United States v. Rickey Beene , 818 F.3d 157 ( 2016 )


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  •      Case: 14-30476   Document: 00513410139     Page: 1   Date Filed: 03/08/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 14-30476                              FILED
    March 8, 2016
    Lyle W. Cayce
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                                                  Clerk
    Plaintiff-Appellee
    v.
    RICKEY NIKKI BEENE,
    Defendant-Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Louisiana
    Before WIENER, SOUTHWICK, and GRAVES, Circuit Judges.
    LESLIE H. SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judge:
    Rickey Nikki Beene entered a conditional plea of guilty, and the district
    court entered a judgment of conviction and sentence.            Beene’s plea was
    conditioned on the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress evidence
    obtained during a search of his vehicle and the statements he made following
    his arrest. We VACATE Beene’s conviction and sentence and REMAND for
    further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
    Case: 14-30476    Document: 00513410139      Page: 2   Date Filed: 03/08/2016
    No. 14-30476
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In June 2012, a dispatcher advised Haynesville (Louisiana) police
    officers that an unnamed caller reported that Rickey Nikki Beene pointed a
    gun at people on Mill Street, then left the scene driving a gray Honda Accord.
    Officers knew Beene to have dealt in illegal drugs.
    Beene lived at the intersection of a state highway and Greer Street.
    Officer Danny Mills drove on the state highway to reach Beene’s residence. As
    he approached Beene’s residence, he saw a silver Lincoln Continental parked
    in the yard with a woman sitting in it. Officers later learned the woman was
    Beene’s wife. He turned onto Greer Street and saw Beene in a gray Honda
    Accord driving toward him. Officer Mills intended to make a stop based on the
    dispatcher’s information, but Beene turned into his driveway off of Greer
    Street before Officer Mills activated his sirens to stop him.
    Beene parked in his driveway about five feet from the street. Officer
    Mills parked on the street at the end of the driveway to block Beene’s vehicle
    from exiting. Officer Mills and Beene got out of their vehicles. Beene started
    walking toward Officer Mills. Officer Mills ordered Beene to stop at his vehicle
    and place his hands on the trunk. Beene kept coming toward Officer Mills.
    Officer Mills again ordered Beene to stop and place his hands on the trunk.
    Beene did not comply, so Officer Mills pulled out his Taser, aimed it at Beene,
    and told him to stop. Beene again did not comply. Officer Mills gave another
    command to stop, and Beene finally stopped. Beene got on the ground as
    directed. Officer Mills decided to handcuff Beene based on his resistance.
    Officer Mills also believed he had probable cause to arrest Beene based on the
    report that Beene had brandished a firearm and because of what Beene “ha[d]
    done in the past.” Officer Trent Crook, who arrived later, helped Officer Mills
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    handcuff Beene and lift him off the ground. Officer Mills advised Beene of his
    Miranda rights and placed him in the back of Officer Crook’s vehicle.
    While the officers were trying to handcuff Beene, his wife Shauntae
    Heard came “running around the corner.” Officer Mills explained that Beene
    was being placed under arrest and instructed Heard to stay back. She stopped
    moving toward the officer, but she continued to yell at him. Heard told Officer
    Mills that she owned the Honda that Beene had been driving. Officer Mills
    asked Heard whether she knew if there was a gun in the vehicle. She said she
    did not know. Officer Mills asked Heard if she minded if he checked for a gun,
    and she asked whether he had a warrant. Officer Mills did not have a warrant.
    At this point, a third officer, Rickey Goode, arrived with a drug-sniffing
    dog. Officer Mills explained to Officer Goode that Heard had refused consent
    to check for a gun. Officer Goode retrieved his dog, and the dog “did a search
    pattern” around the Honda Accord. Meanwhile, the record indicates Beene
    remained in the back seat of Officer Crook’s vehicle and Heard stood by the
    house. Neither person had any encounter with the police dog.
    The dog alerted, and on that basis, the officers believed they had
    probable cause to suspect that narcotics either were, or had been, inside the
    vehicle.   Officer Goode opened the passenger-side door, and Officer Mills
    immediately saw a bag of marijuana at the front of the driver’s seat. They also
    found crack cocaine, a substantial amount of cash, and a loaded .380 caliber
    handgun.
    The chief of police, Anthony Smith, also was at the scene. When the
    contraband was retrieved, Heard, who was standing near the mobile home
    talking to Chief Smith and Officer Crook, passed out and fell to the ground.
    Emergency medical personnel arrived, but Heard revived without their
    assistance and refused any treatment. Chief Smith would later testify that
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    after she recovered, he obtained her written consent to search the residence.
    Allegedly based on that consent, Chief Smith and Detective Adrian Malone
    searched the house and discovered additional marijuana, crack cocaine, a small
    amount of methamphetamine, and a digital scale.
    Heard was arrested for resisting the officers’ orders. She and Beene were
    taken to the police station in Haynesville. While at the station, Officer Crook
    read Beene his Miranda rights a second time. Detective Malone arrived at the
    police station to obtain Beene’s recorded statement. Detective Malone advised
    Beene that he intended to question the people in the neighborhood near the
    Mill Street Apartment Complex, who had said they saw Beene brandishing a
    firearm earlier that day. Beene explained that he possessed the firearm that
    day only for self-defense.
    Beene was charged in a six-count indictment with (1) being a felon in
    possession of a firearm and ammunition, (2) possession with intent to
    distribute crack cocaine, (3) possession with intent to distribute cocaine
    powder, (4) possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, (5)
    possession with intent to distribute marijuana, and (6) possession of a firearm
    in furtherance of drug trafficking. Beene moved to suppress evidence of (a) the
    firearm, ammunition, and drugs seized from his automobile, (b) evidence of
    drugs seized from his residence, and (c) the post-arrest statements he made
    about his possession of the firearm.
    After an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied Beene’s motion as
    to the evidence seized from his vehicle, finding that it was admissible because
    it was the result of a search incident to a lawful traffic stop. The court also
    rejected Beene’s argument that the search of the automobile was unlawful
    because of the presence of the drug-sniffing dog in the driveway of his
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    residence. Additionally, the court denied Beene’s motion to suppress his post-
    arrest statements.
    The district court granted Beene’s motion to suppress the evidence of
    drugs seized from his residence. The court noted that two versions of the
    consent form were produced at the hearing: one that contained Detective
    Malone’s signature as a witness to Heard’s consent, and another that did not.
    Although the court questioned much of Heard’s testimony, it also found Chief
    Smith’s testimony that he obtained Heard’s consent to search was not credible.
    The court concluded that, despite Chief Smith’s and Detective Malone’s
    testimony that they were both present for the signing of the consent form,
    “there exists indisputable evidence that the consent form was falsified.”
    Beene filed a motion to reconsider the district court’s ruling denying his
    motions to suppress the evidence obtained from the vehicle. Among Beene’s
    arguments was that the automobile exception to the warrant requirement did
    not apply, which was the first time this exception had been addressed by either
    party. The Government filed a response without referring to the automobile
    exception. The district court summarily denied Beene’s motion to reconsider.
    Beene entered a conditional guilty plea to the felon-in-possession count,
    reserving his right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress with respect
    to the search of his automobile and his post-arrest statements. The district
    court sentenced Beene to 96 months of imprisonment. Beene timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    When a district court denies a motion to suppress evidence, we review
    the factual findings for clear error and legal conclusions about the
    constitutionality of the conduct of law enforcement officers de novo. United
    States v. Guzman, 
    739 F.3d 241
    , 245 (5th Cir. 2014). “The clearly erroneous
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    standard is particularly deferential where . . . denial of a suppression motion
    is based on live oral testimony . . . because the judge had the opportunity to
    observe the demeanor of the witnesses.” United States v. Robinson, 
    741 F.3d 588
    , 594 (5th Cir. 2014) (quotation marks omitted). “Factual findings are
    clearly erroneous only if a review of the record leaves this Court with a definite
    and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” United States v.
    Hearn, 
    563 F.3d 95
    , 101 (5th Cir. 2009) (quotation marks omitted). We review
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the party that prevailed in the
    district court. United States v. Zavala, 
    541 F.3d 562
    , 574 (5th Cir. 2008).
    The district court held that the search of Beene’s vehicle was a lawful
    search incident to arrest. We disagree. Under that exception, an officer may
    search an arrestee’s vehicle when it is “reasonable to believe evidence relevant
    to the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle.” Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 343 (2009) (quotation marks omitted). In this case, the crime of arrest
    was resisting arrest. Beene’s vehicle would not contain evidence of that crime.
    The Government barely defends the basis for the district court’s ruling, but
    instead argues the evidence was admissible simply as a result of a dog’s
    alerting to the presence of contraband, or under the automobile exception.
    Beene argues that the district court erred when it denied his motion to
    suppress, contending that the search of his automobile violated the Fourth
    Amendment because it was not conducted pursuant to a lawful traffic stop, did
    not fall within an applicable exception to the Fourth Amendment, and occurred
    in his driveway, which allegedly was part of the curtilage of his home. He also
    argues that, because the searches of his automobile and residence were
    unlawful, his post-arrest statements were “fruit of the poisonous tree.”
    We will first discuss the use of the dog.
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    I.      Use of Drug-Sniffing Dog
    A dog sniff is typically not a search; it may be conducted even when a
    detention is not drug-related so long as it does not unreasonably prolong the
    detention. See, e.g., Illinois v. Caballes, 
    543 U.S. 405
    , 407–09 (2005). A sniff
    may nevertheless be an unwarranted search when it involves an intrusion into
    a constitutionally protected area, such as the home or its curtilage. See Florida
    v. Jardines, 
    133 S. Ct. 1409
    , 1417–18 (2013). In determining if an area is part
    of the curtilage, we consider: (1) “the proximity of the area claimed to be
    curtilage to the home,” (2) “whether the area is included within an enclosure
    surrounding the home,” (3) “the nature of the uses to which the area is put,”
    and (4) “the steps taken by the resident to protect the area from observation
    by people passing by.” United States v. Dunn, 
    480 U.S. 294
    , 301 (1987).
    Here, as the district court noted, only the driveway’s proximity to the
    residence weighs in favor of a finding that it was part of the curtilage of the
    home.     The driveway was open and could be observed from Greer Street.
    Although fences encircled part of the driveway, nothing blocked its access or
    obstructed its view from the street. Finally, neither Beene nor Heard took
    steps to protect their privacy, such as posting “no trespassing” signs. In an
    unpublished opinion, we held that a similar driveway was not part of the
    curtilage of a defendant’s home; we agree with that analysis. See United States
    v. Moffitt, 233 F. App’x 409, 411 (5th Cir. 2007). Likewise, we hold that the
    driveway here was not part of the curtilage of Beene’s home.
    Because Beene’s driveway was not part of the curtilage of his home or of
    any other constitutionally protected area, the police were permitted to bring a
    dog onto his property to sniff his vehicle. “In a long line of cases, the Supreme
    Court has held that, except for a house’s curtilage, the Fourth Amendment does
    not protect people from official searches characterized as sights seen in the
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    open fields.” Husband v. Bryan, 
    946 F.2d 27
    , 29 (5th Cir. 1991) (quotation
    marks omitted) (collecting cases). The Court has clarified that “the term ‘open
    fields’ may include any unoccupied or undeveloped area outside of the
    curtilage”: “An open field need be neither ‘open’ nor a ‘field’ as those terms are
    used in common speech.” Oliver v. United States, 
    466 U.S. 170
    , 180 n.11 (1984).
    Courts have applied the open-fields doctrine to myriad search locations beyond
    a literal field. See 1 WAYNE R. LAFAVE, SEARCH & SEIZURE: A TREATISE ON THE
    FOURTH AMENDMENT § 2.4(a) (5th ed. 2014) (collecting cases). Under this
    expansive definition, Beene’s driveway qualifies as an open field.
    An open field is not a protected area because it does not “provide the
    setting for those intimate activities” protected by the Fourth Amendment, and
    “as a practical matter these lands usually are accessible to the public and the
    police in ways that a home, an office, or commercial structure would not be.”
    
