Appeals Court Says Border Patrol Dog Is Capable Of Detecting The Difference Between Legal And Illegal Humans

from the improbable-cause dept

Law enforcement will always get more than a fair shake from the Fifth Circuit. No circuit is more apt to award immunity or otherwise refuse to punish officers for coloring outside of the constitutional lines. And that apparently includes officers’ dogs, who probably enjoy a fair shake as much as anyone. Who’s a good boy?!? Who’s a good boy?!?

Not this dog. Not so much. But it’s not really the dog’s fault. The dog does what it’s told and does what’s needed to secure both its toy and probable cause for its handlers.

The defendant, Buzzy Martinez, was arrested at US Border Patrol (USBP) checkpoint and charged with illegally transporting undocumented aliens after a search of his tractor-trailer. The search was instigated by a USBP drug/human dog named Bak.

Here’s the court’s description of Bak’s CV. From the decision [PDF]:

Bak is a canine trained and certified to detect concealed humans and controlled substances. Bak responds to contraband in two ways: (1) he may “alert,” which refers to the canine’s immediate response to stimulus, including respiratory and posture changes as well as more aggressive signals, after having identified something he has been trained to detect; and (2) he may “indicate,” which is a more passive response the canine is trained to perform when the canine has found the source of what it has detected—which, in Bak’s case, is sitting. After successfully indicating contraband, Bak is rewarded with a toy. Bak went through his initial training process with a different handler. After four successful certifications with that handler, Bak was paired with Agent Compton. Agent Compton then trained with Bak for fifteen days, and the team passed certification on July 21, 2022, two days before the events underlying this case.

As the court sees it, the dog was properly trained and alerted to the presence of contraband — in this case, human beings. Martinez argued the evidence should be suppressed as the result of an unjustified search. After all, a dog that’s trained to detect human beings can’t be expected to determine whether or not they’re “illegal” human beings.

The trial court disagreed, taking as fact the assertions of Bak’s handler that the dog had alerted twice on the cab of the truck where the undocumented immigrants were found. Furthermore, it declared the USBP dog training program to be “sound” and therefore any indication made by Bak was at the very least reasonable suspicion to extend a stop or initiate a search.

On appeal, Martinez relied on the same argument: a dog trained to detect humans can’t tell whether they’re illegal or not just by smelling them. But the Fifth Circuit spins that argument against him. Martinez conceded the dog may be able to detect illegal drugs. And, for that reason alone, the Border Patrol officers were justified in engaging in a search.

As for illegal/non-illegal human argument, the court decides it’s a non-issue. And even if it was, it would have sided with the government because… well, dogs have been trained to detect humans in other circumstances and that usually goes alright. It agrees with the lower court, which had this to say about the issue:

The district court found Martinez’s argument that dogs cannot differentiate between the scents of different concealed humans to be speculative and noted the ability of rescue dogs to find people buried under rubble and to work around the obvious or other people engaged in the search and rescue operation. The court also noted Bak can go weeks without an alert, controverting Martinez’s argument that Bak is alerting to the smell of the drivers or responding to cues. The court examined the standards of USBP’s training program and noted USBP has been training canines to detect concealed humans for nearly forty years with reliable results in testing.

But that ignores the central argument: that a dog trained to detect things that are often legal should not be relied on as a source of information as to whether anything illegal has been detected. That’s the issue facing cops and their dogs all over the nation as marijuana legalization has become a regular thing. A dog trained to smell a substance that is legal (whether it’s weed or humans) will “alert” or “indicate” even when nothing illegal is present. And because it’s capable of “alerting” on legal substances (or humans), an alert alone cannot be considered reasonable suspicion to extend a stop or probable cause to engage in a warrantless search.

Unfortunately, this is how the issue is resolved now in this circuit. And while it’s less than ideal, at least it isn’t the dumbest thing border agents have said about their dogs’ magical ability to detect illegal humans.

That would be this:

Agent Miranda testified that Boeli is trained to detect concealed people in different scenarios including inside a moving vehicle. Agent Miranda testified that Boeli can “distinguish cars with people in them from cars with concealed people in them.”

Fortunately, that argument was laughed out of court by the federal judge handling the case. That happened in California, though, so it has no bearing on this case in the Fifth Circuit, which handles Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi.

So, the ability of USBP dogs to clearly define the difference between legal and illegal humans is still accepted as fact in this appellate jurisdiction. Perhaps another case will bubble up that raises the question a bit better or is at least better received by the trial court before the Fifth handles it. As it stands now, the odor of potentially legal humans is still justification enough for a warrantless search.

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Comments on “Appeals Court Says Border Patrol Dog Is Capable Of Detecting The Difference Between Legal And Illegal Humans”

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Anonymous Coward says:

In this case, I’d have to side with the government — the dog has obviously been trained to detect concealed humans. Concealed humans at a border are illegal humans, because you have to announce yourself at a border crossing.

