D.Me.: IRS agent didn’t violate REP traveling up taxpayer’s drive to house past “no trespassing” sign

Defendant owed taxes for a decade, and the IRS came to his house to look for assets. Traveling up his private road the IRS agent saw a forklift which he wanted to seize for taxes. The government agent’s traveling up the road, even past “no trespassing” signs, did not violate any reasonable expectation of privacy. United States v. Doyon, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74956 (D. Me. May 29, 2013):

In short, Oliver and these other cases make clear that “No Trespassing” and “Keep Out” signs lack the talismanic power that Doyon would like them to have. Not every common-law trespass amounts to a Fourth Amendment violation. Like the roads in Hensel and Roberts, numerous neighbors and their guests used Hillside Estates Drive, as did delivery vehicles, electrical and road maintenance vehicles, and emergency services. Doyon has thus failed to show that the IRS officers either violated a reasonable expectation of privacy in the road or trespassed on a constitutionally protected area.

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