People v. Barnville

7 Misc. 3d 688
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 2005
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Misc. 3d 688 (People v. Barnville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Barnville, 7 Misc. 3d 688 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

[689]*689OPINION OF THE COURT

Phylis Skloot Bamberger, J.

The defendant is charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree, criminal sale of a controlled substance on or near school grounds, and criminal possession of a controlled substance in the third degree. Another judge granted a Mapp hearing. On October 29, 2004 and November 1, 2004, the Mapp hearing was held before this court. Detectives Patrick Donnellan and Robert Rodriguez testified for the People.

For the reasons that follow, the motion to suppress the bag of drugs that was recovered from the defendant’s feces at a hospital is granted because it was the fruit of an illegal visual body cavity search.

The Testimony

On April 19, 2001, at approximately 9:30 p.m., Detectives Donnellan and Rodriguez were in the vicinity of 1220 College Avenue and were working as part of an 8- to 10-member narcotics enforcement field team. Donnellan, an 18-year police veteran, testified that he was the “observation officer” and was posted inside of a building approximately 60 feet away from the corner of 1220 College Avenue and was using binoculars to observe people who were standing in the area of that building. Donnellan testified that he had been to the building at least 100 times and had made about 90 narcotics arrests there.

According to Donnellan, at approximately 9:30 p.m. he was stationed at his observation post and, using his binoculars, observed a black man standing in the vicinity of 1220 College Avenue. The man, who was later identified as the defendant, “was dressed in a multi-colored Averex jacket, a gray baseball cap with the red letter C on the front of it, and blue jeans.” Donnellan further testified that he had been watching the defendant for about 20 minutes and the defendant spoke to people from the neighborhood. Donnellan testified that the defendant did nothing more than talk to the people and he had not previously seen the defendant sell drugs.

A black woman dressed in black and later identified as June Milling approached the defendant. They “had a small conversation” and Milling then handed the defendant United States currency.

Donnellan testified that he then saw the defendant step “towards the doorway of 1220 College, look to his left and to his [690]*690right, and then reach down behind him.” The defendant was facing out toward the street in Donnellan’s direction. Donnellan explained that the defendant “placetd] his hand into the rear” for 10 or 15 seconds, but Donnellan did not “know at this time if it was his pants or his belt area or inside.” The defendant walked up to Milling, and then handed her a “small object.” Donnellan was unable to see exactly what it was that the defendant handed to Milling. Although Donnellan could not see and did not know what the defendant was doing, as his hands were behind his back, Donnellan testified, “I know he was reaching but I — there was not a doubt in my mind what he was doing.”

Donnellan testified that when he saw the defendant and Milling from his observation post, the streetlights were on and the area was “pretty well lit,” his view of the area was not obstructed, and it was “a clear night, no rain.” Donnellan further stated that there were very few people in the area at the time he made his observations.

Donnellan testified that, after the defendant handed Milling the small object, Milling walked north on College Avenue. Over the radio, Donnellan gave a description of Milling to the field team. Detective Rodriguez testified that he heard Donnellan’s description of a “female black wearing all black” who was in the vicinity of 169th Street.

Rodriguez testified that at 9:35 p.m., about one or two minutes after receiving the radio transmission, he saw a black female dressed all in black (Milling) at 169th Street and College Avenue, two or three blocks from 1220 College Avenue. When Rodriguez approached Milling, she threw to the ground a ziplock bag that contained crack-cocaine. Rodriguez recovered the drugs and held Milling at the location until the arresting officer arrived.

Rodriguez testified that a few minutes later he received another radio transmission from Donnellan, this time describing a male black wearing a multi-colored jacket and a baseball cap who was in the area of 167th Street and Morris Avenue, about two blocks from 1220 College Avenue.1 Donnellan sent various messages over the radio to other officers. The testimony was unclear about the sequence of these messages but Rodriguez [691]*691testified Donnellan told him that the defendant may have hidden contraband on his person, that “in the observation of the sale he saw him going into the back area of his — either his pants or his underwear”; that the defendant “had gone in that area [the rear] when he sold the drugs to the observation buyer”; and that “he most likely has it in his back area, cause that’s where it came' from, either back pocket. To check the back pockets, check inside of his underwear.”

About a minute later, at about 9:40 p.m., Rodriguez and Detective Delgado arrived at the location and saw a male black who was wearing “a multicolored Averex jacket and baseball cap containing a letter on it, I think it was [a] red letter.” There were no other individuals in the area who matched the description that had been given by Donnellan. Donnellan testified that the officers who stopped the defendant described what the defendant was wearing. Rodriguez held the defendant at that location until the arresting officer arrived.

While he waited, Rodriguez handcuffed the defendant and searched “his outer garments, his pockets, put everything, all his property in an envelope.” As a result of this search, United States currency was recovered from the defendant’s “pants pocket.” The defendant was handcuffed and transported to the precinct in a prisoner van.

Donnellan testified that prisoners are always searched on the street for weapons and drugs but that the police “won’t go down to a strip search until you get inside the precinct” and that “anybody arrested for narcotics is strip searched back at the precinct.” The strip search, according to Donnellan, is “standard procedure.” He further testified that if it’s a drug offense, a prisoner is always made to “squat.”

Rodriguez testified that when the defendant arrived at the precinct he was taken by the desk officer to the wall near the precinct’s first floor entrance. Donnellan arrived at the precinct at about 9:50 p.m. and saw the defendant for the first time after the transaction. He identified the defendant as “the guy that did the sale in front of 1220 College to June Milling.” Donnellan also testified that he identified Milling as the girl who came up to the defendant and gave him a sum of currency for a small object.

Donnellan testified that when he got to the precinct he learned no narcotics were found on the defendant. He told his team that the defendant had something on him. “I said, check in the rear, check his pants’ pockets or the belt area; if not, he [692]*692has it boosted, but I know he has something on him.” He defined “boost” as “slang for drug dealers that take the drugs, like, say, crack, in a plastic bag and put it up in their rear area.”

According to Rodriguez, after approximately five minutes at the precinct the defendant was taken to the back of the cell area for the strip search.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Misc. 3d 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-barnville-nysupct-2005.