[00:00:00] Speaker 02: May it please the court? [00:00:01] Speaker 02: Scott Quinlan for the appellant. [00:00:06] Speaker 02: I'd like to reserve, if I may, five minutes for rebuttal. [00:00:11] Speaker 02: This case presents three main issues with several sub-issues. [00:00:18] Speaker 02: The first one is the motion to suppress. [00:00:23] Speaker 02: We've always contended that [00:00:26] Speaker 02: It was the possessory interest in the package which was interfered with and down below the government appeared to argue alternatively but the main one was that it was the privacy interest and that's not what we were claiming. [00:00:52] Speaker 02: Ms. [00:00:52] Speaker 02: Garza mailed the package [00:00:54] Speaker 02: On January 27th, it was to be guaranteed two-day delivery to Las Cruces, New Mexico. [00:01:04] Speaker 02: And they were going to get their money back if it was not delivered timely. [00:01:12] Speaker 02: On the evening of the 27th, [00:01:15] Speaker 02: In the course of the wiretap, the case agent had got additional information, giving him probable cause to seize the package. [00:01:25] Speaker 02: He had additional information that it contained contraband. [00:01:29] Speaker 02: The next day, he had the postal investigator locate the package. [00:01:35] Speaker 02: It was found [00:01:36] Speaker 02: in Texas on its way. [00:01:39] Speaker 02: I guess they have a clearinghouse there in Texas. [00:01:43] Speaker 03: Well, Council, I think we know the facts fairly well. [00:01:46] Speaker 03: I guess what is interesting, at least from my perspective, is what's the law on this? [00:01:51] Speaker 03: Because we have [00:01:52] Speaker 03: As the Fourth Amendment comes down, you know, the question focuses on reasonable and we have court interpretations of what reasonable are. [00:02:01] Speaker 03: Why do you think they support this as not reasonable? [00:02:04] Speaker 03: I mean, is your position that as soon as that was supposed to be delivered, if there's any delay beyond that, that it then violates the Fourth Amendment? [00:02:13] Speaker 02: No, my position is that they should not have moved the package from Texas [00:02:22] Speaker 02: to Fresno. [00:02:24] Speaker 02: They should have, at the time the package was in Texas, applied for a warrant in Texas. [00:02:31] Speaker 02: It was going to go to New Mexico. [00:02:33] Speaker 03: But what's your case law that supports that? [00:02:37] Speaker 03: Because, I mean, if they have reasonable suspicion, why can't... Okay. [00:02:42] Speaker 02: It's not reasonable suspicion. [00:02:44] Speaker 02: This is not an investigatory detention. [00:02:47] Speaker 02: It's probable cause. [00:02:48] Speaker 03: So your point is they asked for it to be sent back to California before they got the arrest warrant. [00:02:56] Speaker 02: Before they even applied for one. [00:02:57] Speaker 03: Right. [00:02:59] Speaker 00: So it depends on when probable cause was established and you believe it was established when they heard the phone call. [00:03:08] Speaker 00: Is that right? [00:03:10] Speaker 02: Yes. [00:03:11] Speaker 02: In fact, they state that they had probable cause at that time. [00:03:17] Speaker 02: And in the [00:03:19] Speaker 02: government's opposition, they expressly represented to the trial court in opposition to the motion. [00:03:27] Speaker 02: The only issue for the court to decide is whether the government's one-day delay, including the rerouting of the parcel back to Fresno, unlawfully interfered with Garza's Fourth Amendment privacy interest. [00:03:41] Speaker 02: And they acknowledged [00:03:49] Speaker 02: that they had probable cause. [00:03:56] Speaker 02: In the affidavit in support of the warrant in Fresno, the agent acknowledges that he had probable cause, says, [00:04:18] Speaker 02: After listening to the wiretap at 9 18 p.m. [00:04:22] Speaker 02: This is at 3 er 440 He says based on my training and experience conversations with other experienced narcotics investigators and knowledge of this investigation I believe the above-mentioned conversations involved JR and Garza sending the parcel with narcotics with narcotics to UM 9 who's the Las Cruces, New Mexico