AMENDED OPINION
This case, raising a constellation of criminal procedure issues, illustrates that law school exams may not be as fanciful as they are reputed to be. Appellees Grand-staff and Brown were under suspicion for the armed robbery of $3,318,000 from the Tucson office of the First National Bank of Arizona in April 1981. Both were fugitives, having jumped bail on interstate transportation of stolen property charges pending in the District of Iowa. Arrest warrants were outstanding for both men.
On September 9,1981, the FBI received a tip from an informant that Grandstaff and possibly Brown were in Denver. The informant said that Grandstaff was staying at the Sheraton Denver Airport Hotel and was driving a 1979 blue Chevrolet Monte Carlo. FBI agents went to the hotel where they found a blue Monte Carlo in the parking lot. From conversations with the hotel management, the FBI agents determined that Grandstaff was staying in room 223 under an assumed name. Grandstaff was observed checking out and was arrested as he attempted to return to room 223.
FBI agents searched Grandstaff and found a wallet containing false identification. At about the same time, another FBI agent obtained a key to room 223 and entered without knocking or announcing his presence. Inside, he found luggage which he did not open. He also found Brown in the bathroom and arrested him pursuant to the Iowa warrant. A search of Brown incident to the arrest turned up $4891 in cash and the keys to a Ford. Agents took the keys to the hotel parking lot and tried them on all Fords there. They turned out to fit a 1979 Ford Bronco. The agents did not open the Bronco’s door or search its interior.
The next day, FBI agents obtained a search warrant from a Denver magistrate. The warrant authorized the search of the luggage in room 223, the Bronco and the Monte Carlo. The luggage was found to contain $51,770 in currency. The search of the Bronco and a suitcase in it yielded $129,990 more.
Grandstaff and Brown filed motions to suppress the evidence found in room 223, the Monte Carlo and the Bronco. Additionally, Brown sought suppression of evidence found on him after his arrest. The district court granted the motion to suppress the evidence found in room 223, in the Bronco and on Brown, and later denied the government’s reconsideration motion. This appeal followed.
The government contends that district court erred in suppressing the room 223 evidence because it was seized pursuant to a warrant that can be sustained even without the information obtained during the earlier warrantless entry. It also argues *1355 that, in any event, Brown had no legitimate expectation of privacy in Grandstaff s hotel room, and therefore has no standing to challenge the legality of the agent’s entry and the seizures flowing therefrom. We examine the district court’s suppression order separately as to Grandstaff and Brown.
I.
GRANDSTAFF
A. The Standard of Review
Grandstaff argues that we should defer to the district court’s determination, much as we defer to the decision of the magistrate in the normal case where the affidavit is unredacted.
Illinois v. Gates,
It will not promote accuracy. We are in as good a position as was the district court to assess the legal sufficiency of the redacted affidavit.
See United States v. Anderson,
B. The Merits
To decide whether the magistrate had a substantial basis for issuing the search warrant, we must ascertain what information properly was before him. On this appeal, the government does not deny that the FBI agent who entered room 223 immediately after Grandstaff’s arrest acted unlawfully. Brief of Appellant at 8 n. 2. Any information obtained by that entry could not be used by the magistrate as a basis for issuing the search warrant.
See Segura v. United States,
Our reasoning proceeds as follows. The district court, in granting Grandstaff’s motion to suppress, struck from the affidavit information that it believed was tainted by the illegal entry. Excerpt of Record (E.R.) at 162-64 (Order of Oct. 11, 1985, exhibit A). In response to the government’s motion for reconsideration, the district court later restored some of the information that it had struck. E.R. at 204 (Order of Jan. 23,1986, at 6). As a result, the affidavit as redacted by the district court differed from the affidavit as originally presented to the magistrate in only two respects. It omitted all mention of Brown, his arrest, and the money found on his person. And it omitted all mention of the FBI agent’s entry into room 223 immediately after Grand-staff’s arrest. These two items comprised about 60 words in the original affidavit, the total length of which was about 880 words. Hence they amounted to about seven percent of the affidavit.
Clearly a substantial portion of the affidavit survived the district court’s redaction. It still described the Tucson robbery, the trail of evidence implicating Grandstaff, how one suspect in the robbery, possessing *1356 $950,000, had been arrested and had pleaded guilty, and Grandstaff s statement before a magistrate that he had no checking or savings accounts. The affidavit also recited facts linking Grandstaff to room 223 and raising a reasonable inference that evidence of crime could be found therein. As redacted, the affidavit states that Grandstaff had checked out but thereafter was arrested within 100 feet of room 223. From this, it is reasonable to infer that Grandstaff was returning to his room for his luggage and, as we discuss below, that the luggage might well contain the stolen money. See pp. 1356-57 infra. Thus, the affidavit, so redacted, afforded the magistrate a substantial basis for finding that there was probable cause to issue a search warrant. 1 The district court should have reached this conclusion even if de novo review of the redacted affidavit were appropriate.
The district court obviously was troubled by the relationship between probable cause to arrest and probable cause to search. It acknowledged that the redacted affidavit established probable cause that Grandstaff was guilty. E.R. at 161 (Order of Oct. 11, 1985, at 11). This relationship has troubled this court also. On the one hand, “it cannot follow in all cases, simply from the existence of probable cause to believe a suspect guilty, that there is also probable cause to search his residence. If that were so, there would be no reason to distinguish search warrants from arrest warrants....”
United States v. Lucarz,
“[t]he required nexus between the items to be seized and the place to be searched rests not only on direct observation, but on the type of crime, the nature of missing items, the extent of the suspects’ opportunity for concealment, and normal inferences as to where a criminal would be likely to hide stolen property.”
