb-Mallory Rule”
    in Corley v. United States, 
    556 U.S. 303
     (2009). Liera,
    
    585 F.3d at 1242
    . The Court held that § 3501(c) “modified
    McNabb-Mallory without supplanting it.” Corley, 
    556 U.S. at 322
    . The Court established a two-part test for applying the
    McNabb-Mallory rule in light of the § 3501(c) six-hour safe
    harbor period. First, “a district court . . . must find whether
    the defendant confessed within six hours of arrest (unless a
    longer delay was reasonable considering the means of
    transportation and the distance to be traveled to the nearest
    available magistrate judge).” Id. (internal quotation marks
    and alterations omitted). “If the confession came within that
    period, it is admissible . . . so long as it was made
    voluntarily.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). If,
    however, “the confession occurred before presentment and
    12         UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    beyond six hours, . . . the court must decide whether delaying
    that long was unreasonable or unnecessary under the
    McNabb-Mallory cases, and if it was, the confession is to be
    suppressed.” Id. This is true even if the confession was made
    voluntarily. Id. at 308.
    B. Unreasonable or Unnecessary Delay
    We must first “find whether [Torres Pimental] confessed
    within six hours of arrest (unless a longer delay was
    reasonable considering the means of transportation and the
    distance to be traveled to the nearest available magistrate
    judge).” Corley, 
    556 U.S. at
    322 (citing 
    18 U.S.C. § 3501
    (c)). It is undisputed that Torres Pimental’s
    incriminating statements, made on a Sunday, were made more
    than six hours after his 9:30 a.m. Friday morning arrest and
    before his Tuesday morning initial appearance. Moreover,
    the delay was not a result of the distance to be traveled to the
    nearest available magistrate holding a presentment calendar
    that Friday. The nearest available magistrate was located
    only seventeen miles — or about twenty-two minutes —
    away. See Liera, 
    585 F.3d at 1242
     (holding that the delay
    was not a result of the distance to be traveled to the nearest
    available magistrate when the nearest available magistrate
    was located fifteen miles away).
    Because the § 3501(c) safe harbor does not apply, our
    analysis turns on whether the delay was “unreasonable or
    unnecessary under the McNabb-Mallory cases.” Corley,
    
    556 U.S. at 322
    . If the delay was unreasonable or
    unnecessary under the McNabb-Mallory cases, “the
    confession is to be suppressed.” 
    Id.
     We have “identified
    three categories of reasonable delays apart from
    transportation, distance, and the availability of a magistrate”:
    UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL                 13
    (1) delays for “humanitarian reasons;” (2) “delays due to the
    unavailability of government personnel [and judges]
    necessary to completing the arraignment process;” and
    (3) “delays necessary to determine whether a suspect should
    be criminally charged.” Valenzuela-Espinoza, 697 F.3d at
    752 (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted).
    The delay in presenting Torres Pimental does not fall
    within any of the three categories, and therefore was
    unreasonable.
    First, the government does not contend that the delay was
    reasonable for humanitarian reasons.
    Second, the delay was not “due to the unavailability of
    government personnel and judges necessary to completing the
    arraignment process.” United States v. Garcia-Hernandez,
    
    569 F.3d 1100
    , 1106 (9th Cir. 2009). The district court,
    citing Garcia-Hernandez and similar cases, held that the
    delay here was reasonable because the complaint was
    presented to the magistrate judge at 5:00 p.m. on a Friday
    before a long holiday weekend. Between 5:00 p.m. on Friday
    until the Tuesday after Torres Pimental was arrested, the
    magistrate judge was presumably unavailable; thus, the
    district court determined, that Tuesday was the earliest
    possible time Torres Pimental could have been presented to
    a magistrate. We agree that, in certain circumstances, if a
    defendant is arrested after the magistrate court is closed on a
    Friday night before a holiday weekend, and a judge is not
    available over the weekend for Rule 5 presentment, then a
    weekend delay might be reasonable. See United States v. Van
    Poyck, 
    77 F.3d 285
    , 289–90 (9th Cir. 1996) (holding that a
    weekend delay due to the unavailability of a magistrate judge
    was not unreasonable when the defendant was arrested on a
    14         UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    Friday afternoon and no magistrate judge was available over
    the weekend).