person and so [00:04:48] Speaker 03: I guess I'm just trying to understand what the through line is on the cases here, because it seems to me that the cases established in the Fourth Amendment context, if there's undue delay or the government sitting on their hands, that's a Fourth Amendment violation. [00:05:06] Speaker 03: How do you think that was met here? [00:05:08] Speaker 03: Because it seems to me that they moved fairly quickly. [00:05:11] Speaker 03: I mean, within three days total, didn't they? [00:05:14] Speaker 03: Yes. [00:05:16] Speaker 02: But if they have probable cause, they have to apply for a warrant unless there's an exigent circumstance that excuses that. [00:05:26] Speaker 02: Under US v. LaCada, the court says that if they have probable cause and they don't apply for a warrant and there's no exigent circumstances, then that's a violation. [00:05:39] Speaker 03: So you are, I just want to be clear, you are not relying on the argument that the three days [00:05:45] Speaker 03: was too long between when the package was, well, it was really only one day between when the package was supposed to be delivered and it was ultimately seized. [00:05:59] Speaker 03: You are saying they didn't apply for a warrant on the first day of that three-day period. [00:06:05] Speaker 03: They did it on the second day of that three-day period. [00:06:09] Speaker 02: I'm saying when they located it in Texas, which was the [00:06:13] Speaker 02: the day after it was mailed. [00:06:15] Speaker 02: It had probable cause on the evening of the day it was mailed. [00:06:20] Speaker 02: When they located it, they should have then applied for a warrant to seize it or search it. [00:06:27] Speaker 02: But they did not. [00:06:28] Speaker 02: They exercised dominion and control over the package. [00:06:34] Speaker 02: By requesting it to be sent back to California. [00:06:39] Speaker 02: By directing it. [00:06:39] Speaker 02: Yeah. [00:06:39] Speaker 02: Yes, exactly. [00:06:43] Speaker 02: The case law allows them to hold the package while they apply for a warrant, but that would have been in Texas. [00:06:52] Speaker 02: Alternatively, they could have allowed the package to proceed to Las Cruces, New Mexico and had a warrant waiting for them there under Rule 41. [00:07:01] Speaker 02: And under the en banc case, USV Cold, I forget what the site is. [00:07:11] Speaker 02: I've cited it in here. [00:07:15] Speaker 03: But so it didn't get I'm sorry. [00:07:18] Speaker 03: Did you have a question? [00:07:20] Speaker 00: Well, I would just ask you it looks like you're saying that the warrant should have been applied for on Friday A probable cause as soon as soon as they located it They should have applied for the warrant and that was that was Friday. [00:07:38] Speaker 00: Yes, Friday. [00:07:39] Speaker 00: Okay so then [00:07:44] Speaker 02: And by exercising dominion and control over the package against the interests of my client, her interests having it sent on to Las Cruces, New Mexico, it's not going to get there at all because they've exercised dominion and control and they're sending it back to Fresno. [00:08:01] Speaker 02: So it lands back in Fresno on the day that it's guaranteed delivery [00:08:06] Speaker 03: Can you address the Gill case? [00:08:09] Speaker 03: Because I thought in Gill, correct me if I'm wrong, that there was a six-day period where there was no warrant but a detention of the package of the material. [00:08:27] Speaker 03: So why wouldn't Gill suggest that this is reasonable where it's only, I mean, at this point, we're only talking about one or two days before the warrant is actually applied for. [00:08:39] Speaker 03: Right. [00:08:41] Speaker 02: In Gill, my recollection is it's an investigative detention case. [00:08:47] Speaker 02: And so here you just think there's no... Oh, no, they had probable cause when they went looking for the package to seize it. [00:08:57] Speaker 00: You're talking about Gill? [00:08:58] Speaker 02: No, no, in my case. [00:09:00] Speaker 00: In your case. [00:09:00] Speaker 02: In Gill, it was an investigatory detention case. [00:09:03] Speaker 00: So you're saying that that delay had to, that delay