United States v. Gann,
The facts in this case closely resemble those in
United States v. Jackson,
First, the district court pointed out that the search warrant in
Jackson
was for defendant’s residence in the same city where the robbery took place, E.R. at 208 (Order of Jan. 23, 1986, at 10), rather than for a hotel room in a different city. But Grandstaff was a fugitive who had jumped bail in Iowa. Even if he had an established residence, it would be imprudent for him to hide stolen property there, because it was probably under surveillance. Robbers like Jackson are likely to keep stolen property near them, whether that be in a residence or not. A fugitive, such as Grandstaff, is even more likely to have at least some of his stolen property near him in his temporary abode.
2
Cf. Gann,
Second, the district court observed that a cofelon, who pleaded guilty, implicated Jackson in the robbery, whereas this affidavit does not state that the cofelon who pleaded guilty implicated Grandstaff in the robbery. E.R. at 208-09 (Order of Jan. 23, 1986, at 10-11). This distinction is meaningless. The district court acknowledged that the affidavit established probable cause that Grandstaff was guilty. E.R. at 161 (Order of Oct. 11, 1985, at 11).
Third, the district court relied on the fact that five months elapsed between the bank robbery and the search in this case, whereas only two months elapsed in Jackson. E.R. at 209-10 (Order of Jan. 23, 1986, at 11-12). While the likelihood that a suspect no longer possesses stolen property undoubtedly increases as time goes by, we are not persuaded that five months is sufficient to negate probable cause in this case. The delay before the search of room 223 is offset by the fact that here a greater amount of money was unaccounted for than in Jackson, about $2.3 million, as contrasted with about $226,000.
Therefore we conclude that the affidavit contained enough information untainted by the illegal entry to give the magistrate a substantial basis for issuing the warrant to search room 223.
II.
BROWN
In order to challenge on fourth amendment grounds the government’s use of the information and evidence it found as a result of the FBI agent’s entry of room 223, Brown must demonstrate “a legitimate expectation of privacy in the area searched.”
United States v. Salvucci,
Room 223 was registered to Grandstaff. The parties have stipulated that Brown was Grandstaffs guest. Although a guest who stays overnight and keeps personal belongings in the residence of another might have a reasonable expectation of privacy,
see United States v. Echegoyen,
The evidence seized from the Brown’s person — including the cash and the keys to the Bronco — is not suppressible in any event. Brown’s arrest was lawful, having been made pursuant to a valid arrest warrant. Therefore, the search incident to Brown’s arrest was lawful. 4
*1358 Brown raises separate challenges to the evidence found in the Bronco. First, he argues that the insertion of the key into the door lock constituted an unlawful search. Second, he contends that the search of closed luggage in the Bronco required a separate warrant. We reject both contentions.
For the purpose of argument we assume, without deciding, that the insertion of the key into the Bronco was a search for purposes of the fourth amendment. 5 The search was, however, entirely reasonable and therefore comported with the fourth amendment.
The “automobile exception” allows for warrantless searches of automobiles if the search was reasonable in scope and supported by probable cause.
California v. Carney,
Here, the facts clearly establish probable cause that incriminating evidence would be found in the automobile. The FBI agents knew that Brown was a federal fugitive and bank robbery suspect. Second, a large amount of cash was found on Brown’s person. Third, a valid search of him yielded keys to an automobile, and few of his belongings were in the hotel room, indicating that they might be in a nearby vehicle.
Moreover, the scope of the search was entirely reasonable. The intrusion upon Brown’s privacy was minimal. By inserting the key into the car door, the FBI agents sought to learn only one thing: which car belonged to Brown. 6 The agents did not open the door of the Bronco or search its interior.
Brown’s alternative argument that the search of the luggage found in the Bronco was unauthorized by the warrant to search the Bronco is without merit. “It is axiomatic that if a warrant sufficiently describes the premises to be searched, this will justify a search of the personal effects therein ... if those effects might contain the items described in the warrant.
United States v. Gomez-Soto,
III.
CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court’s suppression order as to both Grandstaff and Brown.
Notes
. At one point, the district court reviewed the affidavit and said that it “screams probable cause." 4 Reporter’s Transcript (R.T.) at 22. The court made this statement when Grandstaff endeavored to show that factual statements in the affidavit were reckless or false under
Franks v. Delaware,
. We reject the district court’s suggestion that, once Grandstaff had checked out of room 223, any probable cause to search there for stolen property evaporated. E.R. at 204 (Order of Jan. 23, 1986, at 6). Apart from the fact that it is not clear whether Grandstaff checked out before his arrest, 3 R.T. at 100-27, the fact that he had no luggage with him permitted an inference that his belongings, and perhaps stolen property, remained in room 223.
. Brown argues in his petition for rehearing that the government stipulated for purposes of the suppression motion that Brown had a legitimate expectation of privacy in Grandstaffs room. Without addressing whether parties may stipulate what is essentially a question of standing, we believe the government did not clearly stipulate that Brown had a legitimate expectation of privacy. Moreover, Brown raises the issue of an alleged stipulation for the first time in his petition for rehearing. In his brief on appeal, Brown contended only that "there has been no stipulation to the effect that Brown did not have an expectation of privacy in the room____” Brief of Appellee Brown at 10 (emphasis added). Brown also argued that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy, an argument inconsistent with his current position that the matter was stipulated.
. Relying on
United States v. Underwood,
Nor is this a case where the arrest was illegal because it was based on fruits of an illegal search. See W. LaFave, Search & Seizure, § 11.4(e), at 646 (1978). Here, the probable cause supporting the warrant for Brown’s arrest was wholly unrelated to, and existed independent of, the entry into GrandstafPs room.
.
United States v. Portillo-Reyes,
. There is little, if any, reasonable expectation of privacy in the identity of one’s vehicle.
See DeBardeleben,
