Appellants, Luis Ramirez, Leopoldo Al-egría-Valencia, and Antonio G. Rodriguez were convicted following a jury trial for various violations of the Federal Controlled Substances Act. Alegría, and possibly Rodriguez, challenge the Drug Enforcement Agency’s (“DEA”) search of luggage and other items which were left in an abandoned hotel room. Ramirez urges that a Brady 1 violation occurred. All three appellants question the sufficiency of the evidenсe and the failure of the district court to give certain jury instructions. We affirm.
Gabriel Quadri, a paid government informant, was approached by two Colombians who planned to smuggle a large amount of cocaine into the United States. Shortly afterward, in November, 1985, two of the Colombians’ contacts, “Beto” and “Paco”, *1340 met Quadri in New Orleans to arrange for the delivery of the cocaine from the M/V TUXPAN, docked in Gramercy, Louisiana. Quadri agreed to drive Paco and three of his confederates, Alegría, Rodriguez, and Jose Tapia, to Gramercy to retrieve the contraband.
Quadri testified that during the 35 to 40 minute trip, everyone in the car discussed the off-loading of the cocaine. Upon reaching Gramercy, Quadri dropped off Beto, Paco, and Alegría and proceeded to the TUXPAN with Rodriguez and Tapia, where they received a portion of the cocaine. 2 The trio returned to Gramercy, picked up Beto, Paco, and Alegría and headed for New Orleans. Moments later, their vehicle was stopped by government agents, the occupants were searched, and six packages of cocaine were found secreted on the persons of Rodriguez and Tapia and lying in the car. Cash in the amount of $14,500 was recovered from Paco.
The sting was not yet complete. Following thе arrest, two agents, Gonzales and Stein, took the $14,500 found on Paco and returned with Quadri to the TUXPAN intending to purchase more cocaine from crewmember Gomez. The three men negotiated the purchase in Gomez’s cabin. Agent Gonzales placed the cash on a table, but ostensibly because of his limited education, Gomez refused to count it. Gomez left the cabin and retrieved fellow crew-member Ramirez who Gomez said would count the money. As Ramirez attempted to leave the cabin with the money, Gonzales stopped him and insisted upon seeing the merchandise. Ramirez then turned to Gomez and instructed him to show Gonzales the cocaine. Gomez gave Quadri several packages of cocaine. As Quadri left the vessel, the agents arrested Ramirez and Gomez.
Meanwhile, another government agent, Mark Greenlee, went to the Rodeway Inn in Kenner where several of the defendants had been staying. According to the hotel manager, Room 220 was registered under Alegria’s name through noon of the next day (November 26, 1985). Greenlee stayed and watched the room. Having observed no activity, he left at approximately 2:00 a.m. the next day and returned at 8:00 a.m. During Greenlee’s absence, the manager had seen no one return to Room 220. Greenlee told the manager that if the room were later determined tо be abandoned, he (Greenlee) would like to view any personal property.
Not surprisingly, no one returned to the hotel room, the rental period expired, and the manager began to ready the room for new occupants. Following his usual procedure, the manager examined the property in the abandoned room and the next day, November 27, he requested Greenlee to assume custody of the property. Among the itеms Greenlee recovered from the hotel room were several suitcases containing money, used airline ticket stubs bearing the names of Rodriguez and Alegría, and a boarding pass bearing the name of Alegría. An address book containing the names and telephone numbers of Quadri and of other coconspirators and the name of the TUX-PAN, was found lying on a table in Room 220.
Except for the three appellants, all co-conspirаtors pleaded guilty to the drug offenses for which they were charged. The jury found all three guilty of various offenses related to conspiracy or possession with intent to distribute cocaine or importation of cocaine.
I.
Alegría challenges the denial of his motion to suppress evidence obtained from the search of Room 220 at the Rodeway Inn. Although Rodriguez adopted the briefs of his co-defendants by letter instead of submitting a separate brief, it is not certain whether he participates in appeal of this claim. Nevertheless, because Rodriguez apparently shared Room 220 with Alegría *1341 and because Rodriguez’s counsel orally joined the motion to suppress in the trial court, we will address this issue with regard to Alegría and Rodriguez.
