This appeal arises from an action in which defendants James Karo, Richard Horton, William Harley, Michael Steele, Evan Roth, and Gene Rhodes were charged with conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to distribute it, a violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and all defendants except Rhodes were charged with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute it, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The defendants filed a joint motion to suppress evidence against them, claiming that the evidence was obtained in violation of their Fоurth Amendment rights. The government had obtained an order authorizing the installation of an electronic tracking beacon (beeper) in a can of ether ordered by Karo, Horton, and Harley through a government informant. Government agents had installed the beeper and tracked the ether over a period of five months, during which the can had come to rest in four homes and two rented storage lockers. Using the information obtained from beeper and other surveillance, government agents obtained a search warrant for the last residence to which the ether was taken, where they seized substantial incriminating evidence. The district court held that the order authorizing the installation of the beeper was invalid because the government made deliberate misrepresentations in the affidavits seeking the order. The court suppressed all the evidence obtained from the search of the residence as fruit of illegal monitoring.
The issues on appeal are (1) whether the government’s appeal was timely filed; (2) whether the government was required to obtain a search warrant to install the beeper and use it to monitor movements of the can of ether; (3) if the warrantless use of *1436 the beeper was illegal, whether the evidence seized under the search warrant for the residence must be suppressed; and (4) whether the district court erred in suppressing the evidence as to all defendants.
I
The government must file its notice of appeal within thirty days after entry of the judgment or order from which it appеals. “A judgment order is entered within the meaning of this subdivision when it is entered in the criminal docket.” Fed.R.App.P. 4(b). A motion to reconsider extends the time for filing a notice of appeal only if the motion is filed within the thirty days allowed for filing a notice of appeal. The notice of appeal must then be filed within thirty days after the denial of the motion to reconsider.
United States v. Martinez,
In the instant case the judge stated in open court on May 12, 1981 that the motion to suppress would be granted. A notation of the ruling was made on the docket thаt day. The judge followed with a written order suppressing the evidence; the written order was dated and noted on the docket on May 22,1981. The government’s motion for reconsideration was timely if measured from May 22, but was not timely if measured from May 12. The time allowed for appeal begins to run “ ‘[w]hen the trial judge acts in a manner which clearly indicates his intention that the act shall be the final one in [the] case, and a notation of the act has been entered on the docket.’”
United States v. Martinez,
II
The government does not appeal the district court’s finding that the order authorizing the beeper was invalid; therefore, the activity in this case must be treated as warrantless installation and monitoring. The government argues that no warrant was needed. Two claims arе advanced by the government to support this argument: that the defendants had no expectation of privacy in the can of ether to which the beeper was affixed because the ether was contraband, and that any intrusion from the installation or monitoring of the beeper was too minimal to implicate the warrant requirement.
Ether is not a controlled substance, but the government argues that because the ether was to be used to produce cocaine it can be considered сontraband. While courts generally recognize that a person does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in or right to possess contraband,
see, e.g., United States v. Washington,
The government’s claims that the installation and monitoring of the beeper were *1437 not unlawful searches or seizures are much more difficult issues. Three of the defendants — Karo, Horton, and Harley — ordered ten five-gallon cans of ether from a government informant, Carl Muehlenweg. Mueh-lenweg alerted Drug Enforcement Administration agents about the shipment and told the agents that the ether would be used in the production of cocaine. With Muehlen-weg’s consent government agents substituted their own can with a bеeper installed in it for one of the cans in the shipment. The can containing the beeper was delivered to Muehlenweg’s residence in Albuquerque, New Mexico. On September 20, 1980 Karo picked up the ether from Muehlenweg’s residence. Using both visual and beeper surveillance, DEA agents traced the ether to Karo’s home. An agent subsequently monitored the beeper to verify that the ether was still in Karo’s residence. Later that same day the ether was transferred to Horton’s home in the same city. No agent saw the transfer; the new location was ascertained by use of a direction finder, which picked up the beeper signal. A DEA agent also walked the public sidewalk near Horton’s residence and smelled the odor of ether in the immediate vicinity of the house.
