Commonwealth v. Simpson

30 Va. Cir. 317, 1993 Va. Cir. LEXIS 13
CourtCulpeper County Circuit Court
DecidedApril 1, 1993
DocketCase Nos. CR92-323, CR92-324, and CR92-325; Case Nos. CR92-318, CR92-319, and CR92-320
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Va. Cir. 317 (Commonwealth v. Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Culpeper County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Simpson, 30 Va. Cir. 317, 1993 Va. Cir. LEXIS 13 (Va. Super. Ct. 1993).

Opinion

BY JUDGE LLOYD C. SULLENBERGER

The court’s ruling on Joshua Butler’s and James Simpson’s motions to suppress, heard March 30 and 31, 1993, follows in summary form because of the closeness of trial.

Butler and Simpson are co-defendants each charged on June 3,1992, with possessing with intent to distribute psilocybin and marijuana and with conspiring with the other to possess with intent to distribute psilocybin and marijuana.

Each claims actions of the Commonwealth’s agents violate his Fourth Amendment rights. Simpson also asserted a Fifth Amendment claim concerning, interrogation on June 3, 1992, which he did not argue orally. In any event, his motion to suppress his statements on that ground is denied.

The evidence shows, among other things, that on Saturday, May 23, 1992, Postmistress Robson of Jeffersonton received from California a [318]*318“priority mail” package addressed to James Butler, HCR 01, Box 29, Jeffersonton, which address was that of James Simpson.

Suspicious because of prior mailing to that address, she called Culpeper Sheriff's Investigator Holt, who came that morning to the post office with a drug detection dog and handler from Orange County. The dog, Argus, sniffed five packages, alerting to the package in question. Argus was trained to detect marijuana, hashish, cocaine (including “crack”), heroin, and methamphetamine, but not psilocybin. The package was not opened.

Postmistress Robson then called a postal inspector in Richmond who directed her to mail the package to Postal Inspector Green in Richmond, which she did on May 23.

Green received the package on Tuesday, May 26, 1992, May 25 having been a legal holiday. On that day, Green had the package, among others, presented to a drug detection dog from Henrico County handled by Officer Shaw. The dog, Ben, likewise alerted to the package. Ben was trained to alert to marijuana, hashish, cocaine, heroin, and other drugs similarly manufactured, according to Shaw.

Green then sought and obtained on May 26 a federal search warrant to open the package, which he did. Contained in the package were several plastic bags of dried mushrooms.

After talking with Holt, he and Green decided to attempt a controlled delivery on the package. Green put back in the package 100 grams of mushrooms and put a beeper which emitted a slow beep until the wires attached to it were disturbed by opening the package. The beeper then emitted a rapid beep.

On May 27,1992, Postmistress Robson, at Green’s direction, caused a package notice to James Butler to be delivered to the HCR 01, Box 29, address.

On May 28, 1992, Green, Holt, and other officers staked out the post office, hoping that someone would pick up the package in response to the notice, but no one did so. Green took the package back to Richmond.

On the following day, defendant, Joshua Butler, attempted to pick up the package in response to the notice but was told that the package was not at the post office. Robson told Butler she would try to retrieve it. Butler was not known to Robson, but he showed her identification. She did not recall the first name thereon. Butler left a telephone number at Robson’s request for her to use to call him when she had the package.

[319]*319Green and Holt arranged to set up a delivery on June 3, so Robson was directed to call on June 2 the telephone number given her by Butler. She did so, advising a female who answered that the package could be picked up on June 3.

On June 3, Green, Holt, and other officers staked out the post office. Defendant James Simpson came for the package and was given it by Robson. He took it to work with him, then later home where the beeper began emitting the rapid tone.

The officers went to the house with Holt and Green going to the open front door. Holt saw Simpson with the package in one hand and a kitchen knife in the other. At Holt’s direction, Simpson dropped both.

Holt, Green, Simpson, and a female in the house, Snoke, went into the yard where Simpson was advised of his so-called Miranda rights, waived them, and made certain oral statements.

The Commonwealth argues that because the package was addressed to James Butler, at the Simpson’s address, neither defendant has standing to object to the diversion and opening of the package or the placing of die beeper therein because neither had a legitimate expectation of privacy in the contents of the package, since neither was the named addressee.

The evidence shows that the postmistress would have delivered the package, had she had it at the time, to defendant Butler upon his inquiry following the notice, and the evidence shows that she did deliver the package to James Simpson, who was the principal postal patron at HCR 01, Box 29, Jeffersonton. Since sealed packages subject to letter postage are free from postal inspection except in a manner permitted by the Fourth Amendment, see United States v. Van Leeuwen, 397 U.S. 249, 90 S. Ct. 1029, 1031 (1970), each defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy and, therefore, standing to object to the diversion and opening of the package.

Defendants assert that retention by the postmistress of the package on Saturday, May 23, and sending of the package to Richmond by her at the direction of the postal inspectors for handling by the Postal Inspector violates the Fourth Amendment.

The court does not so find. The postmistress caused the package to be examined by the police officer and the drug dog on the day of receipt at her post office. Upon the dog Argus’ alerting, she called and was directed by the postal inspectors to send the package to their office in Richmond. It was received by Green on the next working day, [320]*320Tuesday, and he promptly obtained a search warrant to open the package, which he did. This diversion does not violate any constitutional right of defendants.

The next issue is whether the search warrant was defective because the affidavit in support thereof was insufficient, in that Shaw’s findings concerning the drug dog Ben which Green used in his affidavit and which the magistrate relied upon, were not true. Shaw’s findings attached to the application for the May 26 search warrant recite that when Ben alerts, he has detected the presence or the odor of heroin, cocaine, marijuana or hashish; that every time Ben has alerted, heroin, cocaine, marijuana or hashish has been found where so indicated; that Ben has never made a false alert.

However, Shaw testified that the dog would alert to the odor of these substances; that at various times, none of these substances were present, but on some of those occasions, the possessor of the place or package sniffed by the dog admitted one of these substances had been there previously. The court must infer that on some other occasions, Shaw simply himself concluded that one of the substances had been there when Ben alerted but nothing was found.

As the defendants argue, the drug dog’s ability may be too good, since in this case no marijuana, hashish, cocaine or heroin was found in this package. Shaw opined that the package had been exposed to one of the substances giving it an odor to which the dog alerted.

Thus the findings of Shaw, relied on by affiant Green and therefore by the magistrate, were not correct.

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Related

United States v. Van Leeuwen
397 U.S. 249 (Supreme Court, 1970)
United States v. Leon
468 U.S. 897 (Supreme Court, 1984)
McCary v. Commonwealth
321 S.E.2d 637 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
30 Va. Cir. 317, 1993 Va. Cir. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-simpson-vaccculpeper-1993.