The People v. Michael Myers

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 2023
Docket6
StatusPublished

This text of The People v. Michael Myers (The People v. Michael Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Michael Myers, (N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 6 The People &c., Respondent, v. Michael Myers, Appellant.

Philip Rothschild, for appellant. Kenneth H. Tyler, Jr., for respondent. New York State Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, amicus curiae.

GARCIA, J.:

While monitoring a wiretap in an investigation unrelated to this case, law

enforcement officials intercepted a call that originated from a county jail. Defendant joined

the call and made statements suggesting his involvement in a fatal hit-and-run accident.

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Local police were alerted to the call and thereafter obtained a recording of the call from

the jail. Defendant was later charged in connection with the hit-and-run. The People

introduced the jail recording as evidence at trial without providing notice within fifteen

days of arraignment pursuant to CPL 700.70. This was improper. A communication

intercepted via wiretap is not exempted from statutory notice procedures merely because

the same communication was incidentally captured on a separate, consensual recording.

For that intercepted communication or any evidence derived therefrom to be admissible at

trial, the prosecution must follow the CPL’s notice procedures. Accordingly, because the

jail recording evidence was derived from an intercepted communication, we reverse.

I.

In October 2015, the Syracuse Police Department began investigating a fatal hit-

and-run automobile accident. Police identified the suspect car and determined it was

registered to D.H., defendant’s cousin. When police interviewed D.H., he reported that his

girlfriend was borrowing the car at the time of the crash. D.H.’s girlfriend told police that

the car was stolen prior to the accident.

At about the same time, in an unrelated investigation, the New York Attorney

General’s Office obtained a warrant to wiretap the phone of A.C. The wiretap intercepted

a call from A.J., an inmate at the Onondaga County Justice Center (OCJC). A.J. initially

called D.H., who added A.C. to the call. While A.J., D.H., and A.C. were speaking, D.H.

asked A.C. to put defendant on the phone. Defendant then made statements about the hit-

and-run accident. A Syracuse Police detective monitoring the Attorney General’s wiretap

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heard the conversation, recognized defendant’s voice, and notified the detectives working

the hit-and-run case. Syracuse Police then obtained a recording of the call from OCJC.

A grand jury indicted defendant on a single count of leaving the scene of an accident

without reporting (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 600 [2] [a]). The People produced the

recording obtained from OCJC to defendant in discovery but did not furnish defendant with

a copy of the wiretap warrant and underlying application within the fifteen-day period

prescribed by CPL 700.70. Several months after defendant was arraigned, the People

informed defendant by letter that the police were “alerted” to the call by the wiretap.

Defendant moved to preclude the call from evidence on the grounds that the People failed

to adhere to the CPL 700.70 notice procedure.

County Court denied defendant’s motion, holding that the jail recording was not an

“intercepted communication” within the meaning of CPL 700.05 because at least one party

consented to the recording. The tape was entered into evidence and defendant was

convicted. The Appellate Division affirmed, holding that the jail recorded the call with the

implied consent of at least one of the participants, and therefore the call was not an

“intercepted communication” and “no warrant was required to record the conversation . . .

and the People were not required to comply with CPL 700.70 before using the recording at

defendant’s trial” (198 AD3d 1373, 1373-1374 [4th Dept 2021]).

A Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal (38 NY3d 952 [2022]).

II.

Criminal Procedure Law article 700 prescribes the procedures governing

eavesdropping warrants, commonly referred to as wiretaps. We require strict—indeed,

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“scrupulous”—compliance with the provisions of this statute, and the prosecution has the

burden of establishing such compliance (see People v Capolongo, 85 NY2d 151, 159-160

[1995]). In imposing this rigorous standard, we recognize that “[t]he insidiousness of

electronic surveillance threatens the right to be free from unjustifiable governmental

intrusion into one’s individual privacy to a far greater extent than the writs of assistance

and general warrants so dreaded by those who successfully battled for the adoption of the

Bill of Rights” (People v Schulz, 67 NY2d 144, 148-149 [1986]). Our State Constitution

contains explicit protections against the unreasonable interception of telephonic

communications (NY Const art. I, § 12), and “our interpretation of article 700 must be

sensitive to the constitutional guarantees against search and seizure that the statute seeks

to protect” (Schulz, 67 NY2d at 148 [alterations omitted]).

Pursuant to CPL 700.70, the “contents of any intercepted communication, or

evidence derived therefrom[,]” cannot be used at trial unless the People, “within fifteen

days after arraignment and before the commencement of the trial, furnish the defendant

with a copy of the eavesdropping warrant, and accompanying application, under which

interception was authorized or approved.” The People argue, and the Appellate Division

held, that the wiretap was not an intercepted communication because A.J. consented to the

recording of the call by OCJC. We disagree.

As a preliminary matter, our precedent makes clear that the recording of the call

made by OCJC and admitted into evidence at trial is not itself an “intercepted

communication” within the meaning of CPL 700.05. An “intercepted communication” is

defined, as relevant here, as “a telephonic . . . communication which was intentionally

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overheard or recorded by a person other than the sender or receiver thereof, without the

consent of the sender or receiver” (CPL 700.05 [3] [a]). In People v Diaz (33 NY3d 92

[2019]), we held that “detainees, informed of the monitoring and recording of their calls,

have no objectively reasonable constitutional expectation of privacy in the content of those

calls” (id. at 95). In such circumstances, detainees “impliedly consent to the ‘taping’ of

those conversations” (People v Williams, 35 NY3d 24, 46 [2020]). The recording made by

OCJC was made with the consent of A.J.—the sender—and accordingly was not an

“intercepted communication” (see CPL 700.05). OCJC could “share the recording[] with

law enforcement officials and prosecutors[] without violating the Fourth Amendment”

(Diaz, 33 NY3d at 95). That does not end our inquiry, however. The issue here is whether

the recorded conversation obtained from OCJC was “derived” from an “intercepted

communication.”

Guided by the principle that “article 700 and all its integral parts [should] not be

treated lightly or with cavalier disregard” (Schulz, 67 NY2d at 149 [internal quotation

marks and alterations omitted]), we interpret the statute to require an independent consent

analysis for the eavesdropping conducted pursuant to the warrant. The wiretap and the

recording made by OCJC are separate and distinct pieces of potential evidence, and the

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Related

People v. Capolongo
647 N.E.2d 1286 (New York Court of Appeals, 1995)
People v. Myers
2021 NY Slip Op 05435 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2021)
People v. Schulz
492 N.E.2d 120 (New York Court of Appeals, 1986)

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