Question
Read United States v. Dorais, Answer the questions below - UnitedStatesCourtofAppeals, Ninth Circuit. UNITEDSTATES ofAmerica,Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Denis DORAIS, Defendant-Appellant. UnitedStates ofAmerica,Plaintiff-Appellee, v. LaurieGomes, Defendant-Appellant. Nos.
Read United States v. Dorais, Answer the questions below -
UnitedStatesCourtofAppeals, Ninth Circuit.
UNITEDSTATESofAmerica,Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
DenisDORAIS,Defendant-Appellant.
UnitedStatesofAmerica,Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
LaurieGomes, Defendant-Appellant.
Nos. 99-10091, 99-10267.
Argued andSubmittedJan.12, 2001
Filed March1, 2001
Defendants were convicted of possessing methamphetamine with intent to distribute, following entry of conditional guilty pleas in the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii,Helen Gillmor, J. Defendants appealed. The Court of Appeals,Graber, Circuit Judge, held that: (1) defendant's reasonable expectation of privacy in hotel room, required for standing to challenge search of room, extended past noon check-out time but ended at 12:30 p.m., (2) police had reasonable suspicion to stop second defendant's rented automobile upon receiving report from automobile's owner that automobile was "overdue."
Affirmed.
West Headnotes
- KeyCite Notes
110Criminal Law110XXIVReview
110XXIV(L)Scope of Review inGeneral
110k1139k.AdditionalProofsand TrialDe Novo.MostCited CasesA denial of a motion to suppress is reviewed de novo.
- KeyCite Notes
349Searches and Seizures
349VIJudicial Review or Determination
349k201k. Questions of Lawor Fact.Most CitedCases
Whethera defendanthasstanding to challenge a search underthe Fourth Amendmentis a mixed question of law and fact.U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 4.
- KeyCite Notes
110Criminal Law110XXIVReview
110XXIV(L)Scope of Review inGeneral
110k1139k. Additional ProofsandTrial De Novo.Most CitedCases
110Criminal LawKeyCite Notes
110XXIVReview
110XXIV(O)QuestionsofFactandFindings110k1158In General
110k1158(1)k. InGeneral. Most Cited Cases
The CourtofAppealsreviewsa districtcourt'slegalconclusionsde novo and itsfactual findings for clear error.
- KeyCite Notes
349Searches and Seizures349IVStandingtoObject
349k162k. PrivacyInterest orExpectation, inGeneral.MostCitedCases
To have standing to challenge the search ofa hotelroom underthe Fourth Amendment,a defendant must establish a reasonable expectation of privacy in the room.U.S.C.A.Const.Amend. 4.
- KeyCite Notes
349Searches and Seizures349IVStandingtoObject
349k162k. PrivacyInterest orExpectation, inGeneral.MostCitedCases
Although generally a defendant'sexpectation ofprivacy in a hotelroom,asrequired for standing to challenge a search of the room, expires at checkout time, policies and practices of a hotel may result in the extension past checkout time of the reasonable expectation of privacy; the existence and duration of that expectation depend on the facts and circumstances in each case.U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 4.
- KeyCite Notes
349Searches and Seizures349IVStandingtoObject
349k164k.Particular Concrete Applications.MostCitedCases
Defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy in hotel room at time when room wassearched,and thuslacked standing to challenge search,where she had checked out of room before search occurred.U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 4.
- KeyCite Notes
349Searches and Seizures349IVStandingtoObject
349k164k.Particular Concrete Applications.MostCitedCases
Defendant's reasonable expectation of privacy in hotel room, required for standing to challenge search ofroom,extended pastnoon check-outtime butended at12:30 p.m., where hotel communicated noon checkout time to defendant but did not normally issue
trespass notices to overstaying guests, and where housekeeper testified that housekeeping staff did not tell guests to leave immediately at noon because "thirty minutes is notthatmuch difference,"defendantstated thathe planned to remain in room until 12:30, the other guest had left the room already, and hotel's 10 a.m. reminder of checkout time, and housekeeper's noon visit, put defendant on notice that any extension past noon would be of limited duration.U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 4.
