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The Fourth Amendment has long stood for a fairly common-sense principle:  Agents of the government are not supposed to enter or search a place where a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy without a warrant or probable cause to believe that there is some evidence of a crime there.  Although it seems pretty simple, this doctrine has been litigated for years in the nation’s highest courts, usually turning on the interpretation of the phrase “reasonable expectation of privacy.”

Courts have uniformly held that a person certainly has a reasonable expectation of privacy in his home.  The Florida Supreme Court recently addressed a unique situation.  In Caraballo v. State (SC07-1375, decided June 24, 2010), the issue arose as to whether or not an apartment, whose owners were in the process of evicting the tenant, carries the same protections as a regular home.

Caraballo was convicted of murder, kidnapping, rape, and a host of other heinous crimes.  Before trial and while the investigation was ongoing, law enforcement officers entered Caraballo’s apartment with the consent of the apartment owners but not the renting tenant, who happened to be Caraballo.  Typically, this sort of entry is illegal and anything found inside would not be admissible against the tenant.  Inside they found Caraballo and collected several pieces of evidence later used to convict him.  Caraballo also made several incriminating statements.

Even if a tenant is not an owner, the tenant still has a reasonable expectation of privacy in a place that they both rent and reside.  However, in this case, Caraballo had previously failed to pay his rent and the owners had begun eviction proceedings.  In addition, there was evidence that Caraballo knew of the eviction proceedings and had removed most of his personal belongings from the apartment.  Most importantly, he no longer had a key to the apartment and had to borrow one from the apartment’s leasing office before entering.  He told the leasing office that he was simply removing a few remaining articles from the apartment.

The Court held that Caraballo had no reasonable expectation of privacy in an apartment he was being evicted from and had apparently abandoned.  The Court noted the facts that Caraballo had already removed many of his belongings and that he no longer had a key.

While this may seem like a very specific situation, the Court’s holding further defines the perpetually nebulous concept of privacy by applying common sense.  Here’s a lesson one can learn from this ruling:  When you stop paying your rent, you stop becoming a tenant.  When you’re not a tenant, you have no right to challenge a police entry into an apartment.

If you are facing prosecution for a crime, don’t face it alone.  Visit my website at http://www.shafercriminallaw.com or call me at (904)350-9333 for a free consultation.

~Robert Shafer