In an order dated March 23, 1990, the court granted the motions to suppress
*1288
brought by codefendants Archibald Mac-Kenzie and Eldon Head.
See United States v. MacKenzie,
In the memorandum that it filed after the suppression hearing held on October 31, 1989, the government raised three arguments in support of its position. First, the government argued that the customs inspectors were entitled to conduct the search of the vehicle that occurred near the North Grand Island Bridge because that search was merely, according to the government, a “secondary inspection.” Item 12 at 5-6. Second, the government claimed that, in any event, that search was supported by reasonable suspicion. Id. at 6-7. And third, the government asserted that the search at the Burger King parking lot, which resulted in the seizure of the cocaine, was constitutionally permissible because the agents reasonably suspected that MacKenzie was an excludable alien, and, after approaching the defendants for the purpose of questioning MacKenzie, 1 saw the cocaine in plain view. Id. at 7-8. At oral argument on January 19, 1990, the government raised the issue of Head’s “standing” to contest the search that occurred near the North Grand Island Bridge, see Transcript at 28, but it never contested, either in its memorandum or at oral argument, Head’s “standing” to challenge the search at the Burger King parking lot. 2
The government now asserts that it was not required to raise previously the issue of whether the defendant had a legitimate expectation of privacy that was violated when the law-enforcement agents seized the cocaine from MacKenzie’s car, insisting that it was the defendant’s burden to assert and to establish that he had a legitimate expectation of privacy that was violated.
To be sure, the defendant bore the burden of establishing a violation of his fourth-amendment rights.
See, e.g., Rawlings v. Kentucky,
The government’s present constitutional argument may well have merit. But the fact remains that it was not raised before, and it would be exceptionally unfair to the defendant to allow the government, with the benefit of hindsight after having lost based on its original arguments, to use a motion for reconsideration to raise a new argument that should have been raised in the first instance.
See Steagald v. United States,
The government’s motion for reconsideration is denied.
So ordered.
Notes
. According to the testimony at the suppression hearing, the agents converged on the car in the Burger King parking lot in order to arrest Mac-Kenzie and to determine whether Head was also excludable.
See
. The Supreme Court dispensed with the rubric of "standing” in
Rakas v. Illinois,
. Other than its claim that the defendant had the burden to assert and to establish that he had a legitimate expectation of privacy that was violated, the government has not offered any reason for its failure to raise the issue previously.
