People v. Burrell

156 Misc. 2d 272, 592 N.Y.S.2d 546, 1992 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 578
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1992
StatusPublished

This text of 156 Misc. 2d 272 (People v. Burrell) 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. Burrell, 156 Misc. 2d 272, 592 N.Y.S.2d 546, 1992 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 578 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Richard A. Goldberg, J.

Defendant, along with a codefendant,1 is accused of committing a gunpoint robbery of a milkman, Jerry Brunette, on September 13, 1991 as he and his helper, A1 Fleming, were making a delivery to Public School 308. Shortly after the crime, defendant was spotted, pursued and captured by four police officers who had been given a description of the robbers. During the chase, defendant discarded a gun, which was immediately recovered. Defendant was identified by both complaining witnesses at lineups that same day.

Pursuant to defendant’s omnibus motion, a combined Wade, Mapp and Dunaway hearing was granted. At the hearing held by this court on October 16, 1992, the court received the testimony of Police Officer Michael Staffieri, Police Officer Steven Zolga and Detective Patricia Tufo. After evaluating the proffered testimony and the exhibits admitted into evidence, the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

FINDINGS OF FACT

On September 13, 1991, Police Officers Staffieri and Scharfberg were in plain clothes, working anticrime patrol in an unmarked automobile in Brooklyn. In the late morning of that day, they received a radio report concerning the robbery of a milk truck driver. The officers were directed to meet him at the corner of Macon Street and Reid Avenue. When they arrived, the driver, Jerry Brunette, told them that he had been robbed at gunpoint at a school on Gates Avenue between Stuyvesant and Lewis Avenues while making a milk delivery. Mr. Brunetto described the robbers as two black males, the one with the gun being approximately six feet tall, 18 years old, wearing a black hooded sweatshirt and black pants. The other man was approximately five feet seven inches tall, wearing a multicolored jogging suit and a baseball cap. During this conversation, Police Officers Zolga and Woods, also in [274]*274plain clothes, arrived at the scene. Mr. Brunetto told the officers that after the robbery his assailants had run into the housing project at 720-770 Gates Avenue across the street from the school. Police Officers Staffieri and Scharfberg then went to the rooftop of the three- to five-story high housing project to look around while Brunetto and Fleming continued on their delivery route.

From the rooftop, Officers Staffieri and Scharfberg spotted four or five men at a bench in the courtyard in the back of the project. One of them appeared to fit the description of the gunman given by Jerry Brunetto. They radioed Officers Zolga and Woods to rendezvous with them and when all four officers were together on the ground, they entered the courtyard and approached the men. As the officers approached, and before anything was said, the defendant, who was approximately 18 years old, six feet tall, wearing black pants and a navy blue hooded jacket began to run, tossing a silver handgun to the ground. All four officers gave chase. The gun was recovered during the chase by Police Officer Zolga and shortly thereafter, at 11:53 a.m., the defendant was arrested.

The defendant was brought to the 81st Precinct where Detective Tufo then made arrangements for lineup identifications by Jerry Brunetto and A1 Fleming. She obtained five fillers from a nearby men’s shelter. The defendant chose to take seat number one. When Mr. Brunetto and Mr. Fleming arrived at the precinct, they were kept in a room apart from the defendant and the fillers. Jerry Brunetto viewed the lineup first and identified number one, Lamont Burrell, as the man who had put a gun to his head in the vestibule of the school and taken money from him. Mr. Brunetto was then taken out and put in a separate room from A1 Fleming. Mr. Fleming then came in and he also identified number one, Lamont Burrell, as the same man who had pulled a gun on the street and chased his partner, Jerry Brunetto, into the school vestibule.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

The defense raises two familiar themes in arguing for suppression. The first is that the police pursuit of Lamont Burrell was unlawful and, therefore, the evidence flowing from that pursuit must be suppressed. The second is that the lineup was unfairly constituted, thereby suggesting to the witnesses that they should pick the man seated in the first seat, Lamont Burrell.

[275]*275In the landmark case of People v De Bour (40 NY2d 210), the Court of Appeals attempted to balance the conflicting interests of a civilian’s right to privacy and freedom from harassment, against a police officer’s obligation to prevent crime and apprehend criminals. Cognizant of the inherently intimidating nature of a police uniform, the Court attempted to delineate four levels of permissible police intrusion into a civilian’s freedom when police officers are engaged in their criminal law enforcement capacity. Mindful of the difficulties subsequent courts have had in determining where one level begins and the other ends, resulting in "inconsistency in the evaluation of markedly similar police encounters”, the Court of Appeals attempted to recap and clarify its holding in De Bour in the recent case of People v Hollman (79 NY2d 181, 185). An analysis of Hollman results in the following guidelines:

The first level, the right to request information, permits basic, nonthreatening questions, regarding e.g., identity, address or destination. If the individual is carrying something that would appear to a trained officer to be unusual, he can ask about that object. The request for information must be supported by an objective credible reason, not necessarily indicative of criminality.

The second level, the common-law right of inquiry, permits the officer to ask more pointed questions that would lead the person approached to believe that he or she is the focus of the officer’s investigation regarding possible criminality. At this level, a somewhat greater intrusion is permitted, such as a request to search a bag. This level is activated by a founded suspicion that criminal activity is afoot. At this level of intrusion, however, there is no right to detain or otherwise interfere with the liberty of a civilian who gives plausible reasons to the police inquiry or who even refuses to cooperate by refusing to stop or answer. Absent some additional indication of criminality, the police may not interfere with the civilian’s liberty by detaining him or her.

The third level permits an officer to forcibly stop and detain a person for a reasonable period of time in order to confirm or rebut his suspicions that the person was, is, or is about to be engaged in criminal activity. Since the civilian is not under arrest, the detention must be for a relatively short time period and be as noninvasive as possible under the circumstances. Of necessity, pursuit is permitted to effect the detention. This [276]*276level of intrusion is activated when a police officer has a reasonable suspicion that a particular person was involved in a felony or misdemeanor. Thus, a police officer may pursue and detain a suspect for an on-the-scene showup if he reasonably matches a description of a perpetrator given to him by an ostensibly reliable source despite the fact that the description is nonspecific, that is, it may match many people (People v Hicks, 68 NY2d 234). This level of intrusion has been codified in CPL 140.50 (1), a corollary of which is the authority to frisk if the officer reasonably suspects he is in danger of physical injury by virtue of the detainee being armed (CPL 140.50 [3]).

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Bluebook (online)
156 Misc. 2d 272, 592 N.Y.S.2d 546, 1992 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-burrell-nysupct-1992.