    Oliver, 466 U.S. at 179
    . Moreover, the Supreme Court expressly rejected a
    case-by-case review of open-fields cases as an unworkable accommodation,
    noting that such an “ad hoc approach not only makes it difficult for the
    policeman to discern the scope of his authority, it also creates a danger that
    constitutional rights will be arbitrarily and inequitably enforced.” 
    Id. at 181–
    82 (citation omitted).
    An investigation of an open field, be it visual, olfactory, or otherwise,
    does not implicate the Fourth Amendment because “an individual has no
    legitimate expectation that open fields will remain free from warrantless
    intrusion by government officers.” 
    Id. at 181.
    The open-fields doctrine does
    not permit law enforcement officers literally to unearth evidence, contained
    within an open field but hidden beyond plain view. See, e.g., 
    Husband, 946 F.2d at 29
    .     Indeed, any “physically invasive inspection” is commonly
    recognized as uniquely intrusive, even when performed in a public setting.
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    Bond v. United States, 
    529 U.S. 334
    , 337 (2000). A dog sniff, though, is not a
    physically invasive inspection.
    We find no basis to hold that the Government must provide justification
    for the dog’s presence under the open-fields doctrine. The Supreme Court in
    Jardines concluded that a dog sniff became a search due to the physical
    intrusion onto the defendant’s constitutionally protected property. See 133 S.
    Ct. at 1417–18. No such intrusion occurred here. Indeed, as the Supreme
    Court has noted, “an open field, unlike the curtilage of a home, is not one of
    those protected areas enumerated in the Fourth Amendment.                     The
    government’s physical intrusion on such an area . . . is of no Fourth
    Amendment significance.” United States v. Jones, 
    132 S. Ct. 945
    , 953 (2012)
    (citations omitted). Because a dog sniff is not a search in a public place, and
    because the intrusion on an open field has no Fourth Amendment significance,
    it must be the case that a dog sniff is not a search in an open field.
    The use of police dogs can be intimidating. There is no specter of that
    here. Neither Beene nor Heard had any contact with the dog. Even if use of a
    police dog presents a greater intrusion than a typical open-fields search, there
    is no reasonable expectation of privacy in sights or odors existing in an open
    field, in plain view or smell, which do not require a physically invasive
    inspection. Because the dog sniff was permissible, we must next determine
    whether the dog’s alert justified the police officers’ search of Beene’s vehicle.
    II.     Automobile Exception to Warrant Requirement
    The Government claims the search of Beene’s vehicle fell within the
    automobile exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement. See
    generally United States v. Fields, 
    456 F.3d 519
    , 523 (5th Cir. 2006). The
    Government did not present, and thus the district court did not address, this
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    exception to the warrant requirement. Nonetheless, Beene injected the issue
    in his motion to reconsider before the district court. He also made arguments
    concerning the exception in his briefing on appeal. Beene has not argued we
    should not consider the issue, but only that the automobile exception does not
    apply on these facts.
    Under the automobile exception, police may stop and search a vehicle
    without obtaining a warrant if they have probable cause to believe it contains
    contraband. See United States v. Ross, 
    456 U.S. 798
    , 807–09 (1982). The
    exception is justified by the mobility of vehicles and occupants’ reduced
    expectations of privacy while traveling on public roads.        See California v.
    Carney, 
    471 U.S. 386
    , 392–93 (1985). It has been applied to warrantless
    searches of vehicles parked in driveways or lots other than those used by the
    defendant for residential purposes. See, e.g., Pennsylvania v. Labron, 
    518 U.S. 938
    , 939–40 (1996) (applying the exception to the search of a vehicle located on
    a city street and another located outside of a farmhouse); Mack v. City of
    Abilene, 
    461 F.3d 547
    , 550, 552 (5th Cir. 2006) (applying the exception to the
    search of a vehicle located in a parking lot outside of a restaurant and another
    located in the defendant’s apartment complex parking lot); United States v.
    Sinisterra, 
    77 F.3d 101
    , 105 (5th Cir. 1996) (applying the exception to the
    search of a vehicle found in a parking lot outside of a shopping center).
    In contrast, when a vehicle is parked in the defendant’s residential
    driveway, we generally require that there be exigent circumstances justifying
    a search. See 
    Guzman, 739 F.3d at 246
    n.8; United States v. Pruett, 
    551 F.2d 1365
    , 1369–70 (5th Cir. 1977). If exigent circumstances were present in this
    case, those circumstances, taken together with the probable cause created by
    the exterior dog sniff of Beene’s vehicle, would justify the interior search of his
    vehicle.
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    We have upheld a warrantless search of a vehicle parked in front of a
    defendant’s home after the police, investigating a just-reported rape, followed
    a lead to the defendant’s home and discovered the defendant had blood on his
    clothes.    See Carlton v. Estelle, 
    480 F.2d 759
    , 760 (5th Cir. 1973).       We
    emphasized the impracticability of obtaining a warrant before arriving at the
    defendant’s home: officers were not required to “stay[] all action until warrants
    could be obtained” since “circumstances gave no assurance that an effective
    search or seizure could ever be made if it were not made immediately.” 
    Id. at 763–64.
    Additionally, we noted that the defendant’s wife was present in the
    house and that his mother, who had told the police where the defendant lived,
    resided in the neighborhood. 
    Id. at 763.
    On those facts, we underscored the
    exigencies involved when a vehicle is “relatively close to persons who knew of
    it, knew of [the defendant’s] trouble, and had an interest in” the defendant. 
    Id. In a
    more recent case, officers investigating a bank robbery followed a
    tracking signal located inside a stolen pack of money to a vehicle parked in the
    defendant’s driveway. See United States v. Reed, 
    26 F.3d 523
    , 525 (5th Cir.
    1994).     We upheld a warrantless search of the vehicle even though the
    defendant and his wife had been arrested and the police had seized the only
    known set of keys to the vehicle. See 
    id. at 525,
    530. “To leave the vehicle or
    post some undefined guards while securing a warrant with the valuable
    evidence inside would be risking the loss of that evidence and potential injury
    to [the officers].” 
    Id. at 530.
    We rejected the defendant’s contention that
    officers could have secured the vehicle while waiting for a search warrant,
    reasoning that “if a warrantless seizure is permissible, a warrantless search is
    permissible as well.” 
    Id. Whether “exigent
    circumstances were present is a finding of fact” to be
    made by the district court. 
    Id. at 528.
    In this case, the district court did not
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    make factual findings about whether exigent circumstances were present
    sufficient to justify a warrantless search under the automobile exception.
    Indeed, the Government argues for the first time on appeal that the automobile
    exception applies. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the district court
    and remand for further proceedings.
    III.   Post-Arrest Statements
    “Under the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine, all evidence derived from
    the exploitation of an illegal search,” including confessions made after an
    unconstitutional search, “must be suppressed, unless the Government shows
    that there was a break in the chain of events sufficient to refute the inference
    that the evidence was a product of the Fourth Amendment violation.” United
    States v. Cotton, 
    722 F.3d 271
    , 278 (5th Cir. 2013). Beene challenges the post-
    arrest statements he made in response to questions focusing almost exclusively
    on his possession of the firearm. The officers discovered this weapon as a result
    of the search of Beene’s vehicle. The Government contends the challenged
    post-arrest statements should not be suppressed because they were “not
    obtained by exploiting the illegal search [of Beene’s house], but based on
    evidence obtained during the legal search of the Honda.”
    The admissibility of Beene’s post-arrest statements is contingent on the
    lawfulness of the warrantless search of Beene’s vehicle.          The only bases
    resolved by the district court or presented to that court at the suppression
    hearing by the Government for upholding the warrantless search have now
    been reversed. Additionally, the fact that Beene’s post-arrest statements were
    made four hours after the search of his vehicle, and after he was given warning
    of his constitutional rights, is of no consequence. See Taylor v. Alabama, 
    457 U.S. 687
    , 690–91 (1982) (holding that six hours between an illegal arrest and
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    a confession, paired with three distinct Miranda warnings, did not constitute
    sufficient attenuating circumstances). Thus, Beene’s post-arrest statements
    must be suppressed in the absence of some other basis for their admission.
    Because we remand for further proceedings, the admissibility of Beene’s
    post-arrest statements may be reconsidered if an alternative basis to justify
    the search of Beene’s vehicle is presented to the district court and accepted.
    ***
    The conviction and sentence are VACATED, and the case is
    REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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    JAMES E. GRAVES, JR., Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    While I agree that the district court did not find exigent circumstances,
    I write separately to note my concerns as to the use of the drug detection dog.
    Although the majority states that a dog sniff is typically not a search,
    precedent certainly does not support the conclusion that a dog sniff is never a
    search. In my view, permitting the indiscriminate use of a drug detection dog
    in this context seriously undermines the fundamental right to privacy and
    security that the Fourth Amendment serves to protect.            Consequently, I
    respectfully dissent as to majority’s holding that the dog sniff in question is not
    a search.
    I.
    To fully consider the authority the government is afforded in this
    context, it is helpful to review some of the basic principles that govern the scope
    of the Fourth Amendment’s protections. Under the Fourth Amendment, a
    “‘search’ occurs when an expectation of privacy that society is prepared to
    consider reasonable is infringed.” United States v. Jacobsen, 
    466 U.S. 109
    , 113
    (1984).     In determining whether a course of official conduct constitutes a
    search, we analyze whether an “individual manifested a subjective expectation
    of privacy in the object” of the investigation and “whether the government’s
    intrusion infringe[d] upon the personal and societal values protected by the
    Fourth Amendment.”         California v. Ciraolo, 
    476 U.S. 207
    , 211 (1986)
    (quotations marks omitted). This inquiry requires consideration of both the
    reasonableness of the expectation of privacy and “the degree of intrusiveness
    of the [government’s] challenged action.” Horton v. Goose Creek Indep. Sch.
    Dist., 
    690 F.2d 470
    , 476-77 (5th Cir. 1982); see Skinner v. Railway Labor Execs.’
    Ass’n, 
    489 U.S. 602
    , 616 (1989) (“Obtaining and examining . . . evidence may
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    . . . be a search if doing so infringes an expectation of privacy that society is
    prepared to recognize as reasonable.” (internal citations omitted)).
    Undoubtedly, the officers’ use of a drug detection dog on Beene’s property
    “[t]o look over . . . [his vehicle] for the purpose of finding something” qualified
    as a “search” as that word is used in the everyday sense. Kyllo v. United States,
    
