Robert W. Elam, Jr. entered a conditional plea of guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm and now appeals the district court’s 1 denial of his motion to suppress. The firearm was found in a locked cabinet in a common closet in the home where Elam was residing. The principal issue on appeal is whether Kansas City Police Detective Chad Durbin reasonably believed that a third party — the lessee of the home — had sufficient “common *603 authority” to consent to a search when she handed Durbin the key to the locked cabinet. We affirm.
On a snowy February evening, Detective Durbin investigated an anonymous tip that methamphetamine was being cooked by “Bob” at a Kansas City home owned by someone named “Squire.” Durbin and several officers went to the home without a warrant to conduct a “knock and talk.” Martha Squire answered their knock and let the officers in out of the snow. After Durbin explained the complaint they were investigating, Squire said she rented rather than owned the home and consented to a search of the premises. Three others were present in the living room — Squire’s brother, John Hunter; Squire’s friend, Jennifer Turner; and Elam. A computer check revealed an outstanding warrant for Turner for selling narcotics; she was arrested and taken to the kitchen. Elam and Hunter remained in the living room, eating and watching television. Squire took Durbin to the basement to look for evidence of methamphetamine manufacture and anyone who might be hiding there. While in the basement, Squire signed a written form consenting to a search of “my residence” for evidence of drug manufacture or trafficking.
After Durbin returned to the main floor, an officer advised that he had found a locked filing cabinet in a closet just off the living room, about ten feet from where Elam was sitting. Squire retrieved a key to the cabinet from a common key rack in the kitchen and handed it to Durbin in the living room. Squire did not say the cabinet belonged to someone else, and Elam did not object to the obviously impending search. In plain view of Elam and Squire, Durbin then unlocked the cabinet. He found the firearm inside along with documents suggesting it belonged to Elam. After the firearm was found, Squire and Hunter denied owning the gun, and Squire told Durbin the cabinet was Elam’s. Elam was arrested. He confessed to being a felon in possession the next day. In his motion to suppress and on appeal, Elam argues the firearm and the incriminating statement should be suppressed as fruits of an illegal warrantless search because Squire did not own either the locked cabinet or its contents, and the police intentionally bypassed Elam’s superior privacy interest by obtaining the key from Squire.
It is well settled that the Fourth Amendment does not prohibit the warrant-less search of a person’s home or other property if the police have obtained the voluntary consent of a third party with common authority over the premises or property.
See United States v. Matlock,
Elam argues that it was unreasonable for Durbin to rely on Squire’s consent and search the locked cabinet without asking who owned it. We agree with the district court that Durbin reasonably believed that Squire had the authority to
*604
consent to the search. The cabinet was found in a common closet. When asked, Squire retrieved the key from a common key rack and handed it to Durbin without warning that the cabinet or its contents belonged to someone else. Elam remained silent, giving the officers no reason to believe that he had a superior privacy interest in the cabinet. This is not a case like
James,
where the police knew that computer discs belonged to someone else who had attempted to tell the third party to destroy them.
Elam argues that Durbin used Squire’s consent to “intentionally bypass” Elam’s superior privacy interest. As the district court noted, we have acknowledged (but never invoked) intentional bypass as a narrow exception to the Supreme Court’s third party consent principles, explaining that “police may not rely on a third party’s consent to intentionally bypass a person who is present, has a superior privacy interest in the premises,
and actively objects to the
search.”
United States v. Esparza,
Elam argues that his failure to object should merely be a factor to consider in applying the intentional bypass exception, relying on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Impink,
Finally, Elam argues that he did not consent to the search of the cabinet and any implied consent was involuntary given the substantial police presence in the home. “Voluntariness” in this context is limited to whether a person’s affirmative consent was the product of police duress or coercion.
See Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The HONORABLE NANETTE K. LAU-GHREY, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri, adopting the Report and Recommendation of the HONORABLE JOHN T. MAUGHMER, Chief United States Magistrate Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