For fourth amendment purposes, it is necessary to analyze the search of the room and the inspection of the personal property separately. Regarding the room search, Alegría argues that the DEA, having waited for the rental period to expire instead of securing a search warrant, improperly exploited an exception to the exclusionary rule. Appellants explicitly acknowledge the “well-settled rule that a guest in a hotel or motel loses his reasonable expectation of privacy and consequently any standing to objеct to ‘an unauthorized seizure of the premises’ after his rental period has terminated.”
United States v. Jackson,
Citing
United States v. Dowell,
We deal here with a crime аnd a criminal, not with a sporting event. True, the constable put himself in the way to blunder, though he did not. Appellant would nevertheless have us disqualify him from the game because he chose a course less than the best, or perhaps because his heart was not entirely pure. But it was not a game, and wé decline to do so.
Id. at 1233-34.
Because the hotel room was abandoned, appellants had forfeited their reasonable expectation оf privacy in it, and a search by the hotel manager did not tres1 pass on appellants’ fourth amendment rights. An equally compelling refutation of appellants’ position, as will be discussed below, is that the hotel manager was not acting in the capacity of a government agent, and his independent conduct implicated no fourth amendment concerns.
Appellants purport to assert nevertheless a reasonable expeсtation of privacy
*1342
in the address book and luggage which were obtained and searched by the hotel manager before he delivered them to the government. Their contention is fundamentally flawed by the fact that neither appellant has asserted ownership of the address book or luggage. “A person who is aggrieved by an illegal search and seizure only through the introduction of damaging evidence secured by search of a third persоn’s premises or property has not had any of his Fourth Amendment rights infringed.”
Rafeas v. Illinois,
Equally undermining appellants’ contention that they are entitled to fourth amendment protection is the fact that the room was searched and the luggage seized and inspected initially by a private party, the hotel manager. The fourth amendment applies only to actions of the government. When evidence is retrieved by a private individual, it may be admitted at a criminal trial.
Walter v. United States,
II.
Ramirez argues that the government withheld material potentially valuable to the defense, consisting of a dock log which allegedly showed Ramirez away from the vessel at the time Quadri made his second visit to the TUXPAN to pick up the first *1343 installment of cocaine. 5 Ramirez argues that he was prejudiced by this alleged Brady violation since he could neither cross-examine and impeach informant Quadri with the log nor call to testify as witnesses the crewmembеrs listed on the log as accompanying him ashore.
The government denies that a Brady violation ever occurred since: (1) Ramirez’s signature was illegible and the government therefore had no idea that the list was of value to Ramirez; (2) all defendants were given the opportunity to inspect and copy all the documents the government intended to use at trial; and (3) Ramirez was given the dock log before he put on his case at trial and it was introduced as a defense exhibit. The government’s position is correct for several reasons.
Brady
involved “the discovery, after trial of information which had been known to the prosecution but unknown to the defense.”
United States v. Agurs,
Notwithstanding that the prosecutor had no duty to disclose evidence about which the defеndant knew or should have known, there is no requirement of pre-trial disclosure of
Brady
material.
See United States v. Beasley,
In any event, the log only tended to negate Ramirez’s presence at the second meeting between Quadri and Gomez. It did not explain his presence at nor excuse his participation in that meeting which ultimately resulted in his аrrest — the meeting among Gomez, Agents Gonzalez and Stein, Quadri and Ramirez where he instructed Gomez to display the cocaine. In summary, we find no Brady violation in the events of this case.
III.
The discussion of the jury charge was not transcribed. One of the counsel’s proposed instructions would have cautioned the jury against drawing any adverse inferences from the failure of Rodriguez and Alegría to testify. Counsel for Ramirez, in turn, requested an instruction which would caution jurors against drawing an adverse inferenсe from the fact that he chose to testify on his own behalf. The district judge and defense attorneys recognized and discussed the potential fifth amendment issue inherent in the court’s highlighting the fact that two defendants chose to testify while one did not. According to their brief, the defense attorneys left this conference thinking instructions would be given with respect to both situations. The court apparently recollected the discussion differently and, believing that counsel decided against instructions on the failure to testify, omitted any from its charge. None *1344 of the defense attorneys objected on the record to the absence of the adverse inference instruction, but all three appellants now challenge the court’s failure to include it. 6
Appellants’ failure properly to preserve error to this portion of the charge requires us to review the alleged deficiency for plain error. Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b). Plain error is that error “so obvious that our failure to notice it would seriously affect the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings and result in a miscarriage of justice.”
