Jоhnny B. Sharpe (appellant) appeals from his bench trial conviction for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of Code § 18.2-248. On appeal, he contends the trial court erroneously concluded the warrantless, “no-knock” entry of the motel room in which he was sleeping did not viоlate the Fourth Amendment. We hold appellant failed to prove he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the motel room and, thus, that he has no legal basis for challenging the search. Accordingly, we affirm the conviction.
I.
BACKGROUND
On November 21, 2002, Virginia Beach Police Detectives Brent Calhoun, J.J. Kozlowski and Mike Felts conducted an investigation of a motel room suspected to be involved in narcotics activity. They received information from an informant who observed people “coming and going” from a particular room at a particular motel and “thought it merited [the detectivеs’] checking it out.” The detectives planned what they “call[ed] a knock and talk,” in which they “approach a room[,] knock on the door and speak to the occupants.”
The detectives arrived at the motel at around 8:40 a.m. and checked the registration for the room at issue. They then prоceeded to the room, conducted brief surveillance, and knocked on the door at about 8:55 a.m. When an individual looked through the curtains, they identified themselves as police officers and asked if he would mind opening the door to speak with them. The individual, who later identified himself as Brandon Jones, oрened the door and stepped out, and “[t]he door closed behind him.” The curtains to the room remained closed. Upon learning Jones’s name and obtaining identification from him, the detectives ascertained that he was not listed as a registered occupant of the room.
The officers inquired whether Jones “had smoked any marijuana in the room,” and Jones responded “that he had the night before.” When asked if any marijuana was in the room, Jones said “there was a small amount inside an ashtray.” The officers then inquired whether there was any cocaine in the room, and Jones said “his roommate,” later determinеd to be appellant, had “[b]etween
At the detectives’ request, Jones gave them permission to search him. During the course of the search, they found two motel room keys. The officers intended to enter the room tо “freeze the scene and find out if anyone else was in the room other than the person [Jones had] indicated.” They tried the keys in the door, but “[n]either ... worked.” Detective Felts then obtained a key to the room “from a hotel employee.” When Felts returned with the key, they entered the room. The detectivеs did not ask Jones for permission to enter the room and did not knock again prior to actually entering the room. Jones was cooperative while speaking to police and engaged in no efforts to call out to the remaining occupant of the room or to otherwise alert him to the presence of the police outside the motel room.
Upon entering the room, the detectives found appellant “laying down” on the bed closest to the door. Detective Calhoun did not “know if [appellant] was asleep or not,” but testified he “did have to say, Hey, wake up.” Detective Kozlоwski moved far enough into the room to determine that no one was in the bathroom or anywhere else in the room.
Detective Calhoun then asked appellant who he was, and appellant identified himself as Johnny Sharpe. Detective Calhoun knew no one by that name was a registered occuрant of the room. Detective Calhoun asked appellant for identification, and appellant responded that he had some in the jeans lying on the floor next to the bed. Appellant gave Detective Calhoun permission to retrieve his identification and to search the jeans. Inside apрellant’s jeans, Detective Calhoun found “twenty-four black seamed baggies containing suspected cocaine” and $280 in currency. In plain view on the nightstand next to the bed in which appellant had been found “was what seemed to be crack cocaine equaling the size that Mr. Jones had indicated was in thе room.”
Detective Calhoun then asked appellant for permission to search the room. When appellant “indicated that [the detectives] could not search anymore,” Detective Calhoun “told him that the scene was now frozen.” Calhoun then left the scene and returned with a search warrant at about 12:06 p.m. After obtaining the warrant, Calhoun searched the room. In addition to the suspected cocaine found in plain view during the initial entry of the room, Detective Calhoun recovered a Colt 45 handgun, approximately twenty-four grams of marijuana, and three Ecstasy pills.
Appellant was arrestеd and charged with the instant offense. Prior to trial, he moved to suppress the evidence as the product of an unreasonable search. He argued, inter alia, that the detectives should have knocked and announced prior to entering the room because “[t]hey never stated that they heard anybody running arоund inside, toilets flushing, any noise,” and Jones did not report that any weapons were in the room. Thus, appellant argued, the detectives lacked the exigent circumstances necessary for a warrantless, no-knock entry.
The Commonwealth asserted that appellant failed to establish standing to contеst the search of the room because he was not a registered occupant. The Commonwealth also argued that the detectives did knock and announce their presence before they engaged in the conversation -with Jones and that these actions were sufficient to constitute knoсking for their subsequent entry. It appeared to concede that the detectives lacked exigent circumstances.
