United States v. Kimball

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 93-1755

                    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                            Appellee,

                                v.

                          AARON KIMBALL,

                      Defendant, Appellant.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

             [Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]
                                                   

                                           

                              Before

                       Breyer, Chief Judge,
                                          

               Torruella and Stahl, Circuit Judges.
                                                  

                                           

     Peter Clifford, by Appointment of the Court, for appellant.
                   
     Margaret  D. McGaughey,  Assistant  United States  Attorney,
                           
with whom Jay P. McCloskey, United States Attorney, and George T.
                                                                 
Dilworth,  Assistant United  States Attorney,  were on  brief for
        
appellee.

                                           

                           May 23, 1994
                                           

          TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge.  Aaron Kimball was charged in
                                  

a single count indictment with  burglarizing a United States Post

Office  in  North  Waterboro,  Maine,  on  October  2,  1992,  in

violation of 18 U.S.C.    2115 and 2.   Kimball moved to suppress

1) physical evidence  seized from the car in which  he was riding

and  2)  all statements  made to  police  by his  codefendants on

October 3, 1992, the morning  of his arrest.  The  district court

denied Kimball's motion.  Kimball then entered a conditional plea

of  guilty to the indictment.   Kimball now  appeals the district

court's denial of his motion to suppress.  We affirm.

                          I.  BACKGROUND
                                        

          A.  Facts

          We  view the facts in  the light most  favorable to the

district  court's  ruling with  respect  to  Kimball's motion  to

suppress.  See United  States v. Maguire, 918 F.2d  254, 257 (1st
                                        

Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 499 U.S. 950 (1991).
                        

          There were four night-time  burglaries of schools and a

church in western York County, Maine in late September 1992.  The

York County Sheriff's Department  issued a crime bulletin related

to  these  burglaries  and  distributed it  to  deputies  in  the

Sheriff's  department.   The names  "Huertas" and  "Kimball" were

handwritten on the  bottom of  the bulletin.   It was  apparently

standard  practice of  the  York County  Sheriff's Department  to

write the names of suspects on the bottom of crime bulletins.  No

evidence was presented, however, as to specifically who wrote the

names  on the bottom  of the bulletin  or why these  two men were

                               -2-

thought to be suspects.  The bulletin stated that the same  modus
                                                                 

operandi was used in all four burglaries: using a crow bar to pry
        

doors, latches, and file cabinets open.

          Just after  midnight on October 3,  1992, Deputy Thomas

Word saw an automobile in the Massabesic High School parking lot.

As the vehicle pulled out of the school parking  lot, Deputy Word

recognized the vehicle as  belonging to Gregory Huertas.   Deputy

Word knew that Huertas had previously been convicted of burglary,

and that Huertas was a suspect in the recent burglaries.   Deputy

Word  then pulled the vehicle  over, and advised  the York County

dispatcher that he had stopped a suspicious vehicle that had been

on  school property.  Deputy Word then approached the vehicle and

saw  Huertas in the driver's seat and  Kimball in the right front

passenger's seat.  A  man later identified as Michael  Brochu was

sitting  between Huertas and Kimball  in the front  seat.  Deputy

Word shined his flashlight into the car, at which point  he saw a

crowbar and flashlight on the floor in the back seat.

          Deputy  Word  requested  that  Huertas  show   him  his

license, Huertas complied, and Deputy Word returned to his car to

run  a license  check.   Before  receiving  a response  from  the

dispatcher,  Deputy Word went back to  Huertas' vehicle and asked

Huertas  to step  out  of  the  car.    Several  other  officers,

including  Deputy  Philip  Weymouth,  arrived at  the  scene  and

informed  Deputy  Word  that   Huertas'  license  to  operate  an

automobile had been suspended.  Huertas was arrested and taken to

the  York  County Sheriff's  office.    The  deputies then  asked

                               -3-

Kimball  and Brochu whether they  would also go  to the Sheriff's

office, and they agreed to do so.

          At the police station,  after being given their Miranda
                                                                 

rights,  Huertas and  Brochu were  interviewed separately.   They

both admitted that they had burglarized the  North Waterboro Post

Office earlier that evening.  Kimball did not speak to any of the

officers and did not make a statement.

