On October 30, 2002, You Bin Yang called the Eau Claire Police Department (“ECPD”) to report a burglary at his home. After processing the scene, Officer Brian Schneider asked Yang if he could take five notebooks for fingerprinting. Yang acceded to the request. At the time, the IRS was investigating Yang and his brother, You Lin Yang, for tax fraud. One of the officers who knew about the IRS investigation flipped through the notebooks’ pages and saw what appeared to be accounting information, which ultimately led to an indictment against Yang and his brother. They filed a motion to suppress the notebooks, which the district court denied. Yang and his brother subsequently entered conditional guilty pleas, reserving their right to appeal the denial of the motion to suppress. They now appeal. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court’s ruling.
I. BackgRoujsto
On October 30, 2002, You Bin Yang called the ECPD to report a burglary at his home. Officer Dave Kleinhaus responded to Yang’s call. When he arrived at Yang’s residence, Yang told him that the burglars had taken a DVD player from his bedroom and $2,500 from his parents’ bedroom. Officer Kleinhaus surveyed the ransacked home, noting that the burglars had displaced the dresser drawers in both Yang’s and his parents’ bedroom. After viewing the residence, Kleinhaus requested an evidence technician.
Officer Brian Schneider arrived to process the scene. In the course of his work, he found five notebooks in and around the dresser in Yang’s parents’ room. Three of the notebooks were spiral bound and two *834 were bound book-style. The three spiral notebooks were each labeled with a year: 2000, 2001, and 2002. None of the notebooks were sealed. Officer Schneider told Yang that he wanted to take the notebooks to the police department to process them for fingerprints, and Yang gave him permission to do so. At the time of the burglary, Yang, his brother, and his father were under investigation for tax fraud in connection with their ownership of the China Buffet Restaurant in Eau Claire.
On November 1, 2002, Yang called the police department and asked Sergeant Eric Larsen when he could retrieve his notebooks. Larsen, who knew about the IRS investigation, told Yang that he could probably have them back by November 4. Yang asked Larsen if the fingerprinting could be done earlier because Yang needed one notebook in particular. Larsen told Yang that he would talk to the evidence technician and ask if the tests could be run sooner.
Sergeant Larsen checked the notebooks out of evidence and reviewed their contents. Larsen saw that the notebooks appeared to contain the restaurant’s financial records written in Chinese. Larsen began copying the 2002 notebook. While he was making the copies, the evidence technician arrived and told Larsen that most of the fingerprinting tests would be performed on the notebook covers but that if the fingerprinting powder touched the inside pages, it could make the writing difficult to read.
Larsen stopped copying the 2002 notebook and called Yang. Larsen told Yang that the fingerprint powder might damage the writing in the notebooks, but he did not inform Yang that he had already started to copy one of them. Yang gave Larsen permission to copy the contents of each notebook, and Larsen told Yang that he could pick up any of the notebooks that he needed. Later that day, Yang picked up the 2002 notebook.
Larsen contacted IRS Criminal Investigations Special Agent Steven Makowski and told him that the police possessed what appeared to be accounting notebooks from Yang’s residence. Makowski obtained a grand jury subpoena for copies of the notebooks and served it on the evidence technician on November 4, 2002. The evidence technician gave the notebooks to Makowski, who translated the writing into English and discovered that the notebooks contained evidence of tax fraud.
On December 13, 2005, a grand jury indicted Yang and his brother for conspiracy to commit tax fraud, filing false tax returns, and conspiracy to structure currency transactions for the purpose of evading currency transaction reporting requirements.
On March 10, 2006, the brothers moved to suppress the evidence from the notebooks, arguing that the ECPD violated You Bin Yang’s Fourth Amendment rights. The magistrate judge denied the defendants’ motion to suppress, holding that Yang had no expectation of privacy in the notebooks once he turned them over to the police. The district court issued an order adopting the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation. On May 2, the defendants entered conditional guilty pleas, reserving the right to appeal the suppression issue. On July 12, the district court sentenced the defendants to 34 months in prison.
II. Analysis
Yang and his brother contend that the district court erred by denying their motion to suppress. Specifically, Yang and his brother argue that the government violated their Fourth Amendment rights by searching through the contents of the notebooks. The government responds that Yang had no expectation of privacy in the notebooks after he gave them to Officer
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Schneider. This Court reviews legal determinations related to a motion to suppress de novo and findings of fact for clear error.
United States v. Lawshea,
The Fourth Amendment provides that “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects ... shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause ...” U.S. Const, amend. IV. The Constitution thus protects against war-rantless intrusions, but only where an individual has a “legitimate expectation of privacy.”
Rakas v. Illinois,
The Supreme Court has noted that an individual claiming a subjective expectation of privacy must exhibit that expectation, i.e., he or she must not have manifested by his or her conduct a voluntary consent to the defendant’s allegedly invasive actions.
Kyllo v. United States,
Courts applying the subjective expectation prong have looked to the individuals’ affirmative steps to conceal and keep private whatever item was the subject of the search.
See MacWade v. Kelly,
Yang did not manifest a subjective expectation of privacy in the notebooks. Rather, he voluntarily allowed Officer Schneider to take the notebooks in their entirety to the police station and hold them for several days. He placed no limitations on access to the notebooks. He did not separate the notebook covers and keep the written contents to himself. He did not request that the officers perform the fingerprint analysis in his presence. He did not close or secure the contents of the notebook in anyway so that only the covers could be accessed. Indeed, Yang permitted Sergeant Larsen to make copies of the notebooks’ pages. In short, because Yang took no affirmative steps to demonstrate any expectation of privacy in the notebooks, he cannot prevail.
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Yang maintains that although the ECPD had lawful possession of his notebooks, that possession did not give Officer Larsen the right to search their contents. Yang cites
Walter v. United States,
Yang also asserts that this case is governed by
LeClair v. Hart,
Because Yang had no subjective expectation of privacy in the notebooks, we need not reach the objectively reasonable inquiry.
III. Conclusion
For the above stated reasons, we AffiRM the judgment of the district court.
