Court Opinion

ID: 9366233
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-01-26 15:04:02.730841+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:15:50.873625
License: Public Domain

Case: 21-30085        Document: 00516429212             Page: 1      Date Filed: 08/11/2022

               United States Court of Appeals
                    for the Fifth Circuit                                       United States Court of Appeals
                                                                                         Fifth Circuit

                                                                                       FILED
                                                                                 August 11, 2022
                                       No. 21-30085                               Lyle W. Cayce
                                                                                       Clerk

   United States of America,

                                                                     Plaintiff—Appellee,

                                            versus

   Alfonzo Johnlouis,

                                                                 Defendant—Appellant.

                    Appeal from the United States District Court
                       for the Western District of Louisiana
                             USDC No. 6:18-CR-185-2

   Before Barksdale, Stewart, and Dennis, Circuit Judges.
   Carl E. Stewart, Circuit Judge:
           This case presents a novel question involving two provisions within
   the United States Constitution: the United States Postal Service and the
   Fourth Amendment. 1 Alfonzo Johnlouis moved to suppress narcotics
   evidence that the Government seized after a letter carrier’s thumb slipped

           1
            In 1789, the states ratified the Constitution with a clause giving Congress the
   power “To establish Post Offices and post Roads” and “To make all Laws which shall be
   necessary and proper” for administering, inter alia, the agency. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8.
   Two years later, they ratified the Fourth Amendment as part of the Bill of Rights. Id.
   amend. IV.
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                                         No. 21-30085

   through a hole in a package, initiating an allegedly illegal search. According
   to Johnlouis, the Fourth Amendment per se applies to letter carriers because
   they are government actors subject to its warrant requirement. According to
   the Government, this letter carrier was not a government actor to whom the
   Fourth Amendment applies, and her inspection of the package did not fall
   within its purview. The district court agreed with the Government and
   denied Johnlouis’s motion. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.
              I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
          On November 3, 2017, United States Postal Service (“USPS”) letter
   carrier Jasia Girard was delivering mail in Lafayette, Louisiana. As she was
   picking up a package for delivery to 109 Hogan Drive, her thumb slipped
   through a preexisting hole. After feeling a “plastic bag” containing “little
   balls” she thought to be marijuana, Girard removed her thumb and decided
   she would not deliver the package because she did not feel comfortable
   leaving it “with all those kids around there.” She then looked through the
   hole and observed what appeared to be “aluminum pans with a little Ziploc
   bag.” At this point, Girard lifted a previously torn flap of the package to
   better assess what was inside and saw hard white rocks. Upon researching
   “hard white rock substance” on the internet with her phone, she determined
   that these rocks were probably methamphetamine.
          According to Girard, she was “freaked out” and felt morally obligated
   not to deliver the package on account of the children in the area as well as her
   experience with a relative’s methamphetamine addiction. Instead of leaving
   it with her supervisor or contacting the Postal Inspection Service—USPS’s
   law enforcement arm—Girard brought this package and two others
   addressed to 109 Hogan Drive to the property manager, Billie Love. 2 She

          2
              109 Hogan Drive is one of a series of houses with a common property manager.

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   informed Love that she believed the packages contained methamphetamine
   and suggested that Love may want to call the police. Girard then left but was
   later contacted by Special Agent Douglas Herman of the Federal Bureau of
   Investigation to whom she relayed what had happened. As a letter carrier, she
   received no law enforcement training, and aside from the instant incident,
   she had never interacted with law enforcement during her employment with
   USPS.
           Lafayette police officer Brandon Lemelle responded to Love’s call and
   met with her at the property manager’s office. Love relayed to Lemelle what
   Girard had told her about the discovery of the suspected methamphetamine.
   Lemelle also spoke with Herman, who arrived five to ten minutes after him
   and informed Lemelle that 109 Hogan Drive was a suspected
   methamphetamine stash house. A K-9 officer sniffed the three packages and
   “hit,” leading Lemelle to believe that they contained narcotics and that he
   had probable cause for a search warrant that a state judge approved.
   Execution of the search warrant uncovered a combined eighteen pounds of
   methamphetamine. In an interview with officers, the owner of the residence
   stated that Alfonzo Johnlouis had informed her the packages would arrive at
   her address.
           Johnlouis was indicted for (1) conspiracy to distribute and possess
   with intent to distribute methamphetamine, and (2) attempted possession of
   a controlled substance with intent to distribute. He subsequently filed a
   motion to suppress, arguing that the narcotics evidence had been seized in
   violation of the Fourth Amendment following an illegal search of a parcel by
   a USPS letter carrier. A magistrate judge conducted an evidentiary hearing
   at which the relevant testimony was adduced.
           Adopting the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, the
   district court denied Johnlouis’s motion. It determined that despite her
   position as a USPS letter carrier, Girard did not carry out law enforcement

