Contents    Prev    Next    Last


            Title United States v. Lee

 

            Date 2004

            By Alito

            Subject Criminal Law

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





LEXSEE 359 F3D 194


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. ROBERT W. LEE, SR., Appellant


No. 01-1629


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



359 F.3d 194; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062; 93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv.

(Callaghan) 781


September 20, 2002, Argued

February 20, 2004, Filed


SUBSEQUENT HISTORY: US Supreme Court certio- rari  denied  by   Lee  v.  United  States,  2004  U.S.  LEXIS

7112 (U.S., Nov. 1, 2004)


PRIOR   HISTORY:             **1        ON   APPEAL   FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY. (D. C. Criminal No. 99-

640-1). District Court Judge: John W. Bissell, Jr.


DISPOSITION: Affirmed.


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes



COUNSEL: GERALD KROVATIN (argued),  Krovatin

& Associates, Newark, NJ, Counsel for Appellant. GEORGE       S.             LEONE,   Chief,      Appeals  Division, MICHAEL               MARTINEZ          (argued),                Assistant               U.S. Attorney,   U.S.  Department  of  Justice,   Newark,   NJ, Counsel for Appellee.


JUDGES: Before:  SCIRICA, Chief Judge, and ALITO, and MCKEE, Circuit Judges. McKee, Circuit Judge, dis- senting.


OPINIONBY: ALITO


OPINION:


*198   OPINION OF THE COURT


ALITO, Circuit Judge:


This  is  an  appeal  by  defendant  Robert  W.  Lee,  Sr.

("Lee") from a judgment in a criminal case. Lee was in- dicted on charges stemming from the alleged payment of bribes by boxing promoters to Lee and other officials of the International Boxing Federation ("IBF"). After a jury trial,  Lee  was  convicted  of  one  count  of  conspiracy  to engage in money laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §


1956(h); three counts of interstate travel in aid of racke- teering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1952 (the "Travel Act") and 18 U.S.C. § 2;  and two counts of filing false **2  tax returns, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206. He was sen- tenced to a concurrent term of 22 months' imprisonment on each count and was fined $25,000.


In  this  appeal,  Lee  argues  (1)  that  video  tapes  that show him receiving money from a confidential govern- ment  informant  violated  his  Fourth  Amendment  rights and  should  have  been  suppressed,  (2)  that  the  District Court misinstructed the jury concerning the meaning of the "duty of fidelity" under the New Jersey commercial bribery statute, N.J.S.A. 2C:21-10, (3) that his Travel Act and money laundering conspiracy convictions must be re- versed because they are predicated upon the New Jersey commercial  bribery  statute,  and  there  is  an  insufficient nexus between his conduct and New Jersey to permit the application of the New Jersey statute, (4) that his money laundering conviction should be reversed because the ev- idence  at  trial  did  not  prove  the  existence  of  a  single conspiracy,  (5)  that  two of  the  Travel  Act  counts  were impermissibly amended at trial, and (6) that the District Court erred when it imposed concurrent sentences of 22 months' imprisonment on the tax counts. We affirm.


I.


Lee was a cofounder and president **3   of the IBF, an organization that crowns international boxing cham- pions  and  publishes  ratings  of  boxers  within  different weight divisions. The ratings are published monthly from the  IBF  headquarters  in  East  Orange,  New  Jersey. The primary  function  of  the  ratings  is  to  determine  which boxers will fight in upcoming IBF championship bouts. During the period relevant to this appeal, Lee served on the  IBF  Executive  Board  and  various  IBF  committees, including the championship committee, chaired by Don

"Bill" Brennan, and the ratings committee, chaired by C. Douglas Beavers.


359 F.3d 194, *198; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **3;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 2


In May 1996, the Federal Bureau of Investigation re- ceived  information  that  boxing  promoters  were  paying certain IBF officials in order to receive more favorable IBF ratings for their boxers. Beavers was questioned and, in May of 1997, chose to cooperate with the FBI. He told investigators  that  he  had  solicited  and  received  bribes from  boxing  promoters  and  that  these  bribes  had  been divided equally among himself, Brennan, Lee, and Lee's son, Robert W. Lee, Jr. ("Lee, Jr."). Beavers, who is based in Portsmouth, Virginia, further testified that he had held regular telephone conversations with Lee, who works out of the IBF **4   headquarters in East Orange, regarding strategies for maximizing payment amounts, methods for laundering bribes that were received as   *199    checks n1, and arrangements for Lee to travel from New Jersey to Virginia to collect his share of the bribes.


n1  Because  of  the  difficulty  of  transporting large amounts of cash from South America, bribes from South American promoters were sometimes received in the form of checks. These were either hand delivered or mailed to Beavers,  who would then deposit the checks into a bank account belong- ing to the Portsmouth Athletic Club, a gymnasium owned by Beavers. Once the checks had cleared, Beavers would then retain his share and distribute the  remainder  of  the  bribe  to  Lee  in  the  form  of cash.



With Beavers' cooperation, the FBI made audio and video recordings of three meetings between Beavers and Lee that took place in Portsmouth, Virginia, on June 9,

1997,  December,  18,  1997  and  October  21,  1998.  The meetings  were  held  in  a  hotel  suite  rented  by  Beavers for Lee in the Portsmouth **5    Holiday Inn and were electronically monitored and recorded using equipment installed in the living room of the suite by the FBI prior to Lee's arrival. This equipment consisted of a concealed camera and microphone that transmitted video and audio signals to a monitor and recorder located in an adjacent room. The FBI did not obtain a warrant authorizing the installation or use of the equipment but instead relied on Beavers' consent. The government agents located in the room next to Lee's suite were instructed to monitor activ- ity in the corridor to determine whether or not Beavers had entered Lee's rooms. The agents were further instructed to switch on the monitor and recorder only when Beavers was in the suite and that, at all other times, the monitor and recorder were to be switched off. During the December

1997 meeting,  Beavers was recorded handing Lee cash that  had  originated  as  a  bribe  paid  to  the  IBF's  South American representative, Francisco "Pancho" Fernandez, by a Colombian boxing promoter, Billy Chams.


On  November  4,  1999,  a  federal  grand  jury  in  the District  of  New  Jersey  indicted  Lee,  Lee,  Jr.,  Brennan and Fernandez on 35 counts related to the receipt of bribes from boxing **6   promoters. As noted, Lee Sr. was con- victed on six counts but acquitted on the rest. Lee, Jr. was acquitted on all counts. The case against Brennan was dis- missed because of his ill health and age, and Fernandez remains a fugitive outside the United States.

II. A.


Lee challenges the District Court's admission into evi- dence of tapes of meetings in his hotel suite. Lee contends that the monitoring and recording of these meetings vio- lated his Fourth Amendment rights because the govern- ment did not obtain a warrant. Lee's argument, however, is inconsistent with well-established Fourth Amendment precedent concerning the electronic monitoring of con- versations with the consent of a participant.


In   United States v. Hoffa,  385 U.S. 293,  17 L. Ed.

2d 374, 87 S. Ct. 408 (1967), a confidential government informant  named  Partin  met  with  the  defendant  in  the defendant's hotel suite and elsewhere and testified about those  conversations  at  trial.  The  defendant  argued  that Partin had conducted an illegal search for verbal evidence and that, because the defendant was unaware of Partin's role as an informant, the defendant had not validly con- sented to his entry into the suite.  Id. at 300. **7   The Supreme Court rejected this argument, holding that the defendant had "no interest legitimately protected by the Fourth Amendment." Id. at 301-02. The Court concluded that the Fourth Amendment does not protect   *200   "a wrongdoer's misplaced belief that a person to whom he voluntarily confides his wrongdoing will not reveal it." Id. at 302.


Although Hoffa involved testimony about conversa- tions and not electronic recordings of conversations, the Supreme Court in later cases drew no distinction between the two situations. See  United States v. Caceres, 440 U.S.

741, 744, 59 L. Ed. 2d 733, 99 S. Ct. 1465 (1979);  United States v. White, 401 U.S. 745, 752, 28 L. Ed. 2d 453, 91 S. Ct. 1122 (1971) (plurality). As the Court in Caceres put it,



Concededly a police agent who conceals his police connections may write down for offi- cial use his conversations with a defendant and testify concerning them, without a war- rant authorizing his encounters with the de- fendant and without otherwise violating the latter's Fourth Amendment rights.   Hoffa v. United  States,  385  U.S.,  at  300-303.  For


359 F.3d 194, *200; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **7;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 3


constitutional  purposes,  no  different  result is **8   required if the agent instead of im- mediately reporting and transcribing his con- versations with defendant, either (1) simulta- neously records them with electronic equip- ment which he is carrying on his person; (2) or carries radio equipment which simultane- ously  transmits  the  conversations  either  to recording equipment located elsewhere or to other agents monitoring the transmitting fre- quency . . . .



440 U.S. at 750-51 (quoting  United States v. White, 401

U.S. 745, 749, 28 L. Ed. 2d 453, 91 S. Ct. 1122 (1971))

(citation omitted)). The Court added that it had "repudi- ated any suggestion that a  defendant had a 'constitutional right to rely on possible flaws in the agent's memory, or to  challenge  the  agent's  credibility  without  being  beset by corroborating evidence that is not susceptible of im- peachment.'"  Id. at 750 (quoting  Lopez v. United States,

373  U.S.  427,  439,  10  L.  Ed.  2d  462,  83  S.  Ct.  1381

(1963)). In short, the Court adopted the principle that, if a person consents to the presence at a meeting of another person who is willing to reveal what occurred, the Fourth Amendment permits the government to obtain and use the best available proof **9   of what the latter person could have testified about. This principle appears to doom Lee's argument here.


Lee argues, however, that neither the Supreme Court nor our court has extended this principle to the circum- stances present in this case. He points to three factors:

(1) the agents used video rather than audio equipment;

(2) the recording occurred in Lee's hotel room,  a place where a person has a heightened expectation of privacy; and (3) the monitoring equipment remained in the room when Beavers was not present.


In  making  this  argument,  Lee  relies  on  the  First

Circuit's decision in   United States v. Padilla, 520 F.2d

526,  527-28  (1st  Cir.  1975),  which  held  that  the  de- fendant's Fourth Amendment rights were violated when agents  placed  an  audio  recording  device  in  the  defen- dant's  hotel  room  and  recorded  conversations  between the defendant and another person who consented to the recordings. In reaching this conclusion, the First Circuit expressed concern that if law enforcement officers were permitted to leave a monitoring or recording device in a hotel for a lengthy period of time the officers would be tempted to monitor or record conversations that occurred when **10   no consenting participant was present. Id. As the Court put it,



the government's position would turn on its


head the carefully tailored consenting party  exception to . . . one's expectation of privacy. Electronic  devices  could  be  installed  for lengthy periods of time without antecedent authority,     *201    so  long  as  only  a  sus- pect's conversations with police agents were offered in evidence and the enforcement offi- cials alleged that nothing else was recorded. Under this approach a room or an entire hotel could be bugged permanently with impunity and with the hope that some usable conver- sations with agents would occur.



Id.  at  528.  See  also   United  States  v.  Shabazz,  883  F. Supp. 422 (D.Minn. 1995) (audio and video recording).


In  contrast  to  the  First  Circuit,   the  Second  and Eleventh Circuits have held that the Fourth Amendment is not violated by the use of a fixed electronic device to record a meeting between a defendant and a person who consents  to  the  recording.   United  States  v.  Yonn,  702

F.2d  1341,  1346-47  &  n.  5  (11th  Cir.  1983)  ;   United States v. Myers, 692 F.2d 823 (2d Cir. 1982). In Myers, a   **11    defendant  was  videotaped  during  a  meeting with a government informant at a townhouse maintained by the FBI.  Id. at 832. Rejecting the defendant's Fourth Amendment argument,  the Court stated that the defen- dant's  "conversations  with  undercover  agents  in  whom he chose to confide were not privileged, and mechanical recordings of the sights and sounds to which the agents could have testified were proper evidence."  Id. at 859.