          At  the  scene  of  the initial  vehicle  stop,  Deputy

Weymouth arranged  to have Huertas' vehicle  towed, and conducted

an inventory search of the vehicle  before it was towed.   Deputy

Weymouth  recorded  on  the  inventory form  that  he  found  two

crowbars, a flashlight,  a hammer,  a pair of  bolt cutters,  and

assorted screwdrivers in the vehicle.

          B.  Proceedings Below

          Kimball filed a motion  to suppress the introduction of

evidence  of  the  tools  found  in   Huertas'  vehicle  and  the

statements made by Huertas and Brochu, claiming that the evidence

obtained was  the fruit of an unconstitutional stop of the car in

which  he  was riding.   The  district  court denied  the motion,

finding that the circumstances reasonably justified Deputy Word's

initial stop of Huertas' vehicle and the initial detention of the

vehicle's occupants.  The court found that  the scope of the stop

was limited and reasonably related to the  reasons that justified

it.  The court also found that the tools were seized as part of a

lawful inventory search of the car.

          Kimball now appeals the  district court's denial of his

                               -4-

motion  to suppress.   Kimball contends  that the  district court

erroneously  concluded  that 1)  Deputy  Word  had the  requisite

reasonable suspicion  necessary to stop Huertas'  vehicle; 2) the

stop  was  reasonable  in its  duration  and  scope;  and 3)  the

physical evidence  and incriminating statements  were not legally

attributable to an unlawful stop.

              II.  KIMBALL'S FOURTH AMENDMENT CLAIM
                                                   

          A.  Does Kimball Have Standing1 To Challenge the Stop?

          As  a  threshold  matter, the  Government  argues  that

Kimball lacks standing to  challenge the constitutionality of the

stop of Huertas' vehicle.2  We disagree.

          Fourth Amendment  rights are personal,  and a proponent

of   a  motion  to  suppress   must  prove  that  the  challenged

governmental  action infringed  upon  his  own  Fourth  Amendment

rights.   United States v.  Soule, 908 F.2d  1032, 1034 (1st Cir.
                                 

1990) (citing Rakas v.  Illinois, 439 U.S. 128, 131  n.1 (1978)).
                                

A  police officer's act of  stopping a vehicle  and detaining its

                    

1  We use the term "standing" as a shorthand  method of referring
to the  issue of  whether the  defendant's  own Fourth  Amendment
interests  were implicated by the challenged governmental action.
"Technically,  the concept of 'standing'  has not had  a place in
Fourth Amendment jurisprudence for more than a decade,  since the
Supreme  Court  in  Rakas  v.  Illinois,  439  U.S.  128  (1978),
                                       
indicated that matters of standing in the context of searches and
seizures  actually involved  substantive  Fourth Amendment  law."
United States v. S nchez, 943 F.2d 110, 113 n.1 (1st Cir. 1991).
                        

2   The  Government challenged  Kimball's standing to  bring this
motion  to suppress in the  district court.   The district court,
however, elected to consider,  and then rejected Kimball's Fourth
Amendment claim  on the merits without  first determining whether
Kimball in fact had standing.

                               -5-

occupants constitutes a seizure within the meaning of the  Fourth

Amendment.  Delaware  v. Prouse,  440 U.S. 648,  653 (1979);  see
                                                                 

also  Michigan Dept. of  State Police v. Sitz,  496 U.S. 444, 450
                                             

(1990);  United States v. Sharpe, 470 U.S. 675, 682 (1985).  Such
                                

a  stop affects an  occupant's interest  in freedom  from random,

unauthorized, investigatory  seizures.  Prouse, 440 U.S. at 657. 
                                              

An occupant's  interest in avoiding the  substantial anxiety that

such stops may create is also affected.  Id.
                                           

          When a police officer  effects an investigatory stop of

a  vehicle,  all occupants  of that  vehicle  are subjected  to a
                

seizure, as defined  by the Fourth  Amendment.   The fact that  a

defendant is a passenger in a vehicle as opposed to the driver is

a distinction of no consequence in this context.  The interest in

freedom of movement and the interest in being  free from fear and

surprise are personal  to all  occupants of the  vehicle, and  an

individual's interest is  not diminished simply  because he is  a

passenger  as opposed to the driver  when the stop occurred.  See
                                                                 

United States v. Erwin, 875 F.2d 268, 270 (10th Cir. 1989).  Both
                      

driver and passenger:

            have  their  travel  interrupted  by  the
            sight of a state patrol cruiser or police
            car  looming  large   in  the  rear  view
            mirror,  are detained on  the side of the
            road,  have  their identifying  documents
            inspected  by  the trooper  or policeman,
            and  may even  be  asked  to leave  their
            vehicles   for   the   duration  of   the
            questioning . . . .

