Category: Drug Offenses

  • Woman acquitted in infant’s death won’t receive more time

    Babysitter was sentenced for other crimes but served two years while awaiting trial

    Rachel Smith

    A woman acquitted last month of causing the death of an infant she was babysitting at a Santa Fe motel will serve no additional time for possessing drug paraphernalia and obstructing a police investigation by initially pretending to be the child’s mother.

    A judge on Tuesday sentenced Rachel Smith, 27, to just under two years for those crimes. But counting time spent in jail and on electronic monitoring, Smith already had undergone more than two years of incarceration while awaiting trial.

    Authorities charged Smith in the 2017 death of 3-month-old Jonathan Valenzuela after medics arrived at the Cerrillos Road motel in response to her frantic 911 call reporting the child was not breathing. Responders found the baby dead.

    Smith said at trial she originally claimed to be the child’s mother in order to protect the baby’s teenage mother from getting in trouble.

    The boy had no visible injuries, and police initially speculated that Smith — who admitted she used heroin in the bathroom while the boy and his 2-year-old sister slept — may have smothered the child by accidentally rolling over on him. But when an autopsy found the child died of strangulation and blunt force trauma, Smith was charged with child abuse resulting in death.

    About a month before the case was set for trial in July, the state got more time to investigate evidence that suggested the child’s mother, Angel Arellano, may have inflicted the child’s fatal injuries. Though prosecutors never charged Arellano and proceeded with their prosecution of Smith, defense attorney Stephen Aarons raised the issue at trial.

    Medical examiner Dr. Heather Jarrell testified that in her opinion the infant’s injuries most likely were inflicted during the time he was under Smith’s care, but she acknowledged under cross-examination it was possible the injuries were inflicted much earlier, while the baby was with his mother.

    A jury found Smith not guilty of child abuse resulting in death, but convicted her of obstructing an investigation and possession of drug paraphernalia. The maximum penalty for each of those misdemeanors is 364 days in jail.

    The child’s mother did not attend the sentencing. Smith declined to comment after the hearing, saying only, “Not right now. I’ve been through enough.”

    • By Phaedra Haywood phaywood@sfnewmexican.com
    • Reprinted with permission
  • Smith found not guilty in baby’s death

     

    Smith, 28, was found guilty on two counts of obstructing the investigation into the child’s death and drug possession. Because she has already served more than two years in custody on electronic monitoring, her lawyer asked she be released for time served.

    Chief Judge Marlowe Summer agreed. Smith’s remaining sentencing is still pending.

    Trembling slightly, both Smith and a defense attorney, Hugh Dangler, appeared to cry after the verdict was read. Several members of Smith’s family brought their hands together in prayer to thank Dangler as the courtroom emptied.

    “I am extremely grateful for the jury’s work … and extremely grateful for their decisions,” Dangler said.

    The baby’s mother, Angel Arellano, 20, exited the courtroom, sobbing in a summer dress.

    On March 11, 2017, Smith had been babysitting the infant, Jonathan Valenzuela, and his 2-year-old sister at her room at the Thunderbird Inn, when she awoke to find the baby had stopped breathing.

    Smith, from Glorieta, admitted to police she had injected heroin the night before the baby’s death, and was indicted on charges of reckless disregard, which could incur an 18-year prison sentence. Police initially believed Smith, who had been watching the children for 33 or 34 hours, may have rolled over the baby in her sleep.

    An autopsy report later showed there had been bleeding in Valenzuela’s brain, likely caused by blunt force trauma, and broken bones in the infant’s neck, consistent with strangulation.

    Prosecutors for the state asked during the trial if she had harmed the baby in a stage of drug withdrawal, as the heroin left her system.

    The trial was postponed in March when new evidence raised questions over whether the baby’s mother, Arellano, might have shaken or injured the baby before leaving him in Smith’s care. Arellano has said she did not harm her son.

    Dr. Heather Jarrell, a neuropathologist with the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator, and a witness for state prosecutors, said earlier this week the injuries could have been caused within 24 or 48 hours of the baby’s death.

    The jury, composed of six men and six women, deliberated for two hours after closing arguments concluded Tuesday and returned Wednesday morning just after 11 a.m.

    “This is a mysterious death,” Dangler said. “And will probably remain so.”

     

    By Rebecca Moss, Santa Fe New Mexican (C) 2019 Reprinted with Permission


    Sitter’s lawyer requests immunity for mother in testimony about dead boy

    Rachel Smith has spent the better part of the past two years in the county jail awaiting trial on a charge that she caused the death of a 3-month-old infant left in her care in a Cerrillos Road motel room in 2017.

    But Smith’s defense attorney and prosecutors recently told a state district judge that new evidence raises the possibility that the child’s mother, Angel Arellano, might have inflicted the injuries that led to the death of Jonathan Valenzuela.

    Arellano had dropped off the boy and his 2-year-old sister at the motel to be cared for by Smith.

    State District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer postponed Smith’s trial this month — just three days before it was set to begin — to give investigators time to pursue new leads in the case, including allegations that Arellano confessed to an acquaintance she had hurt her son.

    “It would be extremely difficult, if not unethical, for the state to go forward with the trial at this point without setting our minds at ease that we do indeed have the right person in the courtroom,” Assistant District Attorney Larissa Breen said during a court hearing.

    Smith is now out on bail with electric monitoring. She still faces a first-degree felony charge that could send her to prison for up to 18 years.

    Arellano’s attorney, Marc Edwards, said Friday that he had just taken her on as a client and could not comment for this story. Arellano hasn’t been charged.

    Smith’s defense lawyer, Stephen Aarons, recently filed a motion asking the court to approve an arrangement that he hopes will encourage the child’s mother to testify on Smith’s behalf at trial, even if it means implicating herself.

    Aarons is asking the court to grant “use immunity” to Arellano, who is listed as a witness for the state. Such immunity would prevent prosecutors from using anything she said on the stand during Smith’s trial to prosecute her for her son’s death.

    The immunity would not prevent the state from prosecuting her based on other evidence.

    Without the immunity, Aarons says in his motion, Arellano will invoke her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination by remaining silent during Smith’s trial.

    Arellano attempted to abort her son by self-harm while pregnant, screamed that she did not want the baby and threatened suicide before he was born, the lawyer says in his motion. He also wrote that Arellano gave the baby to Smith about 33 hours before his death. “The baby could have been grabbed by the throat and violently shaken before this final exchange,” Aarons wrote.

    Smith assumed care of Jonathan and his sister on March 10, 2017, according to police reports. She told police she fed him and put him to bed but awoke the next morning to find he was not breathing. She then called 911.

    The child had no visible injuries. Smith told investigators she had used heroin the night before, and police originally speculated she may have rolled over on the child in the night.

    An autopsy revealed the boy died from bleeding in the brain caused by blunt force trauma.

    The father of a man with whom Arellano — then 17 — was involved at the time has since told police that Arellano told his son that she had harmed the boy before delivering him to Smith, according to court filings.

    Assistant District Attorney Breen is opposing Aarons’ motion, saying that granting Arellano immunity would devastate the state’s chances of prosecuting her if the Santa Fe Police Department’s renewed investigation reveals Arellano was responsible for the infant’s death.