was caused by they still didn't have probable cause. [00:09:12] Speaker 00: They were still investigating. [00:09:13] Speaker 02: Yes, and that's all the case laws pretty uniform on that. [00:09:17] Speaker 02: You know, if you're investigating it and it's a reasonable investigation, you're making reasonable efforts, then that [00:09:24] Speaker 02: That's fine. [00:09:25] Speaker 02: You can detain it while you're investigating it. [00:09:28] Speaker 02: But that's not what happened in this case. [00:09:32] Speaker 02: They had probable cause, they found it, and they should have applied for a warrant then. [00:09:37] Speaker 02: And instead, by exercising dominion and control over it, by shipping it back to Fresno, that was an illegal seizure. [00:09:49] Speaker 02: The second issue, if I may, [00:09:53] Speaker 02: is related to that is that my client was arrested solely on the contents of that package. [00:10:05] Speaker 03: On this issue, doesn't it just rise or fall with your argument on the first issue? [00:10:14] Speaker 02: Yes. [00:10:15] Speaker 03: I mean, that's what I wondered. [00:10:16] Speaker 03: I didn't know if you had any additional arguments. [00:10:18] Speaker 03: It seems to me these rise or fall together. [00:10:21] Speaker 02: I agree. [00:10:22] Speaker 03: OK. [00:10:25] Speaker 02: The deliberate indifference instruction, which is another issue that I've raised, I think, and I, in my points to authorities in support of... You said deliberate indifference. [00:10:44] Speaker 03: You're talking about deliberate ignorance. [00:10:45] Speaker 02: Pardon me. [00:10:46] Speaker 02: Yeah, that's fine. [00:10:46] Speaker 02: I just want to make sure. [00:10:47] Speaker 02: I make that mistake all the time. [00:10:49] Speaker 02: I'm sorry. [00:10:52] Speaker 02: I think that the instruction, if it was going to be given, [00:10:55] Speaker 02: that should have tracked USV Al-Sharari, which is a district court case, where it says, you may find that the defendant acted with the requisite knowledge as to the nature of the substances for either count one or two if you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant believed that there was a high probability that the substances were regulated by federal drug abuse laws and that he took deliberate actions to avoid learning that fact. [00:11:23] Speaker 02: I think that would have summed it up. [00:11:25] Speaker 02: in a nutshell. [00:11:26] Speaker 02: What happened in this case is that my client mails the package. [00:11:35] Speaker 02: After she mails the package, when she gets back in the car with JR, she asks him what was in it, or the subject comes up because he tells her that it had pills in it. [00:11:50] Speaker 02: It never had pills in it. [00:11:54] Speaker 02: And so [00:11:57] Speaker 02: If deliberate indifference were to apply to that situation, it should be whether or not she had sufficient knowledge to believe that the package contained a federally controlled. [00:12:13] Speaker 03: Isn't that basically what the instruction said? [00:12:15] Speaker 02: That's instruction number 17. [00:12:17] Speaker 03: No, but I think what my point is the argument you're making is basically what the instruction said. [00:12:23] Speaker 03: I mean the instruction said if you find enough evidence that you must find that defendant acted knowingly and then it says first the defendant was You can do this if the first the defendant was aware of a high probability that drugs were in the package Why doesn't that address the concern that you were just outlining? [00:12:45] Speaker 02: Because she has stated, and the government put into evidence, that she didn't know what was in the pills. [00:12:54] Speaker 02: And so to say that she was aware of a high probability that drugs were in the package does not reach the question of whether or not she was aware that the package contained a federally controlled substance. [00:13:09] Speaker 03: But then it goes on to say, second, the defendant deliberately avoided learning the truth. [00:13:13] Speaker 03: So that's a requirement. [00:13:15] Speaker 03: And then it also says you may not find such knowledge if you find that the defendant actually