United  States v. Powell, 929  F.2d 1190, 1195  (7th Cir.), cert.
                                                                 

denied, 112  S. Ct. 584 (1991).  Moreover, once a car is stopped,
      

                               -6-

a passenger may  feel no more  free to leave  the scene than  the

driver,  without first  being  allowed to  do  so by  the  police

officer.  Erwin, 875 F.2d at 270 (citing Berkemer v. McCarty, 468
                                                            

U.S. 420, 436 (1984)).  Rather, the passenger is subjected to the

demands and control of the police officer, just as the driver is.

Because a passenger's own interests are affected when the vehicle

in which  he is riding is  stopped, he has  standing to challenge

the stop  of that  vehicle.   United States  v. Roberson,  6 F.3d
                                                        

1088, 1091 (5th Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 127 L.Ed.2d 574 (1994);
                                        

Erwin, 875 F.2d at 270; United States v. Portwood, 857 F.2d 1221,
                                                 

1222  (8th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1069 (1989); United
                                                                 

States v. Durant, 730  F.2d 1180, 1182 (8th Cir.),  cert. denied,
                                                                

469  U.S.  843 (1984);  see also  Powell,  929 F.2d  at 1194-95.3
                                        

Thus,  if the initial stop  of the vehicle  was illegal, evidence

seized  by  virtue  of that  stop,  such  as  the tools  in  this

instance, may be  subject to  exclusion under the  "fruit of  the

poisonous  tree" doctrine.  See, e.g., Wong Sun v. United States,
                                                                

371 U.S. 471, 484-85 (1963).

          B.  Was the Stop Constitutionally Valid?

          As a  preliminary matter,  we set forth  the applicable

                    

3  The Government's  reliance on Rakas v. Illinois, 439  U.S. 128
                                                  
(1978), in  the context of a  stop, is misplaced.   In Rakas, the
                                                            
United  States Supreme  Court held  that a  mere passenger  in an
automobile ordinarily does not have the legitimate expectation of
privacy  necessary to  challenge the  search of  that automobile.
                                            
Id.  at  148-49.   The  Supreme  Court's decision,  however,  was
  
limited  to  the  issue  of whether  the  passenger's  legitimate
expectation  of privacy was invaded  by a search  of the vehicle,
and   not  the  stop  thereof.    Id.  at  150-51.  (Powell,  J.,
                                    
concurring).

                               -7-

standard of review.  Whether police activity is reasonable in any

particular  context depends on the facts which are unique to that

incident.  See United States v. Rodr guez-Morales, 929  F.2d 780,
                                                 

783 (1st  Cir. 1991), cert. denied,  112 S. Ct. 868  (1992).  The
                                  

trial court  has  a superior  sense of  what actually  transpired

during an incident, by virtue of  its ability to see and hear the

witnesses who  have first hand knowledge of the events.  Id.; see
                                                                 

also United  States v. Karas,  950 F.2d  31, 35 (1st  Cir. 1991).
                            

Appellate oversight is therefore  deferential, and we review "the

district  court's  findings  of  fact   following  a  suppression

hearing, including  mixed  fact/law findings,  under the  clearly

erroneous test."   Rodr guez-Morales, 929 F.2d  at 783 (citations
                                    

omitted).    If  the  district  court  applies  the  wrong  legal

standard, however, no deference  attaches to such an application.

Id.
  

          Consistent with the  Fourth Amendment, law  enforcement

agents  may  stop  a   moving  automobile  to  investigate  their

reasonable suspicion  that the vehicle's occupants  were, are, or
                    

will  be engaged in criminal activity.  United States v. Hensley,
                                                                

469 U.S. 221, 226 (1985); Berkemer v. McCarty, 468 U.S.  420, 439
                                             

(1984); Rodr guez-Morales, 929 F.2d at 784.
                         

