The defendant-appellant was found guilty by a jury on each of four counts of an indictment charging violations of the Dyer Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2314. Counts one through three charged the unlawful interstate transportation of certain forged bank checks, and count four charged the unlawful interstate transportation of a cheek protector. Concurrent sentences were imposed on each count. The defendant now challenges the validity of *886 his arrest, the evidentiary fruits of the search of both his automobile and his motel room, and his identification by witnesses at trial by claim of impermissibly suggestive photographic identification made prior to trial.
Defendant was operating his automobile eleven miles east of Pratt, Kansas on the morning of July 10, 1969 when he was stopped at a roadblock by an officer of the Kansas Highway Patrol. The officer later testified that he was conducting driver’s license checks on his own volition and that defendant’s car was the first he had stopped that morning. After discovering that defendant did not have a driver’s license and that there was an opened bottle of liquor on the front seat, 1 the officer arrested defendant for both violations and placed him handcuffed in the patrol car. The officer then returned to defendant’s automobile and searched the glove compartment, finding a key to a room at the Wilcox Motel in Syracuse, Kansas and ten suspicious looking checks. The officer did not extend his search immediately but obtained a search warrant using the cheeks as a basis for probable cause. A subsequent search of the vehicle uncovered no additional evidence.
The owner of the Wilcox Motel testified that defendant rented a room on July 8 for two days. Shortly after noon on July 10 the local county attorney and county sheriff came to the motel and were permitted by the owner to search the room that had been rented to defendant. This search disclosed, in addition to personal effects, a cardboard box containing a check protector. These items were retained by the motel owner in his office, but several days later an agent of the F.B.I. called at the motel and took possession of the check protector. At no time was a search warrant shown to the motel owner.
At trial, witnesses identified defendant as the man who cashed three forged checks in Cheyenne, Wyoming similar to the ones found in defendant’s car. The motel key, the checks taken from defendant’s car, and the check protector were admitted into evidence over objection. Expert testimony established that the check protector had been used in drawing the forged checks.
Defendant does not contend that a Kansas law officer cannot make a lawful warrantless arrest where, as here, a misdemeanor is committed in the officer’s presence nor that a properly administered driver’s license cheek is not a proper police function.
See
Myricks v. United States, 5 Cir.,
*887
The subsequent search of the motel room and seizure of the check protector are subject to more serious question. We hold, however, that defendant does not have standing to challenge these actions, for the basis of defendant’s complaint must rest on some invasion of his right of privacy. And although it is clearly established that a guest in a hotel or motel room is entitled to protection against unreasonable searches and seizures, Stoner v. California,
The owner of the Wilcox Motel testified that defendant’s rental period expired at noon on July 10, before the officers entered the motel room. It follows that there was no invasion of defendant’s right of privacy.
Defendant argues that the expiration of the rental period should not control in this case because his arrest prior to check-out time prevented him from returning to the motel and perhaps extending the rental period. We are not persuaded by this argument for it was defendant’s own conduct that prevented his return to the motel.
Defendant lastly contends that he was prejudiced by photographic identification procedures prior to trial which were "so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.” Simmons v. United States,
Considering the circumstances of this case, we hold that the photographic identification procedures were not impermissibly suggestive. That two pictures of defendant were shown at the second photographic identification was not, in itself, improper.
See
United States v. Baker, 2 Cir.,
Affirmed.
