Shоrtly after he received a 10-year federal sentence on a felon in possession charge, state authorities mistakenly released federal prisoner Dan Ward, who exploited the situation by absconding. This case presents the question of whether Ward enjoyed a Fourth Amendment right to privacy that was violated by а warrant-less search of his motel room.
I
Federal marshals learned that Ward had contacted his mother after his escape and that his car, a maroon Buick, was parked in her driveway. Two deputies were dispatched to Odessa, Texas where Ward’s mother lived, but found Ward’s car gone. During their search of area mоtels, with an eye for the Buick, the marshals located the car in a Days Inn parking lot. The Days Inn clerk advised that Ward was not a registered guest. The marshals then staked-out the car.
After a few hours, Ward appeared on the scene, walking briskly towards the car. The marshals moved in. As Ward got in his car, they pulled in front of him, flash
Thinking that Ward may have been trying to retrieve something from a motel room and not wanting the trail to go cold, the marshals checked other nearby motels. At the first motel — the Parkway Inn directly next door to the Days Inn where they first spotted Ward’s car — the manager confirmed that Ward was a guest, registered under his own name. After obtaining the key, the marshals knocked and then cautiously entered room 133, with guns drawn. They cleared the room, determining that Ward was not present, and then searched for clues of Ward’s whereabouts. The first item they checked was a bag, described as looking like a camera bag. Unzipping the bag the marshals found a soft gun case, with a loaded 9mm Beretta semi-automatic handgun, loose ammunition, an address book, and a pharmacy card.
Ward was soon after apprehended in the nearby town of Midland, and on the basis of the gun and ammunition found in his motel room, indicted on counts of felon in рossession of a firearm and fugitive in possession of a firearm. Ward filed a motion to suppress the evidence found in his motel room, which the district court denied. Ward then pled guilty, retaining the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress, which he now does. We review the legal conclusions of the district court de nоvo. 1
II
The question before us is whether Ward, as an escapee,
2
had a right of privacy in his motel room entitling him to the protection of the Fourth Amendment against unreasonable searches. Justice Harlan in his oft-quoted concurrence in
Katz v. United
States
3
gives the proper framework for answering the legal question: whether a person may invoke the Fourth Amendment to suppress evidence
Our determination of whether an escapee’s expectation of privacy is reasonable is informed by related Supreme Court precedent. In Hudson v. Palmer the Court made plain that because society is not prepared to recognize a prisoner’s expectation of privacy in his prison cell, the Fourth Amendment, as a bright line rule, does not restrict searches and seizures in the cell. 7 The Court found the privacy right irreconcilаble with both the institutional concern of security in the prison and with the punitive objectives of incarceration, namely retribution and deterrence.
That Ward would have had no right to privacy in his prison cell does not a fortiori mean that he has no right to privacy in his motel room. The interests at play for determining whether the Fourth Amendment аpplies to an escapee in society may differ from those applicable in the prison cell context. In other words, although the privacy right is personal, defining the specific content and incidents of the right often requires reference to a place — hence the Hudson opinion’s repetition of the clause “in his prison cell.” The Court’s holding, specific to the cell, does not by its own force reach a motel room.
Exchanging the prison environment for a motel room 8 and the prisoner for a prison escapee, we find that the balance of interests weighs against finding a constitutionally protected reasonable expectation of privacy. We аcknowledge that the consideration of internal security recognized in Hudson loses much its force when applied to justify circumscribing an escapee’s privacy right. This justification is place specific. As explained in Hudson, “[a] right of privacy in traditional Fourth Amendment terms is fundamentally incompatible with the close and continuаl surveillance of inmates and their cells required to ensure institutional and internal order.” 9 It is the challenge of the unique prison environment — exemplified by the prison administrator’s constant fight to keep dangerous contraband out of the hands of a population that has demonstrated a proclivity for violence — that рartially justifies that the privacy right in the cell be among the rights ceded by a convicted felon.
However, while institutional security loses some of its justifying force once a prisoner breaches the prison wall, we believe it remains indirectly at play. Recog
We need not however rely on indirect justifications. The institutional demands of the prison environment are not the sole justification for the prisoner’s loss of liberty. Even assuming the justification of internal оrder and security falls away once a prisoner escapes the institution, an escapee privacy right remains incompatible with the objectives of incarceration. The loss of significant rights is an incident of imprisonment; the deprivation of privacy is a component of society’s punishment.
