Appellants were convicted by a jury and subsequently sentenced under three counts of a four-count indictment, for possessing and transporting in interstate commerce, and in a truck whose cab had been stolen, a quantity of some 326 mercury cylinders which had previously been hijacked. The cylinders were being transported from a pier in Staten Island, New York, where they had arrived by ship in May 1969, to another pier in Brooklyn. The truck from which the cylinders were stolen was recovered the day after the hijacking.
Viewing the evidence most favorably to the Government, as we must at this juncture, United States v. Kahaner,
After the truck entered Watertown at about 2:30 a. m. on June 6, D’Avanzo appeared to be getting ready to turn into a street leading to the Infeld Metal Company but then for some reason changed his mind and proceeded ahead for two more blocks before turning into a U-shaped residential street, Bessamy Avenue, 1 which led nowhere but back to the road upon which the truck had been traveling, Falls Avenue. D’Avanzo parked a short distance down Bessamy Avenue. While several FBI agents remained in another car on Falls Avenue (contiguous to Bessamy), Agent Hays stopped his car short of Bessamy Avenue and walked toward the other FBI vehicle, whose headlights were on. The agents saw appellants leave the truck and walk in their direction for a short distance. But then, as they approached Hays, both turned in the opposite direction and proceeded at a trot into a swampy wooded area behind Bessamy Avenue.
Their retreat prompted Agent Hays to inspect the inside of the truck with his flashlight. The panels were sufficiently high that it was necessary for him to stand on a ledge running around the body of the truck in order to view, through the open top, the exposed interi- or of the dump truck. Without disturbing a tarpaulin that covered only part of the truck’s cargo, Hays was able to observe several exposed cylinders, later identified as part of the stolen shipment of mercury cylinders. Further investigation revealed that the serial number on the motor of the truck corresponded with that of a 1969 flat-bed International truck stolen from the Port Equipment Renting Co. in March 1969. Under a *1226 layer of fresh paint on the left door of the cab the name “Port Equipment Renting Co.” was still visible.
Prior to the trial, Judge Zavatt conducted a hearing on D’Avanzo’s motion to suppress the fruits of the search and seizure of the truck and its contents on the ground that Agent Hays acted without a warrant. After a hearing, Judge Zavatt ruled that the defendants had “abandoned” the truck and its contents prior to Hays’s inspection and thus there had been no “search and seizure” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment to which appellants could object. Whether there has been an abandonment presents a question of intent. Like other factual findings by a district court we may disturb Judge Zavatt’s finding that defendants relinquished any interest they may otherwise have. had in protecting the privacy of the exposed portion of the dump truck only if the finding is clearly erroneous. United States v. Cowan,
We have examined appellants’ other points and find them without merit.
The convictions are affirmed.
Notes
. From among many different versions in the record of the name of this street, we have adopted that form used by the parties in this appeal.