In Yonn, the Eleventh Circuit likewise held that the Fourth Amendment was not violated when agents placed a microphone in a motel room and monitored and recorded the  defendant's  conversations  when  a  person  who  con- sented  to  the  surveillance  was  present.  The  Court  held that  "the  location  of  the  electronic  equipment  does  not alter the irrefutable fact that Yonn had no justifiable ex- pectation  of  privacy  in  his  conversation  with   the  per- son who consented ."  702 F.2d at 1347. The Court also specifically rejected the reasoning of Padilla, stating that it saw "no reason to suppress the recording of a clearly unprotected conversation merely because the monitoring technique employed poses a hypothetical risk that pro- tected **12   conversations may be intercepted."  Id. at

1347 n.5.


We  have  considered  the  concern  expressed  by  the Padilla Court, but we remain convinced that the present case is governed by the well-established principle that a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in con- versations with a person who consents to the recording of the conversations. None of the three factors on which Lee relies appears to us to be sufficient to take this case


359 F.3d 194, *201; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **12;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 4


beyond the reach of this principle.


First, we cannot distinguish this case on the ground that the recorded meetings occurred in a hotel suite. What is significant is not the type of room in which the surveil- lance occurred but Lee's action in admitting Beavers to the room. Although Lee had an expectation of privacy in the hotel suite so long as he was alone there, when Lee allowed Beavers to enter, any expectation of privacy vis- a-vis Beavers vanished. We note that in Hoffa many of the conversations also occurred in a hotel suite, but the Court nevertheless held that the case did not involve any legitimate Fourth Amendment interest.  385 U.S. at 296. Second, we cannot draw a constitutional distinction between consensual **13   audio and video surveillance. The principle underlying the governing Supreme Court cases is that if a defendant consents to the presence of a person who could testify about a meeting and is willing to reveal what occurs, the defendant relinquishes any le- gitimate expectation of privacy with respect to anything that the testimony could cover. Thus, just as Lee gave up any expectation of privacy in the things that he allowed

*202   Beavers to hear, Lee also gave up any expectation of privacy in the things that he allowed Beavers to see. Although video surveillance may involve a greater intru- sion on privacy than audio surveillance, the difference is not nearly as great as the difference between testimony about a conversation and audio recordings of conversa- tions.  As  noted,  however,  the  Supreme  Court  has  not drawn  any  distinction  between  those  two  types  of  evi- dence, and we similarly see no constitutionally relevant distinction between audio and video surveillance in the present context.


Finally,  we  do  not  agree  with  the  First  Circuit  that it is appropriate to suppress recordings of meetings be- tween a defendant and a cooperating individual simply because  the  recording  device  was  placed  in  the   **14  room rather than on the cooperating individual's person. To be sure, there are three circumstances in which this dis- tinction would matter for Fourth Amendment purposes. First, if the defendant had an expectation of privacy in the premises at the time when the device was installed, the en- try to install the device would constitute a search. Second, the cases involving consensual monitoring do not apply if recordings are made when the cooperating individual is not present. Third, the logic of those cases is likewise inapplicable if the placement of the recording device per- mits it to pick up evidence that the cooperating individual could not have heard or seen while in the room. Unless one of these circumstances is present,  however,  it does not matter for Fourth Amendment purposes whether the device is placed in the room or carried on the person of the cooperating individual. In either event, the recording


will not gather any evidence other than that about which the cooperating witness could have testified.


As the government argues, the decision in Padilla ap- pears to be based, not on the conclusion that the recordings in that case had been obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment, **15   but on a prophylactic rule designed to stamp out a law enforcement technique that the Court viewed as creating an unacceptable risk of abuse. Even assuming for the sake of argument that we have the au- thority to adopt such a rule n2, however, we would not do so. Although Padilla was decided more than a quar- ter century ago and has not been followed in any other circuit, we are not aware of evidence that the installation of recording devices to monitor meetings attended by a cooperating individual has led to the sort of abuse that the Padilla Court feared. Nor is it intuitively obvious that there is much risk of such abuse. As noted,  the Padilla Court feared that law enforcement agents would install electronic devices in a hotel rooms and monitor what oc- curred "in the hope that some usable conversations with agents would occur."  520 F.2d at 527-28. However, there are numerous reasons to doubt whether law enforcement is likely to find this an alluring strategy.


n2 But see   United States v. Payner, 447 U.S.

727, 735-36, 65 L. Ed. 2d 468, 100 S. Ct. 2439 &

n.8,   447 U.S. 727,  65 L. Ed. 2d 468,  100 S. Ct.

2439 (1980).


**16


First, a person who illegally intercepts wire, oral, or electronic communicates is subject to criminal and civil penalties, see 18 U.S.C. §§ 2511, 2520, and a federal agent who violates the Fourth Amendment may be sued under Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403 U.S.

388, 29 L. Ed. 2d 619, 91 S. Ct. 1999 (1971). Second, in order to install a monitoring device, law enforcement au- thorities or a person cooperating with them must   *203  acquire a right to enter the premises, such as by obtaining a warrant or renting the premises in which the device is to be installed. Thus, the Padilla Court's fear that agents might  bug  "an  entire  hotel,"   520  F.2d  at  528,  and  the fear of the District Court in Shabazz that devices could be placed in a person's home, see   883 F. Supp. at 425, seem misplaced. Third, it is not clear that law enforcement would have much to gain from monitoring conversations that occur when a cooperating individual is not present. A video tape of a conversation generally reveals whether a cooperating individual is present, and without proof of the presence of the cooperating individual, the tape is in- admissible.   **17    We do not go so far as to say that there  is  no  risk  of  the  type  of  abuse  that  worried  that Padilla Court, but the risk is not great enough to justify


359 F.3d 194, *203; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **17;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 5


the holding of the Padilla Court.


In the present case,  there was no violation of Lee's Fourth Amendment rights. The monitoring devices were installed in the suite's living room at a time when Lee had no expectation of privacy in the premises. There is no ev- idence that conversations were monitored when Beavers was absent from the room, and Beavers was plainly there at the time of the incriminating meetings shown on the tapes that were introduced at Lee's trial. We are satisfied that the tapes do not depict anything material that Beavers himself was not in a position to hear or see while in the room. Finally, we reject Lee's suggestion that the govern- ment was required, before resorting to video surveillance, to demonstrate that less intrusive investigative techniques were unlikely to succeed. Although this requirement ap- plies to monitoring governed by the federal wiretapping statute, 18 U.S.C. § 2518(3)(c), that statute does not apply to electronic surveillance conducted with the prior con- sent of a party **18   to the communication. Similarly, judicial  decisions  considering  a  similar  requirement  in cases involving silent video surveillance conducted with- out a participant's consent, see  United States v. Williams,

124 F.3d 411, 416 & n.5 (3d Cir. 1997) , are inapplicable in this context. We therefore reject Lee's argument that the tapes should have been suppressed.


B.


Lee next contends that the District Court misinstructed the jury regarding the elements of commercial bribery un- der the New Jersey Commercial bribery statute, N.J.S.A.

§ 2C:21-10, which figured in four of the counts on which Lee was convicted, i.e., the three counts of interstate travel in aid of racketeering and the money laundering conspir- acy count. n3 Our "review of the legal standard enunciated in a jury instruction is plenary,"  United States v. Yeaman,

194 F.3d 442, 452 (3d Cir. 1999), "but review of the word- ing of the instruction, i.e., the expression, is for abuse of discretion." Id. "This Court reviews jury instructions to determine whether, 'taken as a whole, they properly ap- prized the jury of the issues and the applicable law.'" Id.

(quoting  Dressler v.   *204   Busch Entertainment Corp.,

143 F.3d 778, 780 (3d Cir. 1998)). **19


n3 The Travel Act counts charged that he trav- eled in interstate commerce with the intent to pro- mote, manage, establish, carry on and facilitate the promotion, management, establishment and carry- ing  on  of  commercial  bribery  in  violation  of  the New Jersey bribery statute. The relevant part of the money  laundering  conspiracy  count  charged  that Lee and the other alleged conspirators conspired to commit the offense of engaging in financial transac- tions involving proceeds derived from violations of


the New Jersey commercial bribery statute while knowing  that  these  proceeds  were  derived  from such violations and that the financial transactions were designed at least in part to conceal and dis- guise the nature, location, source, ownership, and control of the proceeds.



The New Jersey commercial bribery statute provides in relevant part as follows:


A  person  commits  a  crime  if  he  solic- its,  accepts  or  agrees  to  accept  any  benefit as consideration for knowingly violating or agreeing to violate a duty of fidelity   **20  to which he is subject as . . . An officer, di- rector,  manager  or  other  participant  in  the direction of the affairs of an incorporated or unincorporated association . . . . .


N.J.S.A. § 2C:21-10(a) (emphasis added).


The District Court instructed the jury that the three elements needed in order to establish a violation of the New Jersey commercial bribery statute are:


First,  that  the  defendant  solicited,  ac- cepted or agreed to accept a benefit;


Second, that the defendant did so in con- sideration for knowingly violating or agree- ing to violate a duty of fidelity;


Third, that the defendant owed that duty of fidelity because he is either an officer, a director, a manager or other participant in the direction of the affairs of an incorporated or unincorporated association.


Joint App. at 3788. This was a straightforward and accurate statement of the elements of N.J.S.A. § 2C:21-

10(a).


The Court further instructed the jury as to the meaning of a "duty of fidelity," stating:


A person who owes a duty of fidelity or loyalty  may  not  engage  in  self-dealing  or otherwise use his or her position to further personal  interests  rather  than  those  of  the beneficiary. For example officers **21   and directors have a duty not to engage in self- dealing to further their own personal interests rather than the interests of the corporation.


. . . .


The duty of loyalty or fidelity may also arise  based  on  the  existence  of  a  contrac-


359 F.3d 194, *204; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **21;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 6


tual  relationship  between  a  defendant  such as Mr. Lee, Sr. and the corporation such as the IBF. A contract creates a duty between the contracting parties to adhere to the terms of the contract, and those terms may include or encompass a duty of fidelity. A director or officer's failure to abide by the terms of his contract with a corporation could, if you so find, be a breach of his duty of loyalty to the corporation.


Joint App. at 3790-91.


Pointing to these latter instructions, Lee contends that the District Court erred by telling the jury (1) that a per- son can breach a "duty of fidelity" merely by engaging in self-dealing and (2) that a breach of an employment contract is a per se breach of a duty of fidelity. We dis- agree. Lee first argues that the District Court went astray in instructing the jury that any act of self-dealing by a corporate officer constitutes a breach of a duty of loyalty. According  to  Lee,  the  New  Jersey  commercial  bribery

**22   statute reaches only "those specific duties of the actor 'to which he is subject' as a director, manager, etc. of the specific corporation at issue, not to generic, vague, undefined corporate duties, such as a duty to refrain from

'self-dealing.'"  Appellant's  Br.  at  32  (emphasis  added). However, Lee cites no New Jersey case law that supports this interpretation of N.J.S.A. § 2C:21-10(a); we are not aware of any such authority; and the jury instruction in question  seems  to  be  an  accurate  interpretation  of  the statutory language. Moreover, in light of the nature of the breach alleged in this case (accepting bribes in exchange for rigging the ratings of boxers) any failure to draw the

*205   fine distinction suggested by Lee (between "spe- cific" and "generic" corporate duties) was harmless.


