Fourth Amendment Rights in a Storage Unit Obtained Using a Stolen Identity

Posted on October 28, 2009
Filed Under United States |

Today the Tenth Circuit handed down a very interesting Fourth Amendment decision, United States v. Johnson , on whether an individual can have a reasonable expectation of privacy in a storage unit rented with a stolen identity. As I understand the facts of the case, the defendant Johnson asked his girlfriend to rent a storage unit using a fake name where he could store his guns. Johnson and his girlfriend had possession of the driver’s license of a woman named Haroldsen — the license had

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Fourth Amendment Rights in a Storage Unit Obtained Using a Stolen Identity

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