- KeyCite Notes
Arrest
35IIOnCriminal Charges
35k63.5InvestigatoryStop or Stop-And-Frisk
35k63.5(6)k. Motor Vehicles,Stopping.Most CitedCases
48AAutomobilesKeyCiteNotes48AVIIOffenses
48AVII(B)Prosecution
48Ak349Arrest,Stop,orInquiry;BailorDeposit 48Ak349(2)Grounds
48Ak349(2.1)k. InGeneral. Most CitedCases
Police had reasonable suspicion to stop defendant's rented automobile upon receiving report from automobile's owner that it was "overdue," notwithstanding that automobile wasnotquite 48 hourslate and defendantthushad notcommitted misdemeanorunder Hawaii law; police were reasonable to suspect crime had been committed due to fact owner would be subject to criminal penalties if it made false police report, and officer's mistake regarding how long automobile had been overdue was mistake of fact, not misunderstanding of law.U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 4;HRS 708-837,710-1015.
- KeyCite Notes
35Arrest
35IIOnCriminal Charges
35k63.5InvestigatoryStop or Stop-And-Frisk
35k63.5(6)k. Motor Vehicles,Stopping.Most CitedCases
48AAutomobilesKeyCiteNotes48AVIIOffenses
48AVII(B)Prosecution
48Ak349Arrest,Stop,orInquiry;BailorDeposit 48Ak349(2)Grounds
48Ak349(2.1)k. InGeneral. Most CitedCases
The Fourth Amendmentrequiresonly reasonable suspicion in the contextofinvestigative traffic stops. U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 4.
*1125Karyn H. Bucur,Laguna Hills, California;Edmundo Espinoza, Del Mar, California, for the defendants-appellants.
*1126Kenneth Sorenson and Larry L.Butrick,AssistantUnited StatesAttorneys, Honolulu, Hawaii, for the plaintiff-appellee.
Appealsfrom the United StatesDistrictCourtforthe DistrictofHawaiiHelen Gillmor, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CR-98-00485-HG
Before:SNEED,GRABER, andPAEZ, Circuit Judges.
GRABER, Circuit Judge:
Defendants Denis Dorais and Laurie Gomes became the focus of a police drug investigation aftera hotelmanagerreported suspiciousactivitiesin theirroom atthe New Otani Hotel. Police eventually arrested Gomes for drug possession after they stopped her because of a rental agency's report that her rental car was overdue. During the stop, Gomes consented to a search of her purse, which yielded methamphetamine, and made incriminating statements about Dorais. Later, police arrested Dorais when they found methamphetamine in Defendants' hotel room while they were helping the hotel manager evict him.
In their joint motion to suppress, Defendants sought to suppress evidence of the methamphetamine in Gomes' purse; Gomes' incriminating statements about Dorais, made during the stop; the methamphetamine in the hotel room; and statements made by Doraisin the hotelroom.They argued that(1)the police had neitherprobable cause nor reasonable suspicion to stop the car and Gomes' consent and statements were a product of the illegal stop;[FN1]and (2) the warrantless search of the hotel room violated the Fourth Amendment.
FN1.Defendants did not otherwise challenge the voluntariness of Gomes' statements or of her consent to search.
The district court deniedDefendants'motiontosuppress. We affirm.
FACTUALANDPROCEDURALBACKGROUND
- The Hotel
Gomes checked into the New Otani Hotel on July 1, 1998. She informed the hotel that two men, Dorais and another, would be staying in her room; completed a registration card thatincluded Dorais'name;registered two vehiclesto the room;and paid $1,400 in cash to cover the cost of the room through July 5, 1998. The hotel assigned her to room 610.
At some point, Gomes and Dorais decided to extend their stay.[FN2]Because room 610 wasnot availableforthenight of July 5, thehotelreassignedDorais andGomestoroom
421. At first they resisted the move but, after repeated requests by the hotel, they relocated to room 421 at 2:30 p.m. on July 5. After the move, the hotel asked Dorais severaltimesto come to the frontdesk to sign a new registration card,butDoraisnever signed the card.
FN2.Although the district court made no findings about the timing of Defendants' extension,itappearsfrom the receiptin Exhibit1 that,on July 5,Defendantsextended their stay until July 6 and that, on July 6, they extended their stay until July 8.