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   action within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment; as such, it did not
   apply to her inspection of the package and the contents were not subject to
   suppression. In the alternative, the district court held that even if Girard did
   carry out law enforcement action within the meaning of the Fourth
   Amendment, such action did not rise to the level of misconduct warranting
   application of the exclusionary rule. Next, it determined that Lemelle’s
   subsequent search of the package pursuant to a warrant was done in good
   faith and that the contents would have inevitably been discovered. Finally,
   the district court reasoned that Herman’s statement to Lemelle that 109
   Hogan Drive was a suspected stash house provided independent probable
   cause for the search of the package after the K-9 officer hit on it.
          Johnlouis ultimately pled guilty to the conspiracy count, and the
   attempt count was dismissed pursuant to the terms of his plea agreement.
   The district court sentenced him within the guidelines range to 120 months
   of imprisonment, followed by five years of supervised release. Johnlouis
   reserved his right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress.
                           II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
          On appeal from a denial of a motion to suppress evidence, this court
   reviews “the district court’s findings of fact for clear error and its
   conclusions of law de novo.” United States v. Lopez-Moreno, 420 F.3d 420,
   429 (5th Cir. 2005). We may affirm the ruling “on any basis established by
   the record,” United States v. Ibarra-Sanchez, 199 F.3d 753, 758 (5th Cir.
   1999), and should do so “if there is any reasonable view of the evidence to
   support it.” United States v. Michelletti, 13 F.3d 838, 841 (5th Cir. 1994) (en
   banc) (citations omitted).
                                III. DISCUSSION
          The threshold question in this case is whether the Fourth Amendment
   applies to Girard, a USPS letter carrier. This court must decide whether she

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   was a government actor to whom the Fourth Amendment applies at the time
   she peered into the hole and lifted the flap of the package at 109 Hogan
   Drive. 3 Although it is evident that Girard was an employee of the federal
   government, the parties dispute whether this fact alone has Fourth
   Amendment implications.
                                    A. Applicable Law
           The Fourth Amendment protects the “right of the people to be secure
   in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches
   and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. “[O]fficial intrusion into that
   private sphere generally qualifies as a search and requires a warrant
   supported by probable cause.” Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206,
   2213 (2018). “Letters and other sealed packages are in the general class of
   effects in which the public at large has a legitimate expectation of privacy;
   warrantless searches of such effects are presumptively unreasonable.”
   United States v. Jacobsen, 466 U.S. 109, 114 (1984).
           Federal     courts    have     “consistently      construed     [the    Fourth
   Amendment] as proscribing only governmental action; it is wholly
   inapplicable ‘to a search or seizure, even an unreasonable one, effected by a
   private individual not acting as an agent of the [g]overnment or with the
   participation or knowledge of any governmental official.’” Id. at 113 (quoting
   Walter v. United States, 447 U.S. 649, 662 (1980) (Blackmun, J., dissenting)).
   “[T]he arrival of police on the scene to confirm the presence of contraband

           3
            The Government does not specifically dispute that Girard’s actions constituted a
   search. According to the Government, whether Girard in fact searched the package “need
   not be resolved, for . . . that conduct was not subject to the protections of the Fourth
   Amendment.” Because the Government does not dispute that Girard in fact searched the
   package—that is, “examine[d] [it] by inspection,” Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27, 32
   n.1 (2001) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)—we assume that a search
   occurred.

