People v. Burch

88 Misc. 2d 835, 390 N.Y.S.2d 524, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2756
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 2d 835 (People v. Burch) 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. Burch, 88 Misc. 2d 835, 390 N.Y.S.2d 524, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2756 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Joel J. Tyler, J.

We are presented with a unique proposition. We are asked, in effect, to apply the term "perjurious”, as used and intended in People v Alfinito (16 NY2d 181, 186), in a case, as here, where no legal perjury has been found in the allegations to secure a search warrant. Is Alñnito limited only to cases where legal perjury is established? I believe not, if the intent of Alfinito is to be given logical effect.

Defendants move to controvert a no-knock search warrant and to suppress the contraband seized in pursuance thereof (CPL 710.20). The supporting affidavit for the warrant stated, on information and belief, that an undercover officer purchased narcotics from defendants in their second-floor apartment on April 5 and 9, 1976. The defendants claim such statement, among others, is false and justify their request for a hearing by prima facie documentary proof, namely, that undercover officer’s "Buy Report”, which states that the April 5 purchase was effected, not in defendants’ second-floor apartment, but elsewhere.

Accordingly, it having been initially shown, as required, that there was a factual implication of perjury and falsehood in the allegations upon which the warrant was based, a hearing was ordered and held (CPL 710.60; People v Alfinito, 16 NY2d 181, supra; People v Solimine, 18 NY2d 477, 480; People v Glen, 30 NY2d 252, 262; United States v Dunnings, 425 F2d 836, 840).

The warrant, its supporting affidavit and minutes of testimony before the issuing Justice were placed in evidence at this suppression hearing. That supporting affidavit, sworn to by Officer Harold Guy, stated in part, that information supplied to him by an undercover officer indicated that the aforesaid two purchases were made from the defendants in their second-floor apartment. Further, Officer Guy averred, that his personal but unspecified "investigations and observations” caused him to believe that defendants occupied that apartment and were there in possession of and trafficking in heroin.

The minutes of the sworn examination before the issuing Justice reveal that Officer Guy did not testify, except to identify himself and the undercover officer then present, as his informant. Thereupon, the undercover officer testified that he had purchased drugs from the defendants on April 5 and 9, 1976 "at the door of the [i.e., second-floor] apartment” but "I wasn’t in the apartment”. This was in contradiction of Officer [837]*837Guy’s affidavit, which indicated the purchases were made within the apartment. The informant later changed the place of purchase to the entrance door situated on the first floor within a small vestibule into which one enters the building. He further testified that after pushing the only bell in that vestibule, he saw the female defendant exit the second-floor apartment and walk down the stairs to that first-floor entrance door, where she greeted the officer and concluded the transactions; that he could and did see the apartment door on the second floor while looking through the glass partition of the entrance door on the first floor; that he understood the female defendant "occupies the second and third floors”, (without stating the basis for such belief) and "You may have to go through that same door (i.e. on second floor) that she comes out of to get to the third floor”.1

The warrant recites that it was issued upon proof offered by affidavit and oral testimony, which established probable cause to believe that the crimes were being committed within the second-floor apartment, where the search was ordered to be made.

It would appear that the issuing Judge could not and did not place reliance or give credence to that portion of Officer Guy’s affidavit which placed the drug purchases within the second-floor apartment. That becomes evident when we examine the testimony of the undercover officer who fixed the place of purchase elsewhere. Furthermore, the court understood that the affiant officer’s statement in this connection was based, not on personal observations, but rather upon information from the undercover officer, who was in the best position to directly advise that court where the purchases were made. The latter did so, thus correcting an apparently misleading affidavit. It is common experience that information passed from one to another often assumes proportions different, misleading and at times even ominous when compared with the initial statements. This may have been the result in the retelling by Officer Guy (by affidavit) what his informant originally told him.

However, it is clear that the issuing court made its determi[838]*838nation of probable cause and justified the search of that second-floor apartment particularly on the testimony of the undercover officer, who assured the court, by citing his alleged personal observations, that he saw the female defendant exit a second-floor apartment and thereafter enter it on the occasion of each of the two purchases. The Judge, therefore, reasonably inferred that she occupied that apartment, justifying the warrant.

Both officers testified at the instant hearing. Officer Guy testified that his informant never told him that the purchases were made within the second-floor apartment, in spite of his affidavit to the contrary. Bewildering was his further statement, that he made no personal investigations or observations to support his belief that drug trafficking was being conducted on the second floor, although his affidavit indicated that he did. Credulity was stretched even further, by his testimony that he read and signed his affidavit after he heard the contradicting testimony of his informant before the issuing Judge. In spite of all, he nevertheless, maintained that he believed that the affidavit was correct when he signed it.

The testimony of the undercover officer, the informant, was as bewildering as that of Officer Guy. He also testified here that he never told Officer Guy that the drugs were purchased within the subject apartment; further, that he never entered the building proper but dealt with defendants at the entrance door to the building, located in the small vestibule on the ground or first floor, and from that position he could not see, he said, any door on the landing of the second floor; that he never saw either defendant enter or exit through a door on the second floor; that when the defendants reached the second-floor landing he saw the female defendant extend her arm with hand opened, and then "disappear”, and that he thereupon "assumed” she was pushing open a door and "go into what appeared to be an apartment,” but that there was a third floor and that defendants may possibly have proceeded to that floor after they disappeared from the second-floor landing. All of this was in contradiction of his testimony before the issuing Judge.

It is plain that neither Officer Guy nor his informant had a reasonably objective basis to believe, when they applied for the warrant, that the defendants, or either of them, occupied a second-floor apartment rather than a third-floor apartment. It is also clear that issuance of the warrant would have been [839]*839highly problematical were the examining Judge aware of the true facts and circumstances concerning the observations the informant did, in fact, make. The actual observations were critical and speak to the very essence of materiality; the failure to reveal them in full was a denial of probable cause (People v Alfinito, 16 NY2d 181, supra; People v Callahan,

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People v. Adams
2 Misc. 3d 166 (New York County Courts, 2003)
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Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 2d 835, 390 N.Y.S.2d 524, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-burch-nysupct-1976.