The rationales of punishment retain their full force both inside and outside the prison. A federal escapee remains in legal custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons even when outside the prison walls. A prisoner cannot by escape rewrite his sentence such that his punishment no longer includes a loss of Fourth Amendment protected privacy. Society, through our system of justice, has retracted this privacy right from prisoners as a necessary incident of incarceration, imposed for the purposes of retribution, deterrence, and rehabilitation. We cannot find that this same society would recognize the escapee’s expectatiоn of that right as reasonable. 11
There remains the additional consideration of protecting society. Incarcerated persons have demonstrated their propensity to engage in illegal, and often violent, behavior. The facts of this case exemplify this risk. Ward had a significant criminal history, including burglary and illegal fireаrm possession, and his recent behavior fleeing federal marshals in a dangerous automobile chase evidenced his willingness to place lives at risk. Ward’s imprisonment was partially justified by incapacitation — removing his ability to inflict additional crimes on society. Prisoners that escape have frustrated this purpose, at the same time self-selecting themselves into an even more crime-prone subset. 12 Allowing an escapee to invoke the privacy right would be inconsistent with protecting society from a demonstrably dangerous person who is fleeing from law enforcement outside of the structured environment that the criminal justice system determined was necessary for him. In this game of hide and seek the sheriff need not count to ten.
We, therefore, join the Second
13
and
Ill
The Supreme Court has not addressed whether an escaped felon may invoke the Fourth Amendment. It has held that prisoners have no prоtection under the Fourth Amendment from searches of their cell, a per se rule. At the same time, the Court has taken a different tack in its analysis in the related cases of paroled felons and probationers. 15 In these cases the Court assumed the petitioner could invoke the Fourth Amendment; that the parolee and probationer had a right to have the search measured by reasonableness, deploying an ad hoc “totality of the circumstances” balancing test. Under this test, the Court found that the balance tipped in favor of the government. “By their status alone,” probationers and parolees have only a limited privacy right, 16 one that when weighed against the government’s penological interests in restoring rights of liberty in a measured way yields to warrantless searches.
Although the Court employed a “reasonableness” analysis in these cases instead of the Katz test it had earlier used to determine that prisoners, as an antecedent matter, could not invoke the Fourth Amendment, the determinative factor is the same under either approach—the petitioner’s status. It is the status of probationers and parolees that results in their reduced expectation of privacy, a diminished right that could be outweighed by government interests. Similarly, it was status that drove the Katz analysis for prisoners in Hudson v. Palmer; as a pеr se rule a prisoner cannot invoke the Fourth Amendment because society is not prepared to recognize a prisoner’s expectation of privacy in his prison cell.
We do not ponder the precise approach the Supreme Court would take in this case. Even were we to balance a diminished right against the interest of the government, the expectation of privacy of the probationer and parolee would offer no solace to Ward. Escape is a frustration of ordered justice that cannot be rewarded with rights greater than those held by felons that leave or avoid prison lawfully.
IV
This said, there remains the nagging risk of invading the privacy rights of third
We are persuaded that Ward, as a prison escapee, could not invoke the Fourth Amendment to suppress a warrantless search of his motel room and bag. The district court did not err in rejecting Ward’s motion to suppress. The judgment of conviction and sentence is AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
United States v. Ceniceros,
. Ward asserts that because he was mistakenly released he is not technically an escapee. Ward is incorrect. In the narrower, but related, context of the federal escape statute, the Supreme Court noted that “we think it clear beyond peradventure that escape from federal custody as defined in [the federal escape statute] is a continuing offense and that an escapee can be held liable for failure to return to custody as well as for his initial departure.”
United States v. Bailey,
.
.
Katz v. United States,
.
Id.
at 361,
.
Hudson v. Palmer,
.
Id.
at 525-26,
. That the search was of a motel room, and not of a private house or apartment, does not effect the analysis.
See Stoner v. California,
.Id.
at 527-28,
.
United States v. Roy,
. We do not address privacy interests beyond those protected by the Fourth Amendment such as may be protected by the Eighth Amendment.
. While there are no ready statistics to document crime rates of escapees, reason warns it is likely higher than the already alarming recidivism rates for those legally released. In its most recent recidivism report, the Bureau of Justice Statistics studied recidivism in 272,-111 prisoners released in 1994, representing two-thirds of all prisoners released in the United States that year. It found that 67.5% of released prisoners were rearrested for a new crime within 3 years, 46.9% were recon-victed for a new crime, and 25.4% were re-sentenced to prison. Patrick A. Langan & David J. Levin, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Recidivism of Prisoners Released in 1994 (June 2002).
.In Roy,
. In
United States v. Lucas,
.
United States
v.
Knights,
. “[B]y virtue of their status alone, probationers do not enjoy the absolute liberty to which every citizen is entitled.”
Samson,
.
See Steagald v. United States,