            Although stopping a car and detaining its
            occupants constitute a seizure within the
            meaning  of  the  Fourth  Amendment,  the
            governmental interest in investigating an
            officer's reasonable  suspicion, based on
                                                     
            specific   and  articulable   facts,  may
                                               
            outweigh the Fourth Amendment interest of
            the  driver  and passengers  in remaining
            secure from the intrusion.

                               -8-

Hensley, 469 U.S. at 226 (emphasis supplied) (citing Prouse,  440
                                                           

U.S. at 653-55).   To evaluate the overall reasonableness of this

type  of stop,  a "Terry  stop", see  Terry v.  Ohio, 392  U.S. 1
                                                    

(1968),  the  reviewing court  must perform a  two step  inquiry:

"the court must first consider  whether the officer's action  was

justified at  its inception; and second, whether the action taken

was  reasonably  related  in  scope to  the  circumstances  which

justified the interference in the first place."  United States v.
                                                              

Walker, 924 F.2d  1, 3 (1st  Cir. 1991) (citations omitted).   It
      

should be kept in mind that when applying this test and assessing

the  reasonableness of  the police  officer's actions,  the court

must consider the totality  of the circumstances which confronted

the officer  at the time  of the stop.   Walker, 924 F.2d  at 3-4
                                               

(citing  United States  v. Trullo,  809 F.2d  108, 111  (1st Cir.
                                 

1987), cert. denied, 482 U.S. 916 (1987)).
                   

          To  initially  justify  a  "Terry  stop,"  "the  police
                                           

officer must be able  to point to specific and  articulable facts

which, taken together with  rational inferences from those facts,

reasonably  warrant that  intrusion."    Terry,  392 U.S.  at 21;
                                              

Walker,  924  F.2d at  3; Trullo,  809 F.2d  at  110-11.   In the
                                

present case, we agree with the district court that Deputy Word's

stop of Huertas'  vehicle was  warranted at its  inception.   The

record indicates that Deputy Word was able to articulate a number

of  factors that made him  suspicious of Huertas'  vehicle in the

early  morning  hours of  October 3,  1992.   First,  Deputy Word

observed the vehicle in a school parking lot after midnight, long

                               -9-

after any school functions  had ended.  Second, Deputy  Word knew

by virtue of the crime  bulletin, that a number of schools  and a

church  in  the  area  had  been  burglarized  during  the  weeks

immediately  preceding the  stop.   Thus, as  the  district court

noted, "the  presence of a car,  in close proximity to  a school,

late  at night,  not  in  conjunction  with  any  school  related

function,  was, in light of the officer's knowledge of the recent

local  pattern of  burglaries  at public  schools, an  additional

suspicious circumstance."  United States v. Kimball, 813 F. Supp.
                                                   

95, 98  (D. Maine 1993).4    A third articulable  factor was that

Deputy Word recognized  the vehicle as belonging  to Huertas, and

he knew that Huertas had a criminal history involving burglaries.

A police  officer's knowledge  of an individual's  prior criminal

activity is  material to whether the  officer reasonably suspects

that  criminal  activity has  or may  be  occurring.   Cf. United
                                                                 

States v. Taylor, 985 F.2d 3, 6 (1st Cir.), cert.  denied, 113 S.
                                                         

Ct.  2426 (1993) (an affiant's knowledge of the target's criminal

record is material to the probable cause determination to issue a

                    

4  The  names of Huertas and Kimball had  been handwritten on the
crime bulletin,  identifying them as suspects  in the burglaries.
Because the Government failed  to present any evidence as  to who
handwrote the names on  the bulletin, or why Huertas  and Kimball
were  considered suspects,  we do  not  believe that  this factor
provides  reasonable support for Deputy  Word's stop of  Huertas'
vehicle.  See Hensley, 469 U.S. at 233 ("Assuming the police make
                     
a  Terry stop in  objective reliance on  a flyer or  bulletin, we
        
hold  that the  evidence uncovered in  the course of  the stop is
admissible  if the  police  who  issued  the  flyer  or  bulletin
                                       
possessed  a reasonable  suspicion justifying  a stop  . .  . ").
Deputy Word was  justified, however,  in relying  upon the  other
information contained in the crime bulletin, and even without the
identification  of  Huertas  and  Kimball  as  suspects,  he  was
justified in stopping  Huertas' vehicle on October 3, 1992.