    533 U.S. 27
    , 33 n.1 (2001) (quoting N. WEBSTER, AN AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF
    THE   ENGLISH LANGUAGE 66 (6th ed. 1989)).            Whether this investigation
    constitutes a “Fourth Amendment ‘search,’” however, is “not so simple under
    our precedent.” 
    Id. at 31.
    Legitimate expectations of privacy are premised
    upon “concepts of real or personal property law . . . [and] understandings that
    are recognized and permitted by society.” Rakas v. Illinois, 
    439 U.S. 128
    , 143
    n.12 (1978); accord United States v. Jones, 
    132 S. Ct. 945
    , 951 (2012). An
    individual, for example, may possess an expectation of privacy based on a belief
    that his or her information “will not be broadcast to the world.” Katz v. United
    States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 352 (1967).
    Nevertheless, while the privacy the Fourth Amendment protects clearly
    safeguards against the disclosure of personal information, 
    id. at 351-52,
    its
    central concern is with the “security of persons against . . . invasive acts by . .
    . the Government.” City of Ontario v. Quon, 
    560 U.S. 746
    , 755-56 (2010); see
    also Soldal v. Cook Cnty., 
    506 U.S. 56
    , 69 (1992) (“What matters is the
    intrusion on the people’s security from governmental interference.”); see also
    Alderman v. United States, 
    394 U.S. 165
    , 176-80 (1969) (holding that the
    property interest an individual possesses in his home provides protection
    against electronic surveillance of conversations emanating from within
    whether or not the individual is party to those conversations). When properly
    conceived, the amendment’s protections extend beyond the mere preservation
    of sensitive information.
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    The Fourth Amendment preserves an individual right to both “privacy
    and security,” two interests that speak to different, though related, protections
    against “arbitrary invasions by governmental officials.” Berger v. New York,
    