On July 6, 1998, Curtis Kawamoto, the evening manager, contacted acquaintances of his who worked for the Hawaii Police at the airport. Kawamoto expressed concern about "suspicious actions" that had been occurring in room 610. As a result, the police ran a background check on Dorais and Gomes. In response to Kawamoto's report, Officer Yamamoto contacted Glen Manaba, the assistant front-office manager and security managerofthe New OtaniHotel,on the morning ofJuly 7,1998.The two agreed to meet to discuss Kawamoto's report. Manaba requested a background check on the guests who were now in room 421; Yamamoto informed him that he had already run a check andthat Gomes was the only guest with a criminal record. Yamamoto told Manaba to call if
he noticedsuspiciousconduct bythe occupantsof room421but did not informthe
*1127hotel manager that the guests already were the subjects of a drug investigation. At some point on July 7, the hotel decided that it would not permit Gomes and Dorais to extend their stay past July 8. There is no evidence in the record that the guests requested an extension; likewise, there is no evidence in the record that the hotel informed them ofitsdecision.On the morning ofJuly 8,Yamamoto contacted Manaba to find out if Dorais and Gomes had checked out and to request permission to search the room afterthey checked out. He also told Manaba that he would be parked outside the hotel, in case the hotel required his assistance.
At 10a.m. onJuly8, thehotel left amessageonthevoicemail inroom421, reminding the guests of the noon checkout time. Gomes left the hotel before noon. Dorais remained.
Shortly after noon, the executive housekeeper knocked on the door of room 421 to inquire when Dorais would be checking out. Dorais told her that he intended to stay until 12:30.The housekeepertold Dorais"OK"and said thatshe would tellthe frontdesk.She could not remember whether she reported to the front desk Dorais' intent to stay until 12:30.
Around noon, Manaba spoke with the Hawaii Police officers, who entered the hotel to inquire whetherthe occupantsofroom 421 had checked outyet.Manaba informed them that the guests remained in the room, and he told the officers that he wished to evict them if they stayed past checkout time. One of the officers contacted his supervisor to arrange for permission to proceed with the investigation of the room and to assist the hotel in the eviction. At about 12:40, Manaba and six officers went to room 421 to evict Dorais. Manaba knocked on the door and told Dorais that he was there to evict him.
When Dorais opened the door, one of the officers identified himself and told Dorais that the police would assist in the eviction. The police entered the room and saw a substance on the coffee table that resembled methamphetamine. At that point, the police arrested Dorais and conducted a pat-down search incident to arrest. The search yielded a baggie containing a substance resembling crystal methamphetamine. The police then obtained a search warrantto search the closed boxesand envelopesthatthey found in the room and on Dorais.
- The Car
At8:23 p.m.on July 4,1998,DefendantGomesrented a carfrom DollarRent-a-Car.The car was due back at the same time two days later. On July 6, after the hotel had contacted the police to express concern about Dorais' and Gomes' activities, Yamamoto called Dollar to inquire about the car rental. He asked when the car was due back and asked the rental agency to contact him when Gomes returned it.
AsofJuly 8,Gomeshad notreturned the car. SeeHaw.Rev.Stat. 708-837(providing a 48-hour grace period before a rental car is considered stolen). Dollar tried withoutsuccess to contact her. When it could not reach her, it notified the police at 10 a.m. that the car was overdue. The manager of Dollar testified at the hearing on the motion to suppress that it was an oversight on the part of Dollar that it contacted the police beforea full 48 hours had elapsed.
Based onthe complaint fromDollar,Officer Yamamoto stoppedGomes between 10:30
a.m. and 12 p.m. on July 8. [FN3]Gomes signed a consent to search her purse, after stating thatthere were drugsin itthat"Deni"had given her.The search yielded crystal methamphetamine.
FN3.There wasconflicting testimony in the record aboutthe time ofthe stop.The district court found that Gomes had been arrested "sometime before noon."
Dorais filed the motion to suppress that is the subject of this appeal, and Gomes later joined in it.The districtcourtheld a three-day evidentiary hearing,afterwhich itdenied the motion to suppress.
*1128Thereafter, Dorais and Gomes conditionally pleaded guilty to possessing more than 100 grams ofmethamphetamine with intentto distribute,in violation of21 U.S.C.
841(a)(1)and (b)(1)(A)and18 U.S.C. 2.Both Defendants reserved the rightto appeal the district court's denial of their motion to suppress. After being sentenced, they timely filed their notices of appeal.
