The Wyoming Supreme Court has upheld a lower court's conviction of two men caught hauling 320 pounds of marijuana on the Interstate after a state trooper sped to catch the men because their vehicle looked too big for just two people.Â
The Wyoming Supreme Court has rejected an argument that a state trooper stopped two men as they drove 320 pounds of marijuana through the state because the men are Hispanic and that the judge overseeing the menâs case disregarded the Wyoming Constitution. Â
Albany County District Court Judge Misha E. Westby sentenced Hector Zapien-Galvan and Cristian M. Ramirez both to probation, with the threat of prison time if they fail their probation, after Wyoming state troopers caught the men with 320 pounds of marijuana on March 20, 2022. Â
Wyoming Highway Patrol Trooper Cody Tippy was parked on the median of I-80 that day with another trooper in the passenger seat, according to a summary in a Friday opinion by the Wyoming Supreme Court. Â
Tippy saw two men in a white Ford Expedition with out-of-state license plates driving eastbound at the proper speed limit. Â
Tippy pulled onto I-80 to catch up to the vehicle, and sped up to about 120 miles per hour as he did so. Â
He was trying to investigate possible drug activity, he later testified in court. His hunch was based on the size of the vehicle. Â
âItâs an oversize rental,â Tippy said in court, according to the opinion. âSo if thereâs only two people in a vehicle, then they donât need to be renting out, like, a Ford Expedition.â Â
Tippy admitted, however, that he didnât know the vehicle was a rental until after the stop. Â
Under The BlanketsÂ
Tippy caught up to the Expedition, noticed its license plateâs registration had expired and performed a traffic stop. Â
Ramirez produced a California driverâs license. Galvan had a Mexico consular identification card. Â Â
Tippy noticed a gray blanket covering large items in the back of the Expedition, the document says. Â
Tippy asked the men questions about the car, the rental agreement (which they couldnât produce), where they were traveling and how they knew each other. Â
Another trooper brought a drug-detection dog, Becky, to sniff the car. Â
Becky alerted around the rear door seam by the cargo area, so police searched. They found large vacuum-sealed bags containing 320.6 pounds of marijuana under the blankets. Â
The Speeding ThoughÂ
The two men at first pleaded ânot guiltyâ to drug possession and intent to deliver charges. They asked the Albany County District Court to suppress the evidence against them and claimed that Tippyâs initial stop was not reasonable because he exceeded the speed limit to catch up to them without having first observed a crime. Â
The district court reviewed the menâs request under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution because the menâs brief said that the Wyoming and U.S. Constitutions âagreeâ on reasonable standards for searches and seizures, according to the opinion. Â
But after the district court denied their motion to suppress evidence and ultimately oversaw their change to guilty pleas and their sentencing, the men appealed to the Wyoming Supreme Court. They claimed the district court judge didnât pay enough attention to the Wyoming Constitutionâs protections against unreasonable searches and seizures. Â
But Donât Cause A CrimeÂ
The high court found that the district court did not mishandle the case, because the defendants themselves did not assert the Wyoming Constitutionâs protections as distinct from the federal Fourth Amendment. Â
The justices also looked at a 2022 case, Levenson vs. Wyoming, in which it had found a trooper violated a driverâs right against search and seizure by chasing after the driver, congesting traffic on the interstate, then stopping the driver for tailgating. Â
âUnjustified actions which âprovokeâ a traffic violation may, under the totality of the circumstances, invalidate the probable cause supporting a traffic stop,â reads the opinion. Â
But in Ramirez and Galvanâs case, Tippy didnât cause the expired license registration for which he stopped them. Â
Racial ProfilingÂ
But Ramirez raised a new controversy before the state Supreme Court: He claimed Tippy sped after he and Galvan because theyâre Hispanic. Â
Ramirezâs appeal alleged that Tippy âgave absolutely no feasible explanation why he thought it so suspicious that two middle-age, Hispanic males would be in a Ford Expedition with out-of-state plates that he needed to investigate.â Â
Ramirez drew attention to Tippy having pulled up next to the men to look at them before running the expired plates through the law enforcement database. Â
The Supreme Court wouldnât grapple with this debate at all because Ramirez didnât raise it at the district court level and the high court doesnât hash out fresh issues during appeals. Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




