Bourassa v. State

830 S.E.2d 189, 306 Ga. 329
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 28, 2019
DocketS18G1136
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 830 S.E.2d 189 (Bourassa v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bourassa v. State, 830 S.E.2d 189, 306 Ga. 329 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

Warren, Justice.

**329In this criminal case, we granted a writ of certiorari to review the Court of Appeals' ruling that the trial court did not err in denying Jeffrey Alan Bourassa's motion to suppress certain intercepted phone communications. Bourassa was convicted of possessing more than one ounce of marijuana, conspiracy to commit that crime, and violating the Georgia Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO") by using a telephone to arrange for the purchase of more than one ounce of marijuana from co-indictee German William Beltran. The evidence supporting these convictions was obtained during a police investigation of Beltran and others that included **330extensive surveillance and investigation warrants that authorized the interception of electronic and oral communications for several phone numbers, including Beltran's. Neither Bourassa's phone number nor any phone number allegedly used by him was listed as a target in the investigation warrants, and Bourassa's phone number was not known to be associated with any of the phone numbers listed in the investigation warrants as targets. However, the following evidence uncovered in the course of the investigation led police to Bourassa.

In intercepted phone conversations and text messages between Beltran and a man who identified himself as "J" or "JB"1 that were surveilled from March 4 to 9, 2013, the two men discussed the exchange of large quantities of marijuana and pills, and ultimately agreed to meet at a residence associated with Beltran on March 9, 2013. When those communications ended, Bourassa and his girlfriend arrived at the residence previously identified in the intercepted communications. Shortly after they left the residence, a law enforcement officer stopped their vehicle (which matched a description of the vehicle police surveillance had spotted arriving at and leaving the residence), obtained consent to search, found 448.5 grams of marijuana and $4,800 cash inside, and arrested Bourassa and his girlfriend.

Bourassa moved to suppress the communications intercepted in March 2013, arguing (among other things) that the investigation warrants that resulted in the interception of his phone conversations and text messages violated the laws of Georgia and the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. 2

*191Bourassa did not testify at the hearing on the motion to suppress or stipulate that he was a party to those conversations and messages, and the State argued that he failed to prove standing. At the suppression hearing, the investigation warrants-including the applications and supporting affidavits-were admitted, and the affiant and sole witness, Sgt. Randy Folsom of the Douglas County Sheriff's Office, confirmed that neither Bourassa nor any phone number associated with him was **331specified as a target in the warrants. On cross-examination, defense counsel then questioned Sgt. Folsom about the intercepted phone calls:

Q. Was [Bourassa] ever part of the call or party on the call?
A. He was identified - or his phone number was identified as one of the phone numbers [that] was calling us, yes.

Specifically, Sgt. Folsom testified that police had determined through surveillance of Beltran's phone calls that some of those calls were between Beltran and someone using a phone number that was not in Bourassa's name, but was associated with his girlfriend's Facebook account. Surveillance recordings revealed, however, that the phone number was being used by someone with a male voice. Sgt. Folsom's cross-examination continued as follows:

Q. Okay. So when was the first time that Mr. Bourassa was linked to the actual phone, not just that number, but the actual phone?
A. I believe it was - I have to go back and look at the phone calls, but I believe it's when he called and set up a drug deal and was surveilled, we got pictures of him.
Q. Okay. And so it's your belief and testimony that he was a party to some of the phone calls that were tapped, that were listened to on this tap?
A. Yeah, he was part of the conversations that we received.
Q. Okay. And how was it that you were able to identify his voice as a person on the other end? How did you make that link?
A. Basically, we didn't. I mean, it was just a phone number that he called - a male voice called and set up a drug transaction, he was surveilled to a location. We have photographs of him showing up at the exact same time and we followed him back. You know, all evidence indicated that it was him.

On redirect examination, Sgt. Folsom testified that he had never met or interviewed Bourassa; that he had no reason to know what Bourassa's voice sounded like; that he believed it was Bourassa's voice on the recorded calls "[b]ased on the evidence we developed"; that "it's basically a guesstimate that that's [Bourassa's] voice on the [calls]"; and that Bourassa never admitted that it was his voice.

**332The trial court denied Bourassa's motion to suppress on the basis that Bourassa did not have standing, reasoning that:

The evidence developed during the hearing came solely from the [S]tate. The defendants[3 ] did not offer any evidence. Specifically, the defendants did not offer any evidence that they were parties to any of the conversations intercepted pursuant to any of these orders. The defendants also did not stipulate or concede that they are parties to any of those conversations. As to any intercepted conversation to which the defendants were not parties, they have no standing. ... It is also clear that the defendants bear the burden to establish their standing. They have not offered any evidence of their standing, nor can they rely on the State's position, contention or theory to establish standing.

*192After Bourassa was tried and convicted, he moved for a new trial, raising as error the trial court's failure to suppress the intercepted telecommunications. In its order denying the motion for new trial, the trial court ruled that, because there was no evidence, stipulation, or concession at the hearing that either defendant was a party to any intercepted conversation, the court "remain[ed] satisfied that Bourassa did not show that he had standing to object to the wiretap evidence."

The Court of Appeals affirmed Bourassa's convictions, although it remanded the case for further consideration of certain ineffective assistance of counsel claims. Bourassa v. State , 345 Ga. App. 463, 811 S.E.2d 113 (2018).

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Bourassa v. State of Georgia
306 Ga. 329 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
830 S.E.2d 189, 306 Ga. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bourassa-v-state-ga-2019.