Lee next maintains that the instructions regarding the

"duty of fidelity" were flawed because the jury could have interpreted them to mean that proof that he breached this duty  was  alone  sufficient  to  establish  that  he  violated N.J.S.A. § 2C:21-10(a). Lee's argument is not convinc- ing. The Court's discussion of the meaning of a "duty of fidelity" was delivered immediately after its careful expla- nation of **23   the three elements that were necessary for the jury to convict Lee of violating N.J.S.A. § 2C:21-

10(a), and one of these elements was that "the defendant

received a benefit  in consideration for knowingly vio- lating or agreeing to violate a duty of fidelity." Joint App. at 3788. Thus, the District Court did not read the element of consideration out of the statute.


Finally, Lee suggests that the District Court told that jury that a breach of contract is per se a breach of a duty of fidelity, Appellant's Br. at 33, but the District Court said


no such thing. Rather, the Court said only that a duty of loyalty or fidelity "may . . . arise based on the existence of a contractual relationship between a defendant such as Mr. Lee, Sr. and the corporation such as the IBF" and that

" a  director or officer's failure to abide by the terms of his contract with a corporation could, if you so find, be a breach of his duty of loyalty to the corporation." Joint App. at 3791 (emphasis added). We are convinced that the jury instructions, read in their entirety, "properly apprized the jury of the issues and the applicable law."   Yeaman,

194 F.3d at 452. C.


Lee next contends **24   that his convictions for in- terstate travel in aid of racketeering and for conspiracy to engage in money laundering violated his rights to due process. n4 Asserting that those convictions were predi- cated on violations of the New Jersey commercial bribery statute, Lee argues that "the connections between the con- duct underlying those counts  and the State of New Jersey

were  tenuous at best" and that the application of the New Jersey statute to the conduct at issue would violate due process. n5 Appellant's   *206   Br. at 39. Lee contends that "the vast majority of the conduct constituting 'com- mercial bribery' took place outside the state of New Jersey in states that either do not consider such conduct a crime, or do not consider it as serious a criminal offense as New Jersey does." Appellant's Br. at 36. He notes that the bribe money  was  handed  to  him  by  Beavers  in  Virginia  and that the agreements between Beavers and Fernandez, the IBF's South American representative, were made outside of New Jersey. Lee's arguments are not persuasive.


n4 At one point in his brief, Lee claims that the application of the New Jersey commercial bribery statute to the conduct charged in the counts at is- sue also violated his right to the equal protection of the laws, but his brief makes no attempt to ex- plain what this invocation of the Equal Protection Clause adds to his due process argument. We are therefore unable to assess any independent equal protection argument regarding the New Jersey com- mercial bribery statute.

**25



n5 We understand the question before us to be exclusively  one  of  federal  constitutional  law,  not state law. Specifically, we understand the question to  be  whether  the  conduct  at  issue  is  sufficiently tied to the State of New Jersey to permit that state to regulate that conduct without violating the federal Constitution. The state-law question of whether the conduct at issue is sufficiently tied to the state to


359 F.3d 194, *206; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **25;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 7


bring the conduct within the scope of the state com- mercial bribery statute has not been developed in Lee's briefs, and we do not regard that question as before us in this appeal. Lee's brief does refer to the New Jersey statute that specifies the territorial reach of the state's criminal laws, N.J.S.A. 2C:1-3, but Lee makes no attempt to argue that the conduct at issue here does not fall within this provision. In particular,  Lee does not explain why the conduct at issue in this case does not fall within N.J.S.A. §

2C:1-3(a)(1), which provides that "a person may be convicted under New Jersey law  if . . . either the conduct which is an element of the offense or the result which is such an element occurs within this State." Instead, of addressing this question,  Lee's brief quickly notes that this statute "is itself subject to constitutional review where extra-territorial ap- plication of New Jersey law would violate the due process clause of the United States Constitution." Appellant's Br. at 38-39.


**26


"Acts done outside a jurisdiction, but intended to pro- duce and producing detrimental effects within it, justify a state in punishing the cause of the harm as if the de- fendant   had  been  present   in  the  state   at  the  effect." Strassheim v. Daily, 221 U.S. 280, 284, 55 L. Ed. 735, 31

S. Ct. 558 (1911). See also  United States v. Woodward,

149 F.3d 46, 66 (1st Cir. 1998). n6 Cf. Model Penal Code

§ 1.03. In this case, both the purpose and the effect of the commercial bribery was to cause the IBF, which has its principal place of business in New Jersey, to alter its rank- ings of boxers. Thus, the conduct in question had effects within New Jersey: it tended to harm a business headquar- tered in the state and to produce attendant consequences there. These effects are sufficient to permit the state to regulate the conduct without violating due process.


n6 Lee relies on  BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559, 134 L. Ed. 2d 809, 116 S. Ct. 1589 (1996), and  Healy v. Beer Institute, Inc.,

491 U.S. 324, 105 L. Ed. 2d 275, 109 S. Ct. 2491

(1981), but we do not find those cases to be appo- site. Pointing to,  among other things,  the restric- tions imposed by the dormant Commerce Clause, the Court in BMW held that a state court's award of punitive damages "must be supported by the State's interest in protecting its own consumers and its own economy."  Id. at 572. Lee does not make a make a dormant Commerce Clause argument here,  and in any event, BMW does not preclude a state from basing an award of punitive damages on conduct that occurs outside the state but that has a sufficient


effect on the state's "own consumers and its own economy." Id.


Healy  held  that  a  state  law  concerning  beer prices violated the dormant Commerce Clause. As noted,  Lee  does  not  make  a  dormant  Commerce Clause argument here, and therefore we do not ad- dress that issue.


**27


The   First   Circuit's   decision   in     United   States v.   Woodward,    supra,    supports   this   conclusion.   In Woodward, a member of the Massachusetts Legislature accepted gratuities in Florida and was convicted under the Travel Act of traveling in interstate commerce with the intent to promote the offense of commercial bribery, in violation of the Massachusetts statute. The First Circuit held that the potential effect on Massachusetts when one of its legislators accepts gratuities in another state was suf- ficient to satisfy the "effects test" set out in Strassheim.

149 F.3d at 67-68.


Lee attempts to distinguish Woodward by arguing that the conduct of the defendant in that case created a poten- tial for harm that was unique to his own state (because he was a member of that state's legislature), whereas the ef- fects of Lee's conduct "were no greater in New Jersey than they were in any other state." Reply Br. at 12. However, the effects within a state of extraterritorial conduct need not be unique to that state in order to justify the exercise of jurisdiction. The effects need only be of sufficient mag- nitude, and while the effects-test argument was stronger

**28   in Woodward than it is here, the effects here were adequate. Moreover, we note that, contrary to Lee's sug- gestion,  his conduct did create the potential for special

*207   harm in New Jersey because that is where the IBF is headquartered and publishes its rankings. We thus hold that Lee's convictions on the counts in question did not violate due process.


D.


Lee contends that the government failed to prove the existence of a single conspiracy to engage in money laun- dering, as charged in the indictment, n7 and merely proved the existence of a series of unrelated conspiracies between different boxing promoters and individual officers of the IBF. Lee argues that his conviction for conspiracy to en- gage in money laundering should therefore be reversed. We reject this argument.


n7 Count 27 of the Superceding Indictment pro- vides, in relevant part:


From in or about December 1990, through in or about November 1997, in the district of New Jersey,


359 F.3d 194, *207; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **28;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 8


and elsewhere, defendant ROBERT W. LEE, SR., and separately charged Don Brennan, a/k/a/ "Bill", and separately charged Francisco Fernandez, a/k/a/

"Pancho,"  a/k/a  "Pacho,"  and  others  conspired to  violate  Title  18,  United  States  Code,  Section

1956(a)(1),  that is,  knowing that the property in- volved  in  financial  transactions  represented  the proceeds of some form of unlawful activity, con- ducted and attempted to conduct financial transac- tions, which in fact, involved the proceeds of spec- ified unlawful activity, namely, bribery, contrary to N.J.S.A.§§ 2C:21-10(a)(4) and 2C:21-10(b).


. . . .


b. knowing that the transaction was designed in whole and in part to disguise the nature, location, source,  ownership and control of the proceeds of specified  unlawful  activity,  namely,  bribery,  con- trary  to  N.J.S.A.  §§  2C:21-10(a)(4)  and  2C:21-

11(b).


Joint App. at 120.


**29


We exercise plenary review over "whether there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could have con- cluded that the government proved the single conspiracy alleged in the indictment."   United States v. Kelly,  892

F.2d 255, 258 (3d Cir. 1989). In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence after conviction, we must view the evi- dence in the light most favorable to the verdict. Id. Where a single conspiracy is alleged in an indictment, and the evidence at trial merely proves the existence of several dis- tinct conspiracies, there is an impermissible variance. Id. On the other hand, "a finding of a master conspiracy with sub-schemes  does  not  constitute  a  finding  of  multiple, unrelated  conspiracies  and,  therefore,  would  not  create an impermissible variance." Id. (quoting  United States v. Smith,  789 F.2d 196,  200 (3d Cir. 1986)). In Kelly,  we adopted a three-step inquiry to distinguish a single con- spiracy from a series of separate, unrelated conspiracies: First,  we  examine  whether  there  was

a  common  goal  among  the  conspirators. Second, we look at the nature of the scheme to determine whether the agreement contem- plated  bringing  to  pass   **30    a  continu- ous result that will not continue without the continuous cooperation of the conspirators. Third,  we examine the extent to which the participants overlap in the various dealings.



Id. at 259 (citations and quotation marks omitted).


Application of the Kelly inquiry shows that the jury had a reasonable basis for concluding that what Lee al- leges were four separate conspiracies was in fact part of the same overarching conspiracy to launder the proceeds of the bribes paid to Lee and other IBF officials. n8 The first step of the Kelly inquiry is satisfied because Lee, Lee Jr.,  Brennan and Fernandez   *208    shared a common goal, namely, to receive shares of the payments from box- ing promoters. The second step in the Kelly inquiry - that the co-conspirators each acted to bring about a continuous result that would not have continued but for their contin- uing  cooperation -  is  also  met  because  the  participants continuously cooperated in their receipt of bribes, in the laundering of checks, and in the distribution of proceeds between themselves. For example, Lee held several con- versations with Beavers regarding the risks of receiving bribes in the form of checks,   **31    and Beavers de- posited checks that he had received from Fernandez into the bank account belonging to the Portsmouth Athletic Club  and  then  distributed  part  of  the  proceeds  to  Lee. Finally,  there  was  sufficient  evidence  to  show  that  the participants overlapped in the various dealings, in satis- faction of the third Kelly factor. In establishing this third factor, the government is not required to "prove that each defendant knew all the details, goals, or other participants in order to find a single conspiracy."   Id. at 260 (inter- nal quotation marks and citations omitted). Evidence was presented at trial that Lee participated in each of the four supposedly separate schemes, Beavers was directly impli- cated in three n9, and Fernandez was directly implicated in two.


n8 Two of the allegedly separate conspiracies involved payments by Colombian boxing promot- ers to Fernandez and then to Beavers. The two re- maining conspiracies involved direct payments by U.S. boxing promoters to Lee and Beavers.


n9 He either received money from Fernandez or directly from a boxing promoter.


**32


In sum, there was sufficient evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the government, from which the  jury  could  have  concluded  that  there  was  a  single conspiracy,  as  opposed  to  a  series  of  unrelated  smaller agreements between the participants.


E.