    “The state has no doubt Defendant would like to have Ms. Arellano have leave to testify she may have actually killed [Jonathan], if that is indeed what she will say,” Breen wrote in a motion filed Friday in state District Court, “but the court has to look at the potential detriment to the public interest in getting justice for [the baby’s] death.”

    A spokesman for District Attorney Marco Serna said in an email that Smith’s attorney hasn’t provided documentation to support new allegations involving Arellano.


    Woman held in infant death granted release in Santa Fe

    Woman held in infant death granted release
    Rachel Smith sits with attorneys during a hearing in District Court on Tuesday. Smith was being held in the death of 3-month-old she was baby-sitting.PHAEDRA HEYWOODTHE NEW MEXICAN

    Rachel Smith, 27, had been in jail since her March 2017 arrest in connection with the death of the baby boy at a Cerrillos Road motel.

    The infant’s mother — then 17 years-old — had left two children with Smith for five days preceding the death, according to court records, and Smith was living with the children in the Thunderbird Motel when she woke up one morning to find the baby was not breathing.

    Investigators originally speculated that Smith — a heroin addict who admitted shooting up in the bathroom while she was watching the boy and his 2 year-old sister — might have rolled over on the boy. However, an autopsy later revealed the infant had bleeding in his brain consistent with “blunt force trauma.”

    Smith’s defense attorney, Stephen Aarons, filed a motion in November seeking to have the charges dismissed on grounds that her rights to a speedy trial and discovery of evidence had been violated. Among other things, he argued that it took prosecutors about a year to produce Children Youth and Family Department records that could include evidence that the infant’s mother had abused him.

    State District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer postponed her decision on that motion during a hearing Tuesday, saying she needed to review the Children Youth and Family Department records before ruling.

    Aarons also filed a motion challenging one of the state’s expert witnesses, saying the proposed witness’s opinions on “shaken baby syndrome” as it relates to pinpointing when the child received the fatal injury are not typical and have been contradicted in literature that says determining time of injury is the unreliable “Achilles heel” of forensic pathology.

    Sommer also postponed ruling on that motion Tuesday, directing Aarons and Assistant District Attorney Larissa Breen to expand written briefs on the issue before the judge considers the matter again next month.

  • Woman held in infant death granted release in Santa Fe

    (c) 2018 Santa Fe New Mexican Republished with Permission
    Woman held in infant death granted release

    Rachel Smith sits with attorneys during a hearing in District Court on Tuesday. Smith was being held in the death of 3-month-old she was baby-sitting. PHAEDRA HEYWOOD | THE NEW MEXICAN

    Rachel Smith, 27, had been in jail since her March 2017 arrest in connection with the death of the baby boy at a Cerrillos Road motel.

    The infant’s mother — then 17 years-old — had left two children with Smith for five days preceding the death, according to court records, and Smith was living with the children in the Thunderbird Motel when she woke up one morning to find the baby was not breathing.

    Investigators originally speculated that Smith — a heroin addict who admitted shooting up in the bathroom while she was watching the boy and his 2 year-old sister — might have rolled over on the boy. However, an autopsy later revealed the infant had bleeding in his brain consistent with “blunt force trauma.”

    Smith’s defense attorney, Stephen Aarons, filed a motion in November seeking to have the charges dismissed on grounds that her rights to a speedy trial and discovery of evidence had been violated. Among other things, he argued that it took prosecutors about a year to produce Children Youth and Family Department records that could include evidence that the infant’s mother had abused him.

    State District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer postponed her decision on that motion during a hearing Tuesday, saying she needed to review the Children Youth and Family Department records before ruling.

    Aarons also filed a motion challenging one of the state’s expert witnesses, saying the proposed witness’s opinions on “shaken baby syndrome” as it relates to pinpointing when the child received the fatal injury are not typical and have been contradicted in literature that says determining time of injury is the unreliable “Achilles heel” of forensic pathology.

    Sommer also postponed ruling on that motion Tuesday, directing Aarons and Assistant District Attorney Larissa Breen to expand written briefs on the issue before the judge considers the matter again next month

  • Man gets 7 years for kidnapping, battery in Santa Fe

    Man gets 7 years for kidnapping, battery in Santa Fe
    Daniel Tadege is led to the podium during his plea hearing in June in District Court. Phaedra Haywood/New Mexican file photo

    A judge on Monday sentenced an Ethiopian immigrant to seven years in prison for his role last year in the drug-related kidnapping and pistol whipping of a Santa Fe teenager.

    Authorities said Daniel Tadege, 21, and two or three other people went to the home of a 17-year-old boy, forced the victim into a Jeep at gunpoint, then beat and threatened the teen with a gun before abandoning him on Mutt Nelson Road.

    Tadege in June pleaded guilty to kidnapping and aggravated battery in a plea deal that exposed him to between two and 10 years in prison.

    Defense lawyer Stephen Aarons said Tadege had been left alone in the United States at the age of 18 when his mother and sister returned to Ethiopia, and that Tadege began dealing cocaine to support himself and pay tuition at Santa Fe Community College.

    Aarons said the victim was a customer who had robbed Tadege of money and drugs at gunpoint a few days earlier.

    Tadege’s assaulted the younger man, Aarons said, “to take his stuff back and teach [the victim] never to jump him again.”

    “It doesn’t justify it,” the lawyer said, “but it does explain it.”

    Aarons said Tadege’s mother had flown in from Ethiopia to attend the hearing, but she did not speak Monday. Another Ethiopian woman, a friend of the family, did speak on Tadege’s behalf, begging the judge to “correct the real horror” that had befallen him when he was left alone in a country that was not his own.

    “They brought him here and left him on the street,” she said.

    Aarons asked District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer to send Tadege to a two-year program at the Delancey Street Foundation, a residential self-help program aimed rehabilitating substance abusers, ex-convicts and others.

    But prosecutor Blake Nichols asked the judge to give Tadege prison time.

    “The state is not immune to the plight of immigrant youth and does not oppose folks coming to this country for opportunity,” Nichols said. “The opportunity to sell cocaine and beat someone within an inch of his life is not the opportunity they came here for.”

    Tadege also addressed the court, saying he recognized that he made mistakes that hurt the victim and his family and asking for “a chance to get a grip” on his life at Delancey Street.

    But the judge sentenced Tadege to prison, noting that Tadege had a job in a restaurant when his mother left the country but, apparently unsatisfied with the money he earned there, resorted almost immediately to “illegal activity and significant violence.”

    The judge said Tadege would receive credit for about a year and a half spent behind bars but would have to serve 85 percent of his prison term — ineligible for day-for-day good time credit — because the crime was a serious violent offense.

    Sommer said Tadege would likely be deported upon completing his sentence. But Aarons said Tadege received a renewal of his 10-year green card while the case was pending and might have some time to remain in the country legally after his release.

    Tadege’s mother declined to comment following the hearing.

    District Attorney Marco Serna, asked whether the other participants in the kidnapping had been prosecuted, said “the victim was unable to identify either of the other adults who allegedly participated. The other defendant that was identified is a juvenile, and I cannot comment on juvenile cases.”