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   and to determine what to do with it does not convert [a] private search into a
   government search subject to the Fourth Amendment.” United States v.
   Villarreal, 963 F.2d 770, 774 (5th Cir. 1992) (quoting Illinois v. Andreas,
   463 U.S. 765, 769 n.2 (1983)).
                                     B. Analysis
          Notably, this court’s precedents assessing the constitutionality of
   searches by USPS employees have involved searches by members of the
   Postal Inspection Service, not letter carriers. See, e.g., United States v.
   Osunegbu, 822 F.2d 472, 474–75, 477–80 (5th Cir. 1987); United States v.
   King, 517 F.2d 350, 351–55 (5th Cir. 1975); see generally 39 C.F.R. § 233.1(a)
   (describing postal inspectors’ investigative and arrest powers). However,
   neither party cites any authority discussing whether a person falls within the
   ambit of the Fourth Amendment merely by dint of their being a USPS
   employee. And like the district court, we are “not aware of any case finding
   that suppression is justified based upon the acts of a letter carrier without any
   intervening act by a postal inspector or other law enforcement officer[.]”
          Moreover, the cases cited by the parties in support of their arguments
   do not offer a definitive answer. United States v. Van Leeuwen and Ex parte
   Jackson, for instance, place within the scope of the Fourth Amendment
   searches conducted by “postal authorities” and “officials connected with
   the postal service,” respectively. 397 U.S. 249, 251 (1970); 96 U.S. 727, 733
   (1877). Yet neither explores the scope of those terms nor casts any light on
   whether a letter carrier qualifies as an “authority” or “official.” Indeed, Van
   Leeuwen—despite containing the above language that the district court, in
   any event, found to be dicta—is not a case about USPS employees at all; a
   USPS employee first alerted police to a suspicious package, but the issue in
   that case was whether a customs agent violated the Fourth Amendment by
   detaining the package while awaiting a warrant to search it. 397 U.S. at 250–
   53.

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          However, although there does not appear to be any authority that
   expressly endorses Johnlouis’s per se approach, there are several cases that
   suggest being a government employee does not make one a government actor
   for Fourth Amendment purposes. Each requires something more—namely,
   a connection to law enforcement.
          Consider Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 532 U.S. 67 (2001). In this
   case, public hospital staff conducted urine tests of obstetrics patients who
   were subsequently arrested after testing positive for cocaine and who brought
   successful Fourth Amendment claims. The Supreme Court concluded that
   the “members of [the state hospital] staff [were] government actors, subject
   to the strictures of the Fourth Amendment.” Id. at 76. However, in doing so,
   the Court repeatedly emphasized that these staff members were carrying out
   the tests “for law enforcement purposes,” that it was “law enforcement
   officials who helped develop and enforce the policy,” and that there was
   “extensive involvement of law enforcement officials at every stage.” Id.
   at 69, 73, 84. Crucially, Girard’s role as a letter carrier did not involve law
   enforcement duties, she received no law enforcement training, and she never
   interacted with law enforcement during her employment with USPS outside
   of this incident.
          Meanwhile, the cases Johnlouis cites from sister circuits undermine
   his argument because they too underscore the primacy of law enforcement
   ties in the Fourth Amendment context. See United States v. Ackerman,
   831 F.3d 1292 (10th Cir. 2016); Oliver v. United States, 239 F.2d 818 (8th Cir.
   1957). In Ackerman, the Tenth Circuit held that the National Center for
   Missing and Exploited Children was a government actor for the purposes of
   the Fourth Amendment because Congress imbued it with “many unique law
   enforcement powers.” 831 F.3d at 1298; see generally id. at 1295–1300. And
   in Oliver, the Eighth Circuit held that postal employees required a warrant to
   inspect first-class mail, but the letter carrier who intercepted the suspicious

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   package “had been serving also as an undercover agent for the Bureau of
   Narcotics.” 4 239 F.2d at 820; see generally id. at 820–23.
           Of course, we have “never limited the [Fourth] Amendment’s
   prohibition on unreasonable searches and seizures to operations conducted
   by the police.” New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. 325, 335 (1985). “[W]e have
   held the Fourth Amendment applicable to the activities of civil as well as
   criminal authorities,” including building inspectors, 5 firefighters, 6 teachers, 7
   healthcare workers, 8 and, yes, even USPS employees. 9 Id. After all, “[t]he
   basic purpose of this Amendment . . . is to safeguard the privacy and security
   of individuals against arbitrary invasions by governmental officials.” Camara
   v. Mun. Ct. of City & Cnty. of S.F., 387 U.S. 523, 528 (1967). “Because the
   individual’s interest in privacy and personal security suffers whether the
   government’s motivation is to investigate violations of criminal laws or
   breaches of other statutory or regulatory standards, it would be anomalous to
   say that the individual and his private property are fully protected by
   the Fourth Amendment only when [he] is suspected of criminal behavior.”
   New Jersey, 469 U.S. at 335 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

