United States v. Moore

96 F. Supp. 2d 1154, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7031, 2000 WL 655017
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedMay 18, 2000
Docket1:98-cr-00193
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 96 F. Supp. 2d 1154 (United States v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Moore, 96 F. Supp. 2d 1154, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7031, 2000 WL 655017 (D. Colo. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER ON MOTION TO EXCLUDE

MILLER, District Judge.

This matter is before me on defendant’s Motion to Exclude Evidence of Tape Recorded Conversation. The parties presented evidence and argument at different hearings and filed supplemental briefs thereafter. For the reasons discussed below, I will grant the motion.

Background and Factual Findings

Defendant is implicated in the armed robbery of Cal’s Sporting Authority, a federally-licensed firearms dealer, in April 1998. A confidential informant provided descriptions of the participants that led police to co-defendant Kevin Shuler; the informant also mentioned the involvement of someone named “Iroc” or “Roc.”

Shuler was arrested on April 24,1998, at his place of work. Law enforcement officers learned that Orchid Field, Shuler’s common law wife and mother of his unborn child, was. on her way to Shuler’s work site. Anticipating that Field could have information that would lead to the identification and arrest of “Iroc” or “Roc,” the officers remained at the site. Around noon on that day, Field approached the work site in her car for a planned lunch-hour meeting with Shuler. (She was unaware of his earlier arrest.)

As Field prepared to park at the site, police vehicles boxed her car in. Numerous armed officers (estimated to be ten to fifteen officers or more) surrounded her car, yelling at her to get out of the car; 1 when Field “froze” with her hands on the wheel, one officer had to reach into the car to put it in park. Field exited her vehicle and, upon request, gave oral consent to the search of the car. 2 The officers testified that they asked her if she would accompany them, in her own car, to the Arapahoe County Sheriffs Office to answer some questions about the gun store robbery. Although the officers stated that Field was not under arrest, she testified that she thought she had no choice and believed that she was under arrest. In any case, the command decision was to contact Field and have her come to the Sheriffs Office. There is no evidence that she was told she was free to leave or to refuse to go with the officers.

Because she did not know its location, the officers offered to escort her to the Sheriffs Office. The “escort” consisted of two cars, one in front of Field’s car and the other behind. In addition, an officer went with her as a passenger in her car. Field arranged with the officers to stop on the way to fill up her car with gas. When she went to the restroom at the gas station, an- officer waited outside the restroom door. 3

*1156 Field and her escort reached the Sheriffs Office some time after 1:00 p.m. Field was led to a small interrogation room, complete with one-way mirror, in the restricted area of the Sheriffs Office (ingress to, and egress from, the area was by card key). Soon after her arrival, she was advised of her Miranda rights and signed a form acknowledging that advisement-. Field testified that the officers told her that, if she wanted a lawyer, they would hold her until she got one. Field, believing she had done nothing wrong, indicated she did not want to wait for a lawyer. Officers began to question her regarding her relationship with Shuler, her knowledge of the robbery and/or the stolen firearms, and her knowledge of “Iroc” or “Roc.” During the course of the questioning, which lasted approximately five hours, two to four officers were in the room with Field at all times; she did ask two of the officers to leave the room because they upset her, and the officers complied. When she was allowed to go to the bathroom or outside the building to smoke, she was escorted by at least one officer. She was provided beverages and offered something to eat.

Field was never formally charged with involvement in the robbery or any other crime. Indeed, the officers conceded that they did not ever have probable cause to believe Field participated in the robbery.In spite of the lack of evidence against her, the officers did tell Field, expressly and implicitly, that they believed she was' lying and that they suspected her of some involvement in the robbery as an accomplice, getaway driver, or otherwise. At least two of the officers threatened her with the possibility that she would have her baby in jail, and she was asked how she could be a good mother if she were in jail. She was also told that Shuler did not love her or he would have cleared her name. The questioning was at times accusatory and aggressive and included officers yelling at Field. 1

The course of the questioning changed somewhat when the search of Field’s residence yielded a bag containing some of the stolen firearms in a closet shared by Field and Shuler. When Field was informed of this, she conceded that she was aware-of the bags, if not also of the guns, and became more -forthcoming with information relevant to the investigation. She was told that, because'the-guns were found in her residence, both she and her mother could be “brought down” or charged with crimes.

Also during the afternoon, officers had tentatively identified defendant Moore as Shuler’s accomplice “Iroc” or “Roc.” After Field acknowledged that she knew of defendant, the officers asked if she would participate in a tape-recorded telephone conversation with defendant in an effort to gather further evidence against him.

The parties dispute the tenor of the request that Field participate in the phone call. Field testified that she did not wish to do so but ultimately agreed because it was her “way out”; that is, she believed if she made the phone call she would be permitted to leave instead of being charged or further detained. The officers denied any threat or even unwillingness on her part except that she expressed concern about her own and her mother’s safety and asked if her cooperation could be kept secret. The officers told her that they would try but she might have to testify. Special Agent Motte testified he told her he needed hér consent to make a taped phone call and that the decision was hers.

Testimony provided by Special Agent Motte on direct examination, however, supports Field’s characterization or perception of the request as her “way out” in return for her assistance, with the call:

I basically told her she was basically implicated in this, due to being associated with Kevin Shuler residing at the apartment where all these — a number of the firearms stolen from Cal’s Sporting *1157 Armory-were located in this closet. I said, you can basically help yourself on this. What we would like to do is place a monitor called to Ira Moore and see if we can get some conversation as to where the remaining firearms are located.

Sept. 9,1999 Transcript, p. 20

Field was told she was implicated in the robbery (expressly, by Agent Motte, and implicitly, by the other officers’ statements that she was lying and their threats that she would go to jail). It would not be unreasonable for Field to believe, given her situation, that the phone call was her “way out” of her perceived (and threatened) custody, particularly given the circumstances of the day.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F. Supp. 2d 1154, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7031, 2000 WL 655017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-moore-cod-2000.