believed that no drugs were in the package. [00:13:24] Speaker 03: True. [00:13:24] Speaker 03: So why does I don't understand why that doesn't solve the problem that you're I mean, you're right. [00:13:29] Speaker 03: We can't just impute knowledge that isn't there, but we also can't allow a defendant to actually know. [00:13:37] Speaker 03: But, you know, but not. [00:13:42] Speaker 03: Right, but but intentionally not now. [00:13:45] Speaker 02: In order to apply this instruction, the defendant has to deliberately, on her own, avoid finding out the facts. [00:13:58] Speaker 02: And in this case, she was lied to about the facts by JR. [00:14:04] Speaker 02: And so the deliberate indifference instructions shouldn't apply in that instance. [00:14:09] Speaker 00: It doesn't, it seems to me there's enough circumstantial evidence that she knew what was going on when she said we can't be doing this to her cousin or brother, I guess it was her cousin, you know. [00:14:24] Speaker 00: So it was really, in my view, up to the jury to decide whether her statements [00:14:33] Speaker 00: were sufficient to meet the instruction. [00:14:37] Speaker 00: And if the instruction is compliant with the law, then I don't agree with you, shall we say. [00:14:52] Speaker 02: And then the second issue that I raised on this instruction was that I didn't think it should apply to the conspiracy count. [00:15:01] Speaker 02: And it was. [00:15:05] Speaker 02: I submit that by saying that the defendant acted knowingly... Counsel, your time's out. [00:15:14] Speaker 03: I'll give you some time for rebuttal if you need. [00:15:17] Speaker 02: Okay, thank you very much. [00:15:17] Speaker 03: Yeah, thank you. [00:15:30] Speaker 01: Good morning, Your Honors. [00:15:30] Speaker 01: May it please the court, Justin Giglio for the United States. [00:15:34] Speaker 01: Your Honors, I'd like to start with Judge Nelson's question early on, that you want to understand the through line of the cases that deal with seizures of an item in the mail stream. [00:15:47] Speaker 01: And this court has a rule that it applies to those cases. [00:15:51] Speaker 01: That developed early on in Aldaz in 1990, and it goes all the way through Jefferson [00:15:57] Speaker 01: in 2009. [00:15:58] Speaker 01: And the rule is that a person who tenders a package to the mail stream gives up their possessory interest except for their limited interest in timely delivery of the package. [00:16:11] Speaker 01: That rule makes sense because when they hand the package to the mail stream, the package is going to be handled by many people. [00:16:17] Speaker 01: It's going to be shipped in all different sorts of places. [00:16:20] Speaker 01: Just like in this case, it was going from Fresno, California [00:16:23] Speaker 01: to New Mexico, but it went to Texas out of the way. [00:16:25] Speaker 01: It went past New Mexico on the way. [00:16:27] Speaker 01: And so an individual doesn't have the same possessory interest in a package that they would, for example, in a bag they're carrying with them. [00:16:35] Speaker 03: Okay. [00:16:35] Speaker 03: So that, that makes sense to me, but at the end of the day, there still is this claim that they didn't seek a search warrant. [00:16:43] Speaker 03: Remind me in Gill, in Gill was, there was no, it was an, is that the difference that there was an investigatory search in Gill? [00:16:52] Speaker 01: Your honor, there, [00:16:54] Speaker 01: So in Gill, there was an investigatory detention. [00:16:56] Speaker 01: There was a reasonable suspicion detention. [00:16:58] Speaker 01: I'm sorry. [00:16:59] Speaker 03: I said search, but obviously I meant detention. [00:17:01] Speaker 03: Yeah. [00:17:01] Speaker 01: For a period of time, there was, your honor, an investigatory detention. [00:17:04] Speaker 01: I believe that package was initially detained in California. [00:17:10] Speaker 01: It was to go to Seattle. [00:17:13] Speaker 01: And so it was detained in California. [00:17:14] Speaker 01: And the court found that the brief detention in California [00:17:18] Speaker 01: was supported by reasonable suspicion. [00:17:21] Speaker 01: And then it was sent, it was redirected, instead