STANDARDOFREVIEW
- [2] [3] We review de novo the denial of a motion to suppress. UnitedStates v. Henderson,No. 99-10526, 2000 WL 1804068, *6 (9th Cir. Dec.11, 2000). Whether a defendant has standing to challenge a search under the Fourth Amendment is a mixed question of law and fact.United States v. Armenta,69 F.3d 304, 306-07 (9thCir.1995).We review the districtcourt's legalconclusions de novo and its factualfindings for clear error.Id.at 307.
DISCUSSION
- Standing toChallenge thePolice Entryinto theHotelRoom
The districtcourtheld thatDefendantslacked standing to challenge asa search the police entry into the hotel room because neither had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the room. The court reasoned that (1) Gomes had no privacy interest in the room becauseshe had checked out of the hotel before the search took place, and (2) Dorais' privacy interest expired at checkout time, which was noon on July 8, 1998, also before the entry. The court's reasoning and conclusion are correct with respect to Gomes.United States v.Haddad, 558 F.2d 968 (9th Cir.1977)(holding that a guest has no expectation of privacy in a hotel room after checking out, whether voluntarily or involuntarily). As to Dorais, we affirm on different grounds the ruling that Dorais had no reasonable expectation ofprivacy in room 421 at 12:40 p.m.
- General Principles
- In order to have standing to challenge the search of a hotel room under the Fourth Amendment, a defendant must establish a reasonable expectation of privacy in the room.Minnesota v. Olson,495 U.S. 91,95, 110 S.Ct. 1684,109 L.Ed.2d 85 (1990). "A subjective expectation of privacy is legitimate if it is one that society is prepared to recognize as 'reasonable'."Id.at 95-96, 110 S.Ct. 1684(citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
This court has held that a defendant has noreasonable expectation of privacy in a hotel room when the rental period has expired and the hotel has taken affirmative steps to repossess the room.United States v. Huffhines,967 F.2d 314 (9th Cir.1992). On the other hand, this court has concluded that the lessee of a rental car maintains a reasonable expectation of privacy in the car after the expiration of the lease, when the rental agency has taken no affirmative steps to repossess the car and when it has a policy of permitting lessees to keep cars and simply charging them for the extra time.Henderson, 2000 WL 1804068, at *6-*7. Other courts that have considered the issue have recognized that a guest may retain a reasonable expectation of privacy in a hotel room after checkout time based on the relationship between the guest and the hotel or based on the hotel's generally lax practices in enforcing its checkout time. See, e.g.,United States v.Kitchens,114 F.3d 29,31-32 & 32 n.3 (4th Cir.1997);United States v.Owens, 782 F.2d 146, 149-50 (10th Cir.1986).
In Huffhines, we stated that "[a] guest in a motel has no reasonable expectation of privacy in a room after the rental period has expired."967 F.2d at 318. We held that the defendantlacked standing to challenge a search ofhishotelroom when the rentalperiod expired at noon, the motel manager repossessed the room in the afternoon, and the manager consented to a search of the room in the evening. Id.Similarly, in Haddad,we held that the defendant lacked a reasonable expectation *1129of privacy in a hotel room after the hotel ejected him from the room and required him to check out.558 F.2dat 975.
We have recognized, however, that the mere expiration of the rental period, in the absence ofaffirmative actsofrepossession by the lessor,doesnotautomatically end a lessee's expectations of privacy. In Henderson,we concluded that a defendant had a
reasonable expectation of privacy in a rental car that was four days overdue.2000 WL1804068, at *6-*7. We reasoned that the rental company had not attempted torepossess the car, that it was not unusual for a customer to keep a car past the time specified in the rental agreement, and that the company had a routine practice of simply charging the customer for the late return. Id. In Henderson,we distinguished Huffhinesand Haddadon the ground that, in those cases, the hotel management had terminated the defendants' control of their hotel rooms through private acts of dominion. Id.at *7. Similarly, in Owens,the Tenth Circuit held that a motel guest had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his room after checkout time.782 F.2d at 149-51. There, the police arrested one occupant of the room (the defendant), and, afterward, contacted the frontdesk to inform the motelofthe arrestand to check on the statusofthe room.Id.at148-49.The motel manager informed the police that the rental period on the room had expired, and the manager authorized the police to evict the remaining occupant.Id. at
148.Thecourtbaseditsconclusionthatthedefendant'sexpectationofprivacyin the
motel room was reasonable on three factors. First, a few days earlier, when thedefendanthad stayed pastcheckouttime,instead ofevicting him the hotelpermitted him to extend his stay and pay for the additional term of occupancy.Id. at 150.Second, the manager testified that it was the motel's policy to ask those guests staying past checkout time whether they would be leaving or extending their stay; it was not the motel's policy to evict guests who were staying past checkout time for brief periods. Third, the defendant had given a large cash deposit, which may have led him to believe that he was paid up through the rest of the week. Id.
