Monteiro v. Howard

334 F. Supp. 411, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10755
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 17, 1971
DocketCiv. A. 4681
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 334 F. Supp. 411 (Monteiro v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monteiro v. Howard, 334 F. Supp. 411, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10755 (D.R.I. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION

DAY, District Judge.

This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The petitioner is now serving a sentence of five (5) years in the Rhode Island Adult Correctional Institutions at Howard, Rhode Island, and is in the custody of the respondent as the warden thereof. Said sentence was imposed upon him by the Superior Court of the State of Rhode Island on June 10, 1968, following his conviction by a jury of the offense of unlawful possession of heroin, a felony under the laws of Rhode Island. Said sentence was stayed pending appeal. Later while said appeal was pending, the Superior Court, on the motion of the state, revoked said bail on December 18, 1970, and the petitioner then began to serve said sentence. On May 28, 1971, the Supreme Court affirmed his conviction. State v. Monteiro, 277 A.2d 739 (R.I. 1971).

In his petition he alleges that he was illegally arrested in violation of the provisions of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and that the decision of the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, affirming his conviction, failed to afford him his rights as guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States.

In a memorandum filed by his counsel in support of the instant petition he asserts that his Constitutional rights were violated by the rulings of the trial justice of the Superior Court during the trial, viz: denying the petitioner’s motion to suppress certain evidence and permitting its introduction during said trial, and denying his request for a continuance of his trial in order to obtain new counsel. Both of these contentions were held by said Supreme Court to be without merit in its affirmance of defendant’s conviction. State v. Monteiro, supra.

The transcript of the defendant’s trial in said Superior Court, which has been made available to me, shows little dispute as to the essential facts. On February 6, 1967, Lieutenant Vincent J. O’Connell of the detective division of the Providence Police Department was at the “Hillsgrove Airport” in the City of Warwick with certain members of his family to bid farewell to his stepson. While he was in the main lobby of the terminal building he saw the girl friend of the petitioner, a known narcotic addict. This aroused the suspicions of Lieutenant O’Connell because on February 5, 1967, he had received a request *413 from the Providence Police Department’s “C-Squad” to lend it some detectives for a surveillance of Monteiro’s home in Providence since it had received reliable information that Monteiro would be returning to Rhode Island within the next few days and would be bringing a large amount of narcotics into this state. As a result of his suspicions Lieutenant O’Connell began a check on the arrival of planes to see if the petitioner would be getting off one of said planes.

A short time later Monteiro alighted from a plane and walked through the gate at said terminal where the lieutenant was standing. Monteiro and the lieutenant exchanged greetings; a brief conversation ensued during which Lieutenant O’Connell told Monteiro he had information that he was carrying narcotics. Monteiro denied he had any narcotics on his person. Both of them then walked together toward the main lobby of said terminal building. As they walked Lieutenant O’Connell told Monteiro that said C-Squad had surrounded the airport and were waiting to arrest him. When they reached the main lobby of said building Lieutenant O’Connell asked Monteiro to wait because he wished to make a telephone call. Monteiro walked with him to the phone booth and as the lieutenant reached in his pocket to get a coin to use the telephone to call the Warwick police, Monteiro ran away from him, out of the main door of said terminal building across the road with Lieutenant O’Connell in pursuit. When Monteiro reached the field on the opposite side of said road, Monteiro slipped or tripped and fell into the snow covering said field and Lieutenant O’Connell fell on top of him.

As they struggled Monteiro attempted to bury a brown pouch in the snow, but when he saw that the lieutenant was observing him he threw it about 20 or 25 feet away. After the lieutenant arose from the ground he advised Monteiro that he was making a citizen’s arrest of him for the unlawful possession of narcotics. As he walked him back to the terminal building he asked a security guard at said building to maintain a surveillance of the area where the pouch had been thrown by Monteiro while he placed Monteiro in a special detention cell in said building. After placing him in said cell the lieutenant then returned to the spot where Monteiro had fallen and retrieved said pouch which the latter had thrown away, opened it and saw that it contained what appeared to be 84 bags of heroin. The Warwick police were then called and upon the arrival of certain of them, Lieutenant O’Connell turned Monteiro over to them. He was then arrested pursuant to a complaint issued by a justice in the then District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Rhode Island.

On May 16, 1968, prior to the commencement of his trial in the Superior Court of the State of Rhode Island, the defendant moved to suppress said pouch and its contents as evidence in his trial on the ground that they had been obtained by the prosecution as the result of an illegal arrest, search and seizure. At the conclusion of the hearing on said motion the trial justice denied said motion on the ground that there was probable cause for said arrest based upon information received from a reliable informant sufficient to warrant Lieutenant O’Connell’s action in detaining the defendant and in making a citizen’s arrest of him.

Promptly after the denial of said motion the defendant personally requested a continuance of his trial in order to retain another lawyer to handle his defense. His attorney also moved to withdraw as his counsel. Both of these requests were denied by said trial justice who characterized them as attempts to delay said trial. After his trial before a jury which resulted in a verdict of guilty and his sentence, the petitioner prosecuted two exceptions to the Supreme Court of Rhode Island. One of these exceptions was to the denial by the trial justice of his motion to suppress *414 said evidence, and the other to the denial of his motion for continuance to permit him to engage new counsel prior to his trial. The Supreme Court affirmed the rulings of said trial justice.

In affirming the denial of said motion to suppress, the Supreme Court held that from the evidence presented during said hearing on said motion it was clear that when Lieutenant O’Connell picked up said leather pouch, it constituted the defendant’s abandoned property and that as such the defendant had no standing to question the validity of the seizure thereof or its subsequent appropriation by the police. Said Supreme Court found it unnecessary to consider the questions of the legal status of Lieutenant O’Connell on the date of said arrest, police and citizen’s arrest power, or unreasonable search and seizure and illegal detention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
334 F. Supp. 411, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monteiro-v-howard-rid-1971.