    388 U.S. 41
    , 53 (1967) (emphasis added) (quoting Camara v. Municipal Court,
    
    387 U.S. 523
    , 528 (1967); accord New Jersey v. T.L.O., 
    469 U.S. 325
    , 335 (1985).
    These interests are reflected in the amendment’s history and its text, which
    protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure . . . against unreasonable
    searches and seizures,” and was drafted by the framers in reaction to the
    British Crown’s arbitrary intrusions upon their property. See Coolidge v. New
    Hampshire, 
    403 U.S. 443
    , 455 (1971) (discussing the framers’ desire to create
    “a right of personal security against arbitrary intrusions by official power”). As
    the Supreme Court explained more than a century ago, the evils to which the
    Fourth Amendment was enacted to respond were not limited to “the breaking
    of [one’s] doors [or] the rummaging of [one’s] drawers.” Boyd v. United States,
    
    6 S. Ct. 524
    , 532, 
    116 U.S. 616
    , 630 (1886), abrogated on other grounds as
    explained in Fischer v. United States, 
    425 U.S. 391
    , 405 (1976). Rather, “the
    essence of the offense . . . is the invasion of [an individual’s] indefeasible right
    of personal security, personal liberty and private property.” 
    Id. The Fourth
    Amendment’s use of the word “secure,” then, reflected the framers’ “dismay
    with British search and seizure practices, related to the arbitrary exercise of
    power to invade their property; security for them, was the ability to prevent
    such invasions.”      T. CLANCY, THE FOURTH AMENDMENT: ITS HISTORY AND
    INTERPRETATION 49 (2008). 1
    1 Our jurisprudence may need to begin placing a renewed emphasis on the security
    interests that the Fourth Amendment protects. As a result of technological advancements,
    we now live in an information age in which our everyday tasks often result in our sharing of
    vast amounts of personal data. A focus on the individual security interests implicated by the
    16
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    Whether an official investigation has invaded a reasonable expectation
    of privacy depends on the degree of intrusion caused by the government’s
    actions. See Florida v. Riley, 
    488 U.S. 445
    , 451-52, 454-55 (1989); United States
    v. Cuevas-Sanchez, 
    821 F.2d 248
    , 251 (5th Cir. 1987); 
    Horton, 690 F.2d at 476
    -
    77; see also Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 24 (1968) (considering the “nature and
    quality of the intrusion on individual rights” in assessing the permissibility of
    a search for weapons without probable cause). For example, “one who owns or
    lawfully possesses or controls property will in all likelihood have a legitimate
    expectation of privacy by virtue of [his or her] right to exclude.” 
    Rakas, 439 U.S. at 143
    n.12; see United States v. Gomez, 
    276 F.3d 694
    , 698 (5th Cir. 2001)
    (holding that a defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in a third
    party’s vehicle parked on the defendant’s driveway based on his “possessory
    interest in the land”). As a result, investigations that take place upon private
    property are more intrusive—and more likely to implicate the Fourth
    Amendment—than those that take place in a public space. Compare 
    Coolidge, 403 U.S. at 474-75
    (“[A] search or seizure carried out on a suspect’s premises
    without a warrant is per se unreasonable, unless the police can show it falls
    within one of a carefully defined set of exceptions . . . .”) with Florida v. White,
    
