Commonwealth v. Garner

672 N.E.2d 510, 423 Mass. 735, 1996 Mass. LEXIS 305
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 672 N.E.2d 510 (Commonwealth v. Garner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Garner, 672 N.E.2d 510, 423 Mass. 735, 1996 Mass. LEXIS 305 (Mass. 1996).

Opinion

Fried, J.

A Superior Court judge granted the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence seized pursuant to the execution of a no-knock warrant on the ground that the use of a “flash-bang” diversionary device in the course of the warrant’s execution was unreasonable in the circumstances. A single justice of this court allowed the Commonwealth’s application for an interlocutory appeal, and we now vacate the order allowing the defendant’s motion to suppress.

I

The warrant in this case was issued to the New Bedford [736]*736police in the course of their investigation of an armed robbery and rape that had occurred two days earlier. Two masked men — one armed with a handgun, the other with a sawed-off shotgun — had entered an all night convenience store at 3 a.m. One of the men forced a clerk into a back room and raped her. He then took a wedding ring, a class ring, and several other rings from her. The other robber forced a customer, who had entered the store during the robbery, to he on the floor and took his wallet. The robbers took cash, merchandise, and lottery tickets from the store. Later that day, clerks from several stores in the area alerted the police that a woman was seeking to cash lottery tickets which were flagged as possibly stolen. As a result of their investigation, the police identified this woman as Sharon Hubbard and obtained a warrant to search her home for the stolen lottery tickets. In the course of that search, Hubbard was arrested. Hubbard told the police that, approximately one hour after the robbery, her boy friend Derek Gamer and his nephew Markeith Gamer had visited her apartment. One was armed with a handgun, the other with a sawed-off shotgun. They had in their possession a large amount of change, paper currency, several hundred lottery tickets, and two rings whose description corresponded to those taken from the clerk who had been raped. Hubbard also told the police that the two men had given her an account of the robbery. Although they did not mention the rape, they did say that they had forced a clerk to strip because she would not give them the key to the videotape machine. Using this information, the police obtained a no-knock warrant to search Derek Garner’s apartment at 1261 Church Street in New Bedford.

According to the judge’s summary, which he denominated “Background,” Lieutenant Eugene Hebert, the police witness at the suppression hearing, testified regarding the department’s preparations for the execution of the warrant, their actual deployment at the time of its execution, what was done once the warrant was executed, and the purpose and characteristics of the “flash-bang” device or stun grenade which is at the center of the controversy in this case. Lieutenant Hebert testified that he was in charge of coordinating the execution of the warrant. From the information available to him he had concluded that the inhabitants of 1261 Church Street might be armed with a handgun and a sawed-off shotgun. He had a [737]*737sense of the layout of the apartment and was aware that, in addition to Garner and another male, a pregnant woman might be present with her two small children. Before the police entered, Hebert stationed sniper teams outside the apartment. Hebert’s plan was to have Officer LaVoie break a window of one of the rear bedrooms, which were believed to belong to the adults, look inside and drop the diversionary device. This device — variously referred to as a flash-bang device, a stun grenade and a diversionary device — is intended to make a loud noise and produce a large quantity of smoke when discharged. It is not designed to cause fire, but rather to surprise and distract.1 Because the device does cause an explosion and flash Hebert acknowledged that it is inherently dangerous and carries a warning label that “misuse can cause physical injury or death.” The judge noted Hebert’s testimony that he had assigned an officer to protect the woman and children and remove them from the apartment when the team moved in.

According to the judge’s findings, the New Bedford police require special training in the use of this diversionary device and the department had a policy relating to its use that required the deploying officer to break a window and look into the room before detonating the device, just as LaVoie had been instructed to do in this instance.2 The judge found that LaVoie broke a window in a back bedroom and dropped the device inside without looking inside. A four year old child was in the bedroom when the device went off with a bright flash and “filled the apartment with smoke.” Immediately police officers in black military outfits rushed into the apartment. In the ensuing excitement the pregnant woman was struck in the face and abdomen by a door. The police swept through the apartment and secured it within three to four minutes. No one offered any resistance. The woman complained of feeling ill and was taken to a hospital. The child was screaming and gagging from the smoke in the apartment, and was treated a few days later “for a health complaint as[738]*738seriated with smoke inhalation, and continues to suffer from nervousness, crying and nightmares.” As a result of their search the police seized a sawed-off shotgun, ammunition, credit cards, and jewelry that might have been taken in the robbery, and clothing that the robbers might have worn.

The judge ordered that all the evidence seized in the execution of the warrant be suppressed. The judge first ruled that Markeith Gamer lacked standing to challenge the constitutionality of the search because he had asserted no interest in the apartment and, in the circumstances of this case, could not be the beneficiary of our rule of automatic standing. See Commonwealth v. Amendola, 406 Mass. 592 (1990).3 The judge went on to rule that the warrant was supported by probable cause as

“the police were warranted in having a reasonable belief that weapons might be present on the premises and that a no-knock warrant was needed for their safety when entering Derek Gamer’s apartment. ... In addition, there were no changed circumstances as to the presence of weapons at the premises which would have required the police officers at the scene to dispense with the-no-knock authorization and instead announce their presence.”

The basis for the judge’s suppression of the evidence was thus not the validity of the no-knock warrant but the manner in which it was executed.

The judge acknowledged that the method used in executing a search warrant is generally left to the discretion of the officers executing it, but went on to note that the method of execution is also subject to the general strictures against unreasonable searches and seizures found in the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. See Dalia v. United States, 441 U.S. 238, 257 (1979). The judge determined that the police had used excessive force in executing the warrant and therefore ruled that the search and seizure were unreasonable [739]*739and the evidence seized must be suppressed. Stating that the prevailing test for reasonableness was an objective test examining the circumstances as they were known to the police officers at the time of the warrant’s execution, the judge asked whether the use of the “pyrotechnic diversionary device was necessary and thus reasonable conduct, to effect a safe entry into the dwelling” (emphasis supplied).

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Bluebook (online)
672 N.E.2d 510, 423 Mass. 735, 1996 Mass. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-garner-mass-1996.