  • Acquittal in Las Cruces Federal Drug Case

    United States v. Manuel Pavón-Rodríguez

    United States District Court – District of New Mexico – Case No. 2:17-cr-01923-JB-2

       After a four day trial in Las Cruces Federal Court before Judge Robert Brack, a 12-person jury returned with four “not guilty” verdicts as to Manuel Pavón-Rodríguez. His attorney, Stephen D Aarons, explained that Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez had been indicted by the grand jury for possession with intent to distribute 246 pounds (111 kilograms) of illegal drugs. Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez and his co-defendant, John Milne, were arrested near Rodeo New Mexico and the drugs were discovered in five burlap backpacks in the back of Milne’s Ford Explorer. Mr. Milne was represented by two federal public defenders and he was convicted on all counts.

    Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez testified that he had emigrated to New Mexico over 15 years ago and is living in Santa Fe with his wife and four children. He needed to return to his birthplace after the death of h is parents to check up on his two brothers, one of whom has Downs Syndrome. He hired an outfit to return him illegally across the border. Others being transported earned their way by carrying the heavy back packs each loaded with 50-100 pounds of contraband, but Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez had paid a full fare and did not carry any drugs. Although Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez was released after his acquittal by all twelve jurors, it was not clear whether his immigration lawyer could obtain a stay from deportation given his family situation. Without any felony drug conviction, however, he will be eligible to apply in the future to become a permanent resident or naturalized citizen.


    Después de un juicio de cuatro días en el Tribunal Federal de Las Cruces ante el juez Robert Brack, un jurado de 12 personas regresó con cuatro veredictos de “no culpable” en cuanto al Manuel Pavón-Rodríguez. Su abogado, Stephen D Aarons, explicó que el Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez había sido acusado por el gran jurado de posesión con la intención de distribuir 246 libras (111 kilogramos) de drogas ilegales. El Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez y su codemandado, John Milne, fueron arrestados cerca de Rodeo New Mexico y las drogas fueron descubiertas en cinco mochilas de arpillera en la parte trasera del Ford Explorer de Milne. El Sr. Milne estuvo representado por dos defensores públicos federales y fue condenado por todos los cargos.

    El Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez testificó que había emigrado a Nuevo México hace más de 15 años y que vive en Santa Fe con su esposa y cuatro hijos. Tenía que regresar a su lugar de nacimiento después de la muerte de los padres de H para controlar a sus dos hermanos, uno de los cuales tiene el síndrome de Downs. Él contrató un equipo para devolverlo ilegalmente al otro lado de la frontera. Otros que se transportaban ganaban llevándose los pesados ​​mochilas cargadas con 50 a 100 libras de contrabando, pero el Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez había pagado una tarifa completa y no llevaba drogas. Aunque el Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez fue liberado después de su absolución por los doce miembros del jurado, no estaba claro si su abogado de inmigración podría obtener una suspensión de la deportación dada su situación familiar. Sin embargo, sin una condena por delitos graves de drogas, podrá postularse en el futuro para convertirse en residente permanente o ciudadano naturalizado.

     

    Count 1: On or about June 23, 2017, in Hidalgo County, in the District ofNew Mexico, and elsewhere, the defendants, JOHN LEROY MILNE and MANUEL PAVON-RODRIGUEZ, unlawfully, knowingly and intentionally combined, conspired, confederated, agreed, and acted interdependently with each other and with other persons whose names are known and unknown to the Grand Jury to commit an offense defined in 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(l) and (b)(1)(B), specifically, distribution of 100 kilograms and more of marijuana. In violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. Verdict: NOT GUILTY

    Count 2: On or about June 23, 2017, in Hidalgo County, in the District of New Mexico, the defendants, JOHN LEROY MILNE and MANUEL PAVON-RODRIGUEZ, unlawfully, knowingly and intentionally possessed with intent to distribute a controlled substance, 100 kilograms and more of a mixture and substance containing a detectable amount of marijuana. In violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B), and 18 U.S.C.§ 2. Verdict: NOT GUILTY

  • Ironclad Alibi Causes Dismissal

    Robbery of Cannabis Facility | Santa Fe New Mexican Article by Phaedra Haywood

    According to court records, Jose Nava, one of the other men whose names were mentioned in connection with the case faced charges almost identical to Barela’s until September 21. The the district attorney dismissed them. A man whom Prentice identified as someone who had placed himself at the crime scene and identified the others in 2015 does not appear to have been charged in the case.

    Nava’s attorney, Stephen Aarons, said Monday the charges against Nava were dismissed after the informant who placed Nava at the scene recanted. Aarons also said Nava had a “pretty ironclad alibi” that he was at work when the robbery happened.

  • Index of Federal Cases

    [column width=”1/1″ last=”true” title=”” title_type=”single” animation=”none” implicit=”true”]

    Stephen D Aarons is an attorney in 159 federal cases in the US District Court for the District of New Mexico.