    526 U.S. 559
    , 566 (1999) (“[B]ecause the police seized respondent’s vehicle from
    a public area . . . the warrantless seizure . . . did not involve any invasion of
    respondent’s privacy.”).
    Relatedly, “[p]hysically invasive inspection[s] [are] . . . more intrusive
    than purely visual inspection[s],” and are generally considered a search. Bond
    v. United States, 
    529 U.S. 334
    , 337 (2000); see also Cupp v. Murphy, 412 U.S.
    government’s efforts to obtain such information may provide a more appropriate context in
    which to analyze the seemingly diminishing scope of the Fourth Amendment’s protections in
    this area.
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    291, 295 (1973) (“Unlike . . . fingerprinting . . ., [a] voice exemplar . . ., or [a]
    handwriting exemplar” taking scrapings from under a suspect’s fingernails
    constitutes a “severe, though brief, intrusion” and is therefore a search). The
    more intrusive the method of investigation, the more likely the technique will
    constitute a search under the Fourth Amendment. See Club Retro, L.L.C. v.
    Hilton, 
    568 F.3d 181
    , 196-97 (5th Cir. 2009) (holding that officers’ entry into a
    nightclub was a search where the officers “project[ed] official authority by
    entering with weapons drawn in a S.W.A.T. team raid,” and exceeded the scope
    of the club’s public invitation); compare Maryland v. Macon, 
    472 U.S. 463
    , 469
    (1985) (holding that an “officer’s action in entering a bookstore and examining
    the wares that were intentionally exposed to all who frequent the place of
    business did not infringe a legitimate expectation of privacy”) with Lo-Ji Sales,
    Inc. v. New York, 
    442 U.S. 319
    , 329 (1979) (holding that officers’ inspection of
    items located behind an enclosed display case constituted a search because it
    was more intrusive than that of an ordinary customer); compare also 
    Ciraolo, 476 U.S. at 213
    (aerial observation of backyard held not a search where the
    police were “within public navigable airspace [and observed the space] in a
    physically nonintrusive manner”), with 
    Cuevas-Sanchez, 821 F.2d at 251
    (continuous video surveillance of a backyard held a search because the
    “intrusion [was] not minimal” and “society is willing to recognize” an
    expectation to be free from this type of surveillance). “[W]hat is really involved
    in Fourth Amendment analysis is our ‘societal understanding’ about what
    deserves ‘protection from government invasion.’” United States v. Smith, 
    978 F.2d 171
    , 177 (5th Cir. 1992) (citing Oliver v. United States, 
    466 U.S. 170
    , 178,
    (1984)).
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    II.
    It is with reference to these principles that the scope and meaning of the
    two categories of cases most directly implicated by this appeal—the open fields
    and drug detection dog line of cases—must be evaluated. An open field is not
    open season and a drug detection dog is not free from the application of the
    Fourth Amendment.
    A.
    The government first argues that its investigation into the contents of
    Beene’s vehicle did not implicate the Fourth Amendment because the vehicle
    was parked outside of the curtilage of his home. This argument oversimplifies
    the analysis. The Fourth Amendment “protects people, not places,” 
    Katz 389 U.S. at 351
    , and it is implicated even when the government’s intrusion occurs
    at a “location not within the catalog (persons, houses, papers, and effects)”
    specified in its text. See 
    Kyllo, 533 U.S. at 32
    (explaining that the Fourth
    Amendment applies to the government’s “eavesdropping . . . [of conversation
    in] a telephone booth” even though it is not a person, house, paper, or effect).
    Merely labeling a location an open field or “[t]erming . . . [an] area curtilage
    expresses a conclusion; it does not advance Fourth Amendment analysis.”
    United States v. Wells, 
    648 F.3d 671
    , 675 n.4 (8th Cir. 2011) (quoting United
    States v. Arboleda, 
    633 F.2d 985
    , 992 (2d Cir. 1980)).
    A careful reading of the Supreme Court’s open fields precedents
    demonstrates the scope of the doctrine and its limits. The concept of the open
    field can be traced to the Supreme Court’s decision in Hester v. United States,
    
