State of Rhode Island v. Lewis, 890252a (1991)
This text of State of Rhode Island v. Lewis, 890252a (1991) (State of Rhode Island v. Lewis, 890252a (1991)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Both defendants move to suppress the evidence seized pursuant to the search warrant and the admissions as the fruit of an illegal search in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and Article I, Section 6 of the Constitution of the State of Rhode Island.
The defendants were not reasonably entitled to an expectation of privacy in the areas of their home immediately inside glass doors which were open to view from adjacent open fields. Katz v.United States,
This Court accepts the reasoning of the Court in State v.Vogel,
Binoculars are a well-known and well-understood means of enhancing visual acuity. They were not used in this case to permit the observer to see anything he could not otherwise have detected. They simply permitted the viewer to see better what was in plain view. See also, Kitzmiller v. State,
This Court is aware of Commonwealth v. Lemanski,
This Court subscribes to the analysis propounded by Professor LaFave in Search and Seizure, § 2.2(c), at pages 340, et seq.:
"Fully consistent with Katz, therefore are those holdings that it is not a search to make a binocular observation of . . . the characteristics of a marijuana plant which was on a sundeck and visible from a neighbor's yard. (Citing People v. Vermouth,
42 Cal.App.3d 353 , 116 Cal. Rpter. 675 (1974)) . . .Much more difficult to deal with, because they are not all of a kind, are those cases in which law enforcement agents have used binoculars or similar equipment to look inside of premises. There are instances, of course, in which the fact that the observation was into premises is of relatively little significance because it is readily apparent that there could have been no reasonable expectation of privacy with respect to the object or conduct seen. If, for example, a person places a marijuana plant directly on his window sill so that it is observable from the street, his expectation of privacy concerning the plant is not significantly different from that in the case described above where the plant was on the sundeck, and thus is it no search to scrutinize that plant with binoculars." (Emphasis supplied.)
Accordingly, this Court finds that the observations by the officer through his binoculars of the marijuana plant, just inside the defendant's glass doors was not a "search", because the officer did not violate any reasonable expectation of privacy of the defendants.
The motions are denied.
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