State v. Neisler

666 So. 2d 1064, 1996 WL 15512
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 18, 1996
Docket94-KK-1384, 94-KK-1540
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 666 So. 2d 1064 (State v. Neisler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Neisler, 666 So. 2d 1064, 1996 WL 15512 (La. 1996).

Opinion

666 So.2d 1064 (1996)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Amanda NEISLER, et al.

Nos. 94-KK-1384, 94-KK-1540.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

January 16, 1996.
Dissenting Opinion January 18, 1996.

Morris Hyman, New Orleans, for Applicant (94-KK-1384).

Richard P. Ieyoub, Attorney General, Harry F. Connick, District Attorney, Ralph E. Brandt, Jr., Raymond R. Egan, III, Donald Otis Pinkston, Jack E. Hoffstadt, William H. Slaughter, III, New Orleans, for Respondent (94-KK-1384).

*1065 Jack Earl Hoffstadt, New Orleans, for Applicant (94-KK-1540).

Richard P. Ieyoub, Attorney General, Hon. Harry F. Connick, District Attorney, Ralph E. Brandt, Jr., Raymond R. Egan, III, Donald Otis Pinkston, Morris Hyman, William H. Slaughter, III, New Orleans, for Respondent (94-KK-1540).

Dissenting Opinion by Justice Calogero January 18, 1996.

ON REHEARING

LEMMON, Justice.[*]

We granted rehearing to reconsider our earlier decision that in every case when a police officer, in applying for a wiretap order, submits an affidavit containing any information supplied by an informant without presenting the informant to the issuing magistrate and then uses wiretap information to obtain a search warrant, La.Rev.Stat. 15:1310B(1) requires the suppression of any evidence seized pursuant to the warrant. After reconsideration, we now hold that suppression of evidence is not required when the confidential informant's information, although contained in the affidavit seeking the wiretap order, was not essential to the affidavit's establishment of probable cause to issue the order. At issue is the interpretation of La.Rev.Stat. 15:1301-1312, the Electronic Surveillance Act, and more particularly Section 1310B(1) of the Act.

I

This case primarily involves the suppression of drugs seized in a June 1993 search of 1315 Madrid Street in New Orleans. The suppression issue turns on the validity of a wiretap order, by means of which the police obtained information that led to the issuance of the search warrant authorizing the June 1993 search.

The first contact by the police with defendants Shaun Lang and Sean Ward, the relators in this court, was when officers arrested Lang and Ward at 1315 Madrid Street on March 3, 1993 for possession with intent to distribute marijuana. A drug-sniffing dog had alerted the police to the contents of a Federal Express package, and the arrest occurred after Federal Express made a controlled delivery of the package to the Madrid Street residence.[1]

One week after the March 1993 arrest of Lang and Ward at 1315 Madrid Street, other officers attempted a controlled delivery of a package known to contain marijuana to an apartment in New Orleans, but the occupants refused delivery after the mail courier asked for identification. During the attempted delivery, one of the officers saw Ward leave the apartment and drive away in a truck that had been seen at 1315 Madrid Street.

In late April 1993, a resident of the 1300 block of Madrid Street told Narcotics Officer Bruce Harrison that he had seen Lang and Ward using cordless telephones in the yard of 1315 Madrid Street and had recently overheard on a scanner certain cordless telephone conversations by Lang and Ward in which the parties used words consistent with drug trafficking.[2] The informant further stated that there had been an unusually large amount of visitors to 1315 Madrid Street for several months. The informant, who knew of Lang's and Ward's marijuana arrest and wished to remain anonymous, allowed the officer to listen over his scanner to a conversation that planned a cocaine purchase.

The police then set up a surveillance operation that included their own monitoring of defendants' cordless telephone conversations with a scanner. During this monitoring, police heard conversations suggesting narcotics purchases, particularly one on May 17, 1993 between Lang and an apparent distributor that discussed the price and type of cocaine, with a reference to a source in Houston and a method of transporting drugs by use of a false gas tank.

*1066 The officers then applied for the order at issue in these proceedings. They sought an order authorizing a wire intercept of all telephone (and not just cordless telephone) conversations in order to identify Lang's and Ward's customers and accomplices, as well as the source in Houston. The sixteen-page application and affidavit, which stated all of the information recited above, further noted that officers had followed Lang's car after monitored conversations indicated a delivery, but that Lang had checked his mirrors and used erratic driving techniques which caused them to abandon the car surveillance because of the chance that the entire investigation would be discovered. Although the application affidavit recited the information received from the confidential informant, the officers did not present the informant in person to the judge.

The judge issued an order authorizing interception of wire communications over the target telephone number for a period of thirty days. Through the interceptions, the officers heard that Amanda Neisler had purchased marijuana in Houston and had transported the drugs to New Orleans with Yvonne Ray.

Using this and other information received from the intercepted communications, the police officers obtained a search warrant for 1315 Madrid Street and for 3336 Bell Street, the residence of accomplices discovered through the wiretap. The search yielded controlled dangerous substances and resulted in the arrest of Lang, Ward, Neisler, Ray and Robert Lauer. All defendants were subsequently indicted on various drug possession and conspiracy charges.

Defendants moved to suppress the evidence obtained in the search based on the warrant that contained wiretap information. Defendants attacked the issuance of the wiretap order, focusing on (1) the interception of cordless telephone conversations as an unlawful interception of statutorily protected oral communications and (2) the failure to present the anonymous informant to the judge in violation of La.Rev.Stat. 15:1310B(1), which provides:

B. (1) If statements of an identified or unidentified informant are relied upon in the application as a basis for establishing that there are reasonable grounds to believe that an offense has been, is being, or is about to be committed, the application shall set forth the factual basis for the affiant's belief that the informant is credible and that the information has been obtained in a reliable manner. The informant shall be presented to the judge and be sworn to afford the judge opportunity to inquire if the statements made in the application are true. The application shall so state that the informant was presented to the judge and sworn for such purpose. This provision shall not affect the privileged character of the identity of an informant. Nothing herein shall be construed to require the identification of a confidential informant. (emphasis added).

The district court granted the motion and suppressed the evidence because of the officers' failure to present the informant to the judge when they applied for the wiretap order.

The court of appeal granted supervisory writs and reversed the suppression order. 635 So.2d 433.

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Bluebook (online)
666 So. 2d 1064, 1996 WL 15512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-neisler-la-1996.