CA10: Officer’s peering through 1″ gap in curtains from outside was plain view

Denial of rehearing en banc: United States v. Watkins, 2026 U.S. App. LEXIS 13495 (10th Cir. May 11, 2026),* denial of rehearing en banc from United States v. Watkins, 156 F.4th 1049 (10th Cir. 2025):

MORITZ, Circuit Judge, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc.

This court has missed its opportunity to correct a significant and unwarranted erosion of Fourth Amendment protections. The officer in this case placed his face so close to a motel room’s window that he could peer through a one-inch gap in the curtains and view the entire room. According to this court, that rendered the entire motel room in plain view because the officer’s feet were located in a public walkway and he used only his unaided senses.

But individuals who close their curtains have an objectively reasonable expectation of privacy in what lies behind them. That there was a one-inch gap between the curtains here is by no means determinative—who among us has not struggled to get curtains perfectly closed? And peeping through small gaps in curtains (or similar gaps in bathrooms stalls, tent flaps, or apartment blinds) is grossly inconsistent with societal norms. The court’s myopic focus on so-called plain view ignores that there was nothing “plain” about the view that the officer obtained here. [*4]

What is plain, however, is that the outcome here turned on a misguided concern with “draw[ing] a bright line that would render the observation in this case a violation of the Fourth Amendment.” United States v. Watkins, 156 F.4th 1049, 1057-58 (10th Cir. 2025). A bright line is not only unnecessary, but anathema to the Fourth Amendment’s totality-of-the-circumstances framework. The only standard we should apply is the one already provided in the Constitution: reasonableness.

With that standard top of mind, this case should turn on the common-sense proposition that Americans reasonably expect privacy behind their closed doors and drapes. But this court ignores common sense in the name of public access, plain view, and a misplaced concern about bright-line rules. By refusing to peer through the gaps in its own reasoning, the court closes the curtain on fundamental Fourth Amendment protections. I would grant rehearing en banc.

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