United States v. Carrillo

123 F. Supp. 2d 1223, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18632, 2000 WL 1880163
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedNovember 20, 2000
Docket1:99-cr-00300
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 123 F. Supp. 2d 1223 (United States v. Carrillo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Carrillo, 123 F. Supp. 2d 1223, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18632, 2000 WL 1880163 (D. Colo. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SPARR, District Judge.

THIS MATTER is before the court on the following fifteen motions filed by the Defendants:

1. Defendant Carrillo’s Motion to Suppress Intercepted Electronic and Wire Communications (filed September 21, 2000);

2. Defendant Hinojosa Gonzales’ Motion to Suppress Electronic Communications and for Franks Hearing (filed September 25, 2000);

3. Defendant Atayde’s Motion to Suppress Intercepted Communications (filed September 25, 2000);

4. Defendant Luna’s Motion to Suppress Intercepted Electronic and Wire Communication (filed September 26, 2000);

5. Defendant Licon’s Motion to Suppress Wiretap Evidence and for a Franks Hearing (filed September 26, 2000);

6. Defendant Castorena’s Motion to Suppress Wiretaps (filed September 22, 2000);

7. Defendant Olivas’ Motion to Suppress Evidence Derived from Wiretaps 99-WT-3-Z, 99-WT-4-Z, 99-WT-6-Z, and 99-WT-9-Z (filed September 25, 2000);

8. Defendant Pacheco-Vasquez’ Motion to Suppress Wiretap Evidence (filed September 25, 2000);

9. Defendant Mark Jones’ Motion to Suppress Intercepted Wire Communications (filed August 25, 2000); and

10. Defendant Brandy Jones’ Motion to Suppress Evidence Seized Pursuant to Wiretap (filed September 24, 2000);

11. Defendant Carrillo’s Motion to Join in Co-Defendant Motions to Suppress Intercepted Electronic and Wire Communications (filed September 21, 2000);

12. Defendant Licon’s Motion for Leave to Join the Wiretap Suppression Motions of CoDefendants (filed September 26, 2000);

13. Defendant Jiron’s Motion to Join Co-Defendant’s [sic] Motions to Suppress Evidence Seized Pursuant to Wiretap (filed October 13, 2000);

14. Defendant Castorena’s Motion to Join in Specific Motions Filed by Co-Defendants (filed May 9, 2000); and

15. Defendant Morales’ Motion to Adopt (filed October 4, 2000).

All Defendants have joined in all of the motions listed above. The court has reviewed the motions, the Government’s Consolidated Response (filed October 11, 2000), the extensive exhibits, the entire case file, the evidence and arguments presented at the hearing held November 1 and 2, 2000, and the applicable law and is sufficiently advised in the premises.

At the hearing held November 1 and 2, 2000, Defendants narrowed the arguments raised in their written motions. Defendants contend that the evidence obtained from 99-WT-3-Z, 99-WT-4-Z, and 99-WT-6-Z must be suppressed because the Affidavits in support of the Applications for interception of electronic communications failed to satisfy the “necessity” requirement set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 2518(l)(e). 1 In addition, Defendant Li-con argues that the Affidavits in support of the Applications for interception of electronic communications failed to establish probable cause to believe that the interception of communications would produce evi *1228 dence of his involvement in the criminal offenses outlined in the Applications.

I.The Challenged Wiretaps

1. 99-WT-3-Z

The first wiretap Order, issued April 6, 1999, authorized interception of communications from cellular telephone number (303) 810-5990, assigned Electronic Serial Number (“ESN”) 25301332699 and purchased from AT & T Wireless by the FBI for use as an undercover phone in this investigation. The subject cellular telephone was subscribed to by the FBI in the name of Curt Ramsey at an undercover address in Denver, Colorado, and was in the possession of and utilized by Raul Atayde. The named targets and intereep-tees in the first wiretap Order were “members of the Manuel Carrillo drug distribution organization, including but not limited to ... Raul Atayde, Andres Luna, Manuel Carrillo, Hector Gonzalez, Augustine Oli-vas, Hilda Gutierrez, Omar Nunez, Emili-ano Licon, and others yet unknown.” (Government’s Exhibit 3 ¶A). The first wiretap expired on May 5, 1999. (See Government’s Exhibits 1, 2, and 3).

2. 99-WT-4-Z

The second wiretap Order, also issued April 6, 1999, authorized interception of communications from a digital display paging device assigned telephone number (303) 836-6202 and purchased from Communications Unlimited by the FBI for use as an undercover pager in this investigation. The subject pager was subscribed to by Curt Ramsey of the FBI at an undercover address in Denver, Colorado. As of March 12, 1999, the subject pager was in the possession of and utilized by Raul Atayde. On or about April 6, 1999, when 99-WT-3-Z commenced, the subject pager was transferred to the possession of Manuel Carrillo. The named targets and in-terceptees in the second wiretap Order were Raul Atayde, Andres Luna, Manuel Carrillo, Hector Gonzalez, Augustine Oli-vas, Hilda Gutierrez, Omar Nunez, Emili-ano Licon, and others yet unknown. (Government’s Exhibit 5 1A). The second wiretap also expired on May 5, 1999. (See Government’s Exhibits 1, 4, and 5).

3.99-WT-6-Z

The third wiretap Order, issued May 18, 1999, approximately two weeks after the first two wiretaps expired, authorized interception of communications from cellular telephone number (303) 898-3004 bearing ESN 25301438370. The subject cellular telephone was subscribed to by Curt Ramsey of the FBI at an undercover address in Denver, Colorado, and was in the possession of and utilized by Manuel Carrillo. The named targets and interceptees in the third wiretap Order were “members of the Manuel Carrillo drug distribution organization, including but not limited to” Raul Atayde, Andres Jaquin Luna III, Manuel Guillermo Carrillo, Hector Hinojosa Gonzalez, Hilda Gutierrez, Omar Nunez, Emi-liano Zapata Licon, Angel LNU, Raul Garcia, Tomas Guerra, Oscar Pacheco-Vasquez, Oscar LNU, Alejandro Hernandez, Jose Juan Melendez, Chilas LNU, Augustine Olivas, Xavier Davis, and others yet unknown. (Government’s Exhibit 9 ¶ A). The third wiretap expired on June 15, 1999. (See Government’s Exhibits 7, 8, and 9).

II. The Investigation

According to the Affidavits submitted in support of the three wiretap Applications, affiant Denver Police Officer/F.B.I. Special Federal Officer Jamie D. Akens began Ms participation in the investigation of the charged offenses in January of 1997. The investigation in this case and related Criminal Action Nos. 99-CR-298-S and 99-CR-299-S spanned almost three years.

Through confidential sources, Officer Akens learned that Manuel Carrillo was the founder and leader of a violent Denver street gang known as the Mexican Criminal Mafia Sureño 13 (“MCM SUR 13”) and that Carrillo was personally distributing and using others to distribute large quantities of cocaine and methamphetamine in *1229 the Denver metropolitan area.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 F. Supp. 2d 1223, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18632, 2000 WL 1880163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-carrillo-cod-2000.