    1:00-cr-00728-MV-1 Anthony Trujillo filed 05/26/00   closed 11/02/01
    1:00-cr-01392-JEC-4 Antoine Johnson filed 10/19/00   closed 11/05/02
    1:01-cr-00313-JAP-1 Jeffrey Lynn Dixon filed 03/13/01   closed 07/02/02
    1:01-cr-00867-JAP-4 Sofia Lopez filed 07/11/01   closed 03/06/03
    1:01-cr-01435-MV-1 Donald Ray Elliott filed 10/23/01   closed 07/11/02
    1:01-mj-00115-LFG-1 Jeffrey Lynn Dixon filed 02/23/01   closed 03/13/01
    1:01-mj-00428-DJS-1 Donald Ray Elliott filed 08/03/01   closed 10/23/01
    1:02-cr-00541-LH-1 Harold Gray filed 04/10/02   closed 04/08/03
    1:02-cr-02043-BB-8 Eddie Esquibel filed 11/15/02   closed 06/30/03
    1:03-cr-00777-BB-1 Calvin D Sinks filed 04/23/03   closed 04/20/05
    1:03-cr-00884-RHS-1 Reginald Melvin Whitehead filed 05/14/03   closed 12/17/03
    1:03-cr-01015-JEC-1 Melvin Devon Cooley filed 05/29/03   closed 03/03/04
    1:03-cr-01454-MV-1 Edmund Poblano filed 08/01/03   closed 03/03/04
    1:03-cr-02274-JB-1 John Gould filed 11/14/03   closed 05/06/09
    1:03-mj-00142-RLP-1 Jorge Juarez filed 03/17/03   closed 07/11/03
    1:04-cr-00157-JAP-1 John A Garcia filed 01/27/04   closed 10/14/05
    1:04-cr-00159-MV-2 Michael T Martin filed 01/27/04   closed 01/10/06
    1:04-cr-00561-LH-2 Jose Rivera-Morales filed 03/23/04   closed 12/21/06
    1:04-cr-01211-WJ-3 Ronnell Michael Duvall filed 06/23/04
    1:04-mj-00390-RLP-3 Ronnell Michael Duvall filed 06/11/04   closed 06/24/04
    1:05-cr-00263-JCH-1 Kenneth Manzanares filed 02/08/05   closed 09/21/07
    1:05-cr-01014-JCH-2 Major Sheffield filed 05/10/05   closed 01/06/06
    1:05-cr-01604-JB-1 Arthur Ben Peshlakai filed 07/27/05   closed 12/18/07
    1:05-cr-01849-JCH-15 Matthew Hotthan filed 08/24/05   closed 07/29/08
    1:05-cr-02159-MV-1 Jeremy Baldonado filed 09/27/05   closed 08/23/07
    1:05-cv-00639-JAP-WPL Dixon v. USA filed 06/02/05   closed 07/19/05
    1:05-cv-00640-JAP-LFG Lopez v. USA filed 06/01/05   closed 07/12/05
    1:05-mj-00240-DJS-2 Major Sheffield filed 04/21/05   closed 05/11/05
    1:05-mj-00378-RWI-1 Arthur Ben Peshlakai filed 06/22/05   closed 07/28/05
    1:06-cr-01533-JCH-1 William L Jones filed 07/11/06   closed 08/17/07
    1:06-cr-01984-JB-1 Rosemarie Barbour filed 09/13/06   closed 02/06/07
    1:06-cr-02076-MCA-2 Joseph Charles Marion, Jr filed 09/27/06   closed 08/10/07
    1:06-cr-02499-JCH-1 William L Jones filed 12/05/06   closed 08/17/07
    1:06-cr-02611-JB-2 Tan Dau Vu filed 12/21/06   closed 01/02/08
    1:06-mj-00454-DJS-2 Joseph Charles Marion, Jr filed 09/07/06   closed 09/29/06
    1:06-mj-00585-RLP-2 Tan Dau Vu filed 12/06/06   closed 12/22/06
    1:07-cr-00486-JEC-1 Suezanna Bonesteel filed 03/15/07   closed 11/14/07
    1:07-cr-00931-LFG-1 Jessica Lynn Quintana filed 05/15/07   closed 12/20/07
    1:07-cr-01760-WJ-1 Rick E Reichard filed 08/23/07   closed 04/02/08
    1:07-mj-00347-RHS-1 Suezanna Bonesteel filed 02/14/07   closed 02/21/07
    1:07-mj-01565-LFG-1 Rick E Reichard filed 08/07/07   closed 08/24/07
    1:07-mj-02277-RHS-1 Oscar Cruz-Lopez filed 12/03/07   closed 01/29/08
    1:08-cr-00159-MCA-1 Oscar Cruz-Lopez filed 01/29/08   closed 10/07/08
    1:08-cr-00822-WJ-3 Richard Tafoya filed 04/22/08   closed 03/16/10
    1:08-cr-01546-JAP-1 Joseph Lawrence Trujillo filed 07/08/08   closed 10/19/09
    1:08-cr-01670-MV-6 Anthony Parras filed 07/22/08   closed 06/03/10
    1:08-cr-01970-JCH-1 Timothy Bland filed 08/26/08   closed 08/25/11
    1:08-cr-02337-JAP-1 Noah Kuranga filed 10/08/08   closed 01/13/10
    1:08-cr-02707-WDS-1 Lowena D Towles filed 11/18/08   closed 04/29/09
    1:08-cr-02830-JCH-1 Theodore Largo filed 12/03/08   closed 07/29/10
    1:08-cv-00893-BB-LFG Rowley v. City of Albuquerque et al filed 10/01/08   closed 01/20/09
    1:08-mj-02580-LFG-1 Lowena D Towles filed 10/30/08   closed 11/18/08
    1:08-mj-02606-LFG-1 Theodore Largo filed 11/04/08   closed 12/03/08
    1:09-cr-00594-JEC-1 Yves Dion filed 03/11/09   closed 10/06/10
    1:09-cr-00862-WJ-2 Joseph A Marino filed 04/09/09   closed 11/06/09
    1:09-cr-01034-JB-1 Leroy Perea filed 04/22/09   closed 06/25/10
    1:09-cr-01047-JCH-3 Terri Ann Telles filed 04/22/09   closed 06/30/10
    1:09-cr-02050-JAP-1 Moses E Maestas filed 07/22/09   closed 10/06/10
    1:09-mj-00700-RHS-1 Joseph A Marino filed 03/16/09   closed 04/09/09
    1:09-mj-01834-DJS-1 Moses E Maestas filed 06/30/09   closed 07/22/09
    1:09-mj-02770-LFG-3 Ronald Lamont Peterson, Jr. filed 09/22/09   closed 03/24/10
    1:10-cr-00736-MCA-3 Ronald Lamont Peterson, Jr. filed 03/24/10   closed 07/06/10
    1:10-cr-00754-JCH-1 Jose L. Cortazar filed 03/24/10   closed 08/23/11
    1:10-cr-00759-JB-1 Wesley Rogers filed 03/24/10   closed 03/21/11
    1:10-cr-00989-JEC-2 Cristian Sepulveda Cabrera filed 04/14/10   closed 03/23/11
    1:10-cr-01358-MCA-1 Raymond Joseph Martin filed 05/11/10   closed 05/17/11
    1:10-cr-01759-JEC-2 David Gee filed 06/10/10   closed 11/02/10
    1:10-cr-03354-WJ-2 Oscar Eduardo Gonzalez-Leon filed 12/15/10   closed 06/18/12
    1:10-cv-00709-JB-LFG A.L.A. et al v. The Board of Education of the Las Vegas City Schools et al filed 07/28/10   closed 11/15/11
    1:10-cv-01182-WJ-GBW Rowley v. Morant et al filed 12/10/10   closed 12/19/14
    1:10-mj-00984-DJS-1 Raymond Joseph Martin filed 04/06/10   closed 05/11/10
    1:10-mj-02998-RHS-2 Oscar Eduardo Gonzalez-Leon filed 11/18/10   closed 01/11/11
    1:11-cr-00886-JCH-1 Demetria Luisa Brown filed 04/13/11   closed 02/23/12
    1:11-cr-02025-JCH-1 Donnie Neil Hobbs filed 07/28/11   closed 01/15/14
    1:11-cr-02794-LH-1 Teresa Ann Lucero filed 10/27/11   closed 10/27/11
    1:11-cr-03101-LH-1 Michael Aguirre filed 12/14/11   closed 08/28/12
    1:11-mj-00429-DJS-4 Abel Carrillo Nevarez filed 02/25/11   closed 03/02/11
    1:11-mj-01419-LFG-1 Mark Edwards Jacobs filed 05/31/11   closed 06/02/11
    1:11-mj-01698-KBM-1 Donnie Neil Hobbs filed 06/29/11   closed 07/28/11
    1:11-mj-02074-WDS-2 Llewellyn Dee Benally filed 08/12/11   closed 08/17/11
    1:12-cr-00533-LH-1 Lawrence Munoz filed 03/13/12   closed 01/15/13
