United States v. Danesi

342 F. Supp. 889
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedApril 28, 1972
DocketCrim. 13031
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 342 F. Supp. 889 (United States v. Danesi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Danesi, 342 F. Supp. 889 (D. Conn. 1972).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO SUPPRESS

NEWMAN, District Judge.

Defendant is charged with possession of an unregistered shotgun, which was seized from his car on July 14, 1971. The basic uncontroverted facts are as follows. During the period immediately preceding July 14, there had been a feud between patrons of Del’s Club and the Emerald Bar, both located in New Haven. About one week prior to July 14, defendant had been the victim of a shooting in this area. On the night in question, defendant left Del’s Club at about 1 a. m., drove off and was stopped a few blocks away by New Haven police. In his car, the police found a .45 pistol, for which defendant had a local pistol permit, and a shotgun which, because of its short barrel length, was required to be federally registered and was not.

The other facts are in sharp dispute. The government’s version is based on the following testimony of Patrolman Nichols of the New Haven Police Department. At 5:30 p. m. on July 14, he received a phone call from an informant, who had on three previous occasions supplied him with reliable information. The informant told him that there was going to be trouble between patrons of Del’s and the Emerald that night and that some of them had weapons. Danesi’s name was not mentioned. Nichols told the informant to be at Del’s that evening, and also told him how he could later reach Nichols by telephone. Nichols reported this information to Lieutenant Mor rone of the New Haven Police Department, who assigned him to surveillance of Del’s Club that evening. From his post across the street, he saw defendant enter Del’s at about 10 p. m., and observed that defendant was not carrying anything when he entered. At about 11:30 or 11:45 p. m., Nichols received a second call from the informant, who was now inside Del’s. The informant told Nichols that defendant had a .45 revolver in his belt and a shotgun in a brown paper bag. Nichols saw the informant leave the bar ten or fifteen minutes after the call. Nichols saw the defendant leave the bar at about 1 a. m., carrying a brown paper bag, out of which protruded about 1% inches of a gun stock. Nichols was about fifty or sixty yards from defendant at the time of these observations. He notified Lieutenant Marrone by radio of these observations, and Lieutenant Morrone dispatched another member of the surveillance team, Sergeant Muller, to stop Danesi’s car. Sergeant Muller arrested defendant and seized the shotgun.

Defendant offered evidence to controvert parts of this story. Joe DellaQuila, a part owner of Del’s, testified as follows. He was tending bar on the night of July 14. At some point after 11 p. m. defendant arrived and asked for the return of a shotgun he had previously loaned to the bar for ornamental purposes. The weapon was then in the bar’s basement, and DellaQuila went downstairs to get it after tending bar for an additional five or ten minutes. The gun was in two pieces, and too long to fit entirely into a single paper bag, so DellaQuila placed it in one bag, with a second bag on top, in a manner that concealed the contents of the resulting package. The placing of the gun in the paper bags took place in the back room of the bar, with no one but DellaQuila and defendant present. All this took place at about 11:30 p. m. or midnight. DellaQuila thought that defendant left immediately after the return of the shotgun, but he did not see him go out the door.

Defendant testified that he arrived at the bar at about 12:40 or 12:45 a. m., asked DellaQuila for the shotgun, and received it, totally covered by two paper bags, as DellaQuila testified. He then went outside, put the package in his car, and drove off.

James Gell, another patron of Del’s and a friend of defendant’s, testified *892 that he and his wife were at Del’s on July 14, that defendant entered at about 12:45 a. m., and stayed only five or ten minutes.

There can be little doubt that if the police version is accepted, the eyewitness report of the informant, who had previously given reliable information, is sufficient to provide probable cause to validate the seizure of the shotgun 1 . Defendant’s essential contention is that since the informant’s report constitutes the main portion of the probable cause, the informant should be disclosed so that his testimony can aid in resolution of the factual dispute between the government and the defendant. Two facts are at issue: (1) whether the shotgun was ever seen by the informant (and whether the end of the stock was seen by Nichols) or whether it was totally concealed from anyone’s view when placed in the two paper bags in the back room, and (2) whether defendant arrived at 10 p. m., as Nichols testified, or around 12:45 a. m., as defendant and Gell testified, a time by which Nichols says the informant had already left the bar.

Arguing from these factual disputes, defendant basically contests the existence of the informant 2 . Of course, he does not dispute that the facts allegedly reported by the informant — defendant’s possession of both guns in the bar- — did not occur.- His point is that police knowledge of these facts did not come from an informant prior to the arrest, but were reconstructed after the police made the arrest and found the weapons. In support of this claim, he offered to prove that the police were stopping and searching all cars that left the vicinity of Del’s that night. To determine whether the informant exists, defendant has asked for disclosure of his identity.

*893 In this Circuit, disclosure of the identity of an informant is not required unless the informant’s story provides the “ ‘essence or core or main bulk’ of the evidence brought forth which would otherwise establish probable cause.” United States v. Tucker, 380 F.2d 206, 212 (2d Cir. 1967); United States v. Comissiong, 429 F.2d 834, 838-839 (2d Cir. 1970). While the precise meaning of terms like “bulk” or “core” is elusive, Judge Friendly in Comissiong suggested that disclosure is not .required when “the independent evidence, even though not adequate of itself to establish probable cause, constitutes a sufficient voucher against fabrication, although obviously not a complete one.” 429 F.2d at 839.

Thus, the initial question here is, did the informant’s story constitute the “bulk” or “core” of probable cause. The independent evidence relied upon by the government consists wholly of Patrolman Nichols’ observation of defendant (1) leaving the bar, (2) carrying a paper bag, (3) out of which a gun stock was protruding. The first two factors are colorless on the issue of probable cause. Absent the allegation of an informant’s tip, the observation of a man leaving a bar carrying a paper bag fails to rise even to the level of “suspicion.”

There remains for consideration Nichol’s purported observation from fifty to sixty yards, under normal street light illumination at night, of 1% inches of what he claimed to recognize as a gun stock protruding from the paper bag defendant was carrying. If this testimony is credited, it might well render the informant’s report something less than the core of the probable cause.

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Bluebook (online)
342 F. Supp. 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-danesi-ctd-1972.