                               -10-

warrant).

          Kimball  contends  that  the  record  demonstrates that

Deputy  Word relied solely on the location of Huertas' vehicle to

support  his decision  to stop  Huertas' vehicle,  and  that this

factor  was legally insufficient to justify the stop.  As support

for this  argument, Kimball relies  on  Brown v.  Texas, 443 U.S.
                                                       

47,  52 (1979), where the United States Supreme Court stated that

location  alone is insufficient to justify a "Terry stop."  While
                                                   

Kimball is correct that location in and of itself is insufficient

to justify a "Terry stop," we  have stated that location and  the
                   

type of area where  the stop is made, is clearly  a consideration

that a police  officer may use to decide to  make a "Terry stop."
                                                          

Walker, 924 F.2d at 4; Trullo, 809  F.2d at 111.  Deputy Word was
                             

therefore  reasonably  entitled to  consider  the  fact that  the

vehicle was located in  the school parking lot.   Moreover, as we

have  already noted,  there were  other factors  which buttressed

Deputy Word's decision to stop  Huertas' vehicle.

          Therefore,  we  believe  that  the  district court  was

correct  in   concluding that the  factors articulated  by Deputy

Word, taken together,  demonstrated that when he  decided to stop

Huertas'  vehicle,  he  could  have reasonably  believed  that  a

burglary was in process or was about to be committed.5

                    

5  Kimball makes much of the fact  that Deputy Word stated in one
portion  of his testimony that  he did not  believe that criminal
activity was occurring when he  decided to stop Huertas' vehicle,
and  based on  this testimony,  Kimball therefore  concludes that
Deputy Word  had absolutely no  basis to  stop Huertas'  vehicle.
Kimball assigns too much  weight to one portion of  Deputy Word's
testimony,  and   misconstrues  the   import  of   Deputy  Word's

                               -11-

          We now  review whether the action taken  by Deputy Word

and  the other  York County  deputies was  reasonably related  in

scope to the circumstances which justified the stop.  Walker, 924
                                                            

F.2d  at 3.    The district  court  concluded that  the  stop was

reasonably related to the investigation and did not last too long

or   create  an   excessive  intrusion  into   Kimball's  privacy

interests.  Kimball, 813 F. Supp. at 99.  The "Terry stop" lasted
                                                    

long  enough for Deputy Word  to establish the  identities of the

occupants of the vehicle, to ask the occupants why they  had been

on the school grounds, and to run a license check  on the driver,

Huertas.  Id.    Thereafter, upon learning that  Huertas' license
            

had been  suspended, the police  properly arrested Huertas.   Id.
                                                                

The  district court  found that  the police  officers  then asked

Kimball and  Brochu, in a nonthreatening  and noncoercive manner,

if they  would  agree  to come  to  the station  to  answer  some

questions, and that  they voluntarily  consented to do  so.   Id.
                                                                

The "Terry stop"  therefore ended when Kimball and  Brochu agreed
          

to go with the police officers to the station.  Id.
                                                  

          Kimball  challenges  the  district   court's  findings,

arguing that he was effectively  seized after Deputy Word stopped

Huertas'  vehicle, prior to the  officer's request that  he go to

the  station  for  further  questioning,  and  that  he  did  not

                    

testimony, on one occasion, in response to repeated questions  at
the suppression  hearing as to  why he stopped  Huertas' vehicle.
Kimball ignores substantial other  testimony by Deputy Word which
makes it clear that Deputy Word  stopped Huertas' vehicle because
he believed it was suspicious, based on the fact that the vehicle
should not have been in the school parking lot at that late hour,
and there had been a recent rash of school burglaries.

                               -12-

voluntarily consent to  go with the  officers.  Kimball  contends

that the "Terry stop"  did not end until his arrest several hours
               

later, and the stop was thus unreasonable in duration.

