A jury convicted Larry Ware of three federal drug offenses. The District Court 1 sentenced him to two consecutive ten-year terms in prison and one concurrent twenty-year term. For reversal, Ware argues that: (1) he was denied his right to a fair trial when the District Court granted his motion to appear pro se but then denied his request for a continuance; (2) his Fourth Amendment rights were violated because the consent he gave to search his apartment did not extend to a locked enclosure in a locked storage room located next door to his apartment, which was searched and from which crucial evidence was seized; and (3) the government obtained information about his girlfriend, a key government witness, only through plea negotiations with him and therefore she should not have been permitted to testify. We affirm.
Ware was arrested and indicted late in 1987 on three charges: Count I, aiding and abetting distribution of cocaine; Count II, conspiracy to distribute cocaine; and Count III, possession with intent to distribute cocaine. In January 1988, Ware entered a guilty plea to Count I, the remaining counts to be dropped at sentencing pursuant to a plea bargain. Ware failed to appear at his sentencing on July 7, 1988, and was arrested July 8 outside the jurisdiction. On August 9, he moved to withdraw his plea. Without ruling on that motion, the District Court set the case for trial to begin on October 5. On October 3 Ware’s appointed counsel moved for a continuance, which motion was denied October 4. On October 5, the date set for start of the trial, the District Court held a hearing con *1010 cerning Ware’s motion to withdraw his plea and his motion to proceed pro se. The District Court granted both motions and directed Ware’s appointed counsel to continue serving as advisory counsel. At the hearing, in answer to a question from the judge, Ware’s counsel indicated that she felt prepared to represent Ware “without hesitation,” should the defendant wish that she continue to do so. The trial began on October 7, at which time a pro se motion for a continuance was denied.
The thrust of Ware’s argument is that, once he was granted his motion to proceed pro se, he should have been given a continuance to prepare. He claims that, by failing to delay the start of trial, the court deprived him of his right to effective counsel. We reject this claim.
The district court has broad discretion on the issue of continuances.
Morris v. Slappy,
L.Ed.2d 820 (1989). Abuse of discretion is determined by looking at the particular circumstances of the case.
Ungar v. Sarafite,
Our review convinces us that the District Court properly found no “compelling reason” that would merit a continuance, and therefore that the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the requested continuance. Ware had known about the upcoming trial from the time he moved to withdraw his plea on August 9, nearly two months before the beginning of the trial. His attorney indicated she was prepared to go forward and in fact assisted Ware with his defense. The court properly concluded that Ware’s wish, expressed in his comments to the court, that he might have more time to study the law did not rise to the level of a need requiring a continuance. The record shows Ware was ably assisted by his advisory counsel and that the court and prosecution regularly advised him as to procedural and other trial matters. Considering these circumstances, we reject Ware’s claim that the District Court’s failure to grant a continuance prevented him from having a fair trial.
Ware next asserts that his conviction on Count III should be reversed, as the conviction (and the charge on which it is based) is the product of illegally seized evidence. We disagree.
Soon after he was arrested, Ware consented to a search of his apartment. He executed a preprinted consent form giving permission for a “complete search” of his apartment and authorization to seize, among other items, “any drugs.” The searching officers took with them a key ring that was seized from Ware upon his arrest. The ring contained the keys that Ware identified to a deputy as giving access to the apartment. Using one of the keys on the ring, which was the same brand as the two keys that opened the security door to the apartment complex and the door to Ware’s living quarters, the deputy opened the door to a locked storage room approximately ten feet from Ware’s apartment door. Inside, there were four to six screened-in bins or lockers. Securing one of the bins was a lock with a brand name matching one of the keys on the ring. Upon using this key to open the bin, the searching officers found a suitcase that contained a briefcase, inside which were approximately ten ounces of cocaine. That evidence was the basis for Ware’s indictment on a charge of possession with intent *1011 to distribute cocaine, Count III, and his subsequent conviction. Ware argues that the search of the bin, and consequent seizure of the cocaine, violated his Fourth Amendment rights, as the search was beyond the scope of the consent he had given to the search of his apartment.
The cocaine seized from the storage area was the subject of a suppression hearing in the District Court. The court found that Ware’s consent extended to the storage room and bin, and that items found therein could constitutionally be admitted into evidence. We review such findings by a district court under the clearly erroneous standard.
See United States v. Archer,
A consent search is limited, of course, by the scope of the consent given.
Walter v. United States,
This case is quite similar to
United States v. Principe,
Ware asks us to distinguish
Principe
on factual grounds. It seems to us, however, that the factual differences between the present case and
Principe
work against Ware’s position. In our view, the case for expanding the scope of the search is even stronger here than in
Principe
because of the storage room’s proximity to Ware’s apartment and his identification of the key ring. As for Ware’s assertion that the scope of a consent search somehow is more restrictive than the scope of a warrant search, we point out the Supreme Court’s statement that the standard is the same for both: “When an official search is properly
authorized
— whether
by consent or by the issuance of a valid warrant
— the scope of the search is limited by the terms of its authorization.”
Walter,
Ware argues that, had he wanted to extend the scope of the search to the storage area, he not only would have told the officers they would find cash and a scale in his apartment, as he did, but “surely he would have mentioned the cocaine that would be found during the search!” Reply Brief for Appellant at 7. This argument was not raised in the District Court, and therefore it is not properly before us. In any event, we reject it as totally lacking in merit, since it is based on the unrealistic premise that a clever suspect, who volunteers that he is in possession of potentially incriminating but *1012 ordinarily innocent items (the cash and the scale), also would volunteer that he is in possession of a highly incriminating controlled substance (the nearly ten ounces of cocaine). That would amount to a confession of guilt and is an unlikely scenario when, as was obviously the case here, the suspect retains hope that the search to which he has consented will not uncover his concealed stash of drugs. That Ware refrained from telling the officers they would find cocaine in no way undercuts the District Court’s finding that Ware’s consent extended to the storage area and bin.
The final issue Ware raises was presented by way of his pro se brief, which contends that Ware’s girlfriend, a key government witness at his trial, was known to the government only because Ware mentioned her during his earlier plea bargaining with the prosecutor. At oral argument, Ware’s counsel suggested that this contention is based on Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(e)(6). That rule makes inadmissible against a defendant who participates in plea negotiations “any statement made in the course of plea discussions with an attorney for the government which ... result in a plea of guilty later withdrawn.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(6)(D).
This issue is not properly before us. Aside from the fact that the brief raising the issue was not timely filed, there is no record that the testimony of the witness in question was objected to in the District Court. In any event, a defendant’s introduction of a potential witness to the government during plea discussions is not within the rule.
See United States v. Cusack,
Ware’s convictions are affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable James M. Rosenbaum, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