           4
              It should be noted that Oliver is silent as to who actually performed the search.
   See Oliver, 239 F.2d at 820 (stating only that “the package was opened and inspected” after
   the letter carrier alerted the USPS superintendent).
           5
            See New Jersey, 469 U.S. at 335 (citing Camara v. Mun. Ct. of City & Cnty. of S.F.,
   387 U.S. 523, 528 (1967)).
           6
               See id. (citing Michigan v. Tyler, 436 U.S. 499, 506 (1978)).
           7
               See id. at 341.
           8
               See Ferguson, 532 U.S. at 76.
           9
             See, e.g., Osunegbu, 822 F.2d at 480; see also United States v. Jones, 833 F. App’x
   528, 537–38 (5th Cir. 2020) (per curiam) (holding that seizure of packages by a contractor
   hired by the Postal Inspection Service did not violate the Fourth Amendment because the
   seizure was based on reasonable suspicion).

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          But the building inspectors, firefighters, teachers, healthcare workers,
   and USPS employees that courts have identified as government actors to
   whom the Fourth Amendment applies were all carrying out law enforcement
   functions. The same cannot be said of Girard. Surely her inspection of the
   package addressed to 109 Hogan Drive does not resemble the “arbitrary
   invasions by government officials” that the Fourth Amendment was ratified
   to protect against. It was not even motivated by a desire to investigate a legal
   violation. The record reflects that Girard’s thumb slipped through a hole in
   a package, and that she inspected this package after feeling its contents
   because of her concern for children and her experience with a relative. She
   was not inspecting the package to enforce law. We therefore hold that the
   Fourth Amendment does not per se apply to Girard. As such, we offer a
   narrow holding tailored to the peculiar facts of this case and the particular
   activities of individual government actors. Here, despite working for an
   agency that employs inspectors who undertake law enforcement activities,
   Girard is not one of them. Notwithstanding that she works for the
   government, she is not a government actor to whom the Fourth Amendment
   applies.
          Ordinarily, this resolution would not dispose of Johnlouis’s Fourth
   Amendment claim because he could argue that Girard was a private person
   acting in the capacity of a government agent by searching the package with
   the knowledge of, or in order to assist, law enforcement. See United States v.
   Pierce, 893 F.2d 669, 673 (5th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 506 U.S. 1007 (1992).
   Where a search is conducted by someone other than “an agent of the
   government,” this court has held that it still violates the Fourth Amendment
   if (1) “the government knew of and acquiesced in the intrusive conduct” and
   (2) “the party performing the search intended to assist law enforcement
   efforts or to further his own ends.” Id. But Johnlouis explicitly disclaims any
   such alternative argument, calling the district court’s characterization of the
   inspection as a private citizen search “legal error.” He maintains that “the

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   letter carrier is a government employee/actor” who “cannot search a
   Priority Mail, First Class Mail (sealed mail), without a search warrant” even
   though “none of her job duties entail law enforcement duties.” Johnlouis has
   thus abandoned any argument that the Fourth Amendment applies to Girard
   outside of his contention that her employment by USPS per se renders her
   subject to the Fourth Amendment. See United States v. Charles, 469 F.3d 402,
   408 (5th Cir. 2006).
           Accordingly, because the Fourth Amendment does not per se apply to
   Girard, the district court correctly concluded that she did not perform an
   unconstitutional warrantless search of a package that could justify the
   suppression of evidence. We therefore do not reach Johnlouis’s arguments
   with respect to the exclusionary rule, the good faith exception, and the
   inevitable discovery and fruit of the poisonous tree doctrines. 10
                                   IV. CONCLUSION
           For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
   AFFIRMED.