Lee contends that the two of the Travel Act counts of the indictment were improperly amended at trial. We ex- ercise plenary review over a claim that an indictment was impermissibly amended.  United States v. Asher, 854 F.2d

1483, 1497-98 (3d Cir. 1988). "In order to rise to the level


359 F.3d 194, *208; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **32;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 9


of an impermissible amendment, a variance must act to modify the indictment so that the defendant is convicted of a crime that involves elements distinct from those of the crimes with which he was originally charged."  Id. at

1497. "Thus, where trial evidence has  amended the in- dictment by broadening the possible bases for conviction from that which appeared in the indictment, the variance violates the defendant's substantial right to be tried only on charges returned by a grand jury." Id. (citations and quotation marks omitted, emphasis and alteration in orig- inal). "If,  on the other hand,  the variance **33    does not alter the elements of the offense charged, courts  fo- cus upon whether or not there has been prejudice to the defendant." Id. (alteration in original).


Counts 21 and 23 of the indictment included the fol- lowing language:


On or about the following dates, in the dis- trict of New Jersey,  and elsewhere,  the be- low-named  defendants  did  knowingly  and wilfully travel in interstate and foreign com- merce as described below, with intent to pro- mote, manage, establish, carry on and facil- itate the promotion, management, establish- ment and carrying on of an unlawful activity, that is, bribery, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:21-

10(a)(4)  and 2C:21-10(b) , and therafter did perform, and cause the performance of an act to promote, manage, establish, carry on and facilitate  the  promotion,  management,  and carrying on of said unlawful activity.


. . . .






Count     Date        Defendant From/To


21            11/97       Lee, Sr. Columbia to Virginia

23            6/98         Lee, Sr. Columbia to Virginia






Appellee's  Supp.  App.  at  64-65  (emphasis added).


*209   In violation of Title 18, United States Code, Sections 1952 and 2.

Appellee's Supp. App. at 64-65 (emphasis added). Lee contends that his conviction **34   under these

counts should be overturned because the government im- permissibly amended the indictment by presenting evi- dence  at  trial,  not  that  he  traveled  from  "Colombia  to Virginia" on or about "11/97" and "5/98," as the indict- ment charged, but that Fernandez made those trips. We disagree.


Lee's argument ignores the fact that Counts 21 and 23 charge that the alleged conduct violated "Title 18, United States Code, Sections 1952 and 2," Appellee's Supp. App. at 65 (emphasis added), and under 18 U.S.C. § 2 Lee could be held liable as a principal for Fernandez's travel in in- terstate or foreign commerce if Lee aided, abetted, coun- seled, commanded, induced, procured, or willfully caused Fernandez to engage in that conduct. We have previously noted that criminal indictments are to be read "as a whole and interpreted in a common sense manner."  Gov't of the Virgin Islands v. Moolenaar, 39 V.I. 457, 133 F.3d 246,





250 (3d Cir. 1998). n10 Accordingly, even though Counts

21 and 23 of Lee's indictment could perhaps have been more  carefully  drafted,  it  is  apparent  that  these  counts apply both to travel in aid of racketeering by Lee him- self, acting as **35   principal, and to Lee's aiding and abetting the travel in aid of racketeering of another un- named individual or individuals. The evidence presented at  trial  showed  that  Lee  aided  and  abetted  Fernandez's travel to and from Colombia but did not show such travel by Lee. The elements of the offense charged in Lee's in- dictment were therefore narrowed at trial. Accordingly, we look to whether Lee suffered any prejudice.   Asher,

854 F.2d at 1497. The indictment charged Lee with aiding and abetting travel between Colombia and Virginia by an unnamed individual on or about November of 1997 and June of 1998. Evidence at trial showed that Fernandez, the IBF's South American representative and Lee's co- indictee, was the unnamed individual that Lee had aided and abetted in his travels between Colombia and Virginia during  these  months.  We  cannot  believe  Lee  was  prej- udiced by this narrowing of the government's theory at trial.


n10 Moolenar dealt with an information, as op- posed to an indictment,  but stressed that,  for the purpose of assessing the permissibility of amend-


359 F.3d 194, *209; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **35;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 10


ments  at  trial,  an  information  and  an  indictment should be treated in the same manner.  133 F.3d at

248.


**36  F.


Lee's  last  argument  is  that  the  District  Court  erred when it sentenced him to concurrent terms of 22 months' imprisonment on the two tax counts, which charged vi- olations of 26 U.S.C. § 7206. Because Lee did not raise this argument in the District Court, we review for plain error.  United States v. Gricco, 277 F.3d 339, 350 (3d Cir.

2002).


Title 26, United States Code Section 7206 provides that  any  violation  may  be  punished  by  a  fine  of  "not more than $100,000 . . . or imprisonment for not more than  3  years."  26  U.S.C.  §  7206.  Section  3D1.2  of  the Sentencing Guidelines directs a sentencing court to group

"all counts involving substantially the same harm," and Section  5G1.2(b)  of  the  Guidelines  instructs  a  court  to apply the same sentence to each count in the same group, unless the statutorily authorized maximum for that count is less than the minimum of   *210   the guideline range or the statutory minimum is greater than the maximum of the guideline range. U.S.S.G. § 5G1.2(b) (referring to §§

5G1.1(a) and (b)). At the sentencing hearing, the District Court determined the offense level for Lee's money laun- dering and Travel **37   Act offenses to be 16 and the offense  level  for  his  tax  convictions  to  be  seven.  Joint App. at 3646-48. The Court did not commit plain error when it grouped these offenses. The Court proceeded to identify a guideline range of 21 to 27 months, based on an offense level of 16 and Lee's criminal history category of I. Id. at 6. The Court then imposed concurrent sentences of 22 months on all six counts. Id. at 3700. Because the statutory maximum for Lee's tax offenses, 3 years, is not less than the minimum guideline range of 21 months, and because there was no mandatory minimum term of im- prisonment for those offenses, the District Court did not commit plain error when it imposed the same concurrent

22-month sentence on all counts. III.


For the reasons explained above, we affirm the judg- ment of the District Court.


DISSENTBY: McKee


DISSENT: McKee, Circuit Judge, dissenting.


"What a person knowingly exposes to the public, even in  his  own  home  or  office,  is  not  a  subject  of  Fourth Amendment protection."  Katz v. United States, 389 U.S.


347,  351,  19 L. Ed. 2d 576,  88 S. Ct. 507 (1967) (em- phasis added). Today my colleagues stretch that rule to include  personal  effects  that  a  person   **38    unknow- ingly exposes to the public. Accordingly, I must respect- fully dissent from the majority's rejection of Lee's Fourth Amendment claim.


I. BACKGROUND


The  FBI  rented  a  hotel  suite  for  Lee  in  June  and December of 1997. The suite consisted of "a sitting room and  kitchenette,  from  which  one  could  walk  through  a continuously open door, into a bedroom, which also had a  bathroom  in  it."  A496-97.  C.  Douglas  Beavers,  the government's cooperating witness, rented the hotel suite in Lee's name on behalf of the government and kept a key for himself. However, both Lee and Beavers treated the suite as if it was exclusively Lee's hotel room.


With  Beavers'  consent,  the  FBI  concealed  a  video camera and microphone in the suite after Beavers rented it.  The  camera  could  swivel  360  degrees  and  transmit video images from the living room area and part of the bedroom area of Lee's suite 24 hours a day. Special Agent Reilly of the FBI monitored the hidden surveillance equip- ment from an adjacent hotel room the government had rented  for  that  purpose.  Reilly  could  remotely  control the camera and equipment in Lee's suite from her loca- tion in the adjoining room. The equipment in Lee's room continuously **39   transmitted video and audio to the receiving equipment operated by Agent Reilly although she could not receive or record those transmissions unless her equipment was turned on.


Agent Reilly testified without contradiction that she did not turn her equipment on or monitor any of the trans- missions from Lee's suite unless Beavers was in the suite with Lee. However, the camera could scan and focus on different areas of Lee's suite whether or not Beavers was there. See Reply Br. at 4 n.1.


When Beavers visited Lee, he also wore a "body wire" capable of sending audio transmissions to the equipment in Agent Reilly's adjoining room. However, Beavers' body transmitter  apparently  malfunctioned  and  the  FBI  was only  able  to   *211    monitor  and  record  audio  trans- missions by utilizing the microphone and camera hidden inside Lee's suite. The audio and video recordings that resulted  from  this  surveillance  constituted  the  primary evidence for the only counts on which Lee was convicted. The  Government  argues  that  "Beavers'  view  of  the room  was  unobstructed,  and  he  could  look  around  the room at will. Nothing was concealed from Beavers that was  visible  to  the  camera."  See  Appellee's  Br.  at  28. However,   **40    that  claim  is  not  supported  by  this record, and the district court did not focus on that aspect


359 F.3d 194, *211; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **40;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 11


of Lee's argument. Instead, it found that Lee had no ex- pectation of privacy in his hotel suite because he admitted Beavers to the room, and Beavers' presence negated Lee's Fourth Amendment expectation of privacy under   Hoffa v. United States, 385 U.S. 293, 17 L. Ed. 2d 374, 87 S. Ct.

408 (1966). A498.

II. DISCUSSION A. Katz and Hoffa


The  Supreme  Court  first  addressed  the  tension  be- tween law enforcement's use of technology and the Fourth Amendment's  guarantee  of  privacy  in    Katz  v.  United States.  389  U.S.  347,  19  L.  Ed.  2d  576,  88  S.  Ct.  507

(1967). There, FBI agents attached an electronic device to the outside of a public telephone booth that Katz was suspected of using for gambling-related telephone calls. The  device  allowed  the  FBI  to  surreptitiously  listen  to Katz's end of telephone conversations. Based primarily upon evidence obtained from monitoring those calls, Katz was subsequently convicted of using the telephone for in- terstate transmission of gambling information in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1084. Following his conviction, Katz ap- pealed   **41    the  trial  court's  denial  of  his  motion  to suppress evidence derived from the electronic intercep- tion of his telephone conversations.


The Supreme Court concluded that Katz's expectation of privacy in the content of his calls was reasonable even though  he  was  standing  in a  public  telephone  booth  in full view of everyone passing by, and that the electronic interception of his telephone calls constituted a "seizure" under the Fourth Amendment even though it was accom- plished without physically invading the place where the monitoring  occurred.  Therefore,  absent  exigencies  that were not present, the seizure was subject to the warrant requirement  of  the  Fourth  Amendment.  The  Court  ex- plained:


Bypassing a neutral predetermination of the scope of a search leaves individuals secure from Fourth Amendment violations only in the discretion of the police.


These considerations do not vanish when the search in question is transferred from the set- ting of a home, an office, or a hotel room to that of a telephone booth.


Wherever  a  man  may  be,  he  is  entitled  to know that he will remain free from unreason- able searches and seizures. The government agents here ignored the procedure of **42  antecedent justification . . . that is central to the Fourth Amendment, a procedure that we


hold  to  be  a  constitutional  precondition  of the kind of electronic surveillance involved in  this  case.  Because  the  surveillance  here failed to meet that condition, and because it led  to  the  petitioner's  conviction,  the  judg- ment must be reversed.



389 U.S. at 358-59 (internal quotation marks and cita- tions omitted).


The majority relies upon  Hoffa v. United States, 385

U.S.  293,  17  L.  Ed.  2d  374,  87  S.  Ct.  408  (1966),  in concluding  that  Lee's  expectation  of  privacy  inside  the intimacy of his hotel suite was not reasonable. However, on this record, that is an unjustified   *212   and unsup- portable extension of Hoffa and its progeny.