Of course, it’d be useful to know exactly what the dog was trained to do — was it trained to smell how many distinct humans were nearby and compare that to the number it could see? Was it trained to listen for telltale signs of hiding mammals? Was it trained to smell certain smells that are associated with a Mexican diet? Was it trained to smell fear or the stale sweat of someone cooped up in a small space for an extended period?

Depending on that training, there may be an issue or no issue. The dog obviously hasn’t been trained to identify whether specific humans are complying with the law, but there are a number of things the dog could be legitimately or illegitimately trained to alert and indicate on.

So I’d argue that in this circumstance, the dog could very well have understood enough context to be able to distinguish between legitimate humans at a border stop and undeclared humans (hence illegal) at a border stop, that’s at least worthy of a further search.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

Concealed humans at a border are illegal humans

Two things:

  1. If even one born-and-raised American is found to be concealed in a vehicle at the border, your argument is undone in an instant.
  2. A human being isn’t “illegal”, no matter how much one might wish otherwise as a means to justify actions that would almost certainly be illegal.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

If even one born-and-raised American is found to be concealed in a vehicle at the border, your argument is undone in an instant.

I believe OC (original commenter) was referring to 19 USC 1459. It is possible for a US citizen to enter the US unlawfully. Remaining concealed in a vehicle and not presenting themselves for inspection is one way to do so. Therefore, if the dog “alerts” to say “there’s still a person in this vehicle,” that could be probable cause for a search.

Anonymous Coward says:

Next up: border patrol claims dogs can detect airborne people

“Yep, ol’ Bak there sniffed up at the air, and we saw us a Cessna flyin’ north, so we knew it was them thar’ illegals [1] and put out the red alert for Jim Bob to chase ’em down with the HumVee that we bought last year with DHS money. ‘Course Jim Bob forgot that HumVee’s can’t fly and wrecked it in a ditch off highway 29, but we’re sure Bak was right.”

[1] As every plausibly-educated person knows, there is no such thing as “an illegal human being”. This is a construct of bigots, racists, xenophobes, and other assholes.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

there is no such thing as “an illegal human being”

You are, of course, right. However, the term is usually shorthand for “a human being, who has entered (or remained in) the country illegally”.

The phrasing of the short version is certainly pejorative and implies something untrue. Do you have a suggestion for a replacement? Perhaps “WOP”?

James Burkhardt says:

Re: Re:

While normally i am sympathetic to the argument, the op didn’t use a phrase like illegal migrant, where activists insistence on overly cumbersome language to avoid suggesting the person themselves is illegal is in contrast to the plain read of someone who has migrated illegally.

In this case, op used illegal human, indicating their status as human is illegal, when read with the same interpretation that makes the phrase illegal migrant innocent. It frankly feels intentional.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Part of the problem with this terminology is that it presumes everyone entering a country via any means other than what is considered “normal” has committed an illegal act. But (depending on the country, depending on what country they’re coming, depending on the person, etc.) there are all kinds of exceptions. That’s why deciding whether what they’ve done is legal or illegal is the province of the courts. (And yes, I know, that doesn’t work nearly as well in the US as we’d like it to.)

A second problem is that even the court decides that person X has, in fact, entered the US illegally, that does NOT make them an “illegal person”. We don’t call bank robbers or murderers “illegal persons” — and with good reason: they’re not. The reason the term “illegal person” is unfortunately in common use is racism and xenophobia, and the people using it know EXACTLY what they’re doing: they’re promoting hate.

Which is incredibly ironic given that every person in the US who is not Native is an immigrant, and for centuries the overwhelming majority of those people entered the US in exactly the same way as the people they’d now call “illegal”. (Of course a minority of other people entered the US involuntarily.)

This bigotry and hatred isn’t new, unfortunately; and of course Fox News and the GOP and others cheerlead for it all day every day, because they rely on their base of racist white assholes. But I would hope everyone who is even modestly educated about American history would recognize this as just the latest iteration of what happened to the Irish, and the Chinese, and and and. It was bullshit then and it’s bullshit now.

That One Guy (profile) says:

What's good for the goose should be good for the gander

Every judge and government employee who either made or agreed with the idea that dogs are capable of differentiating the smell of a person by their legal status should be required to be run through a double-blind test where the dog in question is presented with a collection of clothing items, with at least one piece of clothing from each human involved mixed in.

Any ‘alerts’ would result in the immediate revocation of citizenship and deportation to the nearest border of whoever owned the clothing in question, since clearly they’re in the country illegally by their own argument.

Strangely enough were it their ability to stay in the country on the line I suspect that they wouldn’t be quite so willing to give the dog’s nose such credit for sniffing out the legal status of someone.

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