           10
              Although the special concurrence raises an alternative basis for affirmance, the
   independent source doctrine was never mentioned in the magistrate judge’s report and
   recommendation, the district court judgment adopting it, and the briefs and oral argument
   on appeal. “We see no principled basis for addressing [an issue not presented by either
   side] here.” Rollins v. Home Depot USA, 8 F.4th 393, 398 (5th Cir. 2021).

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   James L. Dennis, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
           “We may affirm the district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress
   based on any rationale supported by the record.” United States v. Ganzer,
   922 F.3d 579, 583 (5th Cir. 2019) (cleaned up). Unlike the majority, I would
   assume without deciding that the Fourth Amendment applies to a USPS
   letter carrier like Ms. Girard who searched a package (and did research on
   what she observed) that she was delivering in the scope and course of her
   official duties, but would affirm the district court on the alternate ground that
   the independent source doctrine renders the exclusionary rule inapplicable
   even if Girard’s warrantless search violated the Fourth Amendment. Thus,
   I concur in the judgment only.
           As the majority notes, our court has previously held that a search by a
   member of the Postal Inspection Service, the law enforcement arm of the
   USPS, must comply with the Fourth Amendment’s strictures. United States
   v. Osunegbu, 822 F.2d 472, 474, 477–80 (5th Cir. 1987). But I’ve been unable
   to find a published precedent involving a USPS letter carrier (not a postal
   inspector). In distinguishing a letter carrier from a postal inspector for
   purposes of the Fourth Amendment, I am concerned that the majority’s
   “connection to law enforcement” test may prove unworkable for district
   courts and could lead to confusion rather than clarity in our case law. 1 We
   should leave resolution of this question—whether there is a difference
   between a postal inspector and a letter carrier for Fourth Amendment

           1
             For example, application of the majority’s test, in my view, actually leads to the
   conclusion that the Fourth Amendment applies to Girard. By Girard’s own admission, her
   search of the package was motivated by a suspicion that it contained illegal drugs, and not
   only did she look inside the package, but she then investigated what she saw by doing an
   internet search on her phone to confirm her suspicions.

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   purposes—for another case, because this case can be resolved on firmer
   grounds.
           Whether the Fourth Amendment applies and is violated in a given
   case does not end the inquiry; if the search is unconstitutional, there is still
   the matter of whether the fruits of the search should be suppressed pursuant
   to the exclusionary rule. See Herring v. United States, 555 U.S. 135, 138
   (2009) (“[S]uppression is not an automatic consequence of a Fourth
   Amendment violation.”). In this case, I would hold that exclusion is not
   warranted, even if Girard’s search violated the Fourth Amendment, because
   an independent source furnished legal grounds to admit the evidence.
           In preparing to deliver a package addressed to 109 Hogan Drive, the
   letter carrier’s thumb accidentally slipped into a pre-existing hole in the
   package, and she felt what she thought was marijuana. 2                       She then
   manipulated the flap to look into the box and saw what she thought looked
   like hard white rocks. 3 She did an internet search on her phone for “hard
   white rock substance” and concluded that the package contained
   methamphetamines. She then delivered the package to a private party, the
   property manager of the Madeline Place housing complex, which includes
   109 Hogan Drive, and told the manager about her suspicion that the package
   contained methamphetamines, even though suspicious packages are
   supposed to be returned to the postal inspector per USPS policy. See USPS,
   § 169.2, Reporting Postal Offenses, Postal Operations Manual (POM Issue 9,
   July 2002); USPS, § 223.5, Suspected Narcotics, Administrative Support
   Manual (ASM 13, July 1999). The property manager then called the police.

           2
              The district court did not find, and Johnlouis does not contend on appeal, that
   this slip of Girard’s thumb constituted a “search.”
           3
              The Government does not seriously dispute that Girard’s actions in lifting the
   flap of the package to get a look at its concealed contents constituted a “search.”

