United States v. Bullette, III, No. 15-4408 (4th Cir. 2017)
Annotate this CaseAfter defendant was convicted for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled dangerous substance, he appealed the district court's denial of his motion to suppress. The court explained that it has never required the government to provide a written impoundment-and-inventory policy or elicit step-by-step testimony concerning such a policy to meet its burden under the inevitable-discovery doctrine. The government meets its burden and this court can affirm on inevitable-discovery grounds if the district court can assess the inevitability and reasonableness of a hypothetical inventory search from testimony provided by a law-enforcement official--such as the DEA agent in this case. Because the warrantless search was reasonable, the court affirmed the judgment.
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