Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge WALD.
Wе uphold the conviction. The sole error alleged was the district court’s order denying appellant’s motion to suppress evidence. We decide that the order was proper.
This case arises out of events that took place on board Amtrak Train # 92 at Union Station, Washington, D.C. on March 23, 1987. Appellant Howard E. Brady had purchased a one-way ticket (sleeping compartment), traveling from Hollywood, Florida to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The train stopped at Union Station for just over one-half an hour. Several Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents, notably Agent Rosel and Inspector Ford, boarded the train and sought out Brady. A conversation in the lounge car ensued. The agents idеntified themselves. When Rosel asked Brady if he could look at his ticket, Brady replied, “Yes, but we have to go to my room and get it.” The three walked to the room; Brady handed Rosеl his ticket, and, after brief words, Rosel asked if Brady would object to a room and luggage search. According to the district court, Brady replied, “Go ahead, it’s not my train.” 1 Brady himself took down his coat, which revealed a gym bag also in the luggage compartment. Brady exclaimed, “I don’t know whose bag that is. I never saw it before.” 2 A search uncovered cocaine in the bag.
Brady was indicted and he subsequеntly moved to suppress the cocaine as evidence tainted by an unlawful search. The motion was denied after hearing, and Brady was convicted. On July 23, 1987, he was sentencеd to five years’ incarceration, five years’ probation, and a small fine. He filed timely appeal to this court.
ANALYSIS
The district court considered three issues before it dеnied Brady’s motion to suppress. The court’s rulings as to the first two are correct; its third determination, unfavorable to the government on the issue of abandonment, is dubious. Affirmation of thе district court’s first two conclusions provide sufficient basis to uphold the court’s order.
A. No Fourth Amendment Detention
This court has articulated the test to determine whether an encounter between an оfficer of the law and a citizen amounts to a detention which requires fourth amendment protections.
See Gomez v. Turner,
B. Consent/Coercion
The Supreme Court in
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
C. Abandonment
We affirm the district court on the basis of its consent holding. Thus, we need not reach that court’s ruling on the question of abandonment.
6
We do, however, express serious doubts as to its validity. Warrantless searches of abandoned or disclaimed property do not violate the fourth amendment.
See Abel v. United States,
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, we decide that Brady’s consent to the initial search of his compartment and luggage provided sufficient basis for the agents’ search. We thereforе affirm the district court’s ruling and sustain the conviction.
Notes
. Agent Rosel expressly denied that the second clause ("it’s not my train”) was uttered, Transcript (Tr.) at 36; instead, he testified that Brady simply remаrked, "Yes, go ahead.” Tr. at 10. Exactly to the contrary, Brady himself testified that he only replied, “it's not my train." Tr. at 50.
. Agent Rosel testified that Brady exclaimed:
“That’s not my bag. I never saw that bag before. I don’t know who put that bag in my compartment.” Tr. at 37. Brady himself simply acknowledged that "I told them the bag wasn't mine.” Tr. at 52.
. Needless to say, a reasonable person is not assumed to have a guilty mind, which is especially prone to apprehensions of confinement.
. Because we find that no detention occurred, we do not reach the question of probable cause for rеstraining Brady.
. We find no merit in appellant’s suggestions either that the narrowness and confinement of a train compartment are inherently isolationist, hence coercive, or that the failure affirmatively to inform a person of her right to refuse consent is coercive per se.
. Because appellant-Brady has not argued, nor does the reсord suggest, that the district court’s finding that Brady gave his consent "without qualification,” see United States v. Brady, No. 87-107, mem. op. at 5 (D.D.C. June 4, 1987), was clearly erroneous, we do not conclude that Brady’s disclaimer of ownership indicated an intent to withdraw his consent to search that piece of luggage.
.The decisional law that appellant-Brady relies on to reiterate the district court’s holding is inapposite: The cases merely confirm that abandonment will not be recognized when it is the result of illegal police conduct.
See, e.g., United States v. Morin,
. This court has previously rejected the suggestion that because a party disclaims property in order to separate herself from incriminating evidence, her privacy expectation in the property continues.
See, e.g., United States v. Brown,