The defendant in  Hoffa was convicted of jury tam- pering  based  primarily  upon  the  testimony  of  Edwin Partin, an official of a Teamsters Union local in Nashville, Tennessee,  where  Hoffa  and  other  union  officials  were on  trial  for  violating  the  Taft-Hartley  Act.  During  the course  of  that  trial,  the  government  became  concerned that Hoffa and his codefendants might attempt to bribe some of the jurors. Unbeknownst to Hoffa, the govern- ment recruited Partin **43    to gather evidence of jury tampering. Partin was able to visit Hoffa's hotel suite and Hoffa  spoke  freely  of  attempting  to  bribe  jurors  in  his presence. Hoffa's trial for Taft-Hartley violations ended with a hung jury, but Hoffa was thereafter convicted of jury tampering based largely on Partin's testimony about statements Hoffa had made in his hotel suite. n11 Hoffa appealed  arguing  in  part  that  Partin's  testimony  should have been suppressed because it was obtained in viola- tion of the Fourth Amendment. Hoffa argued that Partin's failure to disclose that he was "a government informer vi- tiated the consent that Hoffa  gave to Partin's repeated en- tries into the hotel  suite, and that by listening to Hoffa's  statements Partin conducted an illegal 'search' for verbal evidence."  385 U.S. at 300.


n11 The government's evidence at the jury tam- pering  trial  consisted  primarily  of  Partin's  testi- mony about statements he heard Hoffa make while in Hoffa's hotel room during the first trial.



The Hoffa   **44    Court began its analysis by con- ceding that the legal predicate of Hoffa's argument rested on solid ground.


A  hotel  room  can  clearly  be  the  object  of Fourth Amendment protection as much as a home or office. . . . The Fourth Amendment can  certainly  be  violated  by  guileful  .  .  .


359 F.3d 194, *212; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **44;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 12


intrusions  into  a  constitutionally  protected area. . . . And the protections of the Fourth Amendment are surely not limited to tangi- bles,  but  can  extend  as  well  to  oral  state- ments.



Id. at 301. The Court explained:


The Fourth Amendment protects . . . the se- curity a man relies upon when he places him- self or his property within a constitutionally protected area, be it his home or his office, his hotel room or his automobile. There he is protected from unwarranted governmental intrusion.  And  when  he  puts  something  in his filing cabinet,  in his desk drawer,  or in his pocket, he has the right to know it will be secure from an unreasonable search or an unreasonable seizure.


Id. (footnote omitted). However,  the Court rejected the balance of Hoffa's argument because Hoffa's disclosures resulted from his relationship with Partin, not any reliance on the privacy of his **45   hotel suite. Thus, there was no reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of the statements made to Partin, and no Fourth Amendment privacy  interest  prevented  Partin  from  testifying  about Hoffa's "confidential" statements. The Court explained:


It  is  obvious  that   Hoffa   was  not  relying on  the  security  of  his  hotel  suite  when  he made the incriminating statements to Partin or in Partin's presence. Partin did not enter the suite by force or by stealth. He was not a surreptitious eavesdropper. Partin was in the suite  by  invitation,  and  every  conversation which  he  heard  was  either  directed  to  him or knowingly carried on in his presence. The petitioner, in a word, was not relying on the security  of  the  hotel  room;  he  was  relying upon his misplaced   *213   confidence that Partin would not reveal his wrongdoing.



Id. at 302.


The same is true here, but only to a point, and it is this limitation that the majority ignores in allowing Hoffa to swallow Katz on this record, and gulp down the Fourth Amendment in the process. Under the majority's Hoffa analysis, once Lee allowed Beavers to enter the suite, Lee no longer had a reasonable expectation of **46   privacy and Katz becomes irrelevant. I disagree.


Hoffa teaches that one's expectation of privacy is com-


promised, and therefore unreasonable, to the extent that he or she confides in a confederate because the speaker is assuming the risk that the confederate may subsequently betray the speaker's trust and repeat anything communi- cated in "private." The same logic dictates that one has no reasonable expectation in the privacy of anything he/she knowingly allows the confederate to see in the presumed privacy of a home or hotel room, or elsewhere. n12 As noted above, the government concealed a microphone and video camera in the sitting room area inside Lee's hotel suite. From that vantage point, the government was capa- ble of monitoring Lee's activity inside his suite 24 hours a day by way of audio and video transmissions to Agent Reilly in the adjoining room.


n12  This  has  been  referred  to  as  the  "invited informant"  doctrine.  See,  e.g., United  States  v. Nerber,  222  F.3d  597,  605  n.10  (9th  Cir.  2000). For convenience, I will use that phrase throughout my discussion.


**47


The government maintains that it took steps to insure Lee's privacy and to guarantee that its actions were con- sistent with the pronouncements in Hoffa. It argues that Agent Reilly did not start monitoring the transmissions from Lee's suite until Beavers arrived, that she turned the equipment  off  when  Beavers  left,  and  that  she  did  not turn it on in Beavers' absence. My colleagues conclude that this restraint was consistent with Lee's expectation of privacy under Hoffa, and therefore no Fourth Amendment violation occurred. In doing so, my colleagues ignore the fact that the Court in Katz rejected that very argument.


The  Court  in  Katz  began  its  analysis  by  noting  the restrained manner in which the government had obtained the evidence there.



The surveillance was limited, both in scope and in duration, to the specific purpose of es- tablishing the contents of petitioner's unlaw- ful telephonic communications. The agents confined the surveillance to the brief periods during  which  he  used  the  telephone  booth and they took great care to overhear only the conversations of the petitioner himself.



389 U.S. at 354 (footnotes omitted). Accordingly,   **48

there, as here, the actual surveillance had been conducted

"in an entirely defensible manner . " Id. There, as here,

"it was  apparent that the agents . . . acted with restraint" Id.  at  356.  Nevertheless,  the  Court  concluded  that  this self-imposed restraint could not legitimize the warrant-


359 F.3d 194, *213; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **48;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 13


less seizure of Katz's conversations in the public telephone booth. The Court reasoned:


The inescapable fact is that this restraint was imposed  by  the  agents  themselves,  not  by a  judicial  officer.  They  were  not  required, before  commencing  the  search,  to  present their estimate of probable cause for detached scrutiny to a neutral magistrate. They were not  compelled,  during  the  conduct  of  the search itself, to observe precise limits estab- lished in advance by a specific   *214   court order. Nor were they directed, after the search had  been  completed,  to  notify  the  author- ing magistrate in detail of all that had been seized.  In  the  absence  of  such  safeguards, this Court has never sustained a search upon the sole ground that officers reasonably ex- pected to find evidence of a particular crime and voluntarily confined their activities to the least intrusive means consistent with   **49  that end.



Id. at 356-57 (emphasis added).


Accordingly, I fail to see the significance of the gov- ernment's self-imposed restraint here. Despite those self- imposed limitations,  the fact remains that Agent Reilly had the ability to manipulate a video camera to see and hear practically everything that Lee did in the privacy of his  hotel  suite  throughout  the  day  and  night.  The  lim- itations of that Orwellian capability were not subject to any court order. Rather, they were defined by the curiosity and scruples of a single agent. That is simply not adequate given the importance of Fourth Amendment guarantees.



If subjective good faith alone were the test, the  protections  of  the  Fourth  Amendment would  evaporate,  and  the  people  would  be secure in their persons,  houses,  papers and effects, only in the discretion of the police.



Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 22, 20 L. Ed. 2d 889, 88 S. Ct.  1868  (1068)  (internal  quotation  marks  and  citation omitted).


Moreover, the agents in Katz did not even initiate their electronic monitoring "until investigation of the defen- dant's  activities established a strong probability that he was  using  the  telephone  in  question   **50     for  inter- state gambling purposes ."  389 U.S. at 354. Here, there is no such representation. In fact, it is clear that Lee was not using the hotel suite for illegal purposes before the


government installed microphones and cameras there and arranged for him to occupy it.


The  government  attempts  to  negate  the  reasonable- ness of Lee's expectation of privacy by suggesting that, since Lee knew Beavers paid for the room and retained a key, "Lee's expectation of privacy in the room was rel- atively  diminished."  Appellee's  Br.  at  21.  However,  as noted above, both parties regarded the suite as Lee's and the government does not seriously argue to the contrary. Everyone involved apparently knew that Lee was to re- main in the suite overnight, and there is nothing to suggest that anyone ever expected Beavers to remain in the suite for any length of time. "From the overnight guest's per- spective," the expectation of privacy in a hotel room is entitled to the same respect as afforded one's actual home under the Fourth Amendment.  Minnesota v. Olson, 495

U.S. 91, 99, 109 L. Ed. 2d 85, 110 S. Ct. 1684 (1990). Thus, "no less than a tenant of a house, or an occupant of a room in a boarding **51   house, . . . a guest in a hotel room is entitled to constitutional protection against un- reasonable searches and seizures."  Stoner v. California,

376 U.S. 483, 490, 11 L. Ed. 2d 856, 84 S. Ct. 889 (1964). Accordingly, the fact that Beavers rented the suite for Lee and retained a key to Lee's suite before surrendering possession to Lee for the latter's sole occupancy is little more than a technicality of convenience that the govern- ment devised to fortify this intrusion against the expected suppression motion. It is entitled to no more consideration

than that.



It  is  unnecessary  and  ill-advised  to  import into  the  law  surrounding  the  constitutional right to be free from unreasonable searches and  seizures  subtle  distinctions,  developed and refined by the common law in evolving the  body  of   *215    private  property  law which, more than almost any other branch of law, has been shaped by distinctions whose validity is largely historical. We ought not to bow to them in the fair administration of the criminal law.



Id. at 488. To the extent the Fourth Amendment has any vitality in an era of increasingly sophisticated electronic eavesdropping,  it surely protects the privacy **52    of someone in the intimacy of a hotel suite from the poten- tial of warrantless 24-hour video surveillance.


As  noted  above,  the  majority  concludes  that  the Supreme Court's analysis in Hoffa negates Lee's claim of privacy. Lee, like Hoffa, "was not relying on the security of his hotel suite when he made incriminating statements


359 F.3d 194, *215; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **52;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 14


to Beavers  or in Beavers'  presence."  Hoffa, 385 U.S. at 302. Beavers,  like the confederate in Hoffa,  "was in the suite by invitation, and every conversation which he heard was either directed to him or knowingly carried on in his presence." Id.


It is now clear that the Fourth Amendment does not protect "a wrongdoer's misplaced belief that a person to whom he voluntarily confides his wrongdoing will not re- veal it." Id. However, this means that Lee's expectation of privacy is only unreasonable insofar as he actually made statements  in Beavers' presence,  or allowed Beavers to see the effects inside his suite. It does not mean that Lee's expectation of privacy in things beyond Beavers' earshot or line of sight was unreasonable. Indeed, that expectation remained reasonable and should be protected under the Fourth Amendment. **53


However,   the   concealed   camera   was   capable   of sweeping the hotel suite at a 360-degree angle, thereby displaying for the FBI all of Lee's effects inside the suite whether or not Beavers would have been able to see them. Neither Hoffa nor any other legal precedent supports such an abrogation of the fundamental right of privacy.


B. Lee's Right of Privacy


The Fourth Amendment states that "the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated. . . ." U.S. CONST. Amend. IV. At the very core of the Fourth Amendment "stands the right of a per- son  to retreat into his or her  own home and there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion."  Silverman v. United States, 365 U.S. 505, 511, 5 L. Ed. 2d 734, 81 S. Ct. 679 (1961).


It has often been said that "the Fourth Amendment protects  people,  not  places."               Katz,  389  U.S.  at  351. However, my colleagues appear to assume that since Lee admitted Beavers to his suite (the place), Lee (the person) lost all constitutional protection. That conclusion would be warranted if Lee had allowed Beavers' unlimited access to **54   everything that was within the 360-degree field of vision of the video camera. However, despite its asser- tion to the contrary, the government has not established that he did.


"The capacity to claim the protection of the Fourth Amendment depends . . . upon whether Lee  has a legiti- mate expectation of privacy" in those portions of his hotel room that were beyond the gaze of Beavers.  Minnesota v. Olson, 495 U.S. 91, 95, 109 L. Ed. 2d 85, 110 S. Ct. 1684

(1990) (ellipsis in original; internal citation and quotation marks omitted).