          The question  of whether  a defendant has  consented to

questioning  by the police,  and whether  that consent  was given

voluntarily, are  questions of  fact to  be  determined from  the

totality of all of the circumstances.  Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
                                                                

412 U.S.  218, 227  (1973);   United States  v. Miller,  589 F.2d
                                                      

1117,  1130 (1st Cir. 1978),  cert. denied, 440  U.S. 958 (1979);
                                          

United States v. Analla, 975 F.2d 119, 125 (4th Cir. 1992), cert.
                                                                 

denied,  113 S.  Ct.  1853  (1993).    The  record  supports  the
      

conclusion that Kimball voluntarily consented to undergo  further

questioning.  The testimony  of Deputy Weymouth demonstrates that

the  deputies asked Kimball  several times whether  he would come

down to the station and talk with officers, and each time Kimball

expressly agreed  to do so.   This was not an  unusual request by

the officers; rather, it  was department policy not to  engage in

detailed interviews  on the side of the road.  See, e.g., Florida
                                                                 

v.  Royer, 460  U.S. 491, 504-05  (1983) ("there  are undoubtedly
         

reasons  of  safety and  security  that  would justify  moving  a

suspect  from one  location  to another  during an  investigatory

detention  . .  . ").   There  is no  evidence that  Kimball ever

indicated that he was unwilling to accompany  the police officers

to the station.   Moreover, there is no evidence  that any of the

officers  coerced or  intimidated Kimball  into going  with them.

Although Kimball was not expressly told that he was free to leave

                               -13-

the  scene, or free to refuse to undergo further questioning, and

this  fact cuts against a finding of voluntariness in the overall

calculus,  the Government  was not  required to  demonstrate such

knowledge by Kimball as  a prerequisite to establishing voluntary

consent.  Schneckloth, 412 U.S. at 249.
                     

          The record  also indicates  that both the  officers and

Kimball acted in a manner  that was at all times  consistent with

Kimball  having  voluntarily consented  to  their  request.   The

officers did  not handcuff or  physically restrain Kimball.   The

officers  did not threaten to  arrest Kimball.   The officers did

not  take any  identification or  personal effects  from Kimball.

Additionally,  when Kimball  was transported  to the  station, he

rode  in  the  front  seat  of  Deputy  Word's  patrol  car,  and

apparently engaged in relaxed  conversation that was unrelated to

the  case.   Once  Kimball arrived  at  the station,  the  police

officers permitted Kimball to move freely around the station.

          As  a general matter,  we would be  cautious in finding

that  a  defendant  voluntarily  consented  to   undergo  further

questioning when, after being stopped by one police officer, five

other  officers   converge  on  the  scene   soon  thereafter  to

investigate.     Additionally,   Kimball,  like   any  reasonable

defendant,  may have been intimidated by the fact that the driver

of the vehicle,  Huertas, was  then arrested for  driving with  a

suspended license, and taken  to the police station.   We believe

that  here,  however, our  general  fears are  outweighed  by the

specifics  of the situation,  which point to  the conclusion that

                               -14-

Kimball did in fact agree to go to the station.   After examining

the  record, we  are left  with the  impression that  Kimball did

initially  consent  voluntarily  to  further questioning.    Upon

learning  that  further  questioning  at  the   station  produced

incriminating statements from his codefendants,  however, Kimball

now wants to  challenge the  voluntariness of his  consent in  an

attempt to taint  the police  officers' conduct  in stopping  and

questioning  all three occupants of  the vehicle.   The nature of

Kimball's  consent  obviously does  not  hinge  upon whether  his

strategic decision  to acquiesce to the  police officer's request

was effective.

          We  do not  believe that  the district  court's finding

that Kimball's  consent to further questioning  was voluntary, is

clearly  erroneous.   See, e.g.,  Karas, 950  F.2d at  35; United
                                                                 

States  v. Manchester, 711 F.2d 458, 462 (1st Cir. 1983); Miller,
                                                                

589 F.2d  at 1130.  We  therefore conclude that the  "Terry stop"
                                                           

was reasonable at its  inception and in its duration,  given that

the stop ended when Kimball agreed to go to the station, and that

the  stop did not in  any way violate  Kimball's Fourth Amendment

rights.

          C.   Standing to Challenge the Inventory Search?

          While we have  found that Kimball does have standing to

challenge the stop and consequently the seizure of the tools as a

fruit  of  that  stop,  Kimball could  separately  challenge  the

constitutionality  of the inventory  search itself, through which

the  police officers seized the  tools.  Standing  to challenge a

                               -15-

search  presents issues  separate and  distinct from  standing to

challenge the  stop.  Erwin, 875  F.2d at 269.   Kimball in fact,
                           

does  additionally argue  that the  police officer's  decision to

impound Huertas' vehicle, and the ensuing inventory search, was a

mere  subterfuge  to  perform  an  unconstitutional investigatory

search.   We  believe that  Kimball lacks  standing to  object to

either  the  seizure  of  the  car or  the  subsequent  inventory

search.6

          In  order  to  embark  on a  suppression  challenge,  a

"defendant must  show that  he  had a  reasonable expectation  of

privacy in the area searched and in relation to the item seized."

