People v. Tony

30 Misc. 3d 867
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 2010
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Misc. 3d 867 (People v. Tony) 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. Tony, 30 Misc. 3d 867 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

James M. Kindler, J.

Defendant, charged with attempted criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree (Penal Law §§ 110.00, 265.01 [1]), moved in an omnibus motion to suppress a gun recovered following the search, by parole officers, of the apartment in which he resided and statements that he made to the police after his arrest. An evidentiary hearing was held on September 2, 3 and 17, 2010, at which Parole Officers Luis Loftin and Ronnita Campbell, Sergeant William Estrada, Detective Alejandro Zapata, and Police Officer Andrew Ulich testified for the prosecution and defendant testified in his own behalf. Both parties filed post-hearing written submissions. Defendant’s principal contentions are that (1) the People failed to demonstrate the police acted lawfully in stopping and seizing defendant; (2) the certificate of release, signed by a parolee who lived in the apartment, was insufficient to permit a search of the apartment in the absence of reasonable suspicion; (3) the search was a police initiative “disguised as a ‘parole operation’ in an effort to avoid Constitutional implications”; and (4) the People failed to serve proper CPL 710.30 notice and, thus, the defendant’s statements to the police should be precluded; alternatively, he asks that they be suppressed.

Following the People’s request, the hearing was reopened on November 1, 2010 and Parole Officer Derek Jones testified for the prosecution.

[869]*869Based on the evidence adduced at the hearing, and for the reasons discussed below, defendant’s motion to suppress the firearm and the oral statement he made to the police at the apartment is granted and the motion to suppress the written statement and the second oral statement is denied.

Findings of Fact

The court credits the testimony of the parole officers and police officers, except as indicated below, and does not find the testimony of defendant credible to the extent it conflicts with the testimony of the officers. The court makes the following findings of fact, based on the hearing evidence and written submission papers:

In December 2007, a special operations lieutenant in the 41st Precinct of the New York City Police Department (NYPD) contacted the New York State Division of Parole (Parole) to set up a “special operation” whereby officers from both agencies would conduct joint parole visits of parolees residing in a certain area of the Bronx. The police wanted to obtain information from the parolees regarding a string of robberies that had occurred in that area, which they believed were being committed by individuals between the ages of 16 and 18. NYPD gave Parole a list of 20 or 30 parolees of all ages that they wanted to speak with who lived in the targeted area.

On February 8, 2008, at a meeting at Parole, Parole Officer Ronnita Campbell was directed by her supervisor to choose five parolees from her 75-person case load who resided in the designated area. Officer Campbell chose five parolees who had not previously given her any “problems”; among them was John Doe Walker. Since May 22, 2007, Officer Campbell had conducted home visits at Walker’s residence roughly two or three times every month and met with him at her office biweekly. Walker was “in compliance with all [of] his [Parole] rules and regulations” and Officer Campbell believed “that [he] would be the one person that [she] would not have any problems [with] at his residence.” Walker was not a suspect in the robberies and was not believed to have any contraband or weapons in his apartment.1 Although Walker had signed a certificate of release on April 17, 2007, authorizing Parole, as a condition of [870]*870his release from prison, to search his “person, residence and property,” a search of his apartment had never before been conducted.

Parole compiled a list of 20 parolees to visit, including the five parolees chosen by Campbell and 15 others (two of whom were on a list submitted to Parole by the police). The parole officers then met with police officers at the 41st Precinct and provided them with the list of names and addresses of the parolees that were to be visited that evening. Two teams comprising both parole and police officers were each designated to visit 10 parolees. The police were present to obtain information from the parolees regarding the recent robberies and to provide security. According to the parole officers who testified, the purpose of the visits was to check on the parolees’ compliance with the conditions of parole.

A team including Parole Officers Campbell, Luis Loftin, and Andre Logan, and Police Officers Andrew Ulich, Joseph Piccioto, and other NYPD officers arrived at Walker’s apartment, in Bronx County, at approximately 10:30 p.m. In the apartment at the time were Walker and defendant, Walker’s stepson, who also lived in the apartment, as well as several other family members. Campbell told Walker that they were conducting a “special operation” and were going to search the apartment to ensure his compliance with the conditions of parole. Walker stepped aside to allow the officers in and Campbell, familiar with the layout of the apartment, walked directly to Walker’s bedroom where a search was conducted. A gun and bulletproof vest, among other things, were recovered from the closet. A gravity knife was recovered from a nearby nightstand. Police Officer Ulich handcuffed Walker, who then indicated that he kept more personal belongings in a hallway closet. Officer Ulich escorted Walker from the apartment, while Parole Officer Loftin searched the hallway closet and recovered another gun. He gave the gun to Police Officer Piccioto. Testimony regarding the statements made by Walker about the second gun was conflicting.* 2

[871]*871Police Officer Ulich was called back into the apartment where Police Officer Piccioto handed him a shoebox containing two guns and told him that because defendant had been- “acting nervous,” he had asked him “where is it,” and defendant had responded, “I have a gun in the hallway closet.” Police Officer Piccioto did not tell Police Officer Ulich whether he had read defendant his Miranda warnings, or whether his gun had been drawn or defendant had been handcuffed at the time. Neither Police Officer Ulich nor Parole Officers Campbell or Loftin heard defendant make any statements in the apartment.3 Both Walker and defendant were arrested.

At the 41st Precinct, defendant was placed in a holding cell uncuffed. At around 5:50 a.m., defendant was escorted by Police Officer Ulich, in handcuffs, to Sergeant William Estrada’s office, where the handcuffs were removed. Sergeant Estrada and his partner, Police Officer Manny Perez, were in plain clothes. Using a Miranda warning sheet, Perez advised defendant of his Miranda rights, and, after being asked if he understood each right, defendant said he did and wrote “yes” and his initials next to each one. Estrada wrote defendant’s pedigree information at the top of the sheet and defendant wrote his name at the bottom and signed the sheet; Estrada signed as a witness. Defendant answered questions about where he got the gun and about crime in the neighborhood. He then wrote out the following statement:

“That gun was my cousin’s. He left it at my house. He asked if he could leave it there for a couple of days. I said put it in my closet. I was at work around the time so when I came home there was gun in back of closet.”

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Bluebook (online)
30 Misc. 3d 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tony-nysupct-2010.