By contrast,in Kitchens,the Fourth Circuitconcluded thatthe defendants lacked standing to challenge a search of their hotel room an hour after checkout time.114 F.3d at 32.
The court recognized that "[a] guest may still have a legitimate expectation of privacy even after his rental period has terminated, if there is a pattern or practice which would make that expectation reasonable." Id.It further acknowledged that a warrantless search immediately after checkout time "would be improper if the hotel, as most hotels do, hada pattern or practice of allowing guests some leeway regarding the checkout time." Id.at 32 n. 3. However, the court found that the defendants did not have a pattern or practice of staying past checkout time and that the hotel had a strictpolicy of enforcing checkout times. Id.As a result, the defendants' reasonable expectation of privacy in the room expired at checkout time.
- Under Huffhines,as a general rule a defendant's expectation of privacy in a hotel room expires at checkout time. However, consistent with Henderson,we hold that the policies and practices of a hotel may result in the extension past checkout time of a defendant's reasonable expectation of privacy. The existence and duration of that expectation depend on the facts and circumstances in each case.
- Application to ThisCase
- In this case, the district court found that Gomes had checked out of the hotel before noon on July 8.Thatfinding isnotclearly erroneous.Thus,under Haddad,she lacks standing to challenge the entry into the hotel room.
- As toDorais, theanswer is thesame, but theexplanationmorecomplex.Having
- The Stopof theCar
concluded that a hotel guest's expectation of privacy does not expire automatically at checkout time, we examine the *1130record to determine whether Dorais presented sufficient evidence to meet his burden of proving that he held areasonable expectation of privacy in room 421 at the time of the search. SeeUnited States v. Singleton,987 F.2d1444, 1447 (9th Cir.1993)(holding that a defendant bears the burden of proving a legitimate expectation of privacy). On the record before us, Dorais has not met his burden.
Dorais demonstratedthathis reasonable expectationof privacy inroom421extended
pastnoon; butthat reasonableexpectation expiredat12:30p.m.
First,the hotelcommunicated the noon checkouttime to Dorais.The noon checkouttime was clearly posted in the room, and the hotel, following its standard checkout procedure, reminded Dorais at 10 a.m. of the noon checkout time.
Second, Dorais proved that the hotel did not enforce its checkout time strictly. Manaba testified that it was not normal hotel policy to issue trespass notices to overstaying guests immediately at noon but, rather, that the standard practice was to ask guests at noon when theywould be leaving. Additionally,the executivehousekeepertestified that
it was hotel practice for the housekeeping staff to ask guests when they would be leaving. Third, however, we concluded for four reasons that these practices extended Dorais' expectation of privacy in room 421 only until 12:30.(a) The housekeeper testified that
the reason why the housekeeping staff did not tell guests to leave immediately at noon was that "thirty minutes is ... not that much difference." Her testimony suggests that, although the New Otani permits guests some leeway with respect to checkout time, the leeway time is limited. (b) The district court found, and the record supports the finding,[FN4]that Dorais stated only that he planned to remain in the room until 12:30.(c) Gomes had leftthe room already.(d)The hotel's 10 a.m.reminderofthe checkouttime, and the housekeeper's noon visit, put Dorais on notice that any extension past noon would be of limited duration. Those factors establish that Dorais' expectation of privacy was reasonable only until 12:30. Therefore, we affirm the district court's ruling that Dorais lacked standing to challenge the police entry, which occurred at 12:40.
FN4.The housekeeperstated:"Iask:What time are you checking out,and he say 12:30," and "He just answer me 12:30 he checking out."
- Defendants also challenge the stop of the rental car, arguing that the police lacked probable cause or reasonable suspicion to stop the car. They further argue that the lack of probable cause or reasonable suspicion rendered Gomes' consent to search invalid and that,asa result,the drugsthatthey found in herpurse and the incriminating statements that she made about Dorais must be suppressed.