 United  States v.  Aguirre, 839  F.2d 854,  856 (1st  Cir. 1988)
                           

(citing United States  v. Salvucci, 448  U.S. 83, 90-92  (1980));
                                  

see  also United States  v. Mancini,  8 F.3d  104, 107  (1st Cir.
                                   

1993).   "[T]he defendant must show both a subjective expectation

of  privacy   and  that  society  accepts   that  expectation  as

objectively  reasonable."   Mancini,  8  F.3d  at 107  (citations
                                   

omitted).  The burden  of proving this expectation lies  with the

defendant.  Mancini, 8 F.3d at 107.
                   

          The   record  is   bereft  of  evidence   that  Kimball

maintained  a subjective  expectation of  privacy in  the vehicle

apparently  owned and operated by Huertas.  The record also fails

to  disclose any facts which show that Kimball had an objectively

reasonable expectation of privacy in his friend's vehicle.  Thus,

                    

6   While the district  court concluded that  the police officers
lawfully  performed the  inventory  search and  seized the  tools
found in the vehicle, we do not reach this issue.

                               -16-

Kimball  has  failed to  proffer  any  evidence establishing  any

privacy expectation in the area searched.

          Kimball instead bases his  claim for standing solely on

the  fact  that he  claimed a  possessory  interest in  the items

seized during the inventory search.  This  contention, in itself,

however, is insufficient to confer standing.

            Ownership   alone   is   not  enough   to
            establish  a  reasonable  and  legitimate
            expectation  of  privacy.   Ownership  is
            relevant  to the  inquiry .  . .  but the
            total circumstances determine whether the
            one   challenging   the   search  has   a
            reasonable and  legitimate expectation of
            privacy in the locus of the search.

United  States v. Dall, 608 F.2d  910, 914 (1st Cir. 1979), cert.
                                                                 

denied,  445  U.S.  918  (1980)  (citations  omitted);  see  also
                                                                 

Salvucci, 448 U.S. at 92 ("we must ... 'engage in a conscientious
        

effort  to apply  the  Fourth  Amendment'  by asking  not  merely

whether  the defendant  had a  possessory interest  in the  items

seized, but whether he had an expectation  of privacy in the area

searched.")  (quoting Rakas, 439 U.S.  at 147-49).  Certainly the
                           

fact that Kimball  owned the  tools was a  factor working in  his

favor in  the standing determination.7  Without any evidence that

Kimball left the  tools in  a place that  could justifiably  give

rise to an  expectation of  privacy, however, he  simply has  not

                    

7  The tools were apparently  in an opened black bag in the  back
seat  of  Huertas' vehicle.    While  a "bag  may  be  used as  a
repository of personal possessions," the mere possibility of such
personal  use does  not  lead us  to  "the conclusion  that  such
contents  are  'inevitably'  associated  with  an expectation  of
privacy."  United States v. Goshorn, 628 F.2d 697, 700  (1st Cir.
                                   
1980).  Kimball failed  to introduce any evidence that  he had an
expectation of privacy in the bag.

                               -17-

sustained  his  burden  of  demonstrating  that  his  own  Fourth

Amendment rights  were affected  by the  inventory search  of the

vehicle.  See, e.g., Aguirre, 839 F.2d at 857.
                            

          D.  Statements Made By Huertas and Brochu

          As   a  final   matter,   Kimball  contends   that  the

confessions  made by  Brochu  and  Huertas  were  "fruit  of  the

poisonous  tree" from  the  allegedly  unconstitutional  stop  of

Huertas'   vehicle,  and   the  statements   must  therefore   be

suppressed.  The short answer to this contention is that  we have

found nothing  unreasonable about  the stop of  Huertas' vehicle,

and therefore,  there  is nothing  constitutionally  infirm  with

admitting these statements.

          For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district

court is affirmed.
                 

                               -18-