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   The police in turn obtained a valid search warrant based on independently-
   developed probable cause, most significantly from a positive “hit” by a drug-
   detection dog.
          The district court, assuming arguendo that the Fourth Amendment
   was violated, ruled in the alternative that the evidence should not be
   suppressed because the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary
   rule applied. The district court reasoned that the result would have been the
   same if Girard had turned over the package to the postal inspector, as postal
   regulations instructed, because the postal inspector would have likely
   obtained a search warrant based on a drug-detection dog sniff or contacted
   the police.    I agree with the district court’s alternative ruling that an
   exception to the exclusionary rule applies, though I believe the closely-related
   independent source exception rather than the inevitable discovery exception
   is a better fit for the facts of the case.
          Our court has suggested that the two doctrines are closely related and
   may even overlap in some cases. United States v. Grosenheider, 200 F.3d 321,
   328 n.8 (5th Cir. 2000) (characterizing “the two doctrines” as “two sides of
   the same coin” because “inevitable discovery is no more than ‘an
   extrapolation’ of the independent source doctrine” (quoting Murray v.
   United States, 487 U.S. 533, 539 (1988)). The independent source doctrine
   was first referenced by Justice Holmes, writing for the Court in Silverthorne
   Lumber Company v. United States, 251 U.S. 385 (1920). In Silverthorne,
   Justice Holmes explained that “knowledge gained by the Government’s own
   wrong cannot be used by it” to later obtain the same knowledge by legal
   means, but that “this does not mean that the facts thus obtained become
   sacred and inaccessible.” Id. at 392. Instead, the exclusionary rule would not
   apply if the same knowledge is “gained from an independent source.” Id. at

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   392. The doctrine was developed further in Segura v. United States, 468 U.S.
   796 (1984), and Murray v. United States, 487 U.S. 533 (1988).
           Justice Brennan, dissenting in Nix v. Williams and joined by Justice
   Marshall, explained that “[w]hen properly applied, the ‘independent source’
   exception allows the prosecution to use evidence only if it was, in fact,
   obtained by fully lawful means.             It therefore does no violence to the
   constitutional protections that the exclusionary rule is meant to enforce.”
   467 U.S. 431, 459 (Brennan, J., dissenting). “The ‘inevitable discovery’
   exception is likewise compatible with the Constitution, though it differs in
   one key respect from its next of kin: specifically, the evidence sought to be
   introduced at trial has not actually been obtained from an independent
   source, but rather would have been discovered as a matter of course if
   independent investigations were allowed to proceed.” Id. 4
           Citing the inevitable discovery doctrine, the district court found that
   “the result would have been the same”—meaning the drugs would have been
   discovered—if Girard “had complied with USPS procedures by returning
   the packages to the post office” without illegally searching the package by
   manipulating its cardboard flap to peer into the pre-existing hole. The court
   reasoned that, had Girard turned over the package to the postal inspector
   “based on her initial, accidental discovery”—meaning the inadvertent
   insertion of her thumb into the pre-existing hole in the package when Girard
   felt what she thought were balls of marijuana wrapped in plastic between two
   sheet pans—then the inspector would have likely obtained a search warrant

           4
              As the Third Circuit explained, “[t]he independent source and inevitable
   discovery doctrines . . . differ in that the former focuses on what actually happened and the
   latter considers what would have happened in the absence of the initial search.” United
   States v. Herrold, 962 F.2d 1131, 1140 (3d Cir. 1992).

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   in the same manner as Officer Lemelle and the drugs would have been
   discovered.
          The district court’s inevitable discovery analysis relied on, or
   extrapolated from, Girard’s testimony—repeated both on direct examination
   and on cross—that she decided to deliver the package to the property
   manager, Billie Love, because of her concern that it contained drugs after her
   thumb went into the package but before she manipulated the flap to gain a
   view of the contents:
                           On direct examination
          Q. At that moment when you pulled out your thumb, what if
          anything did you intend to do?
          A. Not deliver that package, to bring it --
          Q. Why not?
          ...
          A. Oh. I was going to bring it to the office manager.
                           On cross-examination
          Q. Okay. Well, I just want to know one thing. When you are
          there looking at this box and you decided in your mind that it’s
          not good stuff. It’s something that appears to you, based upon
          your research, to be drugs. Why didn’t you call your
          supervisor?
          A. I don’t know. I freaked out. I was not delivering the box.
          Once I put my thumb in it and felt what appeared to be drugs,
          I wasn’t delivering it to the door.
          At the end of the suppression hearing, the district court stated that it
   found Girard to be credible. In applying the inevitable discovery doctrine to
   these facts, however, I think that the district court took a more complicated
   route than necessary, imagining a hypothetical road-not-taken (inevitable
   discovery) instead of analyzing what actually happened to determine whether