United States v. Graves,
This circuit has held that the omission of an adverse inference instruction, over proper defense objection, may be found harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Richardson v. Lucas,
Ramirez raises two other objections to the jury charge. First, he contests the adequacy of its instruction on the weight to be given the testimony of a paid informant. A court does not err by refusing to use the exact words of a requested instruction as long as the charge, when viewed as a whole, correctly reflects the issues and law of the case.
United States v. Garza,
Second, Ramirez unsuccessfully sought an instruction directing that additional consideration be given the Gomez and Tapia testimony which involved an admission against their interests; in other words, by testifying as they did, Gomez and Tapia had nothing to gain but much to lose from any adverse impact their testimony might have had on their plea bargains. The trial court refused to so instruct the jury, as he believed the charge given with respect to the credibility of informants included an instruction as to the general credibility of witnesses. The proposed charge does overlap other portions of the *1345 court’s instructions. Moreover, not only did Ramirez’s attorney fail to object to this ruling, he agreed to it. There is no plain error in the charge on this account, nor any other error.
IV.
The appellants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence on whiсh they were convicted. The jury’s verdict will be sustained if it is supported by substantial evidence when examined in a light most favorable to the government.
Glasser v. United States,
Concerning Ramirez, Quadri and DEA Agent Gonzalez both testified that when they went to the TUXPAN to make their final deal with crewmember Gomez, Ramirez instructed Gomez to show them the cocaine and counted the cash payment. Ramirez objects that the testimony conflicted concerning his involvement in this drug transaction. Notwithstanding a dispute about how many meetings Ramirez attended on the TUXPAN,
8
both Quadri and Agent Gonzales identified him as an active participant in the third and final meeting of the “sting.” The jury was fully equipped to determine the witnesses’ credibility and its verdict must be upheld because the testimony relied upon is not incredible or insubstantial on its face.
United States v. Blankenship,
For the reasons set out above, we find no reversible error and AFFIRM the judgments of the district court.
Notes
.
Brady
v.
Maryland,
. This was Quadri's second meeting on the TUX-PAN. Earlier in the day crewmember Gomez, who was evidently responsible for the delivery, met Tapia and Quadri there and instructed them to return later that evening.
. Federal courts of appeаls have uniformly approved warrantless searches of hotel or motel rooms after occupancy has terminated.
United States v. Lee,
. The court in
Dowell
stated, “[a]ppellants do not claim, and we do nоt find that the DEA deliberately ... exploited the exigent circumstances exception.”
. See infra note 8.
. Ramirez, who testified, has no standing to assert this error which pertains only to the non-testifying appellants.
. The trial court instructed the jury as follows: [A] Paid informant or a witness who has been promised that he or she will not be charged or prosecuted or witnesses [sic] that hope to gain more favorable treatment in his or her own case, may have a reason to make a false statement becausе he wants to strike a good bargain with the government. So, while a witness of that kind may be entirely truthful when testifying, you should consider that [sic] testimony with more caution than the testimony of the other witnesses.
Ramirez’s proposed charge read as follows:
You are instructed that you should scrutinize the testimony of an informer or paid agent of the government with great care before accepting that testimony as true, particularly where any agent's or informant’s testimony is essentially uncorroborated by other competent or credible evidence.
. Quadri testified that Ramirez was present at and participated in three meetings held with Gomez. The first meeting occurred the morning of the arrest. This meeting lasted no longer than one-half hour to discuss the off-loading of the cocaine. Quadri also testified that Ramirez was present when he, Rodriguez, and Tapia arrived that evening to pick up a portion of the cocaine. The dock’s log, however, showed Ramirez absent from the TUXPAN during the second meeting. Both Gomez and Tapia testified that Ramirez was neither present nor involved in either of these two meetings.