    1:12-cr-00857-JAP-1 Veronica Villela-Romero filed 04/12/12   closed 05/16/12
    1:12-cr-01062-MV-1 Victor Javier Hernandez filed 05/08/12   closed 09/13/12
    1:12-cr-01099-JEC-1 Elizabeth Talamantes filed 05/11/12   closed 06/20/12
    1:12-cr-01182-JB-1 Mario Alberto Munoz-Chavez filed 05/21/12   closed 07/02/12
    1:12-cr-01401-MCA-1 Torvold Kellywood filed 06/12/12   closed 02/14/13
    1:12-cr-01907-WJ-1 Charles Gallegos filed 08/07/12   closed 11/05/13
    1:12-cr-01916-WJ-1 Willie Bachicha filed 08/07/12   closed 03/25/13
    1:12-cr-02222-WJ-1 Antonio Gutierrez filed 09/05/12   closed 07/08/14
    1:12-cr-02369-MV-1 Desiree Louise Sowell filed 09/25/12   closed 05/13/14
    1:12-cr-02375-JB-1 Uriel J Esquivel filed 09/25/12   closed 05/21/14
    1:12-cr-02680-JAP-1 Deluvino Elias Salazar filed 10/23/12   closed 03/20/14
    1:12-cr-03182-JB-6 Manuel Valencia filed 12/12/12   closed 04/21/15
    1:12-cr-03289-JCH-2 Marcial Hurtado-Fonseca filed 12/19/12   closed 06/12/13
    1:12-mj-00501-LFG-1 Veronica Villela-Romero filed 03/07/12   closed 04/12/12
    1:12-mj-00502-LFG-1 Elizabeth Talamantes filed 03/07/12   closed 05/11/12
    1:12-mj-00748-LFG-1 Mario Alberto Munoz-Chavez filed 03/29/12   closed 05/21/12
    1:12-mj-00749-LFG-1 Victor Javier Hernandez filed 03/29/12   closed 05/08/12
    1:12-mj-02039-LFG-1 Uriel J Esquivel filed 08/27/12   closed 09/25/12
    1:12-mj-02473-KBM-1 Deluvino Elias Salazar filed 10/09/12   closed 10/24/12
    1:12-mj-03078-RHS-2 Marcial Hurtado-Fonseca filed 12/07/12   closed 12/21/12
    1:12-mr-00054-WDS-1 *SEALED* Antonio Carroll filed 01/18/12
    1:13-cr-00306-JAP-2 Alex Baena-Aguilar filed 02/06/13   closed 09/26/13
    1:13-cr-00559-JB-2 Nestor Valdez filed 02/27/13   closed 10/04/13
    1:13-cr-01372-MCA-3 Alfredo Andrade filed 04/24/13   closed 06/12/14
    1:13-cr-02028-JAP-1 Angel LNU filed 06/12/13   closed 10/10/14
    1:13-cr-02226-JB-1 Lee Baca filed 06/26/13   closed 02/04/14
    1:13-cr-02858-JB-1 David Mendez-Medina filed 08/27/13   closed 08/27/13
    1:13-mj-00149-LFG-2 Alex Baena-Aguilar filed 01/18/13   closed 02/06/13
    1:13-mj-02694-KBM-1 Carmen Melendez-Enriquez filed 08/22/13   closed 11/18/13
    1:15-cr-00214-MV-1 Gerald James Viarrial filed 01/21/15   closed 01/26/17
    1:15-cr-00533-JB-1 Marcos A Martinez filed 02/18/15   closed 02/14/17
    1:15-cr-04076-WJ-1 Rashad Travon Woods filed 11/17/15   closed 06/15/16
    1:15-cv-01003-JB-CG Valencia v. United States of America filed 11/04/15   closed 09/30/16
    1:15-mj-00226-KBM-1 Marcos A Martinez filed 01/26/15   closed 02/20/15
    1:17-cr-01103-MV-1 Dina Gonzalez-Marquez filed 04/26/17
    1:17-cr-01362-WJ-1 Uchenna Nlemchi filed 05/24/17
    1:91-cv-00782-ELM USA v. Corvette Chevrolet filed 08/05/91   closed 02/25/92
    1:92-cr-00174-SEC-1 Jason J Jones filed 04/09/92   closed 10/09/92
    1:94-cv-00001-SEC-WD Flattley v. Johnson filed 01/03/94   closed 04/20/94
    1:99-cr-00008-MV-2 Johannah Whitman filed 01/07/99   closed 08/25/99
    1:99-cr-00770-MV-1 Hector Rogelio Valles-Rodriguez filed 07/08/99   closed 06/08/00
    2:06-cr-00424-JCH-2 Nicholas Jay Hopkins filed 02/27/06   closed 06/02/06
    2:09-cr-03663-MV-1 Luis Manuel Montoya filed 12/23/09   closed 03/31/10
    2:10-cr-01566-WJ-15 Edwin Baltazar Sanchez filed 05/26/10   closed 06/29/11
    2:10-cr-03093-JB-15 Mario David Di Franco filed 11/10/10   closed 06/09/11
    2:11-mj-02690-ACT-1 Samuel Valles-Ruiz filed 11/16/11   closed 01/24/12
    2:12-cr-00130-MV-1 Samuel Valles-Ruiz filed 01/24/12   closed 08/16/12
    2:12-cr-02014-JAP-1 Mario Kanakoqui Isordia filed 08/15/12   closed 11/29/12
    2:12-mj-01116-CG-1 Mario Kanakoqui Isordia filed 05/09/12   closed 08/15/12
    2:13-cr-01504-JCH-1 Maria Mercedes Aguilar-Urquilla filed 05/07/13   closed 06/06/13
    2:13-cr-01588-ABJ-1 David Gallegos-Correa filed 05/09/13   closed 06/25/13
    2:13-cr-01589-WJ-1 Jesus Calderon-Saenz filed 05/09/13   closed 06/17/13
    2:13-cr-01590-MV-1 Alvaro Salazar-Rivera filed 05/09/13   closed 06/25/13
    2:13-cr-02711-JB-1 David Mendez-Medina filed 08/14/13   closed 10/08/13
    2:13-cr-04004-RB-1 Mario Orlando Jude Serrano filed 12/11/13   closed 11/09/15
    2:13-cr-04037-MCA-1 Fausto Abel Jimenez-Armendariz filed 12/17/13   closed 02/18/14
    2:13-cr-04110-MCA-1 Miguel Angel Rivera-De La Trinidad filed 12/26/13   closed 02/27/14
    2:13-cr-04111-MV-1 Roberto Brito-Molina filed 12/26/13   closed 02/06/14
    2:13-mj-00960-WDS-1 David Gallegos-Correa filed 03/26/13   closed 05/09/13
    2:13-mj-00961-WDS-1 Jesus Calderon-Saenz filed 03/26/13   closed 05/09/13
    2:13-mj-01303-RHS-1 Alvaro Salazar-Rivera filed 04/18/13   closed 05/09/13
    2:13-mj-01304-RHS-1 Maria Mercedes Aguilar-Urquilla filed 04/18/13   closed 05/07/13
    2:13-mj-02357-ACT-1 David Mendez-Medina filed 07/15/13   closed 08/14/13
    2:13-mj-03336-LFG-1 Fausto Abel Jimenez-Armendariz filed 10/23/13   closed 12/17/13
    2:13-mj-03715-KBM-1 Miguel Angel Rivera-De La Trinidad filed 12/01/13   closed 12/26/13
    2:13-mj-03716-KBM-1 Roberto Brito-Molina filed 12/01/13   closed 12/26/13
    2:14-cr-00832-KG-2 Martin Llantada filed 03/19/14   closed 05/12/15
    2:17-cr-01037-RB-1 Yi Lee filed 04/19/17
    2:17-cr-01923-RB-2 Manuel Pavon-Rodriguez filed 07/19/17
    5:12-cr-03108-MV-1 Roger Baeza filed 12/05/12   closed 02/06/14
    5:12-mj-02672-WDS-1 Roger Baeza filed 10/30/12   closed 12/11/12
    6:05-cv-00612-MV-KBM Elliott v. USA filed 06/01/05   closed 08/08/05
    6:08-cv-00954-WJ-RHS Arellano v. Board of Education of Las Vegas Public Schools filed 10/16/08   closed 06/12/09
    6:10-cv-01086-BB-GBW Burciaga-Segura et al v. The Board of Education of the Las Vegas City Schools et al filed 11/15/10   closed 05/26/11
    6:93-cr-00202-SEC-1 Jose Luis Barron-Lopez filed 04/22/93   closed 01/21/94
    6:93-cv-01467-PJK San Ildefonso v. Ridlon, et al filed 12/14/93   closed 04/30/97
    6:95-cv-01062-MV-DJS Stock v. Grantham, et al filed 09/19/95   closed 10/26/95
    6:95-cv-01127-SEC-WD Ohls v. USA filed 09/22/95   closed 05/14/96