Unlike my colleagues, I conclude that Lee's expecta-


tion of privacy in anything inside the suite that he did not knowingly let Beavers see was reasonable, and entitled to Fourth Amendment protection.


*216   Moreover, the government was able to peer into Lee's hotel room even after Beavers left. "When the informant  leaves the  premises, the subject  is left with the expectation of privacy in his surroundings which is not only actual but justifiable. . . ."  United States v. Padilla,

520 F.2d 526, 527 (1st Cir. 1975) (citing  Katz, 389 U.S.

347, 19 L. Ed. 2d 576, 88 S. Ct. 507). C. Video Surveillance Under Hoffa


In   United  States  v.  Felton,  753  F.2d  256  (3d  Cir.

1985), **55   we explained the invited informant rule in the context of a monitored telephone conversation. There, we stated:



Insofar  as  the  Fourth  Amendment  is  con- cerned,  one  party  to  a  telephone  conversa- tion assumes the risks that the other party (a) will permit a third party to eavesdrop on an extension telephone, for the purpose of com- municating what he heard to the police,  or

(b) may be a police informer who will relate or record or transmit a conversation to the au- thorities, or (c) may record the conversation and deliberately turn it over.



Id. at 260. We then stated: "the expectation of privacy is not measured by what takes place during or after the con- versation, it is measured by what is expected before the conversation begins." Id. As then-Chief Judge Aldisert so plainly explained, "when you pick up that phone and talk, you can't trust nobody, nohow, nowhere!" Id.


Hoffa's  reliance  on  the  Court's  earlier  decision  in

Lopez v. United States, 373 U.S. 427, 10 L. Ed. 2d 462,

83 S. Ct. 1381 (1963) clearly demonstrates this. Lopez is even more relevant to Lee's claim here because in Lopez, unlike in Katz,  the government concealed a transmitter

**56   and recorder on a government agent. That agent then interviewed the defendant in the latter's office after being invited in. The defendant was convicted of offering the agent a bribe based on the ensuing conversation, and thereafter argued that the trial court had erred in refusing to suppress recordings of conversations with the agent. The Lopez Court began by noting that "it was  plain that

the agent  could properly testify about his conversation with  Lopez;"  thus,  "the  constitutional  claim  relating  to the recording of that conversation emerged in proper per- spective."  373 U.S. at 438. The Court concluded that the recordings were properly admitted at trial because "the Government  did  not  use  an  electronic  device  to  listen


359 F.3d 194, *216; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **56;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 15


in on conversations it could not otherwise have heard." Rather, "the device was used only to obtain the most re- liable evidence possible of a conversation in which the Government's own agent was a participant and which that agent  was  fully  entitled  to  disclose."  Id.  n13  However, neither Lopez nor Hoffa allow the government to go far- ther and substitute its own electronically enhanced senses for the mortal senses of the informant. **57    Putting aside  for  a  moment  the  ability  to  monitor  Lee's  suite when  Beavers  left,  absent  a  showing  that  Beavers  and Agent Reilly were limited to identical observations while Beavers was in Lee's suite, the government's surveillance simply goes too far. The problem is only exacerbated by the fact that Agent Reilly had the capability of monitoring Lee at all hours of the day and night even though Beavers was not in the suite. As noted above, it is clear under Katz that the fact that Agent Reilly did   *217   not peek is not relevant to this invasion of Lee's privacy under the Fourth Amendment.


n13  The  Court  likened  Lopez'  position  to  an argument that he had "a constitutional right to rely on possible flaws in the agent's memory, or to chal- lenge the agent's credibility without being beset by corroborating evidence that is not susceptible to im- peachment."  Lopez, 373 U.S. at 439. That position was, of course, untenable.



My  colleagues  note  that  they  "are  satisfied  that  the tapes here  do not depict anything **58   material that Beavers himself was not in a position to hear or see while in  the  room."  Maj.  Op.  at  13.  Again,  putting  aside  the intrusion that occurred when Beavers was not even in the suite,  I  must  still  respectfully  disagree  with  the  major- ity's analysis. The government concedes that the camera continued  to  transmit  video  surveillance  of  Lee's  room on  occasion  when  Beavers  left  Lee's  presence  to  go  to the bathroom, and there is no showing that, in Beavers' absence, Agent Reilly could only see objects that Beavers had already seen, or would see when he returned to the sit- ting area where Lee remained. Similarly, there has been absolutely  no  finding  here  that  Agent  Reilly  was  only able to see what Lee knowingly allowed Beavers to see while Beavers was in Lee's presence. Despite its claim that Reilly only saw what Beavers saw, the government con- cedes that any such limitation on its surveillance would be extremely impractical if not impossible.


D. Audio Surveillance Is Distinguishable From Video

Surveillance


My colleagues concede that video surveillance "may involve a greater intrusion on privacy than audio surveil- lance."   Id. at 10-11. Indeed, they could hardly do oth-


erwise.   **59    As the Court of Appeals for the Ninth

Circuit has observed, in the case of video surveillance: the   governmental   intrusion   is    severe. Hidden video surveillance is one of the most intrusive investigative mechanisms available

to law enforcement. . . . We have  pointed out  .  .  .   that   the  defendant  has  a  reason- able expectation to be free from hidden video surveillance  because  the  video  search  was directed straight at him, rather than being a search  of  property  he  did  not  own  or  con- trol ... and  the silent, unblinking lens of the camera was intrusive in a way that no tem- porary search of the office could have been.



United States v. Nerber, 222 F.3d 597, 603 (9th Cir. 2000). The court in Nerber quoted Judge Kozinski's concurring opinion in   United States v. Koyomejian, 970 F.2d 536,

551 (9th Cir. 1992). There, Judge Kozinski stated: "every court considering the issue has noted that  video surveil- lance can result in extraordinarily serious intrusions into personal privacy. . . ."


This distinction between video and audio surveillance is dismissed by my colleagues. They conclude that "the difference is not nearly as great **60   as the difference between testimony about a conversation and audio record- ings of conversation." Maj. Op. at 11. My colleagues then correctly note that "the Supreme Court has not drawn any distinction  between  those  two  types  of  evidence,"  and they therefore find "no constitutionally relevant distinc- tion between audio and video surveillance in the present context." Id. I must again respectfully disagree. n14


n14  The  majority  does  not  state  whether  the Supreme  Court  has  been  called  upon  to  decide if  there  is  a  distinction  between  video  and  audio surveillance under the Fourth Amendment. My re- search did not reveal any such case. Therefore, the Supreme Court's failure to draw a distinction is ir- relevant. The Court has never been presented with the question.



The government correctly states that it would be ex- tremely impractical to create a situation where the cam- era's view would be limited to the view of an informant.

*218  We all know that we can not see around corners al- though we can hear around corners. Everyday experience

**61    teaches enough physics to know that observers with different lines of sight will have different fields of vision and therefore see different things or the same thing from different angles. One need not study Gestalt theory


359 F.3d 194, *218; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **61;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 16


to appreciate that two observers who see the same object from different angles may "see" two entirely different ob- jects. The observer at point A in a given space may not see the same thing as an observer at point B in the same space. Moreover, no two observers can possibly occupy the  exact  same  space  at  the  same  time,  and  the  extent to which their observations may differ increases with the distance between the two observers as well as the increase in the angle formed by their location and the location of the objects they are observing.


The amount of discrepancy in their observations may also depend on the presence of objects in the space be- tween  them  and  the  object  they  are  viewing.  There  is nothing on this record to support a conclusion that Agent Reilly could only see what Beavers could see at any given instance  and  I  think  it  fair  to  say  that  proposition  is  a virtual impossibility given the configuration of the usual hotel suite, the number of objects inside **62   it, and the fact that Beavers and the video camera could not possibly have been looking at any given object from exactly the same place.


However, Agent Reilly may well have been only able to hear the same sounds that Beavers heard depending on such factors as the sensitivity of the microphone, transmit- ting and receiving equipment, as well as the presence of any electronic interference in Lee's room or Reilly's. n15

Nevertheless, since no court has yet addressed the impact of such variables as the sensitivity of the equipment on an invited informant analysis under Hoffa, I will assume arguendo that Agent Reilly could only hear what Beavers heard. However, as I have explained, the same can not be said of the video transmission. This distinction between audio transmissions and video transmissions is crucial to any  analysis  under  Hoffa  and  its progeny  if the  Fourth Amendment is to withstand the increasing sophistication of electronic surveillance equipment.


n15          See          The          Physics   of             Sound,


isfactory reply. If the government wishes to engage in this kind of invasive surveillance it need only visit a neutral magistrate; it need not impose upon "Q." n16


n16  Those  familiar  with  the  James  Bond  se- ries will recognize "Q" as the bureau chief charged with outfitting Bond with all kinds of unimaginable gadgets.



Things that Lee did not knowingly disclose to Beavers remain within Lee's expectation of privacy so long as that expectation is reasonable, and society **64  is willing to accept the expectation as such. "The test of legitimacy is not whether the individual chooses to conceal assertedly

'private'  activity,  but  whether  the  government's   *219  intrusion infringes upon the personal and societal values protected by the Amendment."   Oliver v. United States,

466 U.S. 170, 182-83, 80 L. Ed. 2d 214, 104 S. Ct. 1735

(1984). n17


n17 "Since  Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347,

19 L. Ed. 2d 576, 88 S. Ct. 507 (1967), the touch- stone of Fourth  Amendment analysis has been the question  whether  a  person  has  a  constitutionally protected  reasonable  expectation  of  privacy.  The Amendment does not protect the merely subjective expectation of privacy, but only those expectations that society is prepared to recognize as reasonable." Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S. 170, 177, 80 L. Ed.

2d 214, 104 S. Ct. 1735 (1984) (internal citations, quotation marks and parentheses omitted).



The government maintains that "no part of the meet- ing rooms was obstructed from Beavers' line of sight, and thus,   **65    Beavers  could  see  whatever  the  camera could capture (albeit at a different angle)." Appellee's Br. at 20. As noted above, the majority accepts this premise, stating  that  it  is  "satisfied  that  the  tapes  do  not  depict

http://interface.cipic.ucdavis.edu/CIL_tutorial/3D_phys/3D_phys.htmanything material that Beavers himself was not in a po-

(viewed on Jan. 22, 2004).


**63


The  government  argues  that  unless  we  ignore  this technicality "video surveillance would be limited to cir- cumstances  where  an  informant  is  wearing  eyeglasses containing mini-video recorders , " and the government emphasizes  that  "such  a  requirement  is  impractical." Appellee's  Br.  at  28.  However,  we  can  not  condone  a constitutional violation merely because complying with the Constitution would be "impractical." Nor is the gov- ernment's sarcastic observation that it "is unaware of the existence of such James Bond-like gadgets , " id., a sat-

sition to hear or see while in the room. . . ." Maj. Op. at 13 (emphasis added). However, that is supported only by the government's unsupported assertion. The district court never found that the camera's transmissions were no greater than Beavers' observations. In fact, the district court  found  this  was  specifically  not  the  case;  it  noted that "there were instances . . . where perfection was not achieved" such as when Agent Reilly monitored the sit- ting room while Beavers visited the bathroom. A497. The district court dismissed this "imperfection" stating:  "the brief exceptions do not warrant suppression of any or all of the evidence taken on that ground," and the court noted the  government's  offer  to  edit  out  the  images  recorded while Beavers was in the bathroom. A498. However, the


359 F.3d 194, *219; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **65;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 17


right of privacy can not be quantified in this manner. .