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   Officer Lemelle’s application for a search warrant that led to the
   methamphetamines was in fact a result of Girard’s search (independent
   source).
          “Under the ‘independent source’ exception to the exclusionary rule,
   the government must make two showings in order for a lawful search
   pursuant to a warrant to be deemed ‘genuinely independent’ of a prior illegal
   search: (1) that the police would still have sought a warrant in the absence of
   the illegal search; and (2) that the warrant would still have been issued (i.e.,
   that there would still have been probable cause to support the warrant) if the
   supporting affidavit had not contained information stemming from the illegal
   search.” United States v. Runyan, 290 F.3d 223, 234 (5th Cir. 2002) (citation
   omitted) (quoting Murray, 487 U.S. at 542).
          Though unpublished, our decision in United States v. Newton provides
   a helpful illustration of the doctrine. In Newton, a police officer responding
   to a call about drug sales at an apartment complex smelled marijuana
   emanating from a specific apartment and then peered through a gap in the
   apartment’s closed window blinds, at which point he saw Newton handling
   bags of marijuana. 463 F. App’x 462, 465–66 (5th Cir. 2012). When officers
   knocked on the door, Newton fled in a car, but was later found and arrested
   while running on foot. Id. at 466. Officers obtained a search warrant and
   searched the apartment. Newton moved to suppress the drugs because the
   search warrant affidavit included the fact that an officer observed Newton
   handling marijuana. Id. at 465.
          Our court, assuming that the officer violated the Fourth Amendment
   by peeking through the window, held that suppression of the evidence was
   not required because of the independent source doctrine. Even when the
   tainted information was removed from the affidavit, the remaining facts—
   particularly, the odor of marijuana—provided probable cause for a search

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                                    No. 21-30085

   warrant of the apartment for drugs. Id. at466. The same is true in this case.
   Even when the tainted information—here, Girard’s observation of the
   methamphetamines—is removed from the affidavit, the remaining facts in
   the affidavit provided probable cause for a search warrant for the packages.
          As to the first part of the test, whether Officer Lemelle would have
   sought a warrant in the absence of Girard’s search, the record supports the
   conclusion that the answer is yes. Had Girard delivered the package to Love
   and told her that she thought the package contained marijuana, there is no
   reason to think that Love would not have called Officer Lemelle or that he
   would not have investigated the suspicious package and sought a search
   warrant. Put another way, Girard’s unlawful visual inspection of the interior
   of the package only provided the additional information that Girard thought
   the package contained one illegal drug—methamphetamines—instead of
   another illegal drug—marijuana. It is just as likely Officer Lemelle would
   have responded with the K-9 no matter what kind of illegal drugs he thought
   were suspected to be in the package. Lemelle testified that he drove to the
   location with a K-9 because it was “normal” to dispatch a K-9 when
   responding to a call about a suspicious package. He also testified that,
   pursuant to department rules, he is required “to at least get a K-9 alert” when
   seeking a search warrant for a postal package.
          As to the second part of the test, whether there would have been
   probable cause for the warrant absent the information gleaned from Girard’s
   visual interior search, based on our precedent the answer is also yes. Without
   relying on Girard’s visual interior search, but relying only on her alerting the
   police to a suspicious package based only on her accidental thumb feel, under
   our precedent there was still sufficient support for probable cause to issue a
   search warrant because a certified police K-9 conducted a drug-detection
   sniff and alerted to the presence of drugs in the packages. See United States
   v. Ned, 637 F.3d 562, 567 (5th Cir. 2011) (“We have repeatedly affirmed that

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   an alert by a drug-detecting dog provides probable cause to search.”) (citing
   Resendiz v. Miller, 203 F.3d 902, 903 (5th Cir. 2002) (holding that a “drug-
   sniffing canine alert is sufficient, standing alone, to support probable cause
   for a search”)).
                                  *        *         *
          Because the record supports affirming the district court’s denial of the
   motion to suppress on an independent source rationale, I concur in the
   judgment on that ground.

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