    [/column]

  • US v. Maestas, 639 F.3d 1032 (10th Cir 2011)

    [column width=”1/1″ last=”true” title=”” title_type=”single” animation=”none” implicit=”true”]

    639 F.3d 1032

    UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff–Appellee,
    v.
    Moses Earnest MAESTAS, Defendant–Appellant.

    No. 10–2226.

    United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.

    [639 F.3d 1033]

    Stephen D. Aarons, Aarons Law Firm PC, Santa Fe, NM, for Defendant–Appellant.John C. Anderson, Assistant United States Attorney (Kenneth J. Gonzales, United States Attorney, with him on the brief), Albuquerque, NM, for Plaintiff–Appellee.Before MURPHY, HARTZ, and HOLMES, Circuit Judges.HOLMES, Circuit Judge.

    Defendant–Appellant Moses Earnest Maestas appeals from the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence—specifically, forty-two grams of methamphetamine and a handgun—seized from an enclosed garbage storage area. Mr. Maestas argues that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the place where the evidence was seized, and that the seizure

    [639 F.3d 1034]

    therefore violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm the district court’s denial of Mr. Maestas’s motion to suppress.

    BACKGROUND

    On June 29, 2009, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Albuquerque, New Mexico, police department arranged for an undercover officer to make a controlled purchase of methamphetamine from Mr. Maestas. The law enforcement officers expected the purchase to take place at a triplex residential unit located at 13101 Mountain Road NE in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The Mountain Road residence was rented by a man known as “Road Dog,” R., Vol. III, at 8–9 (Suppression Mot. Hr’g Tr., dated Mar. 4, 2010), but Mr. Maestas had spent a considerable amount of time there over the preceding three months.

    The officers observed Mr. Maestas pull up in a maroon Nissan Maxima car and enter the residence. Before entering the home, however, he “place[d] a black firearm in the small of his back.” R., Vol. I, at 20 (Plea Agreement, filed Mar. 9, 2010). Once inside, Mr. Maestas “pulled out a ziplock bag that contained clear crystalline substance and started running his fingers through the contents of the ziplock bag.” Id. Mr. Maestas then realized that he needed scales to weigh the drugs, so he gave his brother (who was present at the residence) forty dollars and sent him out to purchase scales.

    Shortly thereafter, Mr. Maestas received a phone call informing him that law enforcement had the house surrounded. Mr. Maestas then took the ziplock bag of methamphetamine and went out the back door. As he stepped out, “he looked around,” reached “to the small of his back,” and walked toward the enclosed garbage storage area adjacent to the residence. R., Vol. III, at 32. Mr. Maestas disappeared momentarily inside the fenced-in area; during that time, the observing officer “could not see him.” Id. Once he reemerged, Mr. Maestas attempted to re-enter the residence, but the undercover officer had locked him out. Mr. Maestas was then arrested. The officers subsequently searched the enclosed garbage storage area and “discovered a black hand-gun placed near a fence and behind a garbage can” and “a ziplock bag that contained the crystalline type substance inside one of the garbage cans.” R., Vol. I, at 21. The bag contained forty-two grams of methamphetamine.

    Mr. Maestas was charged with one count of distributing five grams or more of methamphetamine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B), one count of possessing with intent to distribute fifty grams or more of methamphetamine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(A), and one count of carrying a firearm during and in relation to a drug-trafficking crime, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(a). Mr. Maestas moved to suppress the methamphetamine and firearm recovered from the property; these items served as the basis for the second and third counts.1 Mr. Maestas argued that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the enclosed garbage storage area because (1) he was a guest in the home and, consequently, should be afforded the protections of the Fourth Amendment, and (2) the Fourth Amendment protections applicable

    [639 F.3d 1035]

    to the residence extended to the enclosed garbage storage area, which is within the curtilage of the home. The district court denied the motion, holding that

    Defendant Maestas failed in his burden to establish a privacy interest in the dwelling and certainly not the exterior, common garbage area where the physical evidence was located. Accordingly, Maestas lacked a subjective expectation of privacy necessary to challenge the search…. [E]ven if Maestas’ connection to the home had been less tenuous and he was the type of overnight guest to which Fourth Amendment privacy expectation has been assigned, the items were located i[n] an area shared with other apartment residents where garbage is placed outside for pickup. Surely Defendant Maestas has established no legitimate, reasonable expectation of privacy in that area.R., Vol. I, at 30 (Mem. Op. & Order Denying Def.’s Mot. to Suppress, filed Apr. 5, 2010).

    Mr. Maestas pleaded guilty to all three counts, reserving his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress. This timely appeal followed.

    STANDARD OF REVIEW

    When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, “we consider the totality of the circumstances and view the evidence in a light most favorable to the government.” United States v. Higgins, 282 F.3d 1261, 1269 (10th Cir.2002) (quoting United States v. Gordon, 168 F.3d 1222, 1225 (10th Cir.1999)) (internal quotation marks omitted). The district court’s factual findings are reviewed for clear error, and “the ultimate determination of reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment is a question of law reviewable de novo.” Id. (same). “The burden of proof is on the defendant to demonstrate that he has a reasonable expectation of privacy in the place searched….” United States v. Johnson, 584 F.3d 995, 998 (10th Cir.2009).

    DISCUSSION

    The Fourth Amendment protects the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. A defendant invoking the protection of the Fourth Amendment “must demonstrate that he personally has an expectation of privacy in the place searched, and that his expectation is reasonable.” Minnesota v. Carter, 525 U.S. 83, 88, 119 S.Ct. 469, 142 L.Ed.2d 373 (1998) (emphasis added); see also United States v. Poe, 556 F.3d 1113, 1121 (10th Cir.2009) (“It is well-established that ‘the Fourth Amendment is a personal right that must be invoked by an individual.’ ” (quoting Carter, 525 U.S. at 88, 119 S.Ct. 469)). In order to meet this burden, “the defendant must show that he had a subjective expectation of privacy in the premises searched and that ‘society is prepared to recognize that expectation as reasonable.’ ” Higgins, 282 F.3d at 1270 (quoting United States v. Conway, 73 F.3d 975, 979 (10th Cir.1995)).

