People v. Flynn

2004 NY Slip Op 50001(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Bronx County
DecidedJanuary 5, 2004
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 50001(U) (People v. Flynn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Bronx County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Flynn, 2004 NY Slip Op 50001(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

People v Flynn (2004 NY Slip Op 50001(U)) [*1]
People v Flynn
2004 NY Slip Op 50001(U)
Decided on January 5, 2004
Supreme Court, Bronx County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on January 5, 2004
Supreme Court, Bronx County


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, Plaintiff,

against

MICHAEL FLYNN, Defendant.




Ind. No. 971-03

Richard Lee Price, J.

On February 20, 2003 the Defendant was indicted for various degrees of Criminal possession of a controlled substance and other charges related to his arrest on September 28, 2002, including Bribery in the third degree, P.L. § 200.00. The case came into this part on December 8, 2003 for a combined Mapp, Huntley and Dunaway statement hearing. That hearing concluded on December 10, 2003 and, after oral argument, the People submitted a written memorandum in further support of their opposition to suppression of the physical evidence and certain statements allegedly made by the defendant.

Thereafter, as briefly stated on the record, I denied the Mapp application to suppress the drugs and knife recovered from the Defendant and I partially granted the Huntley and Dunaway motions to the extent of suppressing the statement surreptitiously recorded at the precinct, but I denied suppression of two statements Mr. Flynn allegedly made to a police sergeant while being transported back to the precinct. This Decision amends that determination and sets forth my reasons.

The Hearing Evidence

The only witness at the hearing was Sergeant Louis Graziano, and the following findings of fact are made from his testimony and the evidence introduced in support thereof.

Sergeant Graziano testified that at about 10:15 on the evening of September 28, 2002, he and his partner were on motor patrol in plain clothes pursuant to their grand larceny auto, anti-crime assignment. The officers pulled up and double parked their unmarked vehicle in the area of 138th Street and Waldo Avenue, two blocks away from Manhattan College. Sgt. Graziano described the area as "busy with pedestrian traffic. It's frequented by there is a dorm across the street for the college. There is a lot of activity in the street. Drinking on the street. Sometimes drug transactions take place in that general area. Things of that nature." H. 5-6. However, on cross-examination, the Sgt. also testified that there are a number of bars and stores in the area, and that it was specifically not his testimony that this was a "high drug location." H. 42-43.

Sgt. Graziano stated that he and Officer Cullen observed a group of some eight to ten individuals standing around. The defendant was in the middle of this group and the sergeant "didn't know who he was at first. We decided to stand, to park the car, double park the car and [*2]see if anything was going on. My partner, Officer Peter Cullen noticed that * * * he stated that he knew the defendant . . . from a prior arrest." H. 7-8. The defendant "was surrounded by * * * what appeared to me to be college students, relatively well dressed, well groomed people. He was in the middle of that mass of people and he appeared to be a little disheveled. And originally, we thought that he was a neighborhood kid that was being accosted by a college kid. We thought there was going to be a dispute at that location. * * * As he was engaging in conversation with the people that were standing around him, he was slowly turning around that crowd, and I noticed him, what appeared to me, noticed the vehicle that we were in, noticed I noticed the defendant see the car. He had a look of surprise on his face. He dropped the item in his hand and pushed it over with his feet." H. 9-10. "I observed the defendant with a brown, I'm sorry, a plastic bag in his hand, turn around and noticed the Police car parked there. At that point, the defendant looked startled, like he was kind of shocked that there was an unmarked Police car sitting there. He dropped the bag, and out of his left hand. He tried to scoot it over behind a cement pillar with his left foot." H. 8.

On cross-examination the sergeant admitted that they saw no exchanges between the defendant and any of the other ten to twelve people he was standing with, he "just saw conversation", H. 46, "[t]hey were milling around Mr. Flynn, talking among themselves, standing around Mr. Flynn." H. 62. Nor did he find anything suspicious about the plastic bag the defendant dropped, and he had no idea what was in it. "It's a black bag that you get from, like, a corner grocery store, like a shopping bag, black plastic shopping bag." H. 47.

The sergeant asked his partner to call to the defendant and ask him to come (the two car-lengths) over, which he did. As the defendant approached, both officers got out to meet him, with Cullen questioning him on what he was "doing here, what's going on, and that kind of thing. I asked Mr. Flynn if that was his bag that he had dropped, and he stated to me, No. I asked Mr. Flynn if he dropped the bag and he said no. I looked into the bag. I noticed that there was some narcotics in the bag. A scale, some drug paraphernalia, some glassine envelopes and I retrieved the bag and brought it back to the vehicle." H. 11.

The defendant was immediately arrested and handcuffed. Graziano testified that as he was leading him back to the back of the patrol car, Mr. Flynn "stated to me that he would give me half his money if I could let him go." H. 13. Telling the Defendant to relax, he put him in the vehicle and they drove back to the precinct. On the way, Flynn is alleged to have again spoken up, saying "he was afraid that [if] he wasn't let out with his drugs, that he was going to be killed. As a matter of fact, the statement was, I'm going to get bopped if I don't have my drugs. If I don't get my drugs back. He offered me all of his currency." H.113-14.

At the precinct, the defendant was put into a holding cell while the officer notified the Internal Affairs office about the bribe offer. The Bronx Investigation Unit of that office put a tape recording device on the sergeant and the defendant was brought into the "juvenile room" where they could speak without any background noise. Sgt. Graziano reinterviewed Flynn, and called in two other officers as witnesses, explaining to the defendant that these officers had to be clear that they were going to get "a fair share of the money." H. 20. The defendant again explained that he wanted to give up the money so he could be released with the drugs because "[h]e was afraid that he was going to be killed if he didn't get his drugs back. He offered us the money to let him go." Id. [*3]

After this conversation, the defendant was taken back to the holding cell and the officers checked to verify that the recording was intelligible. Confirming that it was, the officers returned to the defendant and arrested him for bribery. Only then was he given his Miranda warnings. Mr. Flynn immediately asked for an attorney and questioning ceased. The defendant was then processed for arrest, i.e.

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2004 NY Slip Op 50001(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-flynn-nysupctbrnx-2004.