Matter of Nevin W.
This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 51313(U) (Matter of Nevin W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court, Queens County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Matter of Nevin W. |
| 2004 NY Slip Op 51313(U) |
| Decided on November 4, 2004 |
| Family Court, Queens County |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports. |
In the Matter of NEVIN W., a Person Alleged to be a Juvenile Delinquent, Respondent.
|
D-15646/04
John M. Hunt, J.
By petition filed on September 17, 2004 respondent, Nevin W., is alleged to have
committed an act which, were he an adult, would constitute the crime of Criminal Possession
of a Weapon in the Fourth Degree. Respondent is also alleged to be a juvenile delinquent by
reason of his alleged violation of Penal Law §265.05 which prohibits the possession of weapons
by persons under sixteen years of age.
Claiming to be aggrieved by an unlawful search of his person, respondent has moved to
suppress the introduction of tangible property recovered by police officers on the date of his
arrest.
With respect to tangible evidence, the Presentment Agency has the initial burden of going
forward to show the legality of the police conduct, while respondent bears the ultimate burden of
proving that the evidence should be suppressed (People v. DeStefano, 38 NY2d 640, 652; People
v. Pettinato, 69 NY2d 653, 654).
In order to determine whether evidence should be suppressed this Court conducted a
hearing on October 13, 2004 at which the sole witness was New York City Police Sergeant
Vincent Collins. Based upon the credible testimony of Sergeant Collins, this Court makes the
following findings of fact and conclusions of law.
Sergeant Vincent Collins has been a police officer for 9½ years and he is presently
assigned to the 103rd Precinct in Queens County where he is responsible for supervising school
safety officers assigned to New York City public schools located within the precinct. At
approximately 12:25 P.M. on May 21, 2004 Collins received a radio run which reported that
a student had been observed with a gun inside of "Intermediate School ("I.S.") 8" which is
located at 108-35 167th Street in Jamaica, Queens County.[FN1] Collins and Police Officer Rodriguez
who is the "Youth Officer" at the 103rd Precinct proceeded to JHS 8. When Sergeant Collins
arrived at JHS 8 he spoke to school safety officers assigned to the school and "possibly the
principal" of the school. Collins was informed that the school safety officers "had Tyquan [F.]"
in custody "and he was a student that [they] said he pointed a gun at the classroom, but they did
not have the firearm". Sergeant Collins testified that when he arrived at JHS 8 "the school was
in some kind of lock down" because he did not observe students to be moving about the hallways
which added to the sense of urgency concerning the presence of a gun in the school.
During his conversations with the school safety officers, Collins learned that an
individual "had pointed a- - what they believed to be a gun into a classroom", and that "a teacher
had observed this". Collins stated that "someone described that the alleged firearm has a [slide
[*2]
lock] to the rear" of the gun which indicated that the weapon was a semi-automatic pistol. While
Collins was at the school he was approached by a teacher who was with an individual who
Collins subsequently learned was the respondent, Nevin W. According to Collins, respondent
told him that "some girls took the gun". Collins testified that he was "suspicious" because
respondent had approached him with this information and because the information was not
consistent with other information he had acquired during his investigation at the school. Collins
then asked respondent "to look in his bag on his back and as I asked him, I tapped his bag
[which] was on his back." When Collins "tapped" respondent's knapsack he "felt what I
believed was a firearm [and it] felt like the gun that I have on me, a nine millimeter." Sergeant
Collins then proceeded to open and search respondent's knapsack and recovered what appeared
to be a handgun but, upon inspection, proved to be an air pistol that resembled a semi-automatic
pistol. Respondent was then arrested for the offenses charged in the petition.
II
In deciding whether the police acted properly in this case, the "inquiry into the propriety
of police conduct must weigh the degree of intrusion it entails against the precipitating and
attending circumstances" (People v. Salaman, 71 NY2d 869, 870; see, People v. DeBour, 40
NY2d 210, 223). "The touchstone of any analysis of a governmental invasion of a citizen's
person under the Fourth Amendment and the constitutional analogue of New York is
reasonableness" (People v. Batista, 88 NY2d 650, 653; see, People v. Herold, 282 AD2d 1, 4,
lv. denied 97 NY2d 682).
[*3]
The events in this case indisputably involved an emergency situation inside of a public
school and Sergeant Collins and Officer Rodriguez were responding to a report of a gun in a
crowded public school. After Sergeant Collins arrived at JHS 8 his investigation revealed that a
teacher observed someone point a gun into or towards a classroom which led credibility to his
belief that an emergency existed. Additionally, upon arriving at the school, Collins observed
that the school was in a "lock down" and no students were in the hallways. While school safety
officers had taken a student, Tyquan F., into custody, they had not recovered any gun from any
student. While Collins was in the school conducting his investigation, the respondent approached
him on his own initiative without any prompting by the officers and in the company of an
unnamed teacher. Respondent volunteered that "some girls took the gun" which was contrary to
information then known to Collins. According to Collins, he believed that the information
conveyed by the respondent was inconsistent with other information he had obtained, including
that a teacher had observed a student with a gun, that the school safety officers had taken a male
student into custody, and no one had told him anything about female students with a gun in the
school. Based upon the information then known to the Sergeant, he had a reasonable basis to
conclude that the respondent had not told him everything that he knew about the gun or its
whereabouts. Collins than asked respondent whether he could look inside of his knapsack and as
he did so he simultaneously "tapped the bag" and felt the outline of what he believed was a
firearm.
The issue here is whether Sergeant Collins acted reasonably when he 'tapped" the outside
of respondent's knapsack. In the case of Matter of Gregory M.
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