United States v. Mora

98 F. Supp. 2d 466, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7351, 2000 WL 702981
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 30, 2000
Docket98 CR, 1407(MBM)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 F. Supp. 2d 466 (United States v. Mora) 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. Mora, 98 F. Supp. 2d 466, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7351, 2000 WL 702981 (S.D.N.Y. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

MUKASEY, District Judge.

On October 12, 1998, defendant Pedro Mateo Mora was arrested with a kilogram of cocaine tucked under his jacket. He is charged with possessing that kilogram with the intent to distribute it. He has moved to suppress both the drugs and incriminating statements he made following his arrest, on the ground that the arresting officer lacked cause to initiate the confrontation that led to discovery and seizure of the drugs, and did not warn Mora of his rights before he made the statements. As set forth below, Mora’s arrest was lawful, albeit not for the reasons initially pressed by the government and testified to by the arresting officer, and the motion to suppress the drugs therefore is denied.

However, also as set forth below, the circumstances surrounding the arrest convince me that Mora was not warned of his rights before he made incriminating statements, and those statements were not otherwise voluntary. Accordingly, the motion to suppress those statements is granted.

*468 I.

A. Plain View

The initial charging instrument in this case was a complaint sworn to by the arresting officer, Detective Armando Rodriguez. He averred in pertinent part that while on surveillance on October 12, 1998, he had seen defendant Mora leave the vicinity of 4841 Broadway in a van, and then return about 15 minutes later, get out of the van, and reach into the rear of the vehicle on the passenger side. Mora then allegedly walked away from the van and “kept his right arm clutched to his body as he walked.” (Cmplt-¶ 2) Then, according to the detective’s account, he followed Mora to the entrance of 4841 Broadway and stopped him; when the defendant turned around, Rodriguez showed his badge and was rewarded with the following sight:

At that time, I observed inside MORA’s open jacket a yellow brick-like package which was tucked under his right arm. I then placed MORA under arrest.

(Id. ¶ 3) The complaint states that following the arrest, Rodriguez advised Mora of his Miranda rights and field tested the contents of the package for cocaine, with positive results. (Id. ¶ 4, 5)

The evidentiary hearing on Mora’s motion was generated by defendant’s undated affidavit averring in part as follows:

On October 12, 1998, I was stopped in the vicinity of 4841 Broadway, New York, New York. The police approached me, stopped me, and then searched me. The police recovered cocaine hidden inside my zippered jacket. I was then placed under arrest. At no time was I read my Miranda rights.

(Mora Affidavit ¶ 2) Mora also adopted his attorney’s affidavit (Id. ¶ 3), which was at once more expansive and more argumentative, and which included the following:

It is defendant Mora’s contention that on October 12, 1998, the cocaine he was carrying was concealed on his person by a zippered jacket and that at no [ ] time were the drugs in plain view. There was no bulge or tell tale sign that Mora possessed drugs on his person. It was only after detective Rodriguez unzip-pered Mora’s jacket and removed the package that he knew Mora carried cocaine.

(Guzman Aff. ¶ 9)

The evidence relating to Mora’s suppression motion was heard on six separate hearing days sprawled over a period of more than nine months. The first three hearing days — August 10, August 25 and September 1, 1999 — were taken up principally with the government’s initial plain-view theory of the case, presented mainly through the testimony of Rodriguez. By letter dated August 6, 1999, the government moved in limine to bar defense counsel from cross-examining Rodriguez about findings by two state court judges, one in 1989 and one in 1995, that Rodriguez had testified to things he could not have seen or that were so unlikely as to warrant rejection of his testimony on its face, including one instance when a defendant allegedly exposed drugs to his plain view. (8/6/99 Letter of Jennifer L. Borum Esq. to the Court, enclosing rulings in People v. Ulerio, No. 2453/92 Feb. 9, 1995 (Supreme Court, Bronx County), and People v. Hernandez, No. 1206/88, May 17, 1988 (Supreme Court, Bronx County)). However, before the August 10 hearing got underway, defense counsel disclaimed any intention of examining the officer about those state cases. (8/10/99 Tr. 2) As it later turned out, he would have no need to pursue any such examination; Rodriguez’s account would fall of its own weight.

On August 10, Rodriguez testified that the occasion of Mora’s arrest on October 12, 1998 was not the first time he had seen Mora. On March 25, 1998, while conducting a then unrelated surveillance on upper Broadway, members of Rodriguez’s team saw a silver van that they had been watching for weeks, whose occupants and operators were suspected of trafficking in nar- *469 cotíes, park behind Mora’s tan van at 259th Street and Post Road in the Bronx, and saw two men emerge and give a duffel bag to Mora and another occupant of the tan van. Mora and that other person then drove to the vicinity of Academy Street and Broadway, where Mora was seen to carry the bag from the van into 4841 Broadway. Mora then emerged, empty-handed, and got back into the tan van. (8/10/99 Tr. 7-8) Rodriguez testified that at that point he and a uniformed officer approached Mora’s van “and identified Mr. Mora and the second individual that was seated in that van” (8/10/99 Tr. 8), which apparently meant that Rodriguez and the uniformed officer had stopped and obtained identification from both men. See, e.g., 8/25/99 Tr. 5, 6 (describing “stop” rather than mere observation). Rodriguez participated in the March 25 events, and saw a report describing them. (8/10/99 Tr. 7-8; 9/1/99 Tr. 14-19)

Rodriguez later learned that five persons connected with the events of March 25, not including Mora, had been arrested for drug trafficking, that there had been one or more guilty pleas, and that intelligence from that case showed that the duffel bag Mora had carried into 4841 Broadway had contained 15 kilograms of cocaine. (8/10/99 Tr. 31-32)

It was with awareness of those facts that Rodriguez saw- Mora again on October 12, 1998, once again while he was on an assignment that did not relate directly to Mora. (8/10/99 Tr. 7) The officer said he saw Mora get into the same tan van he had seen Mora use on March 25, as it stood parked on Broadway. Mora sat in the van for a few minutes, drove off, and then returned in about 15 minutes and parked in the same spot. (8/10/99 Tr. 8-9) Rodriguez testified that he was across the street, facing the driver’s side of the van; and saw Mora get out of the van and go to the passenger side of the vehicle. According to Rodriguez, he could see, through the rear window on the driver’s side, that Mora opened the rear door on the passenger side and bent down, appearing to lean into the vehicle. (8/10/99 Tr. 8-9; 8/25/99 Tr. 8-10) Rodriguez testified that he then saw Mora “crossing the intersection and his right arm was clutched to his body very tightly to his body as he was walking,” and that Mora then entered 4841 Broadway; the" officer followed close behind. (8/10/99 Tr. 9) ’

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Bluebook (online)
98 F. Supp. 2d 466, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7351, 2000 WL 702981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mora-nysd-2000.