    Under the Fourth Amendment, it is axiomatic that people have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their own homes. Griffin v. Wisconsin, 483 U.S. 868, 884, 107 S.Ct. 3164, 97 L.Ed.2d 709 (1987). However, “in some circumstances a person may have a legitimate expectation of privacy in the house of someone else.” Carter, 525 U.S. at 89, 119 S.Ct. 469. For example, in Minnesota v. Olson, the Supreme Court held that an overnight guest has a reasonable expectation of privacy in the home of his host. 495 U.S. 91, 98, 110 S.Ct. 1684, 109 L.Ed.2d 85 (1990). Extending this principle further, this court

    [639 F.3d 1036]

    has “held that a social guest who does not stay overnight has a reasonable expectation of privacy” in the host’s property. Poe, 556 F.3d at 1122 (citing United States v. Rhiger, 315 F.3d 1283, 1286 (10th Cir.2003)). In order for a social guest to qualify for protection under the Fourth Amendment, there must be a “degree of acceptance into the household,” Rhiger, 315 F.3d at 1286 (quoting Carter, 525 U.S. at 90, 119 S.Ct. 469) (internal quotation marks omitted), or an “ongoing and meaningful connection to [the host’s] home” establishing the person’s status as a social guest, id. at 1287.

    On the other hand, “an individual does not possess an expectation of privacy to challenge the search of another’s property when he or she is present solely for commercial or business reasons” and otherwise has no meaningful connection with the home. Id. at 1286 (citing Carter, 525 U.S. at 90–91, 119 S.Ct. 469). More specifically, in Carter, the Supreme Court found no expectation of privacy when the defendants were in the home for the sole purpose of packaging cocaine for distribution—they were “not overnight guests, but were essentially present for a business transaction and were only in the home a matter of hours,” and “[t]here [wa]s no suggestion that they had a previous relationship with [the resident of the home], or that there was any other purpose to their visit.” 525 U.S. at 90, 119 S.Ct. 469.

    Initially, Mr. Maestas argues that his relationship with Road Dog and the three-month period during which he frequented the residence “established a ‘meaningful connection’ to the apartment and an expectation of privacy there.” Aplt. Reply Br. at 3. Mr. Maestas testified that during the three-month period preceding his arrest he was at the house “on a regular basis,” R., Vol. III, at 9, that he frequently “stayed there overnight” when he was using drugs, id. at 10, that he would “shower there” and “g[e]t cleaned up there,” id. at 12, that he would spend time there “talk[ing] to [Road Dog] … about life,” id. at 16, and that “Road Dog [did not] have any problem with the fact that [he] w [as] staying the night there at his Mountain Road residence,” id. at 10. On the other hand, the government argues that “the record is clear that on the day of his arrest, Maestas was present at the Mountain Road apartment for no purpose other than to conduct an illegal narcotics transaction,” and therefore he “had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the Mountain Road apartment.” Aplee. Br. at 8.

    As stated above, the district court concluded that Mr. Maestas’s “connection to the home had been [too] tenuous and he was [not] the type of overnight guest to which Fourth Amendment privacy expectation has been assigned.” R., Vol. I, at 30. Accordingly, the district court concluded that the search did not violate the Fourth Amendment. We need not, however, definitively decide this issue. In this instance, we assume without deciding that Mr. Maestas was a social or overnight guest at Road Dog’s residence and that for Fourth Amendment purposes his expectation of privacy was coterminous with the expectation of privacy of the tenant, Road Dog. Under these assumptions, Mr. Maestas had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the apartment. But that does not necessarily resolve the issue of whether Mr. Maestas—standing in the shoes of the tenant, Road Dog—had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the garbage storage area adjacent to the triplex residence. That is the issue before us for decision.

    Mr. Maestas argues that the garbage storage area is within the curtilage protected by the Fourth Amendment, while the government argues that it is not. Under well-settled Fourth Amendment jurisprudence,

    [639 F.3d 1037]

    the privacy expectation that one has in the home generally extends to the “curtilage” of the home. See, e.g., Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27, 34, 121 S.Ct. 2038, 150 L.Ed.2d 94 (2001); Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S. 170, 180, 104 S.Ct. 1735, 80 L.Ed.2d 214 (1984); Reeves v. Churchich, 484 F.3d 1244, 1254 (10th Cir.2007). “Curtilage is the area to which extends the intimate activity associated with the sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of life.” Lundstrom v. Romero, 616 F.3d 1108, 1128 (10th Cir.2010) (brackets omitted) (quoting Reeves, 484 F.3d at 1254) (internal quotation marks omitted). In determining whether an area around a home is within the “curtilage,” the court generally considers four factors: “(1) the area’s proximity to the home; (2) whether the area is included within an enclosure surrounding the house; (3) the manner in which the area is used; and (4) the steps the resident has taken to protect the area from observation.” Id.

    Regarding the first, second, and fourth factors, the evidence presented in this case demonstrates that the garbage storage area at issue abuts one unit of the triplex, is enclosed by a fence, and is largely shielded from observation. See R., Vol. III, at 17–18, 32 (stating that the area was “an enclosed area adjacent to the residence,” surrounded by a “coyote fence,” and that the officer “could not see” Mr. Maestas when he entered the area). However, as stated above, “curtilage” is defined as “the area to which extends the intimate activity associated with the sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of life.” Lundstrom, 616 F.3d at 1128. Consequently, our observation that “it is difficult to imagine anyone using an area in which garbage was regularly deposited for the intimate activities of the home” is at least arguably relevant to our assessment of the third factor. United States v. Long, 176 F.3d 1304, 1308 (10th Cir.1999).2 However, ultimately we need not opine on whether the garbage storage area located outside Road Dog’s residence is in fact within the curtilage. Even assuming, arguendo, that it is, Mr. Maestas cannot demonstrate that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the area.

    Road Dog lived in a multi-unit residential complex—namely, a triplex. Thus, the garbage storage area was not used exclusively by Road Dog and his guests; to the contrary, it was used by at least two other tenants in the triplex (and presumably their guests), and it was accessible by the landlord (and presumably his or her agents). See R., Vol. III, at 14 (stating that the area contained “three trash cans” that were used by the “three residents at the apartment complex”). The government argues that “[t]he communal nature of the garbage area defeats any argument that Maestas maintained a legitimate expectation of privacy in that space.” Aplee. Br. at 10–11. Although we have stated in dicta that “[a]partment tenants who move personal items into a common hallway cannot reasonably believe those items will be left uninspected,” United States v. Barrows, 481 F.3d 1246, 1249 (10th Cir.2007), we have never definitively ruled on whether an individual can have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the common or shared areas of a multi-unit residential

    [639 F.3d 1038]

    dwelling, see United States v. Martin, 613 F.3d 1295, 1299 & n. 1 (10th Cir.2010) (recognizing the “disagreement among our sister courts about the Fourth Amendment status of apartment building common areas,” but finding it “unnecessary to resolve whether [the defendant] possessed a reasonable expectation of privacy in the apartment building’s atrium or entryway”).

    In general, most circuit courts have found that “shared” or “common” areas in apartment complexes or multi-unit dwellings, such as hallways, entryways, and basements, are not areas over which an individual tenant can have a reasonable expectation of privacy. See, e.g., United States v. Miravalles, 280 F.3d 1328, 1333 (11th Cir.2002) (holding that “tenants in a large, high-rise apartment building, the front door of which has an undependable lock that was inoperable on the day in question, [do not] have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the common areas of their building”); United States v. Nohara, 3 F.3d 1239, 1242 (9th Cir.1993) (holding that a tenant in an apartment complex “has no reasonable expectation of privacy in the common areas of the building”); United States v. Acosta, 965 F.2d 1248, 1252 (3d Cir.1992) (holding that the defendant did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the shared hallway or the backyard of a three-story, multi-unit apartment building); United States v. Eisler, 567 F.2d 814, 816 (8th Cir.1977) (holding that an apartment tenant does not have “a reasonable expectation of privacy in the hallway of the apartment building”). The general reasoning behind this conclusion, as the Eleventh Circuit explained in Miravalles, is that apartment tenants

    have little control over those areas, which are available for the use of other tenants, friends and visitors of other tenants, the landlord, delivery people, repair workers, sales people, postal carriers and the like. The reasonableness of a tenant’s privacy expectation in the common areas of a multi-unit apartment building stands in contrast to that of a homeowner regarding the home and its surrounding area, over which the homeowner exercises greater control.

