United States v. Guy Joseph Duchi

906 F.2d 1278, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 11010, 1990 WL 89726
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 1990
Docket89-5153MN
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 906 F.2d 1278 (United States v. Guy Joseph Duchi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Guy Joseph Duchi, 906 F.2d 1278, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 11010, 1990 WL 89726 (8th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

Guy Joseph Duchi was convicted of acquiring cocaine and intending to sell it. This case is about the constitutionality of the searches during which the police gathered the evidence of his crimes. Because the officers’ entry into Duchi’s home violated the Fourth Amendment, we reverse Mr. Duchi’s conviction and remand for a new trial.

I.

This case begins with an undeliverable package. A parcel addressed to C. Conrad, 318 Lowry Avenue North, Minneapolis, Minnesota, was shipped “next-day air” through the United Parcel Service. A delivery was attempted, but no one was available to accept the package at the Lowry Avenue address — the Reflections bar. The UPS driver noted on his delivery form that an individual outside that address didn’t know anyone associated with the bar by the name of C. Conrad. At the UPS office in Minneapolis undeliverable packages are sent to post clerks such as Diane Dicken-son. It is their responsibility to find out where such parcels came from and where they are going. The record reflects that Ms. Dickenson has handled over forty thousand undeliverable items for UPS. T. 141.

Ms. Dickenson received this package and, as is her practice, opened it, attempting to locate a sender’s address or more information about the intended recipient. She did not find any such information. Instead, she found two brick-like objects covered with several layers of wrapping. Starting with the outermost layer, there was a large clear plastic bag, then a layer of cellophane covering each brick, and finally a Spanish-language newspaper wrapped around each brick. Ms. Dickenson noticed a small triangular tear in one of the newspaper wrappings. A firm white substance was revealed beneath the still-attached flap of the tear. Suspecting either a bomb or drugs, Ms. Dickenson alerted the loss-prevention supervisor: Scott Larson. He examined the parcel, its contents, and its delivery history. Larson concluded that it contained contraband, and notified the narcotics unit of the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office.

Two officers responded. They examined the package and its suspicious contents, and also concluded that narcotics were likely contained in the two bricks. By sampling one of the bricks through the tear in the newspaper wrapping (after removing the two layers of clear plastic), the officers determined that the bricks were indeed cocaine. They then removed the package and its contents to their office. The officers then removed another sample from the bricks, and sent it to their crime lab to verify the field test. It was now around mid-day.

At this point, the officers began to piece together their suspicions about whose package this was. Based on prior criminal investigations they knew several relevant facts. Constance Conrad held the liquor license for the Reflections bar, the package’s intended destination. Conrad lived with Joseph Duchi at 3422 Newton Avenue North in Minneapolis. A little over a year before both Conrad and Duchi had been arrested and questioned about harboring an escaped fugitive. Their home and cars were searched. They were also suspected of possessing drugs, but the searches failed to turn up any contraband. Since *1280 that time, a neighbor had come forward and admitted that he had done two things on the day of that arrest and search: alerted Duchi and Conrad to the police surveillance, and removed cocaine and a pistol from their residence.

Based on all this information, the Henne-pin County officers focused their investigation of the package on Duchi and Conrad. Surveillance of the Reflections bar began almost immediately after the field test of the parcel. Officers were also dispatched to the Duchi-Conrad residence to monitor any comings and goings. Meanwhile, UPS had received at least two phone calls inquiring about the package. Each time he called, the male caller had identified himself as C. Conrad, and left two phone numbers where he could be reached. UPS supplied these numbers to the police around 2:30 that afternoon. The officers traced the numbers through the local phone company. One number was listed at 3422 Newton Avenue North, the Duchi-Conrad residence, the other at 318 Lowry Avenue North, the Reflections bar.

After yet another call was taken by UPS, the officers decided to return the package. Their aim was to confirm the identity of the recipient by allowing a controlled pickup. Before resealing the package, the officers substituted a book for one of the cocaine bricks. That brick was retained by the police. Under police supervision, UPS notified the male caller that the package could be picked up at any time. The man stated that he would be there shortly. It was now a little after 5:00 P.M. Surveillance was in place at the residence and the bar, and officers were also waiting at UPS.

Around 5:45 Conrad collected the parcel from the UPS office. She was followed to her home, where she arrived a little after 6:00 P.M. Duchi’s black Cadillac was parked at the house. Mindful of Duchi’s earlier behavior of disposing of drugs when alerted to police surveillance, and that he was probably in the house with the drugs, the officers feared that the evidence of Duchi’s crime was in danger. The officer in charge decided to enter without a warrant. At approximately 6:10 the officers entered the premises and announced their intentions. Conrad was on the back porch about to barbecue supper; Duchi was in the living room holding his infant son and visiting with two friends; the package was on the dining room table, unopened.

A security sweep of the residence revealed that no one else was present. The officers requested Duchi’s consent to a search of the house, noting that a warrant application would be made if he refused. Duchi said he wanted to talk to his lawyer before cooperating. The officers again asked for his consent to search the premises. Duchi eventually signed a consent form.

The search turned up several items in addition to the package: small amounts of cocaine and methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia, a loaded .38 revolver (found underneath a dresser in one of the children’s bedrooms), and two rolls of large amounts of cash. Duchi identified one of those bundles as the till money to open the Reflections bar. He prevailed on the officers not to confiscate it by promising to reveal as yet undiscovered drugs in the house. The officers agreed. They also found evidénce of a recent trip by Duchi to California: a motel receipt and plane tickets.

II.

Duchi was initially indicted on six counts of narcotics and firearms offenses stemming from the parcel of cocaine. 1 A superseding indictment added to these charges three additional narcotics-trafficking and firearms counts. These new counts arose out of the March 1987 events *1281 when Duchi disposed of evidence through his neighbor. Three hearings were held on the defendant-appellant’s motions to suppress. Duchi sought to exclude all the evidence gleaned from the initial search of the package, the warrantless entry into the Duchi-Conrad home, and the search of that home.

A magistrate recommended denying each of these motions. She reasoned that the search of the package (including the field test) was justified because it did not exceed the scope of the private search already completed by the UPS employees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
906 F.2d 1278, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 11010, 1990 WL 89726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-guy-joseph-duchi-ca8-1990.