United States of America v. Pablo Caballero-Chavez, - United States of America v. Jose Luis Meza-Lopez

260 F.3d 863, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 18182
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 2001
Docket00-3013, 00-3173
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 260 F.3d 863 (United States of America v. Pablo Caballero-Chavez, - United States of America v. Jose Luis Meza-Lopez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America v. Pablo Caballero-Chavez, - United States of America v. Jose Luis Meza-Lopez, 260 F.3d 863, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 18182 (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

LOKEN, Circuit Judge.

Defendants Pablo Caballero-Chavez and Jose Luis Meza-Lopez entered conditional guilty pleas to conspiring to possess with intent to distribute over five kilograms of cocaine found in a duffel bag hidden in an Omaha hotel room rented for their occupancy by a drug courier. Caballero-Chavez and Meza-Lopez appeal the district court’s 1 denial of their motions to suppress the cocaine. Concluding that they abandoned their interests in the hotel room and its contents, we affirm.

I.

The following facts are taken from the magistrate judge’s thorough Report and Recommendation following a lengthy evi-dentiary suppression hearing. The defendants do not challenge any of the district court’s findings as clearly erroneous.

In May 1999, the defendants hired seventy-year-old Mary Stewart to transport seven kilograms of cocaine from El Paso, Texas to Omaha. Stewart arrived at the Ramada Inn near the Omaha airport on June 1, driving a rented Pontiac Bonneville. She rented Room 123 and called the defendants, who asked her to rent an additional room. Stewart then rented Room 222 under her name, without telling the front desk who would be occupying the room. When the defendants arrived, Stewart gave them the key cards to Room 222 and the keys to the Pontiac. They paid her $6500 in cash.

The next day, officers conducting a broad drug investigation learned from an intercepted telephone call that a male Hispanic staying in Room 222 at the Ramada Inn would be involved in a drug delivery at 8:00 p.m. that evening. When they went to the hotel to investigate, the Ramada’s assistant manager told narcotics officers that Stewart had rented Rooms 123 and 222. Officers watched both rooms that afternoon and evening. They saw two Hispanic males through the window of Room 222 but no significant activity at either room. At 8:45 p.m., two Hispanic males drove out of the hotel parking lot in a Pontiac Bonneville with Texas license plates, but no officer had seen the men leaving Room 222. The two men returned at 9:20 p.m. and entered the hotel restaurant.

Shortly thereafter, the officers decided to contact the occupants of the two rooms. They first went to Room 222, but no one *866 responded. They then went to Room 123, identified themselves to Stewart, and told her they were conducting an investigation. Stewart consented to a search of her room, during which the officers saw a large roll of cash in her open purse. After first denying she had rented more than one room, Stewart admitted she had rented Room 222 for two men whose names she did not know. The officers asked Stewart for her consent to search Room 222, telling her that, as the renter, she had authority to consent. Stewart reluctantly consented to a search of Room 222.

The officers advised the assistant manager of Stewart’s consent to the search, and he let them into Room 222. They opened two luggage bags that had no identification tags, finding clothing, toiletries, and a cellular phone they could not immediately link to their investigation. They also found a new screwdriver in the night stand drawer. When the assistant manager confirmed that the hotel did not provide screwdrivers, the officers searched for an area accessible by screwdriver, removed a wood panel from under the bathroom sink, and found a duffle bag with no identifying tags. They opened the duffle and found seven kilogram bricks of cocaine.

After finding the drugs and learning that a rental agreement for a Pontiac had been found in Room 123, the officers decided to restore Room 222 to its pre-search condition and speak to the two Hispanic males in the hotel restaurant, suspecting they were the occupants of Room 222 and hoping to obtain a confession. Two Spanish-speaking officers proceeded to the restaurant, where the defendants denied staying at the hotel and said they were there only to meet a lady named Maria. One officer recognized Meza-Lopez’s voice from the intercepted phone calls, and one of the defendants produced keys to the rented Pontiac. The defendants agreed to show the officers Maria’s room at the hotel. On the way to Room 123, they agreed to follow the officers instead to Room 222. Outside of Room 222, the defendants denied the room was theirs, denied they had ever been in the room, and said they did not care whether the officers searched the room because it was not their room. The officers then entered Room 222 with the defendants, who again denied any claim to the room or to the two luggage bags in the room. When they also denied ownership of the duffel bag hidden under the bathroom sink, the defendants were placed under arrest. This prosecution followed.

In denying defendants’ motion to suppress, the district court resolved three issues in the government’s favor: first, that Stewart voluntarily consented to the search of Room 222, and the officers reasonably believed she had authority to consent; second, that the defendants had no legitimate expectation of privacy in the area under the bathroom sink and therefore no standing to challenge the warrant-less search of the duffel bag; and third, that the defendants abandoned their interest in Room 222 and its contents. Defendants challenge all three rulings on appeal. Given our disposition of the abandonment issue, that is the only issue we need address.

II.

If the defendants abandoned their interests in Room 222 and its contents, they no longer had legitimate expectations of privacy and are precluded from challenging the search of the room or the duffel bag on Fourth Amendment grounds. See United States v. Hoey, 983 F.2d 890, 892 (8th Cir.1993). Whether property has been abandoned is a question of fact we review for clear error. In conducting that review, we “look to the totality of the circumstances, noting in particular two factors: whether the suspect denied owner *867 ship of the property and whether he physically relinquished the property.” United States v. Liu, 180 F.3d 957, 960 (8th Cir.1999). Abandonment “is determined on the basis of the objective facts available to the investigating officers, not on the basis of the [defendants’] subjective intent.” United States v. Tugwell, 125 F.3d 600, 602 (8th Cir.1997), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1061, 118 S.Ct. 721, 139 L.Ed.2d 661 (1998).

In this case, when questioned in the Ramada restaurant, the defendants denied staying at the hotel. After voluntarily accompanying the officers to Room 222, the defendants denied the room was theirs and denied ever being in the room. When taken into Room 222, they denied that the luggage bags on the floor and a bed were theirs and then denied that the duffle bag under the bathroom sink was theirs. The officers did not find a key card to Room 222 when the defendants voluntarily emptied their pockets, and the bags in the room and under the sink bore no identifying tags.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Luciano Camberos-Villapuda
832 F.3d 948 (Eighth Circuit, 2016)
United States v. Calvin James
Eighth Circuit, 2008
United States v. James
534 F.3d 868 (Eighth Circuit, 2008)
United States v. Kimhong Thi Le
402 F. Supp. 2d 1068 (D. North Dakota, 2005)
United States v. Duong
336 F. Supp. 2d 967 (D. North Dakota, 2004)
People v. Pitman
813 N.E.2d 93 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2004)
United States v. Mar James
Eighth Circuit, 2003
United States v. Terriques
211 F. Supp. 2d 1137 (D. Nebraska, 2002)
Meza-Lopez v. United States
535 U.S. 972 (Supreme Court, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 F.3d 863, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 18182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-v-pablo-caballero-chavez-united-states-of-ca8-2001.