United States v. Barr

454 F. Supp. 2d 229, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73018, 2006 WL 2848595
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 2006
DocketCriminal 05-0347
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 454 F. Supp. 2d 229 (United States v. Barr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Barr, 454 F. Supp. 2d 229, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73018, 2006 WL 2848595 (E.D. Pa. 2006).

Opinion

MOTION TO SUPPRESS EVIDENCE FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

RUFE, District Judge.

The eight-count indictment in this matter charges that Defendant Ephraim Barr committed and conspired to commit identity theft and other acts of fraud. Defendant has filed a conclusory and bare-bones motion that seeks to suppress a number of pretrial identifications, statements, and pieces of evidence. Upon consideration of Defendant’s Combined Motion to Suppress Physical Evidence, Statements, and Identification, and the Government’s Response thereto, and after a three-day evidentiary hearing, the Court enters the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

FINDINGS OF FACT

I. Thomas Somerville Incident

1. Patrolman Jason Yaletchko currently works for the Upper Chichester Township Police Department in Delaware County, Pennsylvania. He has more than ten years of law-enforcement experience.
2. On December 16, 2002, Patrolman Yaletchko received a report from Ray Mikell, branch manager of the Boothwyn branch of the Thomas Somerville Company, that someone had passed a fraudulent check at the branch on November 21, 2002.
3. Mikell told Patrolman Yaletchko that the suspect was a smaller-framed black male, 6'1" tall, in his mid—-to late-thirties, and that the suspect arrived at the store driving a dark green Ford Excursion with Pennsylvania tags. Another employee of the store had recorded the Pennsylvania tag as # ETT 1337 and informed Patrolman Yaletchko of that fact.
4. Patrolman Yaletchko ran the Pennsylvania tag and learned that the vehicle was registered to Hertz Rental at the Philadelphia Interna- , tional Airport.
5. Patrolman Yaletchko contacted a manager at Hertz Rental, who informed him that on November 21, 2006, the green Ford Excursion bearing Pennsylvania license plate # ETT1337 was rented to an Ephraim Barr of 2129 Mountain Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
6. Upon running a criminal-history report for Ephraim Barr, Patrolman Yaletchko learned that Barr had *232 been involved in numerous thefts in the Philadelphia area, as well as in Delaware, Maryland, and New Jersey.
7. Based on the above information, on December 18, 2002, Patrolman Yal-etchko, with the help of a Pennsylvania State trooper, assembled a photo lineup 1 using the C-PIN system. 2
8. The photo lineup assembled by Patrolman Yaletchko contained eight head shots of black males with similar facial features, hair, and skin tone. Defendant’s photo was located in the upper-left corner of the lineup, or the “first position.”
9. Later on December 18, 2002, Patrolman Yaletchko showed the photo lineup to Robert Suydam, an employee of the Boothwyn branch of Thomas Somerville. Patrolman Yal-etchko sat down with Suydam in the office area of the store, advised him that the suspect’s photo may not be in the lineup, and instructed him to place a check mark and his name next to the photo of anyone he may recognize. No one else was present during this process.
10. Suydam identified the photo of Defendant within ten seconds, placed an “X” in the upper-left-hand corner of the photo, and wrote his signature, the date, and the time at the top of the photo.
11. Patrolman Yaletchko also intended to show the photo lineup to another store employee, Timothy Holmes, on December 18, but Holmes was not at work that day. Accordingly, Patrolman Yaletchko instructed Suydam not to discuss the photo lineup with Holmes before Holmes had an opportunity to view it.
12. The following day, December 19, 2002, Patrolman Yaletchko returned to the Boothwyn branch of Thomas Somerville and showed the photo lineup to Holmes. Patrolman Yaletchko sat down with Holmes outside the presence of others, advised him that the suspect’s photo may not be in the lineup, and instructed him to place a check mark and his name next to the photo of anyone he may recognize.
18. Holmes immediately identified the photo of Defendant, placed an “X” in the upper-left-hand corner of the photo, and wrote his signature, the *233 date, and the time at the top of the photo.
14. No evidence suggests that Suydam and Holmes discussed the photo lineup prior to Holmes’s positive identification.
15. Based on these positive identifications, Patrolman Yaletchko swore out an affidavit of probable cause and obtained a warrant to arrest Defendant.

II. Duron Paints Incident

16. Corporal Robert Harris Truitt currently works for the Delaware State Police. He has worked there for approximately seventeen-and-one-half years.
17. In late May 2003, Corporal Truitt was assigned to investigate a report from Melissa Sehwartzman, an employee in the security department of Duron Paints, located at 1712 Newport Gap Pike, Wilmington, Delaware, that someone had passed a fraudulent check at the store on April 17, 2003. Schwartz-man gave Corporal Truitt a black- and-white surveillance video of the incident.
18. At the start of his investigation, Corporal Truitt spoke with Duron Paints employee Neil Bukay, who had helped the suspect load items purchased with the fraudulent check into the suspect’s car on April 17.
19. Bukay told Corporal Truitt that the suspect was a tall, well-spoken black male, in his twenties to thirties, with a dark complexion, shortly cropped hair, and eyeglasses. He also said that the suspect drove an older model dark-green or teal Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania tag # EJW-2154.
20. Corporal Truitt ran the tag and learned that the vehicle was registered to an Ephraim Barr of 2129 Mountain Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
21. Upon running a criminal-history report for Ephraim Barr, Corporal Truitt learned that Barr had been arrested previously in Delaware.
22. Based on the above information, Corporal Truitt prepared a photo lineup using an automated computer system called Print Track.
23. The photo lineup prepared by Corporal Truitt contained six color head shots of black males with similar facial features, hair, and skin tone. Defendant’s photo was located in the bottom-right corner, or the “sixth position.”
24. On May 27, 2003, Corporal Truitt showed the photo lineup to Kenneth Shell, a Duron Paints employee who was working on the day of the incident, in the manager’s office of the store. Corporal Truitt told Shell to take his time in reviewing the lineup and that the suspect’s photo may not be included. No one else was present during this process.
25. Shell verbally identified the photo of Defendant within seconds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
454 F. Supp. 2d 229, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73018, 2006 WL 2848595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-barr-paed-2006.