United States v. Elmore

177 F. Supp. 2d 773, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17666, 2001 WL 1339002
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 1, 2001
DocketCR2-01-1281(1)
StatusPublished

This text of 177 F. Supp. 2d 773 (United States v. Elmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Elmore, 177 F. Supp. 2d 773, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17666, 2001 WL 1339002 (S.D. Ohio 2001).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

MARBLEY, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This matter is before the Court on Defendant N’Kenley Elmore’s Motion to Suppress Physical Evidence and Motion to Suppress Statements Intercepted by Wiretap. The Government responded to both Motions, and the Defendant replied. A hearing on the Motions was held on October 9 and October 10, 2001. For the following reasons, the Defendant’s Motions are GRANTED.

II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. Facts

The following facts were adduced at the suppression hearing held on October 9 and 10, 2001.

*776 On June 21, 2001, Logan County Sheriff Deputy Franchie Robinson stopped a 1991 blue Cadillac El Dorado on Route 33 near Zanesfield, Ohio because he did not see a visible license plate on the car. After following the vehicle for approximately one mile and not seeing a rear license, Deputy Robinson turned on his siren and overhead lights to pull the vehicle over, and activated the police cruiser’s video camera, which ran throughout the entire stop.

Upon stopping the vehicle on the side of the road, Deputy Robinson noticed a square-shaped tag in the upper right corner of the rear window, but was unable to read any of the numbers on the tag, or see any markings on it because the back window was tinted. As Deputy Robinson walked from his police cruiser to the vehicle, he was able to see that the square shaped tag was a temporary license plate from Illinois. Although the tint of the rear window was dark enough to make reading the temporary tag difficult, at that time, Deputy Robinson believed that the degree of tinting was legal under Ohio law.

Deputy Robinson approached the driver’s side of the vehicle, and noticed that there were two men in the car. He spoke to the driver, Orlando Elmore, and told him that he had pulled the car over because he had not seen a rear license, and then asked for Mr. Elmore’s driver’s license, registration, and insurance, all of which Mr. Elmore gave him. Deputy Robinson then returned to his police car, and called in Mr. Elmore’s license to dispatch, asking for a driver’s license history check and a criminal history check. Dispatch informed Deputy Robinson that there was conflicting information about Mr. Elmore’s driver’s license; the record found by Dispatch indicated that Mr. Elmore had a temporary permit to drive with a licensed driver, but the license that Mr. Elmore had given to Deputy Robinson did not indicate that it was temporary. Deputy Robinson waited for more information from Dispatch to try to clarify the discrepancy.

While waiting to hear back from Dispatch, Mr. Elmore stepped out of the car to give Deputy Robinson more information that he thought might help expedite the check on his license. At that point, Deputy Robinson asked Mr. Elmore various questions, including where he and his passenger had driven from, who the passenger was, and where they were going. Mr. Elmore answered that the two men had traveled by bus to Chicago, where he now lives, and that he was now driving the passenger, his brother, back home to Columbus. At the time that Deputy Robinson asked these questions, he did not suspect that either the driver or passenger was engaged in any criminal activity.

Deputy Robinson then went back to the vehicle to speak with the passenger, whom he learned was Tyrone Maynus. He asked Mr. Maynus some of the same questions he had asked Mr. Elmore. Despite the fact that Mr. Maynus provided some conflicting answers, Deputy Robinson still did not believe that either Mr. Elmore or Mr. Maynus was engaged in any criminal activity. At some point during the conversation with Mr. Maynus, however, Deputy Robinson believed he smelled the odor of burned marijuana.

Around the time that Deputy Franchie Robinson was questioning Orlando El-more, Deputy Tony Robinson arrived on the scene of the traffic stop. Officer Tony Robinson continued speaking with Mr. El-more while Officer Franchie Robinson was at the car speaking with Mr. Maynus. Because he thought he recognized Mr. El-more, Officer Tony Robinson asked Mr. Elmore if he had arrested him before, to which Mr. Elmore answered “no.” 1 Be *777 fore Officer Franchie Robinson told Officer Tony Robinson that he thought he smelled marijuana in the car, Officer Tony Robinson asked Mr. Elmore for consent to search the car. After Mr. Elmore gave consent, Officer Tony Robinson asked him if there was either money or narcotics in the car. Mr. Elmore responded that there was a large amount of cash (approximately $10,000) in the trunk of the vehicle, but no drugs. 2 Officer Tony Robinson testified that at the time that he asked for consent to search the car, he had no basis for believing that either Mr. Elmore or Mr. Maynüs was engaged in any criminal activity.

Mr. Elmore returned to the car to open the trunk. At that point, Officer Franchie Robinson had finished talking to Mr. May-nus. Officer Franchie Robinson told Officer Tony Robinson that he thought he smelled burned marijuana, and Tony Robinson told Franchie Robinson that they had permission to search the car. Mr. Elmore then opened the trunk, showed the officers where the money was, and the officers removed the money from the vehicle.

After removing the cash from the vehicle, the officers called for additional police assistance. Soon thereafter, Deputy Robert Summers arrived on the scene with a police canine. The dog was placed in the car and alerted to the back rear corner of the back seat of the car, near the side wall. Officer Summers, after failing to find any narcotics on or behind the back seat, got a screwdriver to remove the air vent in the rear door jamb. Once the air vent was removed, Office Summers saw a black panel, which he then pried back. The black panel broke off to reveal a false compartment. Inside the compartment, Officer Summers found a cellophane container that contained what looked like powder cocaine. Subsequently, when the vehicle was towed to the Logan County Sheriffs Department, a member of the Highway Patrol was able to override the electronic system that controlled the air vents in the car. With the electronic system shut down, the air vents were easily removed, and officers found in compartments behind the air vents what was later determined to be approximately six kilograms of powder cocaine.

After Officer Summers discovered the powder cocaine at the scene of the traffic stop, Mr. Elmore and Mr. Maynus were arrested for possession of approximately six kilograms of suspected cocaine. Mr. Elmore claimed that Defendant N’Kenley Elmore was the intended recipient of-the vehicle and the cocaine. Mr. Elmore also stated that Defendant N’Kenley Elmore had provided the money to purchase the vehicle in which the narcotics were found.

Drug Enforcement Agents asked Orlando Elmore if he would be willing to help further the investigation in his case, and Mr. Elmore indicated he would do whatever he could in order to deal with the charges against him. The agents asked him to make a monitored telephone call to Defendant N’Kenley Elmore, and Orlando Elmore agreed. Thereafter, the agents recorded a number of phone conversations between Orlando and N’Kenley Elmore.

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Bluebook (online)
177 F. Supp. 2d 773, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17666, 2001 WL 1339002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-elmore-ohsd-2001.