United States v. Ospina

618 F. Supp. 1486
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1985
DocketNo. CR-85-61
StatusPublished

This text of 618 F. Supp. 1486 (United States v. Ospina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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. Ospina, 618 F. Supp. 1486 (E.D.N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER

COSTANTINO, District Judge.

Defendants Juan Carlos Ospina (“Ospina”) and Diego Zuluaga (“Zuluaga”) move pursuant to the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution contending that they have been subject to illegal searches and arrests. An evidentiary hearing was held in this court from March 8 to March 19, 1985. Memoranda of law were submitted by counsel for defendants Ospina and Zuluaga on March 28 and April 1,1985, respectively. The United States Attorney filed his memorandum of law on April 26, 1985. A reply memorandum by counsel for defendant Ospina was filed on May 7, 1985.

The defendants contend that agents assigned to New York Task Force Group 3 of the Drug Enforcement Agency (“DEA”) utilized an arrest warrant to illegally enter a condominium apartment of which they were subtenants; that the information derived by the agents in the apartment was illegally obtained; that the defendants were illegally arrested; and, that the search warrant signed by Magistrate Chrein was based upon deliberate misrepresentations as well as illegally obtained evidence.

The government contends that the condominium was entered pursuant to a valid arrest warrant; that the observations made therein formed the basis for probable cause to search; that, in any event, there was consent to search; and, that the agents were acting in objective good faith reliance on a validly issued warrant based on probable cause.

I. THE TESTIMONY

A. The Identification of Jorge Rodriguez-Orjuelo

Special Agent Christopher Giovino (“Giovino”) of the DEA was the first witness called by the government. He testified that since September 1984 his group has been holding an arrest warrant for Jorge Rodriguez-Orjuelo (“Rodriguez”) on charges of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. (Tr. 7). Giovino further testified that he was present at a raid upon Rodriguez’ residence located at 37th Avenue in Queens, New York at which time $350,000 in cash, a pistol, drug ledgers and other indicia of the drug trade were found. The money, Giovino noted, was found in a black steamer trunk in the master bedroom. (Tr. 8-9).

Thereafter, the agents spent “about two or three days a week of almost every week going from neighborhood to neighborhood in Queens looking for [Rodriguez].” (Tr. 9).

On January 9, 1985, Giovino was called to the Bay Club Condominium. (Tr. 10). He described the Bay Club as “two towers joined in the middle by a physical education complex,” (Tr. 10), occupied by “thousands of people.” (Tr. 61).

Giovino’s group was advised that detectives visited the security office of the Bay Club and had made a positive identification of Rodriguez. In making the identification, the detectives used photographs seized from the 37th Avenue apartment. (Tr. 11).

Giovino, on direct examination, testified that, he too, showed photographs of Rodriguez to members of the security force. (Tr. 11). The only member of the security force to whom photographs were shown whose name Giovino remembered was Mr. Bosio. (Tr. 12, 58). Giovino could not recall the names of the security staff he spoke to, nor of the maintenance staff. (Tr. 12). Giovino does remember speaking to a lieutenant who was a black man (later [1490]*1490identified as Fulton). (Tr. 58). Giovino attributes his faulty memory to being “incredibly busy that day.” (Tr. 64).

Giovino also testified on direct examination that these security personnel identified the person appearing in the photographs as having been “seen” in apartment penthouse-L (“PH-L”). (Tr. 12). He further testified “that they had a name for that gentlemen of Oscar Seraline ... that he was the person renting that apartment on paper, that is the name that they had.” (Tr. 12-13).

Giovino “guess[ed]” that Bosio told him that “Seraline resided there with other persons, whose names the security office and the maintenance office and the rental office did not have.” (Tr. 13).

On cross-examination, Giovino testified that he showed a photograph of Rodriguez to Bosio and to Fulton, (Tr. 59), and that they gave a “positive response ... to the identification of that being their Mr. Seraline.” (Tr. 59). Giovino further testified to asking Bosio and Fulton, “Is that the person who lives here? If he does live here, what apartment?” The response of either Bosio or Fulton, he wasn’t sure who, was “ ‘EPHL’ or East Penthouse L.” (Tr. 60).

Giovino testified that the maintenance staff, referred to as “they” in the testimony, identified the photographs as the person in PH-L. (Tr. 65). Giovino was also advised by these people that there was “a constant flow of visitors to [PH-L]; ” (Tr. 14) “that the master bedroom closet door had been removed and replaced with the Medeco lock.” (Tr. 14). Giovino also testified to being told that on January 10, 1985 (the next day) the maintenance staff was “to go up there and start to repair the seams in the walls.” (Tr. 15).

On cross-examination, Giovino was pressed to answer the following question:

Q — You wanted to be certain, did you not, before you went into someone’s apartment that you were going to be going into an apartment where Rodriguez, in fact, was? (Tr. 57)
After substantial colloquy between counsel and the court, Giovino responded:
A — In real terms I guess would be to ascertain whether or not we were going to try and enter a third party location. In fact, we were trying to find out whether or not that was the residence of our alleged Mr. Rodriguez or their Mr. Seraline. (Tr. 57).

Special Agent Michael Connors (“Connors”) of the DEA was also asked about the basis of the agents knowledge that Rodriguez resided in PH-L. He testified that, “We are informed by numerous persons at that building that that was in fact the person renting the apartment.” (Tr. 166). Connors was unable, however, to identify those people who made the identification other than to describe them as “persons” on the maintenance and security staffs. (Tr. 166).

Q — Officer, is it a fair statement then rather than them saying to you that this man who lives in this apartment, you came to them as a group and said to them, we believe that the person living in this apartment is this man?
A — We never approached them as a group. Initially, there were two of us who got the identification from that photograph and then we proceeded to fill out the strategy and our plans. (Tr. 166).

Connors further testified that the sole basis for his belief that Rodriguez was in PH-L was the alleged identification made by the security and maintenance staff of the Bay Club. (Tr. 169).

Under cross-examination by Zuluaga’s attorney, Connors testified that the reason he arrived at the Bay Club was because two detectives with the New York City Police Department, Queens Task Force, “had information that a fugitive we were looking for named Orjuelo-Rodriguez was at the Bay Club located in Bayside, Queens and they proceeded to tell us the apartment they thought that he was in.” (Tr. 173, 189).

On redirect, Connors testified that “security people” were shown a photograph of Rodriguez by detective Roy Pena and that [1491]*1491these security people made a positive identification of the photograph. (Tr. 198).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
618 F. Supp. 1486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ospina-nyed-1985.