    265 U.S. 57
    (1924). The defendant in Hester was convicted of illegally distilling
    whiskey based on the testimony of two federal revenue agents who entered
    onto his land without a warrant. 
    Id. at 58.
    Hester was carrying a jug and a
    bottle out in the open when he and his accomplice noticed the agents. 
    Id. at 19
        Case: 14-30476    Document: 00513410139       Page: 20   Date Filed: 03/08/2016
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    58. At that point, Hester and his accomplice dropped the containers they were
    carrying and attempted to escape. 
    Id. The agents
    testified that the jugs and
    other containers that were dropped contained illegally distilled whiskey. 
    Id. In rejecting
    Hester’s challenge to the officers’ testimony, the Supreme
    Court held that his “own acts . . . disclosed the jug, the jar, and the bottle . . .
    [and there was therefore] no seizure . . . when the officers examined the
    contents of each after it had been abandoned.” 
    Id. Further, the
    fact that the
    officers had trespassed onto Hester’s land did not invalidate their actions. 
    Id. According to
    the Court, “the special protection accorded by the Fourth
    Amendment to the people in their ‘persons, houses, papers, and effects,’ [did]
    not extend[] to the open fields.” 
    Id. at 59.
          Hester’s textually formalistic approach was characteristic of the
    Supreme Court’s Fourth Amendment jurisprudence until its landmark
    decision in Katz v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    (1967). In Katz, however, the
    Supreme Court rejected the notion that “constitutionally protected area[s],”
    delineated by the textual categories specified in the Amendment, could “serve
    as a talismanic solution to every Fourth Amendment problem.” 
    Katz, 389 U.S. at 351
    n.9.   “[T]he Fourth Amendment protects people, not places” when
    individuals whose “expectations of freedom from intrusion are recognized as
    reasonable.” 
    Id. at 361
    (Harlan, J., concurring).
    After Katz, the Supreme Court revisited the open fields doctrine in Oliver
    v. United States, 
    466 U.S. 170
    (1984), “to determin[e] whether the
    government’s intrusion upon open fields without a warrant or probable cause
    violates reasonable expectations of privacy and is therefore a search . . . 
    .” 466 U.S. at 178
    . Oliver brought up two cases for review in which the police, acting
    on information that did not give to rise to probable cause, trespassed onto
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    private property and discovered marijuana plants being cultivated in outside
    areas that were open and accessible to the public. 
    Id. at 173-74.
          While reaffirming the validity of the open fields concept, the Supreme
    Court reinterpreted the doctrine in light of its post-Katz jurisprudence. First,
    with respect to the expectation of privacy, the Court observed that “open fields
    do not provide a setting for those intimate activities that the Amendment is
    intended to shelter.” 
    Id. at 179.
    Rather, activities “such as the cultivation of
    crops,” occur out in the open and can be viewed from outside through a fence
    or from the airspace above. 
    Id. at 179.
    Second, with respect to the nature of
    the government’s intrusion, the Court explained that a mere technical trespass
    onto an open field, without more, was not so offensive as to “infringe[] upon the
    personal and societal values protected by the Fourth Amendment.” 
    Id. at 182-
    83. “[A]s a practical matter these lands usually are accessible to the public and
    the police . . . [and] in most instances the police will disturb no one when they
    enter upon open fields.” 
    Id. at 179.
          Oliver’s reframing of the open field’s doctrine, then, was grounded in the
    same inquiries the Supreme Court has considered since Katz in determining
    whether police conduct constitutes a Fourth Amendment search: the nature of
    the privacy interest intruded upon and the degree of intrusion caused by the
    investigative technique. Rather than providing an unlimited exception to all
    investigations conducted outside of the curtilage of a home “the rule . . . [the
    Court] reaffirm[ed] . . . provid[ed] that an individual may not legitimately
    demand privacy for activities conducted out of doors in fields, except in the area
    immediately surrounding the home
    .” 466 U.S. at 178
    .
    In adhering to the language of the opinion, this court has observed that
    while “Oliver revitalized Hester’s open fields doctrine, . . . it explicitly adhered
    to Katz in doing so.” Husband v. Bryan, 
    946 F.2d 27
    , 29 (5th Cir. 1991) (citing
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    Oliver, 466 U.S. at 177-81
    ). Thus, while the open fields doctrine provides that
    “the Fourth Amendment does not protect people from official searches
    characterized as ‘sights seen in the open fields,’ . . . [n]either this court nor the
    Supreme Court have extended the open fields doctrine to anything beyond
    observation searches.” 
    Id. (quoting Air
    Pollution Variance Bd. of Colo. V.W.
    Alfalfa Corp., 
    416 U.S. 861
    , 865 (1974)). Indeed, “courts that have upheld
    surveillance conducted on, over, or from open fields have been careful to note
    the limited extent of the surveillance and to caution against unrestricted
    surveillance.” United States v. Lace, 
    669 F.2d 46
    , 55 (2d Cir. 1982); see also Kee
    v. City of Rowlett, 
    247 F.3d 206
    , 217 n.21 (5th Cir. 2001) (“[T]he open fields
    doctrine has not been expanded beyond observational searches.”); Allinder v.
    Ohio, 
    808 F.2d 1180
    , 1185 (6th Cir. 1987) (“In decisions following Katz, the
    Supreme Court has consistently adhered to the open field doctrine while at the
    same time recognizing that it is limited to sights seen in the open field.”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)); United States v. Bellina, 
    665 F.2d 1335
    ,
    1343 n.7 (4th Cir. 1981) (when analyzing “observations made on [a] defendant’s
    property . . . [e]ach intrusion must be examined on its own peculiar facts and
    each must be analyzed in relation to whether the person challenging the
    intrusion had a legitimate expectation of privacy in the area or thing
    observed.”); United States v. Jackson, 
    588 F.2d 1046
    , 1053 n.12 (5th Cir. 1979)
    (“[T]his court may . . . find a Fourth Amendment violation even though the
    government agents make their observations from an ‘open field.’”). Indeed, the
    Supreme Court recently reaffirmed this limitation in Florida v. Jardines,
    explaining that while an officer may “gather information in . . . open fields”
    with greater leeway than in those areas specifically enumerated in the Fourth
    Amendment’s text, the investigation remains “subject to Katz.” 
    Jardines, 133 S. Ct. at 1414
    .
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    Admittedly, an individual’s expectation of privacy in a so-called “open
    field” is limited. But to say that an expectation of privacy is limited is not to
    say it does not exist at all. See 
    Smith, 978 F.2d at 180
    (“An individual may
    open the curtains of his home to the view of unenhanced vision without
    consenting to the view of a telescope.” (quotations omitted)). As we have stated
    on more than one occasion, “[n]o matter where an individual is, whether in his
    home, a motel room, or a public park, he is entitled to a ‘reasonable’ expectation
    of privacy.” 
    Kee, 247 F.3d at 213
    (quoting 
    Jackson, 588 F.2d at 1052
    ). Our
    evaluation of the government’s investigation in this case must be cognizant of
    these precedential limitations.
    B.
    The scope of the Supreme Court’s holdings with respect to the use of drug
    detection dogs is similarly limited. The government argues that the use of a
    drug detection dog to determine the contents of a vehicle does not constitute a
    search for purposes of the Fourth Amendment under any circumstance. Again,
    the analysis is not so straightforward.
    “It is . . . important to recognize that [the Supreme Court has not]
    validat[ed] the use of drug detection dogs in all circumstances.” 3 W. LAFAVE,
    SEARCH AND SEIZURE § 2.2(g) (5th ed. 2012); see also United States v.
    Whitehead, 
    849 F.2d 849
    , 857 (4th Cir. 1988) (“Place obviously did not sanction
    the indiscriminate, blanket use of trained dogs in all contexts.”), abrogated on
    other grounds by Gozlon-Peretz v. United States, 
    498 U.S. 395
    (1991). Rather,
    the Court has validated the suspicionless use of drug detection dogs to
    investigate inanimate objects located in public places, see United States v.
    Place, 
    462 U.S. 696
    , 707 (1983), and vehicles stopped on public thoroughfares,
    see Illinois v. Caballes, 
    543 U.S. 405
    , 409 (2005). When utilized in the context
    of a private dwelling, however, the Supreme Court determined that “[t]he
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    government’s use of a trained police dog to investigate the home . . . is a ‘search’
    within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.” 
    Jardines, 133 S. Ct. at 1417
    -
    18.
    The Supreme Court first considered the use of a drug detection dog in
    United States v. Place, 
    462 U.S. 696
    (1983). Place involved the use of a drug
    detection dog to sniff luggage that officers seized in a public airport. 
    Id. at 706-
    07. In analyzing whether the conduct of the police was a search, the Court
    analyzed both the nature of the information that was exposed by the sniff and
    the degree of intrusion that was produced by the dog. 
    Id. at 707.
            The sniff “disclose[d] only the presence or absence of narcotics” and
    therefore exposed only limited information into the private contents of the
    luggage. 
    Id. at 707.
    The use of the dog, in turn, did “not require opening the
    luggage” or “rummaging through [its] contents” and therefore was “much less
    intrusive than a typical search.” 
    Id. Based on
    these two considerations, the
    Court concluded that the procedure was limited, “both in the manner in which
    the information [was] obtained and in the content of the information revealed.”
    
    Id. Consequently, the
    “particular course of investigation the agents . . .
    pursue[d] [in the case]–exposure of respondent’s luggage, which was located in
    a public place, to a trained canine–did not constitute a ‘search’ within the
    meaning of the Fourth Amendment.” 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court reaffirmed this holding in Illinois v. Caballes, which
    extended Place to permit “a well-trained narcotics-detection dog . . . [to sniff]
    the exterior of [a] car while [it is] lawfully seized for a traffic 
    violation.” 543 U.S. at 409
    . Neither case, however, held that the use of a drug detection dog
    is never a search. Nor has any precedential decision of this circuit extended
    those holdings to the use of a drug detection dog at a private residence. Indeed,
    we have long placed limitations on the use of drug detection dogs, for example,
    24
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    when utilized to investigate an individual’s body. See, e.g., United States v.
    Kelly, 
    302 F.3d 291
    , 294 (5th Cir. 2002); 
    Horton, 690 F.2d at 477-79
    . Our
    reasoning in those cases did not hinge upon the glib supposition that a dog sniff
    is never a search; instead, we engaged in a careful consideration of “the degree
    of personal intrusiveness” infringed upon by the investigative activity at issue.
    