    That the complaint was not faxed to the magistrate judge
    until 5:00 p.m. was not “due to the unavailability of
    government personnel and judges necessary to completing the
    arraignment process,” Garcia-Hernandez, 
    569 F.3d at 1106
    ,
    as found reasonable in Van Poyck. Rather, here a magistrate
    judge was available starting at 2:00 p.m. on Friday at the
    federal courthouse in San Diego only seventeen miles away.
    And there is no suggestion that there were not enough federal
    agents to transport Torres Pimental that short distance to the
    court. See Valenzuela-Espinoza, 697 F.3d at 752 (concluding
    that, just because “one officer out of nine was fulfilling his
    responsibility to obtain a search warrant did not make the
    delay reasonable under McNabb-Mallory”). The reason
    Torres Pimental was not transported to the magistrate was not
    due to the unavailability of any necessary personnel or
    available judge; rather, Torres Pimental could have been
    taken to the nearby available magistrate by any number of
    law enforcement officers at the Port of Entry. Thus, the delay
    does not fall under the second category.
    Third, the delay was not reasonable to determine
    “whether [Torres Pimental] could be criminally charged.” Id.
    The agents had enough information to charge Torres Pimental
    at 10:00 a.m. on Friday, when 37 packages containing over
    150 pounds of marijuana were found in the Dodge Durango
    (including 3 packages found in the passenger seat where
    Torres Pimental had been sitting). The government urges us
    to find the delay reasonable because of the need to interview
    Torres Pimental and Canales and the need to prepare a
    complaint before Torres Pimental could be taken to a
    magistrate for his initial hearing. We disagree.
    UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL                 15
    The government argues that it would have been
    “unfeasible” for Torres Pimental to be taken to the court
    seventeen miles away at any time after his arrest at 9:30 a.m.
    on Friday, because “the case did not begin and end with him.”
    Not only did Agent Aradanas have to interview Torres
    Pimental before presenting him to a magistrate judge, the
    government contends, but, she also had to interview Canales
    before presenting Torres Pimental to a magistrate judge.
    Agent Aradanas’s desire to fully investigate the crime by
    interrogating Torres Pimental and Canales was not a valid
    reason to delay presenting Torres Pimental to a magistrate
    judge. There is no evidence in the record that such
    interrogation was necessary to determine whether Torres
    Pimental should be criminally charged (or any suggestion that
    he was not going to be charged). See Mallory, 
    354 U.S. at 454
     (an arrested person is “not to be taken to police
    headquarters in order to carry out a process of inquiry that
    lends itself, even if not so designed, to eliciting damaging
    statements to support the arrest and ultimately his guilt”);
    Corley, 
    556 U.S. at 308
     (reaffirming that “delay for the
    purpose of interrogation is the epitome of ‘unnecessary
    delay’” (quoting Mallory, 
    354 U.S. at
    455–56)); United States
    v. Wilson, 
    838 F.2d 1081
    , 1085 (9th Cir. 1988) (describing
    “[t]he desire of the officers to complete the interrogation” as
    “the most unreasonable excuse possible” for a delay in
    presentment); ABA Criminal Justice Standards: Pretrial
    Release 10-4.1(b) (3d ed. 2007), available at
    http://www.americanbar.org/publications/criminal_justice_
    section_archive/crimjust_standards_pretrialrelease_blk.htm
    l#10-4.1 (“[A] defendant’s first appearance should not
    ordinarily be delayed in order to conduct in-custody
    interrogation or other in-custody investigation.”).
    16         UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    In Valenzuela-Espinoza, we specifically rejected the idea
    that a delay is reasonable to fully investigate a crime when it
    is unnecessary to conduct further investigation to determine
    whether a suspect should be charged. See Valenzuela-
    Espinoza, 697 F.3d at 752–53. In that case, federal agents
    had enough information to charge Valenzuela-Espinoza with
    possession of marijuana at 11:15 a.m. when he “exited a
    carport in a ‘cloud of marijuana smoke’ and told officers that
    there was ten pounds of marijuana inside the house.” Id.