As the Court explained in  Kyllo v. United States, 533

U.S. 27, 37, 150 L. Ed. 2d 94, 121 S. Ct. 2038 (2001),

**66   "in the home, our cases show, all details are in- timate details, because the entire area is held safe from prying government eyes." Thus, everything and anything inside Lee's hotel suite was an intimate detail meriting Fourth Amendment protection to the extent that Lee did not knowingly allow Beavers to see it. All such details

"were intimate details because they were details of the home. . . ."  Id. at 38. "It matters not that the search un- covered nothing of any great personal value to Lee  . . . A search is a search, even if it happens to discloses nothing

of value ."   Arizona v. Hicks, 480 U.S. 321, 325, 94 L. Ed. 2d 347, 107 S. Ct. 1149 (1987).


The  district  court's  minimization  of  the  "imperfec- tion"  that  occurred,  and  the  majority's  failure  to  insure that Agent Reilly could see nothing more than Beavers could see, undermines their entire analysis of Lee's Fourth Amendment claim. The problem is that Lee's reasonable expectation of privacy was violated, not that the violation may not have revealed anything that was "material" or of evidentiary significance. "The Fourth Amendment's pro- tection of the home has never been tied to measurement of the quality or **67   quantity of information obtained." Kyllo, 533 U.S. at 38. Thus, "any physical invasion of the structure of the home, 'by even a fraction of an inch,' is  too much."  Id. at 37 (quoting  U.S. v Silverman, 365 U.S. at 512). n18


n18 The Court also noted in Kyllo that "any in- formation regarding the interior of the home that could  not  otherwise  have  been  obtained  without physical 'intrusion into a constitutionally protected area'. . . constitutes a search."  533 U.S. at 34. Thus, a search of Lee's suite occurred to the extent that Agent Reilly was able to see anything that Beavers was unable to see, notwithstanding the application of  the  invited  informant  doctrine.  Obviously,  an even greater intrusion occurred once Beavers left and the government's camera remained behind. See Katz,  389  U.S.  at  356  (as  noted  above,  the  "re- straint was imposed by the agents themselves, not by a judicial officer.").



*220    Lee's motion to suppress the video **68  tapes should have been granted not because of the ma- teriality of evidence that the governmental intrusion dis- closed, but simply because the government's actions vio- lated Lee's reasonable expectation of privacy in his hotel suite.


E. Bond v. United States


Although the case arises in a very different context,

Bond v. United States, 529 U.S. 334, 146 L. Ed. 2d 365,

120 S. Ct. 1462 (2000), demonstrates the extent to which society recognizes the reasonableness of a residuum of privacy even when some privacy has been surrendered. The defendant there sought to suppress evidence obtained when his carry-on luggage was searched by Border Patrol Agents who had boarded a bus in Texas to check on the immigration  status  of  passengers.  As  an  agent  walked through the bus he squeezed the soft luggage which pas- sengers had placed in an overhead storage space. Upon squeezing  the  defendant's  bag  the  agent  felt  a  "brick- like" object, which the agent assumed to be drugs. That search resulted in a warrantless seizure of drugs inside the defendant's bag. The defendant moved to suppress the ev- idence. The government argued that the defendant could not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in luggage

**69    in  an  overhead  compartment  on  a  bus  because

"matters open to public observation are not protected by the  Fourth  Amendment."   529  U.S.  at  337.  The  Court concluded that, although bus passengers expect that their bags may be handled, they do not expect that "other pas- sengers  or  bus  employees  will,  as  a  matter  of  course, feel the bag in an exploratory manner."   Id. at 338-39. Accordingly, although the actual observation of the de- fendant's bag in the overhead luggage compartment was not protected by the Fourth Amendment, contents which could only be revealed by manipulation of the bag were subject to a reasonable expectation of privacy. This was true even though police only manipulated the outside of the bag while it remained in place in the luggage rack. Although Bond's carry-on luggage "was not part of his person," the Court was concerned that carry-on luggage is generally used to transport "personal items that, for what- ever reason, individuals  prefer to keep close at hand." Id. at 338. Accordingly, the Court recognized the defen- dant's expectation of privacy in the contents of the bag was reasonable. n19


n19 Although Bond involves the "plain view" doctrine,  not  the  "invited  informant"  doctrine  of Hoffa,  it  is  nevertheless  instructive  as  it  clearly supports  the  conclusion  that  Lee's  expectation  of privacy in the contents of his hotel room was rea- sonable to the extent that he did not allow Beavers to see his effects.


**70


In  referring  to  electronic  interception  of  telephone conversations, the Seventh Circuit has explained, "elec- tronic interception,  being by nature a continuing rather than one shot invasion, is even less discriminating than a physical search, because it picks up private conversations.


359 F.3d 194, *220; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **70;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 18


. . over a long period of time." United States v. Torres, 751

F.2d 875, 884 (7th Cir. 1984). This situation is exponen- tially exacerbated where, as here, the government's ability to see intimate details of a defendant's daily activities as he/she goes about his/her business in the presumed inti- macy of a hotel suite depends solely on the discretion of

*221   the unsupervised agent controlling the monitoring equipment.



Although  we  may  spend  all  day  in  public places,  when  we  cannot  sleep  in  our  own home  we  seek  out  another  private  place  to sleep,  whether  it  be  a  hotel  room,  or  the home of a friend. Society expects at least as much privacy in these places as in a telephone booth  -  a  temporarily  private  place  whose momentary occupants' expectations of free- dom from intrusion are recognized as reason- able. . . .


Minnesota v. Olson, 495 U.S. 91, 99, 109 L. Ed. 2d

85, 110 S. Ct. 1684 (1990) **71   (internal citation and quotation marks omitted).


Absent a pronouncement from the Supreme Court, or controlling precedent from this court,  I simply can not accept the idea that a society that defines privacy as a fun- damental freedom can tolerate the warrantless intrusion that occurred here. n20


n20 I can not help but wonder if my colleagues would be as complacent about this situation if pre- sented with a male agent capable of remotely view- ing a female suspect in her hotel suite at any hour of the day or night with only self-imposed limitations shielding  the  female  suspect  from  the  wandering eye of the male agent. Clearly, given the analysis of my colleagues that situation would not violate the female suspect's privacy as long as, at some point in the day,  she allowed an informant to enter the sitting area of her hotel suite.


I admit that realistic considerations of taste as well as concerns over a jury's reaction to such an in- trusion may preclude that situation from ever occur- ring. But Katz seeks to insure that privacy protec- tions be rooted in stronger stuff than the judgment of a given agent or concerns about trial tactics.


**72


F. Myers, Yonn and Padilla


In affirming the district court, the majority adopts the analysis in  United States v. Myers, 692 F.2d 823 (2d Cir.

1982) and  United States v. Yonn, 702 F.2d 1341 (11th Cir.


1983) and rejects the analysis of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in  United States v. Padilla, 520 F.2d 526

(1st  Cir.  1975).  However,  Yonn  does  not  involve  video surveillance and is therefore of extremely limited value to the discussion here for all the reasons I have explained. Myers is also of very limited application because the con- versations there were not recorded in Myers' hotel room, nor  was  he  an  overnight  guest  in  the  room  where  the conversations were recorded.


Myers  went  to  a  townhouse  to  meet  with  individu- als who turned out to be government agents. The court's analysis of Myers' privacy interest consumes only a single sentence in the lengthy opinion. The court states: " the de- fendant 's conversations with undercover agents in whom he chose to confide were not privileged, and mechanical recordings of the sights and sounds to which the agents could have testified were proper evidence."  692 F.2d at

859. **73  The court then cites to United States v. White,

401 U.S. 745, 28 L. Ed. 2d 453, 91 S. Ct. 1122 (1971). White involved a defendant who was convicted based upon evidence police obtained by using a "radio transmit- ter" to transmit and secretly record incriminating conver- sations between the defendant and the government infor- mant.  Inasmuch  as  White  involved  audio  transmissions rather  than  video  transmissions,  and  the  Myers  Court failed to discuss why the video transmissions had no more impact on a subject's privacy than the audio transmissions

in White, I am remain unpersuaded.


On the other hand, Padilla involved video surveillance inside a residence and is much closer to the situation here, but the court's analysis reads as though partly influenced by a concern for the potential abuses of emerging surveil- lance technology. My colleagues criticize those concerns

*222   noting: "Although Padilla was decided more than a quarter century ago and has not been followed in any other circuit, we are not aware of evidence that the instal- lation of recording devices to monitor meetings attended by a cooperating individual has led to the sort of abuse that the Padilla Court feared.   **74   " Maj. Op. at 12. There are several reasons why that criticism is less than convincing.


Initially, I note that the issue of whether this technol- ogy has been abused was never raised here and there is absolutely no record one way or the other as to the extent of government any abuses of sophisticated surveillance technology. In addition,  very few cases have addressed the problem of video surveillance involving an invited in- formant. In one that has, a miniature camera was carried in  the  informant's  jacket  and  transmitted  video  images to a nearby agent. See  United States v. Davis, 326 F.3d

361, 363 (2d Cir. 2003). n21 The court rejected the defen- dant's Fourth Amendment argument stating: "because the


359 F.3d 194, *222; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **74;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 19


hidden camera did not capture any areas in which Davis retained a privacy interest, no Fourth Amendment viola- tion occurred."  326 F.3d at 366. As I note above, no such showing has been made here, and the district court found to the contrary on at least two occasions when Beavers was in the suite. Yet the court in Davis was careful to limit is holding to only those things that the informer could see while in the defendant's presence. The court specifically stated:      **75    "We . . . extend the rule of White and Lopez to video recordings that capture images visible to the consensual visitor. . . ."  Id. at 363.


n21  Since  the  camera  was  in  the  informant's jacket, there is a stronger basis to assume that the in- formant's field of vision closely approximated that of the monitoring agent than exists on this record.



G.             Dangers  Inherent  in             Warrantless           Video

Surveillance


Although sensory enhancement has not displaced the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment, "it would be foolish to contend that the degree of privacy secured to citizens by the Fourth Amendment has been entirely unaffected by the advance of technology."  Kyllo, 533 U.S. 27, 33-

34, 150 L. Ed. 2d 94, 121 S. Ct. 2038 (2001). However, given the evolving sophistication of technology, it is in- creasingly imperative that the fundamental liberties guar- anteed under the Fourth Amendment not be eroded by the warrantless use of devices that allow the government to see through curtains, walls and doors.


In **76   Kyllo, the Court addressed the tension be- tween  law  enforcement's  innovative  use  of  technology, and the right to privacy. The Court stated:



While it may be difficult to refine Katz when the search of areas such as telephone booths, automobiles,  or  even  the  curtilage  and  un- covered  portions  of  residences  is  at  issue, in  the  case  of  the  search  of  the  interior  of homes  .  .  .  there  is  a  ready  criterion,  with roots deep in the common law, of the min- imal expectation of privacy that exists,  and that  is  acknowledged  to  be  reasonable.  To withdraw protection of this minimum expec- tation would be to permit police technology to erode the privacy guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment.



533 U.S. at 34 (emphasis in original). n22


n22 Although the Court there focused on "the


interior of homes," I have already explained that no distinction can be drawn for our purposes between homes, and the interior of Lee's hotel suite,  Olson,

495 U.S. at 99, and the majority does not suggest the contrary.


**77


*223   The Court was careful to reaffirm Katz in the face of challenges presented by increasingly sophisticated technology.  In  doing  so,  the  Court  expressed  concerns very similar to the concerns in Padilla that my colleagues dismiss. Writing for the Court, Justice Scalia states:  "re- versing the approach outlined in Katz  would leave the homeowner  at  the  mercy  of  advancing  technology  .  .  . that could discern all human activity in the home."  533

U.S. at 35-36. The Court also mentioned that "the abil- ity to 'see' through walls and other opaque barriers is a clear, and scientifically feasible, goal of law enforcement research  and  development."   Id.  at  36  n.3  (citing  The National Law Enforcement and Corrections Technology Center website,  www.nlectc.org/techproj/,  as visited on May 3, 2001).


