People v. Manzella

150 Misc. 2d 956, 571 N.Y.S.2d 875, 1991 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 287
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 150 Misc. 2d 956 (People v. Manzella) 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. Manzella, 150 Misc. 2d 956, 571 N.Y.S.2d 875, 1991 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 287 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Julian F. Kubiniec, J.

Defendant, Rudolph L. Manzella, Jr., by notice of omnibus motion seeks an order suppressing "all statements involuntarily made and obtained in violation of his constitutional rights.” More specifically, defendant seeks to suppress those oral statements and admissions made by him during an eight [957]*957plus hour siege of his residence by numerous Erie County Deputy Sheriffs, including two SWAT teams, as well as numerous other police officers responding from various police departments.

The prosecution alleges that defendant Manzella shot, without provocation or warning, two Erie County Deputy Sheriffs who had exited from clearly marked police cruisers and who were proceeding up his driveway intent on serving an arrest warrant. One officer was fatally wounded and the other, though seriously wounded, radioed for assistance.

Responding officers were soon on the scene, encircled defendant’s residence, commandeered the next door neighbor’s house, and telephoned the defendant. It is these telephone responses of defendant, and particularly his admissions of shooting two police officers, that are the statements defendant now seeks to suppress as being involuntarily made, i.e., made in a custodial setting without the benefit of prior Miranda warnings. ("Defendant was literally held captive in his home, completely surrounded by a cadre of law enforcement personnel” [defendant’s mem].)

At oral arguments before this court, Part 10, Supreme Court, Erie County, held on January 17, 1991, both the defendant and People stipulated that at no time during the siege and prior to defendant’s arrest was defendant ever Mirandized. A testimonial hearing was held on May 20, 1991 and this court has reviewed the testimony of Deputy Sheriff Christopher Clark and Senior Investigator Dennis Rankin and has also reviewed a transcript of and listened to the recorded conversations between defendant and police personnel. The issue thus presented is whether defendant’s recorded oral statements were involuntarily made in violation of his constitutional privilege against self-incrimination.

Upon review, this court now finds as follows:

As is common in stand-off situations with an armed and barricaded gunman, police officers initially seek to establish communication in order to apprise themselves of the gunman’s whereabouts, the existence of any hostages or innocent bystanders, the mental state of the gunman, whether he is intoxicated or under the influence of drugs, etc. Additionally, police officials attempt to use a police officer specially trained in talking to homicidal/suicidal gunmen and through telephonic communication seek to defuse the situation, by convincing him that they do not seek to hurt him, that escape is [958]*958hopeless, that his only hope to better his circumstances is to surrender, and that by cooperating and surrendering he actually betters his situation. Obviously, by keeping up a string of conversation, the police are able to secure the gunman to one location and distance the time from the original shooting thereby easing the gunman’s agitation.

Arriving at the scene of an ambush-style shooting with two police officers wounded and down, obviously the responding officers’ best and safest hope of confronting the shooter is via telephone.

In the instant case, initial contact was made at 2:23 p.m. by Erie County Sheriff Deputy Christopher Clark, Chief of Administrative Services, who testified that he heard the radio call by Officer Carlson (one of the wounded Deputies) of a man down and request for assistance while driving his patrol car to the Sheriff Deputies’ Control Headquarters at Chestnut Ridge Park. There he learned of the shootings, the name and phone number of the suspect, and that other Deputies were responding and on the scene. Chief Clark thereupon called defendant’s home 4 or 5 times before he received a response. The phone call was taped. Chief Clark stated his purpose was to locate the suspect, to determine if anyone else was within the suspect’s home, and to get defendant into custody, unarmed. Chief Clark, therefore, immediately advised defendant Manzella to put his hands over his head and to go out the front door. While attempting to calm Manzella, Clark asked if anyone else was in the house (mother, father, sister). When Manzella threatened to hang up, Clark stated: "Talk to me, talk to me. Don’t hang up on me”; whereupon Manzella spontaneously and angrily began verbalizing his feelings. At no time did Clark ask any questions, either directly or indirectly, seeking information or incriminating responses from Manzella. Rather, he merely continued to ease the situation by repeating, "Let’s not have anybody else hurt. Nobody is gonna hurt you.” After three outbursts, Manzella discontinued the conversation and hung up.

Defendant’s comments during this first contact, the court finds, most certainly fall within that category of statements made to initial questions of a police officer who, upon first arriving at a volatile scene, seeks to clarify the situation and were not questions made in a paramount effort to elicit evidence of a crime. (See, People v Johnson, 59 NY2d 1014 [1983]; People v Chestnut, 51 NY2d 14 [1980], cert denied 449 US 1018.)

[959]*959However, defense counsel contends that, if it were not immediately clear to defendant, it soon became obvious that he was surrounded by a cadre of police officers, including camouflaged SWAT teams and helicopter patrols, forming a solid police barricade. This circumstance, counsel argues, is tantamount to placing defendant in custody and that, therefore, any telephonic communication thereafter should have been preceded by Miranda warnings. Counsel would have the court apply the common legal definition of "custody”, namely: would a reasonable man, innocent of any crime, believe that his freedom to leave the area of interrogation was significantly restrained. The affirmative answer being obvious, counsel maintains that, as the defendant was in custody and without benefit of prior Miranda warnings, his comments and admissions should be suppressed as involuntarily made.

The prosecution in reliance on People v Flannery (137 AD2d 615 [1988]) contends that, albeit lengthy telephonic communication, it was not conducted within a custodial ambiance and that the defendant was free to move about his house and to talk or not to talk on the telephone. Although there is case law that suggests that police inquiries via a telephone cannot be deemed custodial, there appear to be few cases which deal with a surrounded defendant facing an armed police barricade.

In Flannery (supra, at 616) the police and defendant engaged in some 2 to 2 Vi hours of conversation in which "the defendant revealed that he had shot his wife four times.” However, the holding in Flannery appears to affect only the initial questioning of the defendant by police officers who, in response to a radio communication regarding gunshots, arrived at defendant’s apartment, heard a gunshot and knocked on the apartment door. In response to initial police inquiries at the door, the defendant remarked "that there were no injured children inside the apartment and that he had a problem with his wife, which was no longer a problem inasmuch as he had shot her and she was dead.” (Supra, at 616.) These remarks, the Flannery

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Bluebook (online)
150 Misc. 2d 956, 571 N.Y.S.2d 875, 1991 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-manzella-nysupct-1991.