    Rather than presenting Valenzuela-Espinoza to a magistrate
    judge, however, the officers detained him to interrogate him
    and conduct a search of the property. Id. at 746–47, 752–53.
    A search warrant was issued at 3:25 p.m., and a large amount
    of marijuana was discovered. Id. at 746. Valenzuela-
    Espinoza, who had been detained since his arrest at 11:15
    a.m., was taken to an Immigration and Custom’s Enforcement
    station for questioning later that evening. Id. He was held in
    custody overnight and presented to the magistrate judge the
    next day. Id. at 747. We held that the delay was
    unreasonable because “it was not necessary to conduct any
    further investigation to determine whether Valenzuela-
    Espinoza could be criminally charged.” Id. at 752. There
    was “simply nothing in the record to support the claim that
    the officers needed to execute the search warrant to determine
    whether they could charge Valenzuela-Espinoza with
    possession of marijuana.” Id. at 753.
    Here, as in Valenzuela-Espinoza, there is nothing in the
    record to support the claim that the agents needed more
    evidence than what they had at 10:00 a.m. on Friday — the
    fact that over 150 pounds of marijuana were in 37 packages
    inside the Dodge Durango, including 3 packages in the
    passenger seat where Torres Pimental was sitting — to
    determine whether they could charge Torres Pimental with
    UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL               17
    importing marijuana. Although we understand why law
    enforcement sought to strengthen its case against Torres
    Pimental further, the delay in presenting Torres Pimental to
    a magistrate judge in order to interrogate him and Canales
    was unreasonable. See id.
    Even if it was valid to delay presentment to interrogate
    Torres Pimental and Blanca Canales, the failure to present
    Torres Pimental to the magistrate judge on Friday afternoon
    was still unreasonable because there was ample time between
    10:00 a.m. and the conclusion of the magistrate judge’s
    calendar to conduct the interviews, prepare a complaint, and
    transport Torres Pimental to the courthouse seventeen miles
    away. Agent Aradanas knew there was a three-day weekend
    looming, and knew that if Torres Pimental was not presented
    to a magistrate judge on Friday, he would be imprisoned
    without the benefit of a court appointed attorney from Friday
    morning till Tuesday. Agent Aradanas was required to
    promptly take all necessary steps to ensure that Torres
    Pimental was presented on Friday afternoon, absent a valid
    reason for delay.
    In sum, the four-day delay in presenting Torres Pimental
    to the magistrate judge was unreasonable under the McNabb-
    Mallory rule. “The purpose of the McNabb-Mallory Rule is
    not merely to avoid all the evil implications of secret
    interrogation of persons accused of crime,” it was “also
    designed to insure that a defendant is brought before a
    judicial officer as quickly as possible so that he may be
    advised of his rights and so that the issue of probable cause
    may be promptly determined.” Liera, 
    585 F.3d at 1243
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Under the
    facts presented here, the four-day delay between Torres
    18         UNITED STATES V. TORRES PIMENTAL
    Pimental’s arrest and his initial appearance before a
    magistrate judge was unreasonable and unnecessary.
    Accordingly, we hold that the district court clearly erred
    when it determined that the delay in presentment was
    reasonable and necessary and erred when it declined to
    suppress the incriminating statements that Torres Pimental
    made to Agent Aradanas on Sunday morning, about forty-
    eight hours after his Friday morning arrest, and before he was
    presented to a magistrate judge on Tuesday.
    III. CONCLUSION
    The delay in presenting Torres Pimental to the magistrate
    judge was unreasonable and unnecessary in violation of Rule
    5(a) and the McNabb-Mallory rule. We reverse the denial of
    Torres Pimental’s suppression motion, vacate his conviction,
    and remand for further proceedings.
    VACATED and REMANDED.