OPINION OF THE COURT
We are here confronted with the novel and intriguing question whether, when an owner of an automobile, at the behest of the police, searches that automobile for a gun alleged to belong to another, the Fourth Amendment has been violated.
The matter arises as the result of an appeal by the Government from an order of the district court,
The defendant, Charles W. West, was arrested by the local police on June 5, 1970, and imprisoned for a parole violation. The next day, the Chief of Police, Todd, interrogated West with regard to the possession of a shotgun. West admitted pоssessing the gun and took the police to his home to find it. 1 They discovered that the house had been burglarized and that the gun was missing. Later that month, Chief Todd and *1353 two Treasury Agents questioned Wilson Trott and his friend, Douglas Cannon. The district court found as a fact that Chief Todd threatened Trott and Cannon with imprisonment if they did not locate the shotgun within one week. Three days later, on June 26, 1970, Trott found the gun jammed into the springs of the seat of his own car, where it had-been hidden by someone, probably Cannon. In July, 1970, West signed a statement admitting ownership of a shotgun, describing its purchase, and verifying its loss.
On October 27, 1970, West was indicted for possession of an unregistered weapon, namely a “sawed off” shotgun, on or about June 26, 1970. Thereafter, West moved to suppress the shotgun and the statement of July, 1970. After a hearing, West was reindicted and charged with possession of the same weapon on or about June 5, 1970. 2
The district court issued a memorandum tentatively suppressing the shotgun, but reserving decision until after a further hearing. At the second hearing, West testified that he did not own the shotgun referred to in the indictment and that he had not transferred any such weapon during June or July of 1970. A supplemental memorandum was then issued by the district court suppressing the shotgun and holding that the statement given in July was not the product of illegal police conduct. 3 An order to this effect was entered on June 14, 1971. The Government has appealed.
To resolve the ultimate issue in this case — the correctness ' of the district court’s order directing that the shotgun be suppressed — it is helpful to examine several subsidiary issues raised by the Government. These issues are (1) the standing of the defendant to object to evidence obtained by transgressing another’s Fourth Amendment rights, (2) the scope of the Fourth Amendment with regard to property interests, (3) the extent of the exclusionary rule as applied to seаrches by private citizens, and (4) the parameters of the Fourth Amendment with regard to searches. 4
1
The first matter to be resolved is West’s standing to move for suppression of the evidence allegedly seized illegally from another. The problem of standing in Fourth Amendment cases has for a considerable period of years been troublesome to courts and commentators.
5
*1354
There are two cases, however, Jones v. United States,
In
Jones,
the Supreme Court held that where possession of illegal material is an ingredient of the offense, the indictment charging possession provides a sufficient interest in the material to establish standing.
“. . . First, we held that when, as in Jones, possession of the seized evidence is itself an essential element of the offense with which the defendant is charged, the Government is precluded from denying that the defendant has the requisite possеssory interest to challenge the admission of the evidence. . . . Throughout this case, petitioner Garrett, has justifiably . . . proceeded on the assumption that the standing requirements must be satisfied.
“. . . Garrett evidently was not in Mrs. Mahon’s house at the time his suitcase was seized, from her basement. The only, or at least the most natural, way in which he could found standing to object to the admission of the suitcase was to testify that he wás its owner.”390 U.S. at 390-391 ,88 S.Ct. at 974-975 .
Thus, Garrett, who presumably owned the suitcase, was held to have standing to suppress it even though the police seized the suitcase as a result of an improper search of a third party’s premises. By parity of reasoning, West would have standing to suppress the shotgun, which he presumably owned, 7 even though officials seized thе gun as a result of an allegedly improper search of a third person’s automobile.
To demonstrate that West does not have standing to assert the Fourth Amendment violation, the Government relies on Alderman v. United States,
There is nothing in United States v. Konigsberg,
The present situаtion, according to Konigsberg, is proper for application of the
Jones
rule. At the time the district court entered its order, all that the Government had to prove under Section 5861 (d) was possession of a weapon which required registration and that the weapon was unregistered. Although the Supreme Court has ruled that the Government must now prove that the weapon travelled in interstate commerce, United States v. Bass,
2
The Government’s contention that the scope of “the Fourth Amendment does not extend to a property interest in contraband . . . once owned by a defendant but in . possession of another” at the time of the search is closely related to its standing argument. In developing that thesis, the Government argues that the Supreme Court, in
Jones,
by holding that standing could be satisfied by a property interest in the searched premises,
sub si-lentio
overruled United States v. Jeffers,
*1356
3
The next question is whether the exclusionary rule should be invoked to suppress an item surrendered by a citizen because a police officer ordered the citizen to locate the object. It seems clear that the police may not escape the proscription of the Fourth Amendment merely by directing a third party to perform the search and seizure which would be improper if the police themselves did it.
See
Lustig v. United States,
In this case, the district court found:
“Sometime during the latter part of June, 1970, Chief Todd, a law enforcement officer of the town of Georgetown, Delaware, and two federal treasury agents had a conversation with Mr. Trott and Mr. Douglas Cannon in an automobile. At that time, Chief Todd told Trott and Cannon that he knew Charles West had a sawed-off shotgun and that he, Todd, wanted that gun. He told Trott and Cannon that they must find the gun for him, that he would give them one week to find it, and that, if they didn’t have the gun by the end of that time, he would put them in jail until the gun was found.”
