People v. Brown

80 Misc. 2d 777, 364 N.Y.S.2d 364, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2261
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 Misc. 2d 777 (People v. Brown) 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. Brown, 80 Misc. 2d 777, 364 N.Y.S.2d 364, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2261 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

Burton B. Roberts, J.

On August 30,1971, the Acting District Attorney of New York County obtained court authorization to wiretap and ‘ ‘ bug ’ ’ the apartment residence of Anthony Salerno and Joseph Moretti at 32 Gramercy Park South, Manhattan. This warrant was the first in a continuous series of eavesdropping orders for a succession of locations frequented by Salerno, Moretti and others allegedly associated with them. Conversations overheard after six months at the apartment were used to obtain warrants for eavesdropping which continued for the next six months at the Dunhill Barber Shop, which, in turn, led to the following two and one half months of interceptions in a back room of the barber shop which had been converted into an office of the so-called Merit Commercial Corporation.

Communications of the defendants intercepted as a result of this electronic surveillance resulted in the instant indictment [779]*779charging them with a conspiracy to commit usury.1 The defendants now move to suppress any evidence against them derived from illegal eavesdropping. While also raising defects of a more technical nature in several of the warrants, they make their main attack upon the sufficiency of the probable cause for the progenitor of the series, the order of August 30.

The District Attorney, of course, contends that this and each of the warrants in the series were adequately founded. In the alternative, the prosecution maintains that the defendant Brown lacks “ standing ” to object to the August 30 order inasmuch as his communications were not intercepted until eavesdropping had shifted to the barber shop. The barber shop warrants, it is claimed, were based upon probable cause acquired from the communications of coconspirators to which, the People theorize, the defendant Brown cannot object in view of Alderman v. United States (394 U. S. 165). (A similar argument with respect to the defendant Stein, who was first overheard at the apartment five months after the eavesdropping was begun there, is conceivable but not advanced. The defendant Bailante was first overheard pursuant to the August 30 warrant. His standing to object to it is beyond dispute. (See Alderman v. United States, supra.) The defendant Brown maintains that since his voice was overheard he has all the (Standing that is required and may challenge the warrants under which. he was intercepted by attacking the series to its source, the August 30 warrant.

Since I find, for reasons indicated below, that the initial order did indeed lack probable cause, the case of the defendant Brown then raises the novel issue of whether the standing doctrine applies in the context presented to prevent him from attacking its deficiency. (It is not necessary to reach the unraised similar issue in the defendant Stein’s case since, as will shortly be demonstrated, the renewed warrants for the apartment pursuant to which he was overheard were, like the original, not based upon any manner of probable cause.)

A review of the factual basis for the various warrants, commencing with that of August 30, is set forth below.

The initial application for eavesdropping at the apartment was based upon affidavits by a detective and a then Assistant District Attorney who supervised the investigation. The latter con-[780]*780eluded, based upon the two months of police observations recited by the former, that eavesdropping at the apartment on Salerno, Moretti and ‘ ‘ their confederates ’ ’ would reveal ‘ ‘ essential evidence ” of “ organized criminal activities involving bookmaking [and] policy ’ ’. Underlying this conclusion, however, is an appallingly weak evidentiary showing, embellished by an assortment of unsupported, subjective characterizations and interpretations which merely create illusions of probable cause that the unadorned facts cannot justify.

What is purportedly the most significant evidence in support of the application are several observations of Salerno and Moretti on the street near the Dunhill Barber .Shop during daylight hours conversing with various other individuals and, in a few instances, receiving a piece of paper from them. From an objective (standpoint, these are activities which would, in all probability, have failed to sustain the minimal constitutional intrusion posed by a police officer’s temporary detention of the actors for inquiry (CPL 140.50; see Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S. 1), not to mention an outright invasion by electronic surveillance of their residence. Objectivity, needless to say, is dealt some staggering blows en route to the conclusion that these observations establish probable cause to believe that Salerno and Moretti were conducting “ an organized gambling enterprise ” outside the Dunhill. The application relates, for example, that Moretti is “ known to the police ” as a “front” for Salerno’s illegal activities; that the barber shop is known (based upon some unspecified “past police investigations”) to be “a meeting place for men engaged in organized criminal activities ”; and that several men observed standing with Salerno are ranked as “national figures ” in organized crime gambling operations. The coup de grace, however, is that the pieces of paper are simply decreed, sight unseen, to have contained “ shorthand notations * * * used by gamblers to note betting and layoff transactions.”

The alleged nexus of any criminal activity to the apartment was more fanciful still. Several reported observations concerned the occasional delivery to the residence by Salerno and others of bags and packages, the contents of which were peither seen nor otherwise apparent. Nondescript, such items could, conceivably, have concealed anything from fruitcakes to kilos of heroin. They had no probable cause value. (People v. Corrado, 22 N Y 2d 308.) Nevertheless, they are declared, through the alchemy of “ police experience ”, to be “ the method used by organized crime gamblers to control their operations [781]*781and obtain a routine accounting from their subordinates.” “ Conversations in the Salerno apartment,” it is therefore concluded, “ will clearly reveal evidence of gambling slips and discuss the day to day operation of their unlawful activities.”

The Fourth Amendment, as it relates to eavesdropping, requires that probable cause must exist to believe that a specific crime has been or is being committed and that particularly described conversations constituting evidence of that crime will be obtained through electronic surveillance at a specific location. (Berger v. New York, 388 U. S. 41.) “ Probable cause ”, according to Berger, “ exists where the facts and circumstances within the affiant’s knowledge, and of which he has reasonably trustworthy information, are sufficient unto themselves to warrant a man of reasonable caution to believe than an offense has been or is being committed ’ ’ (id., p. 55). The August 30 application falls distressingly short of these requirements. Its factual showing justifies nothing but the most general suspicion that Salerno and Moretti were engaged in something illegal. (Cf., e.g., People v. Gnozzo, 31 N Y 2d 134; People v. Feinlowitz,

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Bluebook (online)
80 Misc. 2d 777, 364 N.Y.S.2d 364, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brown-nysupct-1975.