People v. Ramirez

193 Misc. 2d 181, 747 N.Y.S.2d 711, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1236
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 Misc. 2d 181 (People v. Ramirez) 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. Ramirez, 193 Misc. 2d 181, 747 N.Y.S.2d 711, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1236 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

[182]*182OPINION OF THE COURT

Herbert I. Altman, J.

Defendants move to suppress physical evidence and statements.

On May 22, 2002 and several days following I presided over a combined Mapp, Huntley and Dunaway hearing ordered by Judge Wittner, who limited the hearing to the events following the arrival of the police at the hotel room in which narcotics were found. When defendants moved to reargue her decision, she indicated that I was free to hear defendant’s arguments and to depart from her ruling if I chose. It was the position of the People that the scope of the hearing should not be expanded. Upon reargument, I adhered to Judge Wittner’s decision. Special Agent James Lasota of the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), and New York City Police Detective Felix Cuebas testified on behalf of the People. Each of the defendants testified. In addition, the defense called DEA Agent Lisa Leonardo.

According to the People’s witnesses, at 1:40 p.m. on August 15, 2001 seven or eight members of the New York Drug Enforcement Task Force positioned themselves outside of room 512 at the Best Western Eden Rock Hotel in Queens County. They were in civilian clothes and wore bullet-proof vests and other protective gear. They did not know if anyone inside the room was armed. None of the members of the task force had a weapon drawn. Detective John Loney announced that he smelled drugs. Special Agent Lisa Leonardo knocked on the outer door of the room and announced “housekeeping.” Defendant Jimenez opened the door approximately half way. Agent Lasota saw a full view of Jimenez, who was wearing shorts but no shirt. He had white powder on his forearm and the bridge of his nose. Lasota detected a pungent odor reminiscent of vinegar, which, his experience told him, was associated with heroin. Defendant Ramirez, also dressed only in shorts, then came up behind Jimenez and opened the door further. When he did so, Lasota was able to see a table and other furniture in the room behind the defendants. There was a towel on the table. Fiber threads were strewn on the floor. Agent Lasota saw motes of powder in the air, made visible by the light streaming through the window. He could see more powder settling on the table, the television and the other glossy furniture in the room.

Lasota, speaking English, identified himself as police and asked the defendants to step out into the hallway. His request [183]*183was translated into Spanish by Detective Cuebas. After they complied, Lasota and other members of the task force entered the room to perform a protective sweep to see if anyone was hiding in the room. They performed the sweep “for safety reasons.” While he was in the room, Lasota noticed a plastic ziplock bag containing powder on the nightstand between the two beds. The defendants, who were being detained in the hallway, facing away from the door but not in handcuffs, were then read their Miranda rights from a card, in Spanish, by Detective Cuebas. They both indicated that they understood their rights. After 10 or 15 minutes they were taken into an adjacent room, where they were given the opportunity to use the bathroom and wash. They were also given water.

The defendants were seated on one of the beds in the room, at the foot of which sat New York City Police Lieutenant Jackson. Loney and Lasota sat on the bed opposite them. Cuebas, interpreting on behalf of Lasota, inquired where they were from and what they were doing and asked them if they would give their consent to a search of the room. Each orally gave his consent. They also stated that there were drugs in the room. Cuebas asked to whom the room was registered and defendant Ramirez stated that it was registered to him. He was then handed a blank preprinted consent form for the search of room 512. Ramirez took the form, which was in Spanish, and read it aloud. He stated that he understood it and signed it. Lasota and Jackson went back to room 512 and searched it, finding, in addition to the powder in the ziplock bags, additional drugs sewn into the lining of clothing found in the room, drug paraphernalia and documents. When Lasota returned 45 minutes later the two were advised that they were under arrest and handcuffed.

The defendants described events differently. According to Jimenez, who is 28 years old and finished two years of high school, upon opening the door a few inches to answer the knock announcing “housekeeping,” he was thrust back as the members of the task force, guns drawn, pushed their way into the room. There were no drugs in open view because the two had not yet begun to unpack the powder from the cloth bags in which it had been packaged. Additionally, there was no coating of powder on the furniture, in the air or on the body of Jimenez. There was no ziplock bag of powder on the nightstand. Rather, a cloth bag containing powder was on a table that defendants had pushed against the nightstand between the two beds. The bag was covered by a cloth. The remainder of the drugs were [184]*184secreted elsewhere in the room. As soon as Lasota and the other law enforcement personnel entered the room, they placed both defendants in handcuffs. Jimenez was told that it would be to his benefit to cooperate. He was not told that he had a right to an attorney. The defendants were taken to a nearby room where they were seated on the bed, in handcuffs. Ramirez, who completed one year of high school, was never asked to give his consent to search room 512. He did not read the written consent form that he signed. He was told that nothing would happen to him and that the form only signified that the police had been there. No one explained to him that by signing the form, he was giving the police his permission to search the room.

I credit the testimony of the People’s witnesses and accept their version of the events, with one notable exception. It is not credible that Detective Loney smelled drugs in the hallway. There was no testimony that heroin has a distinctive odor or that described the nature of that odor. As Detective Loney did not testify, there was no inquiry into any natural ability or training which would enable him to recognize such an odor through a closed door. No one else testified that there was a distinctive odor in the hallway prior to the door being opened and I discount the possibility that there was such a pervasive odor, as the drugs that were seized in this case were packaged. I also note that Lasota testified that only after the door was opened did he detect a pungent vinegar-like odor which he associated with heroin.

In this case the defendants were precluded from inquiring into events which transpired prior to the arrival of the task force at the hotel. Judge Wittner and I limited the hearing to this time frame at the People’s insistence and despite repeated attempts by the defense to open the hearing to events leading up to the arrival of the task force and to an exploration of the knowledge of the police prior to that time. The People, who apparently took their stance in a desire to shield the source or sources of their information from the defendants, elected to defend the seizure purely on the basis of the plain view and consent doctrines. They took the position that what the police discovered after arriving at the hotel completely justified their actions without reference to any prior knowledge or information. I find to the contrary.

The defendants had an expectation of privacy in the hotel room in which they were staying (see People v Ali, 131 AD2d 857). The People must therefore establish that their entry into [185]

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Bluebook (online)
193 Misc. 2d 181, 747 N.Y.S.2d 711, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ramirez-nysupct-2002.