Two days later, monitoring revealed that the ether was no longer at Horton’s house. DEA agents had not observed any movement. They used the direction finder to locate the ether can in a third residence, the home of Horton’s father. The following day, the beeper was no longer transmitting from Horton’s father’s home. By using the direction finder, the agents were able to trace the can to a commercial self-storage facility in Albuquerque. When they could not trace the can to a particular locker, they obtained a subpoena and determined that Horton and Harley shared the rental expenses on locker 143. The agents verified that locker 143 contained the ether by walking to the front of that locker and sniffing the odor emanating from the cans. On October 8, 1980, DEA agents obtained an order authorizing installation of an entry tone alarm into the door jamb of locker 143. While opening the door of that locker to install the alarm they observed the cans containing the ether. Thereafter the agents apparently relied upon the entry tone alarm, which malfunctioned. They did not learn of the removal of the contents of the locker until October 16, when the manager of the storage facility informed them that the cans had been removed.
Using their direction finder, the agents picked up the beeper signal three days later at another self-storage facility in Albuquerque. Through discussions with the facility manager, the can of ether was traced to locker 15, which had been rented by Horton and Harley using an alias. The agents obtained an order permitting the installation of an entry tone alarm for this locker, but instead, with the permission of the manager, installed in a separate locker a closed circuit video camera focused on the door of locker 15. This camera was monitored by DEA agents, who observed Horton and Harley visiting the locker. During this time the order authorizing the beeper lapsed and was extended by court order a few days later. Finally, on February 6, 1981, DEA agents observed by means of the video camera that the ether cans were being removed from the locker by Rhodes. Using both visual and beeper surveillance, the agents followed the ether to Rhodes’ residence. The record indicates that the ether remained in a truсk parked in the driveway of Rhodes’ residence. That same day agents followed the truck to a residence in Taos, New Mexico rented by Steele, Horton, and Harley. The beeper was used to monitor the can of ether while it was inside the Taos residence. Three days later, the government obtained a search warrant for the residence, which was executed the following day. Horton, Harley, Steele, and Roth were arrested at the residence, and cocaine and laboratory equipment were seized in the search.
We first address the question whether the warrantless installation of a beeper in the can of ether designated to go
*1438
to Karo was constitutionally permissible.
1
The government argues that because its informant, Muehlenweg, consented to placing the ether in the can containing the beeper, no warrant was required. This argument, which some courts have adopted,
see, e.g., United States v. Knotts,
We also must determine whether the defendants’ legitimate expectations of privacy were violated by the action of the government in monitoring the beeper. In
United States v.
Knotts, ___ U.S. ___,
In the case before us the beeper was monitored while the can was within private residences and storage lockers. The beeper gave law enforcement officials information that could not be discovered by ordinary visual surveillance, even had that surveillаnce been constant. The Knotts case involved surveillance over only a few days; monitoring in the instant case took place over five months. In Knotts the drum was never inside a residence; here the ether was inside four residences. In Knotts the officers lost track of the automobile carrying the drum once on the public highway; here the officers lost track of the ether can for significant periods of time, after the ether had come to rest in residences and a rented locker. In the instant case, most оf the tracing to new locations was possible only by use of the direction finder to locate the beeper.
The monitoring of the beeper in the instant case was a different type of intrusion than that in
Knotts,
touching upon privacy interests that historically have been protected by the Fourth Amendment. We hold that the warrantless use of a beeper to monitor the location of noncontraband withdrawn from public view inside private residences or similarly protected places is an unconstitutionаl search or seizure. We agree with the statement of the court in
United States v. Moore,
“When defendants withdrew from the public view, taking the box of chemicals with them, they had every right to expect that their activities inside the house which they sought to preserve as private would be free from warrantless intrusion by the Government. Doubtless the limited data transmitted by a beeper was far less revealing than the conversation recorded in Katz; the level of intrusion was less severe. Still, as the chemicals containing the transmitter were not contraband or otherwise wrongfully in appel-lees’ possession, the Government had no right to determine their continued presence in the house by use of warrantless electronic surveillance.”