    Horton, 690 F.2d at 479
    .
    This reasoning was vindicated in Florida v. Jardines—the only case in
    which the Supreme Court has considered the use of a drug detection dog on
    private property—where the Court concluded that the use of a drug detection
    dog to investigate the contents of a home was a Fourth Amendment 
    search. 133 S. Ct. at 1417-18
    .     After Jardines, as a panel of this court recently
    recognized, the contention that “a sniff is not a search” no matter what the
    circumstance simply cannot “withstand scrutiny.” United States v. Nagy, 524
    F. App’x 958, 959 (5th Cir. 2013) (per curiam) (unpublished). Accordingly, as
    with any analysis of investigatory conduct under the Fourth Amendment, the
    question of whether the use of a drug detection dog constitutes a search can
    only be answered by considering both the nature of the privacy interest at
    stake and the intrusion caused by the government’s investigative activity.
    III.
    As the foregoing analysis illustrates, whether the Fourth Amendment
    limited the officers’ ability to utilize a drug detection dog on Beene’s private
    driveway to determine the contents of his vehicle remains an open question.
    As an initial matter, although the driveway was not within the curtilage of his
    home, Beene possessed a reasonable expectation of privacy by virtue of his
    “possessory interest in the land” and his “right to exclude others” by virtue of
    that interest.   
    Gomez, 276 F.3d at 698
    ; see also 
    Rakas, 439 U.S. at 143
    ;
    
    Husband, 946 F.2d at 29
    . Beene also possessed an expectation of privacy in
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    the contents of his vehicle, Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 344-45 (2009); one
    qualitatively different than that which he would have possessed had the
    vehicle been situated on a public thoroughfare, see 
    Coolidge, 403 U.S. at 460
    -
    62; 
    Gomez, 276 F.3d at 697-98
    .
    Although Beene’s expectation of privacy did not reasonably extend to any
    “activities conducted out of doors,” 
    Oliver, 466 U.S. at 178
    , the contents of his
    vehicle were not exposed and the officers were unable to determine what was
    inside by viewing it from the driveway. See ROA. 368-69. Consequently, to
    ascertain the vehicle’s contents, the officers were required to physically
    encroach further upon Beene’s property with the drug detection dog in order to
    conduct a more intrusive investigation than a simple “observation search.”
    
    Husband, 946 F.2d at 29
    . The question is whether this additional, more
    intrusive investigation constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment. I
    conclude that it does.
    While the officers’ presence on Beene’s property was permissible and
    their “[v]isual surveillance was . . . lawful,” see 
    Kyllo, 533 U.S. at 31
    , their use
    of a drug detection dog constituted an additional physical invasion “more
    intrusive than [a] purely visual inspection.” 
    Bond, 529 U.S. at 337
    . This
    additional physical investigation exceeded the more limited “observation
    searches,” the Supreme Court has permitted under the open fields doctrine.
    See 
    Husband, 946 F.2d at 29
    . The roving “eye cannot . . . be guilty of trespass,”
    
    Boyd, 116 U.S. at 628
    (quoting Entick v. Carrington, 95 Eng. Rep. 807 (K.B.
    1765)), but the Supreme Court has repeatedly found physical invasions that
    exceed the permissible scope of the government’s presence constitute a Fourth
    Amendment search. See, e.g., 
    Bond, 529 U.S. at 338-39
    (holding that an
    officers’ physical manipulation of a bus passenger’s bag constituted a search
    because the exploratory manner in which the bag was felt exceeded the usual
    26
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    handling that would be expected); Arizona v. Hicks, 
    480 U.S. 321
    , 325 (1987)
    (holding that moving stereo equipment in plain view a “few inches” to record
    the equipment’s serial numbers constituted a search); New York v. Class, 
    475 U.S. 106
    , 114-15 (1986) (holding that reaching into a vehicle’s interior
    constitutes a search); Lo-Ji 
    Sales, 442 U.S. at 329
    (holding that officers’
    viewing of a retail establishment’s wares in more physically invasive manner
    than a customer would view them constituted a search).
    Moreover, the very presence of the drug detection dog fundamentally
    altered the nature of the investigative interaction. Compare Kentucky v. King,
    