The court also determined that Chief Todd’s threat “did in fact result in a search of Trott’s car and a seizure of the property found therein.” Although these findings raise a serious question whether Trott was Chief Todd’s agent for purposes of interpreting the Fourth Amendment, the matter does not end there. To activate the exclusionary rule, two other crucial factual elements must appear: that the search was constitutionally prohibited and that Trott was acting within the scope of his agency in making it. Although the district court made no specific finding as to the scope of the authority conferred by Chief Todd, the instruction to Trott to find the gun was unrestricted except as to time, and the record indicates that it was broad enough to cover an illegal infringement of the Fourth Amendment.
The overbreadth of the instruction does not vitiate the search, for even if Chief Todd had specifically told Trott to conduct an illegal search, the shotgun *1357 would still be admissible unless it were the fruit -of a search that was actually illegal. For example, had Chief Todd told Trott to conduct a warrantless search of a private dwelling, but instead, Trott found the gun abandoned on a public street, the gun would be admissible because the Constitution would not have been violated.
4
.[6] In view of the foregoing analy-ses, it seems clear that this appeal turns on the single issue whether Trott violated the Fourth Amendment when he searched his own car. The district court concluded that he had, stating that since Chief Todd could nоt have legally searched the car himself, neither could hisj agent. But this reasoning has one fatal deficiency — Trott, even assuming he became Chief Todd’s agent, would not thereby lose whatever rights he already possessed with respect to his own car Prior to becoming an agent of the police Trott could have legally searched his own car, fоund the shotgun, and turned it over to the police' voluntarily, even though Chief Todd ordinarily could not have searched the same car without a warrant. 12 The mere fact that an agency relationship might have arisen between Trott and the police could not encroach upon the right of Trott to enter and search his own car any more than it could susрend Trott’s right to enter and search his own house. If the rule were to the contrary, a criminal could safely hide his contraband in the home or car of any policeman, then move to suppress the evidence when the evidence was subsequently discovered.
One other basis exists for validating the search here. While in the context of this ease West has stаnding to object to unconstitutional searches of Trott’s automobile, such standing does not confer upon him the right to object to any search of Trott’s car at all. It seems that had Trott consented to a search of his car by Chief Todd, any evidence discovered as a result of that search would have been admissible against Trott or anyone else.
See
Abel v. United States,
Although West did not raise the issue whether Trott’s consent was coerced and thereby ineffectivе, there are sufficient facts in the record to negate the element of coercion. Because there had been a lapse of three days during which Trott was not in custody between the alleged threat and the discovery of the shotgun, it would appear that any taint would have been dissipated by that attenuation.
See
Wong Sun v. United States,
Accordingly, it was error for the distriсt court to grant defendant’s motion to suppress, and the order of the district court will be reversed.
Notes
. Apparently, West believed that the barrel of his shotgun was of sufficient length so as not to require registration under 26 U.8.C. § 5861(d) (1970).
. By stipulation, the motions and other papers previously filed were applied to the second indictment.
. Although the defendant lias not appealed from that portion of the opinion denying his motion to suppress the statement, this will not preclude review of that ruling following conviction. Although the statute gives the Government the right to appeal from the grant of a suppression motion, the denial of such a motion is not a final order and is therefore not appealable. Cogen v. United States,
. At oral argument, this Court raised the issue whether West waived his objection by taking the police to his home to retrieve the gun. However, because of the disposition which we make of the case today, we dо not have to decide this question.
. In recent years, the question of standing has been widely discussed in the literature. The issue is inextricably bound to the philosophical underpinning of the application of the exclusionary rule as means of enforcing the Fourth Amendment. If the primary purpose of the rule is, as the Supreme Court announced in Linkletter v. Walker,
The issue of standing is again before the Supreme Court in United States v. Combs,
. The other branch of
Jones
held that a person lawfully present in another’s apartment has a sufficient possessory interеst in the premises to establish himself as a person aggrieved by the search.
. In United States v. Cowan,
. The holding in
Konigsberg
has not been followed in other federal circuits.
See
United States v. Price,
. The record in this case indicates that the shotgun was transported across a state line after its purchase by West.
. United States v. Combs, supra, n. 4a, does not involve a possessory crime. Therefore, there is no reason to postpone judgment in this case until the Supreme Court decides Combs.
. In
Lustig,
Mr. Justice Frankfurter explicitly stated that a “search is a search” by an official if he had a hand in it.
. Nothing in this opinion should be construed as narrowing the principle that warrantless searches of automobiles are sometimes permissible under proper circumstances.
. There was no evidence that any relationship arose between Trott and West that would havе operated to divest Trott of dominion and control over the car and vest such rights in West. Trott had neither loaned nor leased his car to West. Thus, the situation here is not analogous to those cases in which evidence was suppressed because the owner of property, such as a hotel, consented to the search of premises temporarily rented to someone else.
See
Stoner v. California,