Id.
at 113;
see also United States v. Bailey,
Ill
Evidence seized pursuant to the search warrant for the Taos residence may be suppressed only if that evidence is tainted by the prior illegal conduct of the government. The test for determining whether evidence derived from prior illegal conduct of the government must be suppressed pursuant to the exclusionary rule was set forth in
Wong Sun v. United States,
“We need not hold that all evidence is ‘fruit of the poisonous tree’ simply because it would not have come to light but for the illegal actions of the police. Rather, the more apt question in such a case is ‘whether, granting establishment of the primary illegality, the evidence to which instant objection is made has been come at by exploitation of that illegality or instead by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.’ ”
Id.
at 488,
To the extent that the affidavit filed in support of the search warrant for the Taos residence relied on information supplied by the illegal conduct of the government, there is a link between the prior illegality and the search warrant. The evidence seized from the search of the residence is directly tied to the prior illegal monitoring: without that illegal mоnitoring the government agents would not have arrived at the Taos residence or known that the ether was within the house. When that information is excised, the search warrant for the Taos residence must fall.
IV
The government contends that even if the warrantless installation and monitoring of the beeper was unlawful, the court’s order suppressing the evidence seized from the Taos residence as to all the defendants was in error. The government claims that not all of the defendants have demonstrated the invasiоn of a legitimate expectation of privacy.
The district court held that each defendant experienced the invasion of a legitimate expectation of privacy and could suppress the evidence seized from the Taos residence.
5
We agree that the Fourth Amend
*1441
ment rights of Karo, Horton, Harley,Steele, and Roth were violated. The beeper was monitored within the Taos residence jointly rented by Steele, Horton, and Harley. One has a legitimate expectation of privacy within one’s home,
Mancusi v. DeForte,
Neither Karo nor Rhodes has demonstrated a legitimate expectatiоn of privacy in the Taos residence; they can seek suppression of the evidence seized from that residence only if they can demonstrate that that evidence is tainted by prior illegal conduct violating their rights. Karo’s right to own and possess the ether without the presence of electronic devices was violated by the illegal installation. The installation of the beeper is inextricably intertwined with the later illegal monitoring of the beeper, including that monitoring directly tied to the search оf the Taos residence. Therefore, the evidence seized from that house is tainted by prior illegality infringing on the rights of Karo, and the suppression order for the evidence seized at that house was correct as to him. 6
While the district court held that Rhodes could challenge the conduct of the government, the court made no factual findings from which we can review that determination. The record does not establish that the beeper was monitored in any place in which Rhodes had a legitimate expectation of privacy. Rhodes did not establish any possessory interest in the ether violated by the installation of the beeper. Therefore, on the basis of this record, the evidence cannot be suppressed as to Rhodes.
We reverse the district court’s suppression of evidence as to Rhodes. In all other aspects, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
United States v.
Knotts, ___ U.S. ___,
. In
United States v. Shovea,
. Even cases relying strictly on the physical intrusion of installation prior to ownership recognize the concept of intrusion that underlies our holding.
“[S]ince the Government owned the chemicals at the time it installed the beeper, its consent obviated any potential warrant requiremеnt. However, ... the consent of the Government could not satisfy the fourth amendment after ownership and control of the chemicals passed to the defendants. See United States v. Moore, supra,562 F.2d at 111 ; United States v. Clayborne, supra, 584 F.2d [346] at 349 & n. 1 [(10th Cir.1978)]. The Government’s proposed expansion of the consent exception would allow warrantless installation and monitoring of the beepers or even radio transmitters in any property the Government might decide to sell.”
United States v. Bailey,
. While we only discuss Karo’s interest in the can of ether, we do not foreclose the possibility that others also may hаve legitimate expectations of privacy in the object at the time of transfer.
. In ruling that all of the defendants could challenge the conduct of the government, the district judge stated:
*1441 “Now, as far as standing, in my view, the installation of a beeper is a continuing search. It’s not just a search when it’s put on the can on the loading dock, or wherever, it’s a search wherever that can is tracing. And that’s the purpose of the whole thing, is to — and as is evident in this case, it did a good job. I say, accordingly, I think each person has standing, has demonstrated standing to challenge, except maybe the Defendant Roth is the only one I have a question about in that regard. Everyone else has demonstrated some connection with, or expectation of privacy where the can was intruded. Some have demonstrated ownership or possession of it. But rather than further complicate the situation, I will just grant the motion to suppress as to all of the Defendants.”
. The government, relying on
United States v. Clayborne,