    131 S. Ct. 1849
    , 1863 (2011) (police officers may, consistent with the Fourth
    Amendment, bang on the front door of a residence as loud as they can with the
    hope of being able to view incriminating evidence), with 
    Jardines, 133 S. Ct. at 1416
    (police officers may not, consistent with the Fourth Amendment,
    “introduce[] a trained police dog to explore the area around the home in the
    hopes of discovering incriminating evidence”). A canine’s sniff does not exist
    in the abstract; it is attached to a large and intimidating animal, which, by
    virtue of its presence, threatens the sense of security individuals possess in
    their premises. Oliver was premised on the assumption that the “police will
    disturb no one when they enter an open 
    field.” 466 U.S. at 179
    n.10. Such
    reasoning simply does not apply to the use of an animal, which serves as a
    “highly trained tool[] of law enforcement,” 
    Jardines, 133 S. Ct. at 1418
    .
    The Supreme Court’s analysis in Florida v. Jardines supports this
    conclusion. In Jardines, the Supreme Court observed that the prospect of “a
    visitor . . . marching his bloodhound into the garden before saying hello,” would
    be so disruptive to one’s sense of security that it would “inspire most of us to
    . . . call the police.” 
    Id. at 1416.
    While it is true that this observation was made
    in a case where the drug detection dog was employed within the curtilage of
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    the home, the Supreme Court’s recognition of the intrusion felt by the dog’s
    presence is not so easily confined to this area.
    Drug detection dogs represent a significant “project[ion of] official
    authority,” Club 
    Retro, 568 F.3d at 196
    , which escalates the intrusive nature
    of the government’s investigative presence, see 
    Horton, 690 F.2d at 477-78
    .
    Any individual who has encountered a drug detection dog in an airport, bus
    depot, or public sidewalk has experienced the unease that accompanies being
    confronted with the presence of this intimidating law enforcement tool. 2
    Indeed, history is replete with examples of officials using trained dogs,
    sometimes in aid of state sanctioned violence, to intimidate or control
    American citizens. 3       In the modern law enforcement context, police officers
    2  Police dogs are often intentionally employed by law enforcement because of their
    intimidating presence. See, e.g., Jannay Towne, K9 Fine-Tunes Crime Sniffing Skills,
    WHOTV, (April 28, 2015, 6:39 PM), http://whotv.com/2015/04/28/k9-fine-tunes-crime-
    sniffing-skill. (Des Moines, Iowa K9 police officer explaining that, “As an intimidation factor,
    [his police dog is] second to none.”); Iredia Ohenhen, Alija Mehmedovic, Amel Advic, Hunan
    Richards, The K-9 Unit, An Important Part Of Law Enforcement, CTNOW (Jan. 17, 2012,
    8:00 AM), http://www.ctnow.com/about/studentnews/ctn-the-k9-unit-an-important-part-of-
    law-enforcement-20120117-story.html. (police dogs are “used to intimidate criminals from
    trying to escape from the police”); Matt Lait, Role Over for Veteran Police Dog, L.A. TIMES,
    Jan. 5, 1991, http://articles.latimes.com/1991-01-05/local/me-6943_1_la-habra. (police officer
    explaining that “dogs are used more frequently for mere presence and intimidation” than for
    other uses) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    3   As one commentator observed:
    Dogs were used to attack Native Americans and to chase down runaway slaves.
    During the Civil War, dogs were used to intimidate and injure African-
    American soldiers fighting for the North. Following Pearl Harbor, dogs were
    used to intimidate Japanese Americans residing in Hawaii. In more modern
    times, police dogs have been used for crowd control, even on nonviolent civil
    rights demonstrators.
    Leslie A. Lunney, Has the Fourth Amendment Gone to the Dogs?: Unreasonable Expansion of
    the Canine Sniff Doctrine to Include Sniffs of the Home, 88 OR. L. REV. 829, 882 (2009).
    28
    Case: 14-30476       Document: 00513410139        Page: 29     Date Filed: 03/08/2016
    No. 14-30476
    utilize dogs for a multitude of purposes, other than drug detection, including
    tracking, apprehending, and immobilizing suspects. See Jarrett v. Town of
    Yarmouth, 
    331 F.3d 140
    , 143 (1st Cir. 2003) (discussing the use of the “bite and
    hold” technique that apprehension dogs utilize in which the dog “will bite and
    maintain his hold upon a suspect until the handler orders him to let go” and
    may result in a “struggling suspect being bitten several times if the dog loses
    his grip and is forced to re-establish his hold”). 4 This history and current
    practice necessarily shape our “societal understanding” about “the measure of
    the government’s intrusion,” 
    Cuevas-Sanchez, 821 F.2d at 251
    , and supports
    the common sense conclusion that the use of a drug detection dog in this
    context constitutes a search. See 
    Smith, 978 F.2d at 177
    (“[A]ny consideration
    . . . about the privacy expectations” in a particular context includes an
    examination of the role the activity “play[s] in today’s society.”); see also 
    Terry, 392 U.S. at 17
    n.14 (“[T]he degree of community resentment aroused by
    particular practices is clearly relevant to an assessment of the quality of the
    intrusion upon reasonable expectations of personal security . . . .”).
    IV.
    The majority holds that “[a] dog sniff is typically not a search; it may be
    conducted even when a detention is not drug-related so long as it does not
    unreasonably prolong the detention.” I disagree with the majority’s
    generalization.
    Despite what the majority says about exigent circumstances, a decision
    by the district court to deny the motion to suppress would be erroneous because
    4It is common for police dogs to be cross-trained for both drug detection and suspect
    apprehension. Lunney, supra note 3, at 835 n.20 (citing Deborah Palman, U.S. Police Canine
    Ass’n, K9 Options for Law Enforcement, http://www.uspcak9.com/2015/06/22/k9-options-for-
    law-enforcement/ (last visited Nov. 9, 2015)).
    29
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    No. 14-30476
    it would be tied, at least in part, to a finding that the use of the drug detection
    dog was lawful. 5 Here, the vehicle at issue was parked in a private driveway.
    The police responded to a report that Beene brandished a weapon and he was
    arrested for the crime of resisting arrest. The dog used by the police was not a
    weapon detection dog or a “resisting arrest” dog―it was a drug detection dog. 6
    The drug detection dog could not possibly have been searching for evidence of
    the crime that Beene reportedly committed. See generally Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 353 (2009) (Scalia, J. concurring) (“I would hold that a vehicle search
    incident to arrest is ipso facto ‘reasonable” only when the object of the search
    is evidence of the crime for which the arrest was made, or of another crime that
    the officer has probable cause to believe occurred.”); see also Andresen v.
    Maryland, 
    427 U.S. 463
    , 480 (1976) (noting the particularity requirement and
    that “general warrants . . . are prohibited by the Fourth Amendment”). Before
    using the dog, the police recognized that they had no basis to search the vehicle
    and asked for permission. The use of the drug detection dog constituted an
    illegal search.
    “The decision to characterize an action as a search is in essence a
    conclusion about whether the fourth amendment applies at all.” 
    Horton, 690 F.2d at 476
    . The holding in this case that the government’s use of a drug
    detection dog is not a search provides the government with unfettered
    authority to do as it pleases in this context without any reasonable constraints.
    See 
    id. Arguably, based
    on the logic of this holding, the government may
    5The majority states that “[i]f exigent circumstances were present in this case, these
    taken together with the probable cause created by the exterior dog sniff of Beene’s vehicle,
    would justify the interior search of his vehicle.”
    6The majority states that “[i]n this case, the crime of arrest was resisting arrest.
    Beene’s vehicle would not contain evidence of that crime.”
    30
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    No. 14-30476
    indiscriminately sweep residential driveways and yards, and potentially the
    common areas of multi-dwelling residences, unrestrained by any need to justify
    their actions on the basis of facts or particularized suspicion. A free society
    should not be subject to such an expansive intrusion upon the basic rights of
    privacy and security individuals enjoy under the constitution. The Fourth
    Amendment’s fundamental protection is “that in certain places and at certain
    times [an individual] has the right to be let alone.” Winston v. Lee, 
    470 U.S. 753
    , 758 (1985) (internal quotations omitted). Under these facts, that right
    should not be compromised.
    31
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-30476

Citation Numbers: 818 F.3d 157

Filed Date: 3/8/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (63)

Jerome Jarrett v. Town of Yarmouth, Gerard Britt, Cheryl ... , 331 F.3d 140 ( 2003 )

United States v. Oscar Arboleda , 633 F.2d 985 ( 1980 )

United States v. Conrad Whitehead, Ii, United States of ... , 849 F.2d 849 ( 1988 )

United States v. Fields , 456 F.3d 519 ( 2006 )

United States v. David T. Lace, Roger R. Ducharme, Gary D. ... , 669 F.2d 46 ( 1982 )

United States v. Matthew Bellina, Daniel David Hochroth, ... , 665 F.2d 1335 ( 1981 )

Mack v. City of Abilene , 461 F.3d 547 ( 2006 )

United States v. Gomez , 276 F.3d 694 ( 2001 )

United States v. Gerald Leon Pruett , 551 F.2d 1365 ( 1977 )

United States v. Kelly , 302 F.3d 291 ( 2002 )

United States v. Jesus Fernando Cuevas-Sanchez , 821 F.2d 248 ( 1987 )

United States v. Zavala , 541 F.3d 562 ( 2008 )

United States v. Hearn , 563 F.3d 95 ( 2009 )

Club Retro, L.L.C. v. Hilton , 568 F.3d 181 ( 2009 )

Darlie Kee Darin Routier v. City of Rowlett Texas Jimmy Ray ... , 247 F.3d 206 ( 2001 )

Darrell Eugene Carlton, 166802 v. W. J. Estelle, Director, ... , 480 F.2d 759 ( 1973 )

Hyburnia Husband v. Charles Bryan and Larry Saurage , 946 F.2d 27 ( 1991 )

United States v. Tomas Vente Sinisterra , 77 F.3d 101 ( 1996 )

robert-horton-as-next-friend-of-robby-horton-heather-horton-and-sandra , 690 F.2d 470 ( 1982 )

United States v. Earnest Jackson, Jr., and James Arthur ... , 588 F.2d 1046 ( 1979 )

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