United States v. Eggers

21 F. Supp. 2d 261, 1998 WL 262349
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 26, 1998
DocketS1 97 CR. 1004(LAK)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 21 F. Supp. 2d 261 (United States v. Eggers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Eggers, 21 F. Supp. 2d 261, 1998 WL 262349 (S.D.N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAPLAN, District Judge.

Valerie and Anthony Miremadi seek to suppress certain documents, seized during the course of their arrests and a subsequent search of their home, on the grounds that the documents were obtained in violation of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the United States Constitution. In particular, the Mire-madis argue that (1) certain documents seized from their home must be suppressed as fruit of an unwarned custodial interrogation in violation of the Fifth Amendment, and (2) certain other documents must be suppressed because the Miremadis’ consent to search their home was not voluntarily given and the documents seized during that search therefore were obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment.

For the reasons that follow, the motion to suppress documents seized as the result of the alleged custodial interrogation is denied, and the motion to suppress documents seized during the subsequent search of the Mire-madis’ home is granted.

Background 1

Anthony and Valerie Miremadi, Paul W. Eggers and G.H. Lincecum were indicted in this Court on September 26,1997 on charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with an investment program involving a couple named- Ilse and Herbert Erpel. Arrest warrants and a search warrant for the offices of Eggers and Lincecum issued on May 8, 1997. No search warrant ever was sought or obtained as to the Miremadis’ residence or business. Soon thereafter, Secret Service Agent Thomas Atkinson, the case agent, traveled to Los Angeles to arrest Anthony Miremadi and his wife, Valerie. Atkinson was assisted in Los Angeles by fellow Secret Service Agents Jacqueline Marengo, Jack Peterson, and Peter Damos. 2

On the afternoon in question, the four agents first arrested Anthony Miremadi at his place of business. 3 The agents read Mr. Miremadi the Miranda warnings and handcuffed him. According to Agent Atkinson, Mr. Miremadi seemed surprised and expressed concern about his three daughters who would be returning home from school shortly. 4 The agents gathered Mr. Mirema-di’s belongings and placed him in the back of one of their two unmarked cars: They proceeded next to the Miremadis’ home a few minutes away in order to arrest Valerie Mi-remadi. Once there, Agent Atkinson and Marengo approached the door with guns visible below their jackets, and Atkinson knocked on the door. When Valerie Mirema-di opened it, Agent Atkinson announced that he had a warrant for her arrest. Exactly what happened next was the subject of conflicting testimony.

Alleged Custodial Interrogation

All of the witnesses agreed that Valerie Miremadi immediately became very agitated and excited upon being told that she was *263 under arrest and began asking questions of the agents regarding the basis for her arrest. As a result of her agitation, no doubt, the agents failed to follow the standard procedures normally attendant to an arrest. They did not immediately read her the Miranda warnings, nor did they restrain her.

Agent Atkinson testified that, as he explained the charges to her, Ms. Miremadi turned around and began walking into the house. 5 Although he conceded that he did not know where she was going, what she was doing, or even whether other people were in the house at the time, Agent Atkinson said that he nevertheless followed her into the house, down a short hallway, through the kitchen and a wide-open living room, and finally into an office area in the rear. 6 Once in the office area, Agent Atkinson recalled, Ms. Miremadi protested her innocence of the charges by voluntarily picking up certain documents and showing them to him. 7 The first documents she picked up, Agent Atkinson admitted, had nothing to do with the investment scheme he had been investigating, but he seized them from her anyway. 8 The second item Ms. Miremadi picked up was a green folder containing documents; she held it out toward Agent Atkinson and riffled through the contents within his view. Atkinson testified that he was able to observe the names of investors and other relevant information regarding the investment scheme. 9 Consequently, he took the folder from Ms. Miremadi and another document he noticed lying on the desk. 10 Ms. Miremadi protested that she did not give him permission to take the documents, but Agent Atkinson replied that he could take them because they were in plain view. 11

Ms. Miremadi offered a different account of the events leading up to the seizure of these documents. She contended that after being told she was under arrest, she backed up into the house and that Agents Atkinson and Marengo followed her into the entry way. 12 At that point, she said, she asked “what it was all about,” and Agent Atkinson explained to her that it was a fraud case involving the Erpels. 13 According to Ms. Miremadi, Agent Atkinson then asked whether she had any documents relating to the Erpels in the house and, if so, whether he could see them. 14 Ms. Miremadi stated that she replied affirmatively and that only then did she lead the two agents through the house and into the office area. 15 She said she then handed Agent Atkinson a file marked “Erpels” from a stack of closed files on her desk and, when Agent Atkinson asked to see the other files, she refused, saying she did not think they were relevant to the Erpel investigation. 16

Ms. Miremadi testified that she then told the agents that she needed to make arrangements for her three daughters, who would be coming home from school shortly. The agents permitted her to do so. 17 Shortly thereafter, according to Ms. Miremadi, Agent Atkinson sat her down in the kitchen and asked her more questions about her involvement in the investment schemes. 18 During this conversation, Atkinson allegedly told her that “97 percent of the people that we arrest are convicted,” that she was in a lot of trou *264 ble, facing a lot of jail time, and would be better off if she cooperated with the investigation. 19

It is undisputed that Agent Atkinson neither read Ms. Miremadi Miranda warnings nor otherwise advised her of her rights prior to seizing the documents from the office. 20 Atkinson conceded that he failed to advise Ms. Miremadi of her

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. Supp. 2d 261, 1998 WL 262349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-eggers-nysd-1998.