- This court recently clarifiedthat "the FourthAmendmentrequires onlyreasonable
suspicion in the context of investigative traffic stops."United States v. Lopez-Soto,205F.3d 1101, 1105 (9th Cir.2000). Therefore, we examine only whether the police had reasonable suspicion to stop Gomes' car. "Reasonable suspicion is formed by 'specific, articulable factswhich,togetherwith objective and reasonable inferences,form the basis for suspecting that the particular person detained is engaged in criminal activity.' " Id.(quotingUnited States v. Michael R.,90 F.3d 340, 346 (9th Cir.1996)).
In this case the police stopped Gomes' car after they had received a report from Dollar Rent-a-Car, the car's owner, that the car was "overdue." Had Dollar intentionally made a false police report, it would have been subject to criminal penalties under Hawaii law.See Haw.Rev.Stat. 710-1015(defining the crime of false reporting to law-enforcement authorities). Based on the report, the police were reasonable to suspect that Gomes may have been committing a crime because, under *1131Hawaii law, a person who keeps a rental car for more than 48 hours after it is due commits a misdemeanor.Haw.Rev.Stat.
708-837. Thus, the police had reasonable suspicion when they stopped Gomes. SeeIllinois v. Gates,462 U.S. 213, 233-34, 103 S.Ct. 2317, 76 L.Ed.2d 527 (1983)(holding that"ifan unquestionably honestcitizen comes forward with a reportofcriminalactivity-
-which if fabricated would subject him to criminal liability--we have found rigorous scrutiny of the basis of his knowledge unnecessary");United States v. Butler,74 F.3d916, 921 (9th Cir.1996)(holding that police had probable cause to stop a Camaro and arrestthe driverwithouta warrantwhen they were acting on a reportfrom an identified
citizen that the Camarohadbeen stolen).
Defendants argue that the officers had an affirmative duty to determine whether Gomes' car was a full 48 hours overdue and that, because the car was not yet quite 48 hours late, the officers lacked "jurisdiction" to make the stop. Defendants' argument fails under the reasoning of Gates.Because the officers were acting on a police report from Dollar,
whose honesty hasnotbeen questioned,they had reasonable suspicion to stop the car even if the report turned out to be mistaken due to its timing.
Defendants furthercontend thatthis court's decision inUnited States v.Twilley,222 F.3d1092 (9th Cir.2000), establishes that the police lacked reasonable suspicion to stop Gomes. Defendants misapprehend Twilley.In that case, a police officer stopped the defendant based on his mistaken belief that defendant was violating California law by displaying only one license plate; but, in actuality, California law required the defendant to display only one license plate. Id.at 1096. This court held that the officer lacked reasonable suspicion to stop the defendant because reasonable suspicion cannot be premised on a mistaken understanding of the law. Id.
Unlike in Twilley, the officers here stopped Gomes not because of a mistaken understanding of the law, but because of a mistake of fact. The officers correctly understood that Hawaii law criminalizes the possession of a rental car more than 48hours beyond its return time; the officers simply made a mistake of fact as to how long overdue the car was. That mistake of fact does not defeat the officers' reasonable suspicion. Cf.United States v. Wallace,213 F.3d 1216, 1220-21 (9th Cir.2000)(holding thatan officerhad reasonable suspicion to stop a carwith tinted windowswhen California law prohibited certain tinted windows, even though it was later established that the windows were not sufficiently tinted to violate the law).
Because the police had reasonable suspicion to stop Gomes' car, the stop neither tainted Gomes' consent to search her purse nor required the suppression of the incriminating statements that she made about Dorais. The district court correctly denied the motion to suppress the statements and the drugs found in Gomes' purse.
AFFIRMED.
C.A.9(Hawai'i),2001.
U.S. v. Dorais
241 F.3d1124, 1Cal. DailyOp. Serv. 1692, 2001DailyJournal D.A.R. 2187
BriefsandOther RelatedDocuments(Backtotop)
- 99-10267(Docket) (Jun. 04, 1999)
- 99-10091(Docket) (Mar. 10, 1999)
- 1999 WL 33604783(Appellate Brief) Appellants' Joint Opening Brief (1999)Original Image of this Document (PDF)
ENDOFDOCUMENT
West Reporter Image(PDF)
- What must a defendant establish to challenge the search of a hotel room under the Fourth Amendment?
- Do hotel guests automatically lose their expectation of privacy when the term of their occupancy has expired
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