A federal grand jury indicted defendant Timothy Dwayne Austin on September 9, 1993, charging him with possession of drugs with intent to distribute in violation of 21 *1117 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B). Defendant moved to suppress the physical evidence obtained by the police. After the district court denied defendant’s motion, he entered a conditional guilty plea reserving his right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm.
Background
On the evening of June 26, 1993, Daniel Hollis sat at an unoccupied gate in the Albuquerque International Airport during a layover between flights. Defendant approached Hollis and asked him how long he would be sitting there, to which Hollis replied, “a few minutes.” Defendant then asked Hollis if Hollis would watch his bag, and Hollis agreed.
As soon as defendant walked away, Hollis regretted agreeing to watch a stranger’s bag. He recalled reading about various terrorism prevention measures, one of which advised travelers not to look after luggage belonging to strangers. Hollis moved to a seat approximately forty feet away from the bag, but he continued to feel nervous. He therefore called airport security.
Within minutes of receiving Hollis’s call, airport police officer Dwayne Hoppe arrived at the gate. Hoppe picked up the bag, which had no exterior name tag, and unzipped it. He examined the contents of the bag, closed it, and then left with the bag. Hoppe told Hollis he was taking the bag to the airport’s lost and found area.
Approximately fifteen minutes after leaving the bag with Hollis, defendant returned to retrieve it. Hollis told defendant that he had become uncomfortable with watching the bag and had called airport security. After Hollis told defendant that the security officer had taken the bag to the lost and found area, defendant left.
After Hoppe left Hollis, he took the bag to be X-rayed. The X-ray revealed no suspicious items. Hoppe then returned to the airport police office, where lost and found property is stored. Airport police sergeant Felix Sanchez directed Hoppe to inventory the bag’s contents while another officer observed. While inventorying the bag, the officers discovered two plastic bottles labeled “boric acid.” According to Sanchez’s testimony at the suppression hearing, he was concerned about these bottles because he thought boric acid is flammable and can be employed as a component in explosive devices. 1 Setting the bottles aside, the officers completed their search of the bag but found nothing else of concern.
The officers then opened the bottles. Instead of boric acid, the bottles contained small plastic-wrapped packets. By field-testing the substance in one of the packets, the officers discovered that the packets contained heroin. The officers replaced the packets into the bottles and contacted federal authorities. They left defendant’s bag on the counter of the lost and found area.
Sometime later, defendant arrived at the police office. Although his bag was on the counter in plain view, defendant did not ask about it or attempt to claim it. Instead, defendant asked Sanchez for information concerning outbound flights and left the office.
The district court held a hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress evidence on February 25, 1994. After hearing the witnesses’ testimony, the court found that defendant had abandoned the bag at the lost and found area in the police office. The court based this conclusion on its factual finding that defendant spent approximately fifteen minutes in the police office without mentioning the bag or expressing any possessory interest in it. Because the court found that defendant abandoned the bag, it held that defendant had no expectation of privacy in the bag or its contents. In addition, the court found that the airport police “acted consistent with the FAA policy in handling lost and found articles.” Consequently, the district *1118 court denied defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence found in his bag.
Discussion
I.
When reviewing a district court’s denial of a motion to suppress, we accept the district court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous.
United States v. Bute,
II.
“The Fourth Amendment ‘protects people from unreasonable government intrusions into their legitimate expectations of privacy.’ ”
United States v. Place,
An abandonment must be voluntary, and an abandonment that results from a Fourth Amendment violation cannot be voluntary.
Hernandez,
“The test for abandonment is whether an individual has retained any reasonable expectation of privacy in the object.”
Jones,
But defendant must show more than his subjective intent. His expectation of privacy must be one “that society would recognize ... as
objectively
reasonable” for the search to have violated the Fourth Amendment.
United States v. Benitez-Arreguin,
Defendant left his bag in the care of Hollis; thus, Hollis was in lawful possession of it.
See Benitez-Arreguin,
Conclusion
Because defendant did not have an objectively reasonable expectation of privacy, the search of his bag did not violate the Fourth Amendment. We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s denial of defendant’s motion to suppress evidence.
Notes
. When defendant filed a motion to reconsider the denial of his motion to suppress, he provided an affidavit from a University of New Mexico professor of chemistry. In the affidavit, the professor contradicted Sanchez’s testimony regarding the dangerous properties of boric acid. Our decision rests on grounds that do not require us to consider the effect of this affidavit.
. Defendant relies on
United States v. Most,
