Com. v. Lissmore, M.

2024 Pa. Super. 41, 313 A.3d 1050
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 7, 2024
Docket485 WDA 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2024 Pa. Super. 41 (Com. v. Lissmore, M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. v. Lissmore, M., 2024 Pa. Super. 41, 313 A.3d 1050 (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-A29004-23

2024 PA Super 41

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : MICHAEL C. LISSMORE : No. 485 WDA 2023

Appeal from the Suppression Order Entered March 22, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of McKean County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-42-CR-0000530-2022

BEFORE: BOWES, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and MURRAY, J.

OPINION BY BOWES, J.: FILED: March 7, 2024

The Commonwealth appeals from the order granting the motion to

suppress filed by Appellee Michael C. Lissmore. We reverse and remand for

further proceedings.

The trial court offered the following summary of the underlying offense:

On October 3, 2021, members of the McKean County Drug Task Force and confidential informant “CI-020-21” (hereafter “CI”) met to conduct a controlled buy of illegal narcotics. A purchase, which the Commonwealth asserts was with [Appellee], occurred either later that day or on October 4, 2021. To facilitate the purchase, the CI, in the presence of taskforce officers, made a telephone call to “Freckles,” who is purportedly [Appellee]. The CI placed her phone on speakerphone so that the officers could hear it and it was recorded by use of a video recording device. The Commonwealth asserts that, in exchange for $260, the CI obtained 5.37 grams of cocaine from [Appellee]. The transfer occurred on Bushnell Street [in] Bradford, Pennsylvania. In the recorded call, the CI and a male identified as Freckles discuss the purchase of cocaine. There is a later recording, obtained by the use of a video and audio recording device that was with the CI, that captures the CI traveling to and meeting with Freckles on J-A29004-23

Bushnell Street. The recording captures audio and video recordings of the meeting. Freckles[’s] voice can be heard.

Trial Court Opinion, 3/22/23, at 1 (some punctuation modified).

Appellee, alleged to be Freckles, was charged with various offenses in

connection with the sale of cocaine to the CI. He filed an omnibus pretrial

motion seeking, inter alia, to suppress the recordings obtained by the CI.1

Specifically, Appellee contended that “the use of a ‘wire’ to audio/video record

an individual within a vehicle requires a demonstration that the District

Attorney’s Office . . . reviewed and determined voluntariness of the consent

required to circumvent the Wiretap Act.” Omnibus Pretrial Motion, 2/13/23,

at 4.

The trial court held a hearing on the motion at which District Attorney

(“DA”) Stephanie Vettenburg-Shaffer and Chief Michael Ward of the Bradford

City Police Department and the McKean County Drug Task Force testified. The

court summarized that testimony as follows:

[DA] Vettenburg-Shaffer testified that she has an established policy for approving confidential informants for narcotic purchases. She meets and/or speaks with them routinely, often on several occasions while they are working with the McKean County Taskforce. There is a form that she utilizes when speaking with them. She utilizes the form to assure that she fully explains to every confidential informant their responsibilities and the terms of their agreement with the Taskforce. She indicated that she met with the CI in this case on ____________________________________________

1 Appellee also raised an issue concerning the use of a body-worn camera, but

acknowledged at the close of the subsequent suppression hearing that no body camera was utilized as he had alleged. See N.T. Suppression Hearing, 3/7/23, at 29.

-2- J-A29004-23

July 21, 2021, which was prior to October 3rd and 4th, 2021.1 She read the sections of her standard form to the CI. The form includes provisions that advise a confidential informant that their participation as a confidential informant is voluntary, and a provision that advises the informant that they are consenting to the recording of their interactions with any potential suspect. ______ 1 The [DA] also testified that she met with the CI again

in November of 2021. However, since this meeting was after the recordings in October, it would be irrelevant to the approval of the District Attorney and the consent of the CI on October 3rd and 4th, 2021.

Chief [Ward] testified . . . that a police body camera was not utilized to capture the phone call between the CI and Freckles on October 3, 2021. He explained that he used a separate recording device that the taskforce has to capture and record that call. An “Axon” video recording device, that was with the CI, was then used to capture audio and video images of the CI’s travel to and meeting with Freckles. There was no testimony presented that Chief Ward, or any other McKean County Taskforce member, specifically advised the [DA] that [they] were going to record the cellphone conversation between the CI and [Appellee], or the oral conversation between [Appellee] and the CI in the vehicle during the asserted exchange of cash for narcotics. [DA] Vettenburg- Shaffer and the CI did not discuss the potential purchases from Freckles.

Chief Ward explained that the device utilized to capture the phone call is turned on by the operator when they want to start recording and then turned off when the user wants to end the recording. He agreed that Freckles would not have known that his voice and image was being captured anytime during the recordings.

The testimony provided at the hearing was vague regarding the information provided to [DA] Vettenburg-Shaffer and her approval of the recordings. . . . Chief Ward [indicated] that the [DA] had approved the intercept, but there was no explanation of what Chief Ward had told the [DA]. The [DA] later, again during her questioning, indicated: “this occurred after the informant gave consent and I approved,” when discussing the plan leading up to the controlled purchase.2 There was no specific testimony about the details of the information, or lack thereof, that Chief

-3- J-A29004-23

Ward had provided before the recordings were made and that the [DA] specifically told him that he had her approval to record the call and the meeting between the CI and Freckles. The [DA] did not indicate, except again the general reference in her questioning, that she was specifically advised of the potential purchase from Freckles, or that she had specifically advised Chief Ward that the recordings on October 3rd or 4th were specifically approved. ______ 2 The quotations herein are from the court’s notes at

the time of the hearing.

Other than Chief Ward testifying that the CI “was consentualized,” there were few specifics presented regarding the discussion between the CI and Chief Ward or any member of the taskforce regarding her consent to record the telephone call and her subsequent meeting with Freckles.

Trial Court Opinion, 3/22/23, at 2-4 (some punctuation modified).

Ultimately, the trial court granted Appellee’s suppression motion upon

finding that the DA’s “blanket approval for any future calls with any future

suspects, given months in advance, d[id] not fulfill the stringent requirements

of the Wiretap Act.” Id. at 8. Specifically, the court noted the dearth of

evidence “that she was provided ‘the facts’ surrounding the potential call and

anticipated later purchase” such that they properly informed the DA’s approval

of the intercept in question. Id.

The Commonwealth filed a timely notice of appeal and certified therein

that the trial court’s ruling substantially handicapped the prosecution. See

Pa.R.A.P. 311 (d) (“[T]he Commonwealth may take an appeal as of right from

an order that does not end the entire case where the Commonwealth certifies

in the notice of appeal that the order will terminate or substantially handicap

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Related

Com. v. Davis, W.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2025
Com. v. Lissmore, M.
2024 Pa. Super. 41 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 Pa. Super. 41, 313 A.3d 1050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-lissmore-m-pasuperct-2024.