Commonwealth v. Bova

7 Mass. L. Rptr. 456
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1997
DocketNo. 9677CR019596
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Mass. L. Rptr. 456 (Commonwealth v. Bova) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Bova, 7 Mass. L. Rptr. 456 (Mass. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Welch, J.

After conducting a hearing on the defendant’s motion to suppress, this Court makes the following findings of fact.

John Kane, a resident of Saugus, Massachusetts, returned home around midnight on August 4, 1995. John Kane had recently obtained a job with the Middlesex County Sheriffs Department. Previously, he had been employed as a handyman and was known within the Saugus community for his work as a handyman.

John Kane owned a “programmable Bearcat scan: ner. ’’ As was his habit, upon returning home, Mr. Kane turned on the scanner. Mr. Kane’s scanner had the ability to be set at particular frequencies. This particular scanner permitted the user to select frequencies for particular police departments, or portable and cellular phones, taxi cab dispatches, and other transmissions. Mr. Kane had previously programmed his scanner so that it would pick up the frequencies of portable and cellular phone conversations in the area. Mr. Kane did this by obtaining the frequency ranges from a commercially available book. Mr. Kane preset his scanner to listen in on portable and cellular phone conversations as a voyeuristic hobby and from his scanner he obtained enjoyment from listening to these calls being broadcast from his scanner.

In addition to setting his scanner for cellular and mobile phone frequencies he also set the scanner to pick up various police department transmissions including Boston, Lynn, Melrose, Saugus and other communities.

Lying in bed at what was now 12:55 a.m. on August 4, 1995, Mr. John Kane was listening to the scanner and heard a call being picked up by the scanner. Because the call was being made relatively nearby, the scanner “froze" on this call and continued to transmit it (instead of scanning on to some other conversation). The substance of the call pricked Mr. Kane’s interest because the substance indicated that a man and a woman were talking about running and hiding something and that someone had been hit once on the back and on the arm. Mr. Kane suspected that this conversation might relate to some sort of criminal activity. After listening to the call for about five or ten minutes he called the Saugus police department and spoke to a Sergeant David Putnam, the officer in charge of the late shift.

Sergeant Putnam knew John Kane because he, or his family, had hired John Kane as a handyman. At the time, Sergeant Putnam might also have known that John Kane was also employed by the Middlesex County Sheriffs Department. In any event, Sergeant Putnam received this call as he would a call from any other civilian. There is little doubt that Mr. Kane turned on the scanner, listened to the phone call, and made the call to the Saugus Police Department solely in his capacity as a private citizen. The fact that he was employed by the Middlesex County Sheriffs office is of no relevance.

Mr. Kane asked Sergeant Putnam if any type of activity was going on in Mr. Kane’s neighborhood and explained to Sergeant Putnam that he had overheard a suspicious phone call on his scanner. Sergeant Putnam responded that there had been a stabbing a [457]*457short distance from Mr. Kane’s home. Mr. Kane briefly told Sergeant Putnam about the call he had overheard and stated information along the lines that a man by the name of Anthony and a woman by the name of Carmen were talking to each other about a possible stabbing and the hiding of clothes and the use of a beeper. Sergeant Putnam responded by telling Mr. Kane to keep a log of the phone conversation and to call him if anything else happened. Sergeant Putnam also told Mr. Kane that another Saugus police officer by the name of Coburn would drop by sometime on the next day to pick up any log kept by Mr. Kane.

Although he certainly never discouraged Kane from doing so, Sergeant Putnam never instructed or ordered Mr. Kane to continue listening for further telephone conversations. Sergeant never instructed Mr. Kane to record any overheard telephone conversation. In addition, Mr. Kane never informed Sergeant Putnam that he was considering recording the conversation.

This was the extent of the conversation between Mr. Kane and Sergeant Putnam because it was a veiy busy evening for Sergeant Putnam. He was the officer in charge of the late night shift and there was a variety of business to attend to.

Around 1:15 a.m. on August 5, 1995, Mr. Kane, after having spoken to Sergeant Putnam, began writing a very brief summary of what he had previously overheard. Kane then proceeded to note, in a veiy summary log format, a series of telephone conversations that he was picking up on the scanner. The vast majority of these conversations appeared to be conversations between the same two people. It is conceded that these conversations which were overheard were conversations that took place on a portable telephone.

Mr. Kane shortly thereafter decided, at approximately 1:30 that morning, to record the conversations by means of utilizing the recording device on his answering machine. How Mr. Kane utilized the answering machine to record the conversations is unclear, but not of particular consequence to this motion. In any event, a recording of the portable phone conversations that Mr. Kane was overhearing from the scanner was made. Mr. Kane intercepted the radio portion of the cordless phone conversations which were being transmitted between the cordless telephone handset and the base unit. These conversations lasted from approximately 1:30 a.m. until approximately 1:50 a.m. The decision to record the overheard conversations was entirely that of Mr. Kane. At all times, Mr. Kane was acting as an ordinary civilian. As he was taping the phone calls, Kane was at no time acting in his capacity as an employee of the Middlesex County Sheriffs Department, nor as an agent of the Saugus Police. The next morning or afternoon, Saugus police officer Coburn got in touch with Mr. Kane and dropped by his home. At that time, Mr. Kane gave him a copy of the one-page log that he had kept in relation to the conversations. This log is very brief. In addition, Mr. Kane gave the tape that he had made of the overheard conversations. The defendant moves to suppress both the log and the tape recording.

LEGAL DISCUSSION

The defendant bases his motion to suppress on both constitutional and statutory grounds. To be more precise, the defendant argues that suppression is required to remedy violations of the federal and state constitutions and federal and state statutes which prohibit illegal wire tapping or electronic surveillance.

A. The Constitutions

In order for there to be a violation of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution or Article XIV of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, there must be state action involved in the alleged unconstitutional seizure. When Mr. Kane recorded the conversations and when he wrote his summary of the conversations he had previously overheard (prior to contacting the Saugus Police Department), he was not acting under any state imposed direction or command. It is quite clear that Mr. Kane made the decision entirely on his own, and entirely as a private citizen, to write down what he had previously heard in the earlier telephone conversation (this portion of his recitation of the earlier conversation is contained in the top half of the one page marked as Exhibit 1). Likewise, it was entirely Mr. Kane’s decision to record the telephone conversations. Even though the Commonwealth was later the beneficiary of this privately initiated action, none of these activities constitute state action.

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Gelbard v. United States
408 U.S. 41 (Supreme Court, 1972)
United States v. George H. Vest
813 F.2d 477 (First Circuit, 1987)
United States v. Harold D. Murdock
63 F.3d 1391 (Sixth Circuit, 1995)
District Attorney for the Plymouth District v. Coffey
434 N.E.2d 1276 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1982)
Commonwealth v. Brzezinski
540 N.E.2d 1325 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1989)
Commonwealth v. Santoro
548 N.E.2d 862 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mass. L. Rptr. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bova-masssuperct-1997.