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51 UCLA L. Rev. 1703 (2003-2004)
Lost in Probation: Contrasting the Treatment of Probationary Search Agreements in California and Federal Courts

handle is hein.journals/uclalr51 and id is 1733 raw text is: LOST IN PROBATION: CONTRASTING THE TREATMENT
OF PROBATIONARY SEARCH AGREEMENTS IN CALIFORNIA
AND FEDERAL COURTS
Marc R. Lewis
In the administration of a state or federal probation system, a criminal
defendant who is placed on probation often signs a consent-to-search agreement.
This agreement contains a clause in which the probationer consents to suspicionless,
warrantless searches of his person and residence for the duration of his probationary
term. Searches pursuant to these agreements have generated a number of cases
challenging their constitutionality. Specifically, several defendants who have been
searched pursuant to their probation agreement and later prosecuted have invoked
the Fourth Amendment, arguing that the exclusionary rule demands that such
evidence be deemed inadmissible in a subsequent criminal trial.
But federal and state courts have failed to provide a consistent legal analysis in
deciding such cases. On one hand, California courts hold that consent-to-search
agreements eliminate a probationer's privacy protection, and the exclusionary rule
challenge typically fails.  On the other hand, federal courts reason that such
agreements constitute only one factor in the expectation of privacy balancing test,
and thus hold that searches pursuant to these agreements must meet some reduced
level of constitutional scrutiny. In this Comment, the author explores this level of
scrutiny in the wake of the Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Knights,
and argues that federal courts should adopt the more logical and straightforward
California approach.
IN TRO DU CT ION  ........................................................................................................... 1705
I.  THE LEGAL SYSTEM    OF PROBATION   ..................................................................... 1707
A .  B ackground  .................................................................................................. 1707
B.   Purposes and  G oals of Probation .................................................................. 1708
II. LEGAL BACKGROUND: PROBATIONERS AND THE FOURTH AMENDMENT ............. 1710
A .  The  Exclusionary  Rule  ................................................................................. 1710
*    Senior Editor, UCLA Law Review, Volume 51. J.D., UCLA School of Law, 2004;
B.S., UCLA, 2000. I thank first the Assistant U.S. Attorneys who made this Comment possible:
Susan Knight and Laurel Beeler for encouraging me to explore this area of criminal procedure, and
George Cardona for his tremendous patience and meticulous edits. I am also extremely indebted to
several members of the UCLA Law Review: Tracy Casadio for refining my arguments, Beth McLain
for her support during the revising process, and Benjamin Lichtman, Matt Brown, and Pei Pei Tan
for their assistance in publication. Finally, I thank Jeanne, Rob, and Kristen Lewis for their generosity
and guidance, and Emily, my most careful editor, for her patient love and support.

1703

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