The trial court denied the motion, ruling as follows:
They went and secured the scene. They went and got a search warrant. They asked permission to get the ID and to search the jeans once they were in the room. There was no еvidence as to where they went and got the key. One could assume they went to the desk and got the key. One could assume that the defense — that they — I don’t know where they got the key. There’s no showing that it was— that the second entrance was not with consent; and the first entrance was with consent. 1 The police did not go beyond what they should have done.
As far as the standing question, it’s a good question because there was no evidence how long [appellant] was in the room, whether he belonged in the room, whether he was splitting the room, whether he’d gotten there five minutes before and was just visiting in the room. There’s probably enough to deny the motion to suppress just on the standing issue; but with everything еlse, there’s more than enough to deny the motion.
(Footnote added).
After the trial court denied the motion to suppress, appellant entered a conditional guilty plea and noted his appeal of the denial of the motion to suppress.
II.
ANALYSIS
On appeal of a ruling on a motion to suppress, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party, here the Commonwealth, granting to the evidence all reasonable inferences deducible therefrom.
Commonwealth v. Grimstead,
Appellant contends he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the motel room searched and that the detectives violated his Fourth Amendment rights by entering to secure the premises without first knocking and announcing their intent to do so. The Commonwealth contends appellant lacked a reasоnable expectation of privacy in the motel room. It also argues that the detectives knocked when they first arrived at the room and spoke with Brandon Jones and that they were not required to knock and announce again before entering the room. Finally, it contends that the cocaine is аdmissible under an exception to the exclusionary rule because the detectives would inevitably have discovered the cocaine pursuant to execution of a valid search warrant.
We hold, on the facts of this case, that appellant failed to prove he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the motel room, which was a prerequisite to his ability to challenge the entry of the motel room.
At a hearing on a defendant’s motion to suppress evidence allegedly obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the defendant has the burden of proving he had a reаsonable expectation of privacy in the place searched.
2
Barnes v. Commonwealth,
“[S]earches and seizures inside a home without a warrant are presumptively unreasonable.... [T]he Fourth Amendment has drawn a firm line at the entrance to the
The United States Supreme Court has held that an overnight guest in a house has the same sort of expectation оf
privacy that the Fourth Amendment protects,
Minnesota v. Olson,
Whether the privacy interest for personal overnight guests recognized in
Olson
extends to the overnight guests of motel registrants, especially those guests of whose presence motel staff is unaware, has not been resolved by the United States Suрreme Court or any Virginia appellate court. Other courts considering the issue have held that motel registrants and overnight guests of those registrants may have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the motel room.
See, e.g., Gordon,
Mere physical possession or control of property is not sufficient to establish [a basis] to object to a search of that property. Although a defendant need not сome forward with documentation establishing legal possession of the area searched, he must at least demonstrate, in the case of a motel room, that he was the invited guest of the renter of the premises.
United States v. Conway,
We assume without deciding that an overnight guest of a motel registrant may assert a privacy intеrest in the motel room he is occupying. Here, however, no evidence beyond appellant’s presence on the premises tended to indicate that he was in the motel room with the consent of the room’s registered occupant. The detectives, who checked the room’s registratiоn before initiating the consensual encounter, testified that neither appellant nor Brandon Jones, the person who initially responded to the detectives’ knocking, was a registered occupant of the room. Further, no evidence demonstrated that either appellant or Jones possеssed a key to the room,
see Gordon,
III.
Because appellant failed to establish a legitimate expectation of privacy in the motеl room, the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress was not erroneous. Thus, we affirm appellant’s conviction.
Affirmed.
Notes
. In fact, the evidence shows the officer obtained a key from a motel employee. Further, no evidence indicates the entry (there was one entry rather than two, as the trial court erroneously stated) was with consent, and the Commonwealth does not allege consent. Thus, these statements are error. However, appellant does not challenge them on appeal, and we need not resolve them because we conclude appellant failed to estаblish a legal basis for contesting the entry.
. Although many courts "characterize this as a question of 'standing,' the Supreme Court expressly rejected a standing analysis in
Rakas v. Illinois,
. We need not address the impact of motel policy regarding whether registered guests might legitimately allow unregistered guests to be present on the premises overnight. Nothing in this record establishes the motel at issue here restricted the presence of unregistered overnight guests.
See Wilson,