In Silverman, the Court also mentions electronic de- vices  that,  according  to  the  defendant  there,  warranted revisiting prior cases including Katz. The Court explains its refusal to do so as follows:



We  are  told  that  re-examination  of  the  ra- tionale of those cases . . . is now essential in the light of recent and projected develop- ments in the science **78    of electronics. We are favored (sic) with a description of a device known as the parabolic microphone which can pick up a conversation three hun- dred yards away. We are told of a still experi- mental technique whereby a room is flooded with  a  certain  type  of  sonic  wave,  which, when perfected, will make it possible to over- hear everything said in a room without ever entering it or even going near it. We are in- formed of an instrument which can pick up a conversation through an open office window on the opposite side of a busy street.



Silverman, 365 U.S. at 508 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). n23


n23 In Silverman, the owner of a vacant house had granted police permission to use that property to conduct a surveillance of an attached property where police suspected gambling operations were being conducted. They conducted the surveillance


359 F.3d 194, *223; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **78;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 20


by means of a long "spike microphone" which they passed  through  the  properties'  joint  wall  until  it made contact with a heating duct in the target prop- erty.  That  "duct  became  in  effect  a  giant  micro- phone,  running though the entire house occupied by appellants."   365 U.S at 506-07 (internal cita- tion omitted).


The case is distinguishable from the situation here not only because it involves only audio mon- itoring,  but  also  because  the  Court's  ruling  was based on the fact that the defendant did not con- sent  to  the  intrusion  that  resulted  from  the  spike mike  contacting  the  heating  duct  in  his  property.

"The officers overheard the petitioners' conversa- tions only by usurping part of the petitioners' house or office - a heating system which was an integral part of the premises occupied by the petitioners, a usurpation that was effected without their knowl- edge and without their consent."  Id. at 511. Here, Beavers' consent to the placing of the camera lim- its Silverman's applicability. However, as explained above, there remains an issue of Lee's reasonable expectation of privacy under Hoffa and its progeny.


**79


At the risk of appearing alarmist, I think it important to  note  that,  in  rejecting  defendant's  invitation  to  reex- amine Court precedent because of the evolving technol- ogy, the Court explained: "We need not here contemplate the Fourth Amendment implications of these and other frightening paraphernalia which the vaunted marvels of an electronic age may visit upon human society."   365

U.S. at 509.


The majority lists three reasons for rejecting the con- cerns reflected in Padilla and doubting that "law enforce- ment is  likely to find" abuse of technology "an alluring strategy." Maj. Op. at 12. My colleagues rely upon the possibility of a civil penalty under  Bivens v. Six Unknown

*224    Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403 U.S. 388, 29 L. Ed.

2d 619, 91 S. Ct. 1999 (1971), the need to acquire a war- rant or permission of a cooperating individual to enter the premises to install a monitoring device,  and skepticism that law enforcement has anything to gain because " a  video tape . . . generally reveals whether a cooperating individual is present, and without proof of the presence of the cooperating individual, the tape is inadmissible." Maj. Op. at 13.


I must respectfully characterize **80   the majority's trivialization of the potential for abuse as naive. Operation of the technology mentioned in Silverman and Kyllo re- quires neither entry nor permission to enter an area of ex- pected privacy. In Kyllo, Justice Scalia mentions several


technological innovations that require neither physical en- try nor consent. These "include a 'Radar-Based Through- the-Wall  Surveillance  System,'  'Handheld  Ultrasound Through the Wall Surveillance,' and a 'Radar Flashlight' that 'will enable law enforcement officers to detect indi- viduals through interior building walls.'"  533 U.S. at 36 n.3.


In addition, though my colleagues contend that, ab- sent consent, the warrant requirement can be relied upon to prevent abuse of such technology, the facts before us should readily dispose of that notion. It is clear that none of  the  agents  involved  in  monitoring  Lee's  hotel  suite decided to err on the side of caution and obtain a war- rant prior to installing a video camera that could transmit video of his living area, as well as parts of the bedroom and bathroom throughout the day and night. In fact, the record shows that the possibility of a warrant was never even discussed with Agent **81   Reilly. Moreover, Lee clearly did not consent to the FBI installing a camera that could potentially broadcast some images of his bedroom and  bathroom  activities  throughout  the  day  and  night. As explained above, we can not rely upon technicalities of consent as found in property law to stretch Beavers' consent that far. See  Stoner v. California, 376 U.S. 483,

489, 11 L. Ed. 2d 856, 84 S. Ct. 889 (1964). Thus, I do not think the legal analysis in Padilla can be dismissed because  the  opinion  might  be  construed  as  "alarmist." Rather,  the court there expressed the very concerns the Fourth  Amendment  was  intended  to  protect;  concerns that the Supreme Court also expressed in Silverman and Kyllo.


The  majority  does  concede  that  it  is  not  willing  to go "so far as to say that there is no risk of the type of abuse that worried the Padilla Court," but concludes that

"the risk is not great enough to justify the holding of the Padilla Court." Maj. Op. at 13. However, the holding in Padilla rests not upon the risks the court properly identi- fied, but on a proper reading of Supreme Court precedent. The court explained:  "We do not read either White or its predecessors,   **82    Katz v. United States, and Hoffa v. United States, to go farther than to say that a person has no justifiable expectation that one with whom he con- verses will not tell the authorities of the conversation, and that  accurate  recordings  of  the  conversation  are  there- fore permissible."  520 F.2d 526, 527 (citations omitted). See also  United States v. Shabazz, 883 F. Supp. 422 (D. Minn. 1995) (relying upon Padilla to suppress audio and video recordings of conversations in the defendant's hotel room).


My colleagues' remaining justifications for dismissing the concerns expressed in Padilla are equally unpersua- sive. The "remedy" of a Bivens action is often no remedy


359 F.3d 194, *224; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **82;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 21


at all. The Fourth Amendment is intended to afford a right of privacy, not to compensate individuals whose privacy has been violated. Moreover, limitations that arise under the doctrine of qualified immunity   *225   may make it exceedingly difficult to establish the predicate showing of unreasonableness required to sustain an action under Bivens. where the alleged transgression involves the in- novative application of new technology. See   Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 150 L. Ed. 2d 272, 121 S. Ct. 2151

(2001). **83   n24


n24 Under Saucier, a Bivens plaintiff must first establish that legal requirements in a given situa- tion would have been clear to a reasonable officer. Bennett v. Murphy, 274 F.3d 133, 136-37 (3d Cir.

2001). The speed of technology's advance will of- ten make that an insurmountable hurdle to a Bivens plaintiff challenging the government's warrantless use of a new technology.



Lastly,  my  colleagues  doubt  that  "law  enforcement would have much to gain from monitoring conversations that occur when a cooperating individual is not present. A video tape of a conversation generally reveals whether a cooperating individual is present,  and "without proof of the presence of the cooperating individual, the tape is inadmissible." Maj. Op. at 13. However, that misses the point on several fronts as I have already explained. The informant's presence does not guarantee that he/she sees the same thing that the government transmits and records and it is therefore not tantamount to consent. More im- portantly,   **84   however, as the Court clearly noted in Kyllo, it is the intrusion, not the evidence that is the prob- lem. The suppression of the evidence is only important because of its impact on police behavior. n25


n25 For a general discussion of the purposes of the exclusionary rule, see  Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S.

1, 13, 20 L. Ed. 2d 889, 88 S. Ct. 1868 (1968).



III. Conclusion


The Constitution's primary bulwark against arbitrary intrusions into our privacy is the warrant requirement of the  Fourth  Amendment.  "The   Fourth  Amendment   re- flects the recognition of the Framers that certain enclaves should be free from arbitrary government interference." Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S. 170, 178, 80 L. Ed. 2d

214, 104 S. Ct. 1735 (1984).



The  presence  of  a  search  warrant  serves a  high  function.  Absent  some  grave  emer- gency, the Fourth Amendment has interposed


a magistrate between the citizen and the po- lice. This was done not to shield criminals nor to make the home a safe haven for illegal activities. It was **85   done so that an ob- jective mind might weigh the need to invade that privacy in order to enforce the law. The right of privacy was deemed too precious to entrust to the discretion of those whose job is  the  detection  of  crime  and  the  arrest  of criminals.



McDonald v. United States, 335 U.S. 451, 455-56, 93 L. Ed. 153, 69 S. Ct. 191 (1948).


I believe the government's end run around that "high function" here requires that we reverse the district court's ruling on Lee's Fourth Amendment claim. I have already explained that, although Agent Reilly's restraint may be commendable  and  demonstrate  the  government's  good faith, that is not sufficient given these facts. Rather, as I explained above, a warrant is required to insure that such invasions are warranted and conducted in an appropriate manner. The invited informant doctrine only increases the need to obtain a warrant in advance of this type of video surveillance. "No police officer would be able to know in advance whether his through-the--wall surveillance picks up intimate details -  and thus would be unable to know in advance whether it is constitutional."  Kyllo, 533 U.S. at 39 (internal quotation marks omitted).   **86     *226

" A  search which is reasonable at its inception may vio- late the Fourth Amendment by virtue of its subsequent  intolerable intensity and scope."  Terry, 392 U.S. at 17. Katz was not the first time that the Court has declared that liberties protected by a warrant requirement can not be left to the discretion of law enforcement officers absent exigent circumstances not involved here. More than half

a century ago, the Supreme Court declared:



The point of the Fourth Amendment, which is often not grasped by zealous officers, is not that it denies law enforcement the support of the usual inferences which reasonable men draw from evidence. Its protection consists in requiring that those inferences be drawn by a neutral and detached magistrate instead of being judged by the officer engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.



Johnson v. United States, 333 U.S. 10, 13-14, 92 L. Ed.

436,  68 S. Ct. 367 (1948). That is why the warrant re- quirement applies in situations such as the one before us


359 F.3d 194, *226; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 3062, **86;

93 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 993; 63 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan) 781

Page 22


here. n26





n26  In  arguing  that  the  government  was  ob-


that authority, courts have consistently found that authority  under  Fed.  R.  Crim.  P.  41(b),  as  well as under the inherent  supervisory  powers of fed-

ligated  to  obtain  a  warrant  for  this  kind  of  elec- tronic surveillance,  I realize that the authority of the federal courts to issue search warrants autho- rizing video surveillance is uncertain under Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968. See 18 U.S.C. § 2511 (a section of Title III).


We have never determined whether Title III au- thorizes federal courts to issue warrants for video surveillance,  and  there  is  considerable  authority that  it  doesn't.  See   United  States  v.  Falls,  34

F.3d  674,  679  (8th  Cir.  1994);    United  States  v. Koyomejian,  970  F.2d  536,  539  (9th  Cir.  1992); United States v. Torres, 751 F.2d 875, 880 (7th Cir.

1984). However,  although these courts have con- cluded  that  Title  III  does  not  give  federal  courts

eral  courts,  so  long  as  any  warrant  that  may  is- sue contains the safeguards of the restrictions em- bodied in Title III. See, e.g., In the Matter of the Application of the United States of America for an Order Directing X to Provide Access to Videotapes,

03- MC-89, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15227 at *4, *5

n.1, *9 n.3 (D. Md. Aug. 22, 2003); see also  Falls,

34  F.3d  678-79Koyomejian,  970  F.2d  at  542;

Torres, 751 F.2d at 877-78.


**87


I can not endorse my colleague's willingness to entrust the fundamental right of privacy to law enforcement's dis- cretion. Accordingly, I must respectfully dissent from my colleagues' analysis of Lee's Fourth Amendment claim.


Contents    Prev    Next    Last


Seaside Software Inc. DBA askSam Systems, P.O. Box 1428, Perry FL 32348
Telephone: 800-800-1997 / 850-584-6590   •   Email: info@askSam.com   •   Support: http://www.askSam.com/forums
© Copyright 1985-2011   •   Privacy Statement