Ex parte State

121 So. 3d 337, 2013 WL 765747, 2013 Ala. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 1, 2013
Docket1120498
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 121 So. 3d 337 (Ex parte State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte State, 121 So. 3d 337, 2013 WL 765747, 2013 Ala. LEXIS 16 (Ala. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

On January 25, 2013, the State of Alabama, through the Alabama Attorney General, filed with this Court an “Emergency Petition for Writ of Mandamus,” seeking an order directing the presiding judge of the Macon Circuit Court to issue a search warrant as to certain allegedly illegal gambling devices and related items located in a facility commonly known as Quincy’s 777 Casino at VictoryLand (“the casino”) in Shorter. On February 15, 2013, this Court, by order, granted the State’s petition and issued the writ, instructing the judge to issue the warrant. Given the [341]*341inherently ex parte nature of a search warrant, and in order that the purpose of the warrant to be issued not be frustrated, this Court issued the writ under seal, with instructions that the order remain under seal until further order of this Court following the execution of the warrant. The execution of the warrant having been accomplished, this Court has removed the seal from this proceeding and its February 15 order and now addresses the reasons for issuing the writ.

Procedural History

At approximately 7:15 a.m. on January-16, 2013, Howard “Gene” Sisson, who has been a law-enforcement agent for 25 years and who is a special agent with the Office of the Alabama Attorney General, approached Judge Ray D. Martin of the Fifth Judicial Circuit with an application for a search warrant to be executed at the casino. Sisson was accompanied by, among others, Jesse Seroyer, Jr., who is the deputy chief of the Investigative Division in the Office of the Alabama Attorney General. According to affidavits submitted to this Court by Sisson and Seroyer, Judge Martin declined to issue the warrant on the ground that, as of midnight, approximately seven hours earlier, he was no longer the presiding judge for the Fifth Judicial Circuit of Alabama, within which Macon County is located, and that Judge Thomas F. Young, Jr., had, as of that time, assumed the position of presiding judge. According to the affidavits, Judge Martin further stated that he had been assigned responsibility for Chambers County, another county located within the Fifth Judicial Circuit, and therefore no longer had authority to issue a search warrant to be executed in Macon County.1 Judge Martin directed Sisson to Judge Young.

Sisson approached Judge Young with the application for a search warrant later that same day. In support of the application, Sisson presented a 13-page affidavit, to be sworn to and executed by Sisson, as the affiant, and a January 7, 2013, surveillance video of alleged illegal gambling operations at the casino. Sisson’s affidavit states, in pertinent part:

“I have a working understanding of the gambling laws of the State of Alabama and have obtained formal training within the past 18 months on the identification of slot machines and gambling devices. I have also read Macon County’s Bingo amendment. I have witnessed the formal playing of the game commonly known as Bingo in establishments in Montgomery and have worked in an undercover capacity at Center Stage in Cottonwood, Alabama and Southern Star in White Hall, Alabama. As a private citizen, I have played and witnessed the playing of traditional slot machines in Biloxi, Mississippi; Shreveport, Louisiana; and Las Vegas, Nevada. I have participated in four search warrants executed at businesses that [342]*342promoted and facilitated what was advertised as electronic bingo. Furthermore, I have successfully obtained a search warrant for Center Stage, Cottonwood, Alabama and executed the same on July 25, 2012.
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“On December 20, 2012, two days after the Casino announced its opening, an undercover officer entered the premises while equipped with a device to record both audio and video evidence of his visit. For the purpose of this affidavit, this officer will be referred to as Undercover 1 (UC 1)....
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“On December 20, 2012, UC 1 entered the Casino after he was issued U.S. currency from [the Attorney General’s] office. He was required to approach a bank of cashiers after entering where he had to present identification before he could be issued a player’s card. That card identified the Casino and had the UC’s name embossed on it. UC 1 handed the cashier the U.S. currency to have it applied to his account which could be accessed with the player’s card. Furthermore, he was required to create a PIN number that was required to be used after the card was swiped at the various slot machines.
“UC 1 first approached a machine titled ‘Super Fruit.’ On video, it was obvious he swiped his player’s card but could not get the machine to play. After asking for assistance from an employee, he tried again at a machine named ‘Classic Reels.’ He was successful in entering a PIN after swiping his card on that machine.
“The main display on the video screen was predominantly covered by a large, digital representation of ‘reels’ commonly seen on casino slot machines. There were five vertical reels with three positions always visible per reel. When UC 1 pressed the ‘Play’ button, the positions on the reels appeared to rotate vertically at a speed faster than my mind or eye could comprehend for approximately four seconds. In a small section in the top left portion of the screen, there was a small grid consisting of five vertical by five horizontal rows. That grid was the same approximate size as one section of one spinning reel. To the right of that grid were three horizontal lines that rapidly filled with numbered circles in two rows of 15 numbers and one row of four numbers. The total width of the small grid and accompanying rows was approximately as wide as two of the five spinning reels. The height remained constant as the approximate size of one position on the reels.
“On the player’s console were numerous illuminated buttons. Most, from the left to the center, determined the amount a player could wager. There were other buttons for assistance and for a winning conversion chart for the items displayed on the reels. The largest button was a circular ‘Play1 button. Other than occasionally changing the amount of his wager, this was the only button UC 1 had to press to play a game cycle. Upon pressing it, the reels would spin, numbered circles would fill the small horizontal rows at the top and a game cycle would be played. If numbers in those horizontal rows matched any numbers in the small playing grid in the left uppermost portion of the screen, some correlation would be made among the symbols when the reels stopped. Lines traversing in numerous directions would connect various points on the reels with other points to indicate some type of winning pattern. In the event a winning pattern occurred, a representation of increasing amounts of currency [343]*343would be added digitally to the player’s account and the increase could be monitored on the player’s screen. While UC 1 never attempted to present his player’s card to a cashier to obtain the currency that remained in his account, an undercover agent (UC 3) on a later visit did, in fact, receive currency from the cashier after swiping his player’s card and providing his PIN.
“In the event a game cycle was won, a predetermined amount of winnings, based upon the pattern, would be added to the player’s account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 So. 3d 337, 2013 WL 765747, 2013 Ala. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-state-ala-2013.