Not if she bought the car. The title would have to be in her name for her to sell it, so she has the right to inspect her own car.
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Not if she bought the car. The title would have to be in her name for her to sell it, so she has the right to inspect her own car.
It depends on where the car was, and what else was searched besides the car. No one in the press seems at all curious about that end of things.
Now, in the spirit of Google-fu, I dug up stuff that suggests he's prone to exaggeration:
http://www.wayn.com/waynprofile.html?member_key=871357
So, Steven Hambleton claims he's 21 when he's really 19. Innnnteresting. And his favorite song is BYOB. Irony abounds, but the press never digs into this shit! Oooh... check out his MySpace:
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm...endid=88231475
He shrunk 2" between one profile and the other. Uh... yeah.
Privacy starts when you get your own place. That's the law as most parents see it.Quote:
Originally Posted by Uncle Mxy
As she was able to sell the car, it was probably in her name, so the son has no reasonable expectation of privacy inside it.
I dunno... my spider-sense tells me that the mom went through all his shit, not just his car. Snooping parents generally lack self-restraint, in my experience.