of going to the recipient in Seattle, it went to another post office for further investigation and detention in Seattle. [00:17:30] Speaker 01: And I believe there was a drug dog sniff at some point there. [00:17:35] Speaker 01: There was, like Your Honor said, a five or six day period from when it was supposed to be delivered to when the search warrant was obtained. [00:17:43] Speaker 01: At a certain point, reasonable suspicion developed into probable cause. [00:17:47] Speaker 01: And then it was further detained under probable cause until a warrant was obtained. [00:17:52] Speaker 01: And that's what we have. [00:17:53] Speaker 03: Do we know in Gill, because that seems to be their argument here, is that at some point [00:18:02] Speaker 03: before it was redirected, reasonable suspicion had turned into probable cause, and then you delayed getting the search warrant. [00:18:09] Speaker 03: So I'm wondering what the analogy is in Gill. [00:18:12] Speaker 03: If at some point reasonable suspicion turned into probable cause, can we delineate that from the six-day period in Gill? [00:18:20] Speaker 01: I don't remember now, Your Honor, on what day the drug dog sniff was, but there would have been a period when [00:18:28] Speaker 01: reasonable suspicion. [00:18:29] Speaker 01: And it happens in every case when reasonable suspicion develops into probable cause. [00:18:33] Speaker 01: And what our case law, what the Ninth Circuit case law says in the Lozano case, which we cite in our brief, 623, F3, 1055, that case deals with initial detention on reasonable suspicion is the case law supports that initial detention. [00:18:49] Speaker 01: And then continued detention, once you develop probable cause, is supported [00:18:54] Speaker 01: the agents could continue to detain a package because some time is needed once you develop probable cause to apply for, write a search warrant, apply for a search warrant. [00:19:03] Speaker 00: But doesn't it, don't the facts here just show that the government agents and the, they wanted to go back to Fresno because for their convenience it was a better place to get the warrant. [00:19:17] Speaker 00: Was there any other reason that they delayed? [00:19:21] Speaker 01: Your Honor, yes, there is another reason for the rerouting to Fresno, and that was they were trying to act reasonably to get the warrant as quickly as possible. [00:19:31] Speaker 01: Special Agent Varela was the affiant on the warrant, and he submitted a declaration in support of the government's opposition to the defendant's motion to suppress. [00:19:40] Speaker 00: Isn't that speculation, how long it would have taken to get a warrant in Las Cruces or Texas, I guess it would be? [00:19:48] Speaker 01: Two points on that, Your Honor. [00:19:49] Speaker 01: I don't believe it was speculation, because the agent testified, based on his training and experience in getting out of district search warrants, that it takes time. [00:19:57] Speaker 01: And he explained why. [00:19:58] Speaker 01: The AUSA, in this case, myself, was familiar with the case, could review the warrant quickly and get it to a judge quickly. [00:20:04] Speaker 01: This was happening on a Friday and Saturday. [00:20:06] Speaker 01: The warrant was applied on a Saturday. [00:20:08] Speaker 01: In another district, he knew, the agent asserted, that we'd have to find another assistant US attorney out there, [00:20:16] Speaker 01: Perhaps another agent to both review the search warrant and get a judge in the other district to sign the warrant. [00:20:22] Speaker 01: Reviewing a search warrant takes more time when you're not familiar with the facts of the case. [00:20:27] Speaker 01: And so I'll put all that aside. [00:20:29] Speaker 01: There is evidence in the record, uncontested evidence, that this was the more reasonable route. [00:20:34] Speaker 01: But the court doesn't have to find that. [00:20:36] Speaker 01: And the district court didn't find that because the touchstone is reasonableness, objective reasonableness. [00:20:41] Speaker 01: And so the court could say that the agents here acted objectively reasonably, whether they would have held the package in another district or sent it