United States v. Eiland

398 F. Supp. 2d 160, 2005 WL 3211808, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24287
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 21, 2005
DocketCRIM. 04-379(RCL)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 398 F. Supp. 2d 160 (United States v. Eiland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Eiland, 398 F. Supp. 2d 160, 2005 WL 3211808, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24287 (D.D.C. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

LAMBERTH, District Judge.

This matter comes before this Court on several defendants’ motions to suppress evidence obtained via electronic surveillance. Several active defendants have moved to join or adopt the substantive suppression motions of their codefendants. Still other defendants who have since pled guilty moved to join or adopt the substantive suppression motions of their codefen-dants. The United States filed a Consolidated Response, to which two defendants replied. One defendant who has since pled guilty moved to join those replies. All parties participated in a hearing before this Court on October 11, 2005.

Upon consideration of all parties’ filings, the applicable law and the entire record herein, motions by active defendants to join or adopt shall be GRANTED; motions by inactive defendants to join or adopt shall be DENIED as moot; and all defendants’ motions to suppress electronic surveillance evidence shall be DENIED.

I. BACKGROUND

Over a period of 18 months beginning April 2004, defendants filed a succession of 31 motions relating to the wiretap evidence against them. The evidence at issue resulted from surveillance conducted between February and May of 2004 pursuant to applications approved by judges of this Court and one other court. The following applications and affidavits are at issue: (1) February 13, 2004 application for a wiretap on defendant Miller’s telephone including an affidavit by Special Agent Sparks (“Sparks 2/13/04 Affidavit”); (2) March 17, 2004 application for an extension of the *163 Miller wiretap including an affidavit by Special Agent Sparks (“Sparks 3/17/04 Affidavit”); (3) April 15, 2004 application for a second extension of the Miller wiretap including an affidavit by Special Agent Sparks (“Sparks 4/15/04 Affidavit”); (4) April 27, 2004 application for a wiretap on defendant Eiland’s telephone based on an affidavit by Special Agent Sparks (“Sparks 4/27/04 Affidavit”); (5) May 28, 2004-appli-cation for an extension of the Eiland wiretap based on an affidavit by Special Agent Sparks (“Sparks 5/28/04 Affidavit”); (6) May 13, 2004 application for a wiretap on defendant Bryant’s telephone including an affidavit by Special Agent Young (‘Young Affidavit”); and (7) May 19, 2004 application for video and oral communications surveillance including an affidavit by Special Agent Hall (“Hall Affidavit”). Defendants seek suppression of all intercepted communications and all evidence derived therefrom. Gaskins’ Mem. Supp. 7; Gas-kins’ Mot. 1; Miller’s Suppl. Mot. 3-4; Moore’s Mem. Supp. 13; • Thomas’ Mot. 12-13.

A Standing

Defendants assert that they are “aggrieved persons” with standing to challenge the evidence. Gaskins’ Mem. Supp. 5-6. Defendants claim to meet the “aggrieved person” standard because they were targeted by the surveillance (Gas-kins’ Mem. Supp. 6; Gaskins’ Reply 2-3; Miller’s Mot. 1; Simon’s Mot. 3-4; Thomas’ Mot. 2-3; Thomas’ Reply 9-11), intercepted by it (Eiland’s Mot. ¶ 2; Gaskins’ Mem. Supp. 6; Gaskins’ Reply 2-3; Miller’s Mot. 3; Moore’s Mem. Supp. 3; Simon’s Mot. 3-4; Thomas’ Mot. 2-3), implicated by the resulting evidence (Gaskins’ Mem. Supp. 6; Moore’s Mem. Supp. 3^4), or some combination thereof. The United States disputes standing as to those defendants whose conversations were not captured in the contested recordings. Opp’n 10-16.

B, Statutory Requirements

1. Probable Cause

Defendants assert that statutory law and case law establishes that “the probable cause standard for seizing telephone conversations is high for Fourth Amendment purposes.” Gaskins’ Mem. Supp. 7; Moore’s Mem. Supp. 5; cf. Eiland’s Mot. ¶ 11. The probable cause standard is even higher for video surveillance. Thomas’ Mot. 18-19. The gravaftien of defendants’ complaints is that the applications, and especially the affidavits, contained similar or identical language, and were conclusory and incomplete. ' Eiland’s Mot. ¶ 14; Moore’s Mem. Supp. 8-10, 17; Simon’s Mot. 5; Thomas’ Mot. 12-15; Thomas’ Suppl. Mot. 2-4. As such, they are alleged to have insufficiently satisfied the probable cause standard and failed to meet all statutory requirements. Gaskins’ Mem. Supp. passim; Miller Mot. 2-3. If there were no probable cause, the judge could not have “made an independent factual determination regarding the necessity of [the] wiretaps.” Butcher’s Suppl. Mot. 1. The Government defends its use of similar language in succeeding affidavits. Opp’n 13. The practice is not prohibited as long as the key requirement of probable cause is satisfied; namely, that “the affidavit supports probable cause for the target facilities the application seeks to make interceptions.” Id.; id.' at 14.

Defendants also argue that the affidavits contained falsehoods. The Sparks 2/13/04 Affidavit allegedly contains material false statements concerning defendant Gaskins, entitling him to a Franks Hearing. Gas-kins’ Mem. Supp. 12. Specifically, two assertions are identified as false: that Gas-kins committed identity fraud and that his bank accounts routinely reflected daily bal- *164 anees exceeding $9,000, indicating that he laundered Miller’s illicit drug proceeds. Gaskins’ Mem. Supp. 12-15; Gaskins’ Reply 4-5. Even worse, the alleged misstatements were included with at least reckless disregard for the truth because the Government did not take steps to corroborate the information, some of which was provided by a cooperating witness the government knew to be incredible. Gas-kins’ Mem. Supp. 15-16; Gaskins’ Reply 6-7.

Defendant Thomas also argues that he is entitled to a hearing because the affidavits contained “many misleading, false, and reckless statements.” Thomas’ Mot. 20. He cites the omission of the previous application for interceptee Ballard, discussed infra Parts I.B.4 and II.B.5. Thomas’ Mot. 20-22. Thomas argues that the allegation that he had plans to rob a bank or harm a cooperating witness was baseless. Thomas’ Mot. 22; Thomas’ Reply 13-14. He notes that several affidavits include errors that might have misled the judge into finding probable cause where there was none. Thomas’ Mot. 22-23.

Defendant Moore echoes arguments that the affidavits contain falsehoods. Moore’s Mem. Supp. 10-12, 14-16. He points to unsupported implications that he was somehow involved with the conspiracy and had previously committed criminal acts. Moore’s Mem. Supp. 10-12. These implications render the .affidavits intentionally misleading because they “attempt[ ] to create the appearance of a criminal conspiracy” and “Corey Moore’s association.” Id. at 14. These material statements were made with at least reckless disregard because they relied on a cooperating witness whose reliability police had reason to mistrust. Id. at 15.

The Government asserts that probable cause was amply established in its applications. Opp’n 21-22. The applications provided factual details supporting the finding of probable cause, such as identification of co-conspirators and premises used in furtherance of the conspiracy. Opp’n 22. In regard to the allegedly false statements included in the affidavits, the United States contends that defendants’ arguments fail to meet the legal standard. Opp’n 29-40.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
398 F. Supp. 2d 160, 2005 WL 3211808, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-eiland-dcd-2005.