    280 F.3d at 1332 (citations omitted).3

    Most courts have found this reasoning applies even to multi-unit complexes with a small number of units, such as duplexes. See, e.g., United States v. McCaster, 193 F.3d 930, 933 (8th Cir.1999) (holding that a tenant of a two-unit complex had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the shared hall closet of the dwelling, which was accessible by two other tenants and the landlord); United States v. Holland, 755 F.2d 253, 255 (2d Cir.1985) (holding that the defendant did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the entryway of a two-unit dwelling); see also United States v. McGrane, 746 F.2d 632, 634 (8th Cir.1984) (holding that the defendant had no Fourth Amendment right to privacy in the basement of a four-apartment residence, which was accessible to all tenants

    [639 F.3d 1039]

    and the landlord, even though the officer “gained entry to the basement as an uninvited person”).4

    On the other hand, at least one court has recognized that under certain unique circumstances a different result may be warranted—specifically, when all the occupants of a multi-unit residential dwelling have a familial or other special relationship with each other. In United States v. King, the Sixth Circuit held that the defendant “had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the basement of the two-family duplex where he resided,” when “he shared the downstairs unit with his brother while his mother and siblings resided in the upstairs unit.” 227 F.3d 732, 748–50 (6th Cir.2000). In other words, the defendant had a valid privacy interest in the shared basement of the two-unit residential dwelling because, among other things, the residents were all “family members.” Id. at 749; see also United States v. Mendoza, 281 F.3d 712, 721 (8th Cir.2002) (Bye, J., dissenting) (disagreeing with the majority’s holding that the defendant did not have a Fourth Amendment privacy interest in the vestibule of a duplex because, among other reasons, “[t]he only two tenants of the duplex were boyfriend and girlfriend, and thus they shared a common interest in excluding the public from the common vestibule”).

    Keeping these principles in mind, we need not establish any bright-line rules that would generally define the Fourth Amendment’s reach over common or shared areas of multi-unit residential dwellings. See United States v. Holt, 264 F.3d 1215, 1231 (10th Cir.2001) (en banc) (per curiam) (“Because of ‘the fact-specific nature of the reasonableness inquiry,’ the Supreme Court has generally ‘eschewed bright-line rules’ in the Fourth Amendment context.” (quoting Ohio v. Robinette, 519 U.S. 33, 39, 117 S.Ct. 417, 136 L.Ed.2d 347 (1996))), abrogated on other grounds as stated in United States v. Stewart, 473 F.3d 1265, 1269 (10th Cir.2007); see also United States v. Villegas, 495 F.3d 761, 767 (7th Cir.2007) (noting that the inquiry “is necessarily fact dependent, and whether a legitimate expectation of privacy exists in a particular place or thing must be determined on a case-by-case basis” (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted)). We conclude that on the particular facts of this case Mr. Maestas has failed to demonstrate that he had a subjective expectation of privacy in the garbage storage area which society is willing to accept as being objectively reasonable. First, the fact that this was a common area shared by all three tenants (and presumably their guests) and the landlord (and presumably his or her agents) weighs against a conclusion that Mr. Maestas had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the area. See, e.g., McCaster, 193 F.3d at 933 (finding no Fourth Amendment right to privacy in the hall closet of a two-unit dwelling when “[t]he evidence showed that two other tenants, as well as the landlord, had access to the closet”); McGrane, 746 F.2d at 634 (holding that the tenant did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the common storage area of the complex, which was “accessible to all tenants and the landlord”); see also Barrows, 481 F.3d at 1249 (“Apartment tenants who move personal items into a common hallway

    [639 F.3d 1040]

    cannot reasonably believe those items will be left uninspected.”).

    Second, Mr. Maestas has not demonstrated that Road Dog had any sort of familial or other special relationship with the other tenants—as in King—that might warrant a different result. See 227 F.3d at 748–50. Finally, the area in question was located outside of the multi-unit complex and was used to store cans of garbage. Cf. Long, 176 F.3d at 1308 (“[I]t is difficult to imagine anyone using an area in which garbage was regularly deposited for the intimate activities of the home.”). Under these specific facts, it cannot be said that Mr. Maestas had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the shared garbage storage area of Road Dog’s triplex. Accordingly, the district court did not err in denying the motion to suppress.

    CONCLUSION

    Based on the foregoing, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Mr. Maestas’s motion to suppress the methamphetamine and firearm.

    ——–

    Notes:

    1. The first count was based on a June 8, 2009, controlled transaction in which Mr. Maestas sold an officer eighteen grams of methamphetamine. This transaction and the resulting charge were not implicated by the motion to suppress, and Mr. Maestas does not challenge his conviction on this count on appeal.
    2. In Long, police officers “seized three garbage bags from atop a trailer parked near [the defendant’s] garage.” 176 F.3d at 1306. On appeal, we concluded that “the district court’s determination that the trailer was outside the curtilage [was] not clearly erroneous.” Id. at 1308. In noteworthy respects, however, the garbage area in Long differs from the one at issue here. In Long, “no fence or other barrier enclosed the trailer,” and the defendant did not “attempt[ ] in any way to shield [the trailer] from public view.” Id.
    3. But see United States v. Carriger, 541 F.2d 545, 549–50 (6th Cir.1976) (holding that “a tenant in an apartment building has a reasonable expectation of privacy in the common areas of the building not open to the general public,” where the apartment building was locked and the officer gained access to the common area “without permission” by entering the complex as several workmen left the building). The Sixth Circuit has recognized that Carriger is “outside of the mainstream” in finding a reasonable expectation of privacy in such common areas and has declined to move further in this regard by broadly applying its holding. United States v. Dillard, 438 F.3d 675, 683 (6th Cir.2006); see Nohara, 3 F.3d at 1242 (“[W]e join the First, Second, and Eighth Circuits which have rejected this [ Carriger ] rationale and held an apartment dweller has no reasonable expectation of privacy in the common areas of the building whether the officer trespasses or not”).
    4. But see United States v. Fluker, 543 F.2d 709, 716 (9th Cir.1976) (holding that the defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the shared hallway of a duplex, where the door to the hallway was “always locked and [ ] only the occupants of the two apartments and the landlord had keys thereto”); Fixel v. Wainwright, 492 F.2d 480, 484 (5th Cir.1974) (holding that the defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the shared backyard of a four-unit complex).

     

    [/column]

  • Case of Mistaken Identity

    [column width=”1/5″ last=”true” title=”” title_type=”single” animation=”none” implicit=”true”]

    US v Gee 1:10-cr-01759-JEC-2

    • Outcome:All charges dismissed
      Description:Charged with selling drugs to undercover police officer in Farmington.

     

    [/column]

  • Murder Suspect Gets Probation

    [column width=”1/1″ last=”true” title=”” title_type=”single” animation=”none” implicit=”true”]

     

     

    [/column]