back to Fresno, the locus of the investigation, either could have been reasonable approaches. [00:20:56] Speaker 01: And the question really for the court, though, [00:20:58] Speaker 01: isn't the new rule that the defendant is asking for here. [00:21:01] Speaker 01: They're asking the court to apply a new rule that the court should judge a detention based on the actions of agents and the location of where the detention occurs, as opposed to the duration of the detention. [00:21:14] Speaker 01: The case law in the Ninth Circuit in this court holds that because the interest is in timely delivery, the analysis for the court is the duration [00:21:25] Speaker 01: of the detention from when the package was supposed to be delivered to when the warrant was obtained. [00:21:31] Speaker 03: And in this case- And your position is that reasonable suspicion versus probable cause in obtaining the search warrant is not relevant or is just a factor that is relevant in that overall time period? [00:21:46] Speaker 01: Your Honor, probable cause is a greater level of suspicion. [00:21:49] Speaker 01: The government has a greater interest [00:21:52] Speaker 01: in being able to detain and hold that package if they had probable cause as opposed to reasonable suspicion earlier on. [00:21:59] Speaker 01: That's the district court declined to adopt a new rule that's unfounded in case law that if agents have probable cause, then they had to apply for a warrant immediately in the district where the package is. [00:22:13] Speaker 01: There's no Ninth Circuit case law for that proposition. [00:22:16] Speaker 03: Well, I guess I agree with [00:22:18] Speaker 03: I think you're right. [00:22:20] Speaker 03: There's no Ninth Circuit case left for that. [00:22:22] Speaker 03: But it does seem to me that, I mean, it maybe doesn't matter in this case. [00:22:27] Speaker 03: But once there is, I mean, when there's reasonable suspicion, you can't go get a search warrant. [00:22:33] Speaker 03: When there's probable cause, you can. [00:22:36] Speaker 03: So it is an odd situation where it would be odd to penalize them for not getting a search warrant when they can. [00:22:45] Speaker 03: But once they could get it, [00:22:47] Speaker 03: then you assume that you're going to go to a judge. [00:22:50] Speaker 03: Here, it was only a day. [00:22:52] Speaker 03: I mean, that's what I still strike. [00:22:54] Speaker 03: That's why I just don't think this is the case to flesh this out. [00:22:57] Speaker 01: Your Honor, I'd make two points on that. [00:23:00] Speaker 01: And the first is that the district court did not find, like the government asserted and like the defense asserts, that there was probable cause when the package was rerouted. [00:23:09] Speaker 01: The district court at 1 ER 73, [00:23:15] Speaker 01: held that there was reasonable suspicion at the time of the rerouting of the package, that actually the agent didn't yet have probable cause. [00:23:23] Speaker 01: And it was over the course of the next day when he did some further investigation, including looking into mailing records from Fresno to the address that this package was being sent to. [00:23:35] Speaker 01: The search warrant included some additional facts, like other packages that had been mailed to that location, and that eventually he got to probable cause. [00:23:44] Speaker 00: in the search warrant because the application was... When did he get the probable cause? [00:23:48] Speaker 00: It wasn't Thursday when they overheard the phone call? [00:23:51] Speaker 01: The district court did not find that, that it was when they overheard the phone call. [00:23:56] Speaker 01: The district court found that by Saturday afternoon when the government submitted the affidavit to the judge, which is also the same time when the package was set to be delivered, the warrant was submitted at the same time. [00:24:10] Speaker 01: The package arrived in Fresno on Saturday and [00:24:13] Speaker 01: by Saturday afternoon when it was scheduled to be delivered, a warrant had been submitted then on a Saturday to the judge. [00:24:19] Speaker 01: And so the district court found that by that time probable cause existed, but not