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Legal
Questions Answered:
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Question Title: Reasonable expectation of privacy in information
supplied to a third party
E-Newsletter
Edition: May 2, 2007
Always note that state law may be
more restrictive on police power than the U.S. Constitution.
Currently, where does the federal court
system stand regarding the running of wanted checks of names, dates
of birth, ect. From motel/hotel registers that are voluntarily provided
by the manager or owner?
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The primary issue regarding this question
is whether a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy
in information that they supply to the motel/hotel clerk (a third
party). The short answer to this issue is, no, a person does not
have a reasonable expectation of privacy in information that they
supply to a third party. Therefore, officers, if the motel/hotel
manager or owner consensually provides them access to this information,
may constitutionally check this information for wanted persons.
The only exception would be if an individual state has a statute,
regulation or rule governing the access to that states criminal
information system.
The U.S. Supreme Court has decided
a couple of cases dealing with information turned over to third
parties. First,
in United States
v. Miller, 425 U.S. 435 (1976), ATF Agent obtained a subpoena
for bank records, such as checks and deposit slips, of a particular
suspect. The Supreme Court held that this information is used
in commercial transactions and the defendant exposed this information
voluntarily to third parties. Therefore, the Fourth Amendment
does
not prohibit the obtaining of information revealed to a third
party and later conveyed to government authorities.
Further, in Smith v. Maryland, 442
U.S. 735 (1979), officers were investigating a robbery suspect.
The victim began receiving phone
calls from a person that claimed to be the suspect. The police
inst alled a pen register at the central telephone system to record
the phone numbers that the suspect was dialing. The Supreme Court
held that the defendant did not have a reasonable expectation of
privacy in the numbers he dialed because those numbers are automatically
turned over to a third party, the phone company.
Thus, these cases
illustrate that when a person turns over personal information
to a third party, they normally relinquish their reasonable
expectation of privacy in that information. In addition, the
record in which the names a stored at the hotel, was never in the
possession
of the guest, which goes even further to diminish any expectation
of privacy in this information. |