necessarily at the time that the package was rerouted. [00:24:28] Speaker 01: I think that that analysis is not necessary. [00:24:31] Speaker 01: The court can note that in this case, this isn't the situation that you're referring to, Judge Nelson, where there is a finding of probable cause at the time of the rerouting so that the record [00:24:42] Speaker 01: doesn't bind the court in that way. [00:24:45] Speaker 01: But more importantly, though, the bigger issue is that the detention that Miss Garza's possessory interest in timely delivery of the package didn't arise until Saturday afternoon. [00:24:59] Speaker 01: And the warrant was obtained on Sunday morning at 10 AM. [00:25:02] Speaker 01: And this is on a weekend. [00:25:03] Speaker 01: And the warrant had been submitted by the time her possessory interest arose. [00:25:08] Speaker 01: And so ultimately, the rerouting of the package, the analysis for the court was where the actions of the government was the time period that it took the government reasonable. [00:25:20] Speaker 01: And in this case, it's less than 24 hours. [00:25:23] Speaker 00: I have another question for you that's related here. [00:25:28] Speaker 00: Why should the possessory interest of the sender be tied to timely delivery? [00:25:35] Speaker 00: That is, how do you reconcile [00:25:38] Speaker 00: sender cases like Van Leeuwen and Das, I guess it is, being decided without any reference to timely delivery. [00:25:47] Speaker 01: Yes, Your Honor. [00:25:48] Speaker 01: So two answers to that. [00:25:50] Speaker 01: Number one, the rule is, there's a through rule in both the sender cases and in the recipient cases. [00:25:59] Speaker 01: That rule, so the Gill Court, [00:26:01] Speaker 01: was a sender. [00:26:02] Speaker 01: The Gill case was a sender case. [00:26:04] Speaker 01: The England case was a sender case. [00:26:06] Speaker 01: Both of those cases list the same rule, that timely delivery of the package is the only interest that a person has in the package. [00:26:15] Speaker 01: And in Gill, the government didn't argue. [00:26:19] Speaker 01: So in Gill, when the reasonable suspicion occurred when the postal employee pulled the package out of the mail in California and then sends it to Seattle, [00:26:28] Speaker 01: The court looked at whether there was reasonable suspicion at the time the postal employee, which was 10 minutes after the package was delivered to the postal employee, he pulls it out of the mail stream. [00:26:37] Speaker 01: And the court went into analysis of whether there was reasonable suspicion at that time. [00:26:42] Speaker 01: But there's an important footnote there, where the court says the government didn't argue that it didn't need reasonable suspicion at that time. [00:26:49] Speaker 01: So we're not going to address that. [00:26:51] Speaker 01: Instead, we're going to assume that the government did. [00:26:55] Speaker 01: And Judge Gould, in his concurrence, [00:26:58] Speaker 01: takes that point on and says it's clear the government doesn't need reasonable suspicion at that time, before the delivery time. [00:27:06] Speaker 01: And Judge Gould's concurrence is picked up later in a recipient case, but saying that that is the rule. [00:27:14] Speaker 01: The Jefferson case in 2009 cites to Judge Gould's position, I believe the [00:27:22] Speaker 01: The Hong case also cites to that, that that is clearly the rule. [00:27:27] Speaker 01: And that rule is cited in recipient cases and in sender cases. [00:27:31] Speaker 01: And so I think that this court's precedent is clear that the interest is the same, that it's in timely delivery. [00:27:37] Speaker 01: And I think that rule makes sense, because when a person tenders a package to the mail stream, they no longer have possession of it. [00:27:44] Speaker 01: And so the only interest left, other than secrecy of its contents, which is not violated here, is in that timely delivery. [00:27:52] Speaker 01: That's all they have left is they believe that package was going to be delivered at a particular time. [00:28:01] Speaker 01: And Your Honors, I'd like to turn quickly to deliberate ignorance and two points to make there. [00:28:07] Speaker 01: First is the form of the instruction. [00:28:10] Speaker 01: My friend on the other side mentions this district court case that had a different form instruction here the court applied the Ninth Circuit's model instruction and what's important is all the cases cited by the defendant in asking for a modification of that instruction are all analog cases where the issue of [00:28:31] Speaker 01: The contested issue was everyone agrees we're shipping drugs of some sort, but the fight instead is over, is it federally controlled substances or are these legal substances? [00:28:44] Speaker 01: That fight didn't exist in this case. [00:28:47] Speaker 01: And that district court found that in rejecting the modification to the deliberate ignorance instruction. [00:28:55] Speaker 01: Here, the fight was over whether she was mailing innocent items. [00:29:00] Speaker 01: shoes, and the defense's cross-examination of the agents and the closing makes that point clear. [00:29:06] Speaker 01: And the only hook that the defendant cites to make this a fight over whether it's a federally controlled substance is on cross-examination of a DEA chemist. [00:29:19] Speaker 01: The defense elicited testimony that the chemist had on occasion, rare occasion, tested an M30 pill that [00:29:27] Speaker 01: They usually contain fentanyl that didn't contain fentanyl. [00:29:29] Speaker 01: But that abstract piece of testimony didn't make that a material issue in the case. [00:29:36] Speaker 01: The district court found that the substances at issue here, M30 pills, which contain fentanyl, cocaine, and methamphetamine, that there was no fight over whether, if persons knew they were mailing those items, whether they were federally controlled or not. [00:29:54] Speaker 01: The idea that the model instruction would have to be changed just based on the chance that in some cases fake drugs could be found, that could be elicited in any drug case. [00:30:06] Speaker 01: The model was modeled right off the model with one change, package instead of drugs in a car. [00:30:11] Speaker 01: That was the only change to that instruction. [00:30:14] Speaker 01: And I see that my time is running out. [00:30:15] Speaker 01: And so I would ask the court to affirm the decision of the district court [00:30:21] Speaker 01: I have a few more seconds if there's any other questions the court has. [00:30:26] Speaker 03: I think so. [00:30:26] Speaker 03: Thank you. [00:30:27] Speaker 03: We'll give you one minute for rebuttal. [00:30:36] Speaker 02: The government expressly represented to the trial court in its response at 3ER 420 and 421 because the government had probable cause when it seized and redirected the [00:30:51] Speaker 02: parcel back to the investigating district. [00:30:54] Speaker 02: And because the government acted reasonably and diligently in obtaining the one-day delay, Garza's motion should be denied. [00:31:01] Speaker 02: They've admitted, and they've always admitted down below, that at the time the package was seized, they have probable cause. [00:31:09] Speaker 02: I've cited previously to the court, United States v. La Cota, which stands for [00:31:17] Speaker 02: Holding a package without an exigency upon probable cause and without applying for a warrant violates the Fourth Amendment. [00:31:25] Speaker 02: That's Ninth Circuit case. [00:31:27] Speaker 02: And then the en banc case that I couldn't find earlier, Korngold v. United States, that discussed the mailing of an express package, shipping it. [00:31:44] Speaker 02: But it was the same analysis as to exigent circumstances. [00:31:48] Speaker 02: And there, they said, there was nothing to prevent the agents from securing a warrant on a proper showing, either before the package was shipped from Los Angeles or after they arrived in New York. [00:31:59] Speaker 02: And that's what I'm saying. [00:32:01] Speaker 02: They could have applied for a warrant under Rule 41 in Texas, or they could have applied for one in New Mexico where it was going to be. [00:32:09] Speaker 03: Thank you. [00:32:10] Speaker 03: Thank you. [00:32:10] Speaker 03: Thank you to both counsel for your arguments in the case. [00:32:14] Speaker 03: is now submitted.