United States v. Peurifoy

22 C.M.A. 549
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedDecember 21, 1973
DocketNo. 27,157
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 C.M.A. 549 (United States v. Peurifoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Military Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Peurifoy, 22 C.M.A. 549 (cma 1973).

Opinions

[550]*550OPINION OF THE COURT

Duncan, Judge:

Tried by military judge sitting alone, the appellant was convicted of two offenses of larceny of various items (specifications 1 and 2, Charge I), and one offense of wrongful possession of hashish (specification 2, Charge II).1 The approved sentence provides for a dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, confinement at hard labor for 2 years, and reduction to the grade of Airman Basic. We granted review on the following issues:

I. Whether the testimony of witnesses Rowe and Thomas should have been excluded as being the tainted products of the unlawful seizure of the checkbook from appellant’s automobile.
II. Whether the authorization to search the accused’s barracks room was based on probable cause.

The appellant and Airman McGlory occupied the same room in the barracks. On the strength of information that Mc-Glory was involved in a larceny, the room, excluding that portion occupied by the appellant, was searched. A quantity of drug-related paraphernalia and 10 stolen credit cards were discovered in a heating duct located inside and above the entrance to the room.2 Following that discovery, the appellant was found in the day room and was apprehended for "possession of drug paraphernalia and stolen credit cards.” A search of his person revealed a pawn ticket and a quantity of hashish wrapped in white paper in his billfold. Authority was obtained to search the appellant’s portion of the room and his personal belongings, as well as his automobile. The search of the room revealed a billfold belonging to the appellant which contained two trafile citations issued in the name of Ronald Carswell.3 During an ancillary search of the appellant’s automobile, a checkbook of blank checks bearing the preprinted name'of Kenneth K. Rowe was found in the glove compartment. The following morning Rowe was notified that a checkbook purportedly belonging to him had been discovered in the appellant’s possession. Rowe confirmed that his checkbook was missing and, for the first time, disclosed that the apartment he shared with one Thomas had been burglarized some 2 months earlier. Rowe identified the checkbook as his, indicating that it had no doubt been stolen along with other items, belonging to both Rowe and Thomas, all of which are the subject matter of specification 1, Charge I. Rowe informed the investigating agent that none of these items had previously been reported stolen. He thought it would be of no avail.

At trial, the military judge ruled that the search of the automobile was illegal for lack of probable cause and excluded Rowe’s checkbook from evidence. He, however, allowed Rowe and Thomas to testify concerning their loss and to identify the property belonging to them.

The Court of Military Review was unanimous in its holding that the military judge correctly ruled that the search of the appellant’s automobile was illegal and the checkbook inadmissible in evidence. The judges were equally divided, however, on the question of whether Rowe’s disclosure of the property thefts from his room, as well as the subsequent testimony of both Rowe and Thomas, were the tainted products of the unlawful seizure of the checkbook.4

The exclusionary rule has traditionally barred from trial evidence obtained either during or as the direct result of an unlawful intrusion. Wong Sun v United States, 371 US 471 (1963); paragraph 152, Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1969 (Rev). See also [551]*551United States v Armstrong, 22 USCMA 438, 47 CMR 479 (1973); United States v Atkins, 22 USCMA 244, 46 CMR 244(1973); United States v Moore, 19 USCMA 586, 42 CMR 188 (1970). The test for admissibility is " 'whether, granting establishment of the primary illegality, the evidence to which instant objection is made has been come at by exploitation of that illegality or instead by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.’ ” Wong Sun, supra at 488.

Differing interpretations of the meaning of Wong Sun is basic to the division between the judges of the Court of Military Review. These judges who believed the testimony of Rowe and Thomas untainted, acknowledged that "the Government did not, indeed could not, show that Agent Rogers did, in fact, learn of the thefts alleged in Specification 1 of Charge I from a source independent of the unlawfully seized checkbook.” They concluded, however, that "the unlawful seizure did no more than accelerate what would otherwise have been the inevitable discovery of those thefts.” The dissenting judges held that even assuming the evidence might otherwise have been discovered, " 'nothing short of a showing by the Government that the evidence was, in fact, obtained from an untainted source will negate the "exploitation” evil at which the exclusionary rule is directed.’ ”

We agree with the interpretation of Wong Sun held by the dissenting judges of the Court of Military Review. United States v Atkins, supra, and United States v Moore, supra. See also United States v Armstrong, supra'.

An unlawful interrogation5 of Atkins led to his arrest and the search of his person which resulted in the disclosure that he was in possession of marihuana and heroin. The defense maintained that the contraband was inadmissible on the ground that without the unlawful interrogation Atkins would not have been apprehended and searched. In rejecting the Government’s contention that to so hold would be an application of the but for test regarding tainted government activities that was rejected by the Supreme Court in Wong Sun, and holding the evidence inadmissible, we said:

In the present case, we entertain no doubt that the apprehension and search incident to it was a direct exploitation of the accused’s unwarned statement. Martin testified to this effect when he stated there would have otherwise been no reason to apprehend the accused. Evidently he did not regard the other circumstances he had observed as enough to amount to probable cause for taking the accused into custody. Cf. United States v Alston, 20 USCMA 581, 44 CMR 11 (1971). This is not an application of the "but for” principle but one of reliance by the Government’s agent upon an improperly obtained admission as the controlling factor in obtaining direct evidence of the accused’s guilt. Wong Sun v United States, supra.

United States v Atkins, 22 USCMA at 246, 46 CMR at 246.

In Moore, an illegal search of that accused’s barracks room produced a letter from a Sergeant Lindsay which related to trafficking in marihuana.6 When Lindsay was interviewed in Thailand he consented to a search of his quarters. Agents found an envelope (Prosecution Exhibit 1) addressed to Lindsay that bore Moore’s return address. The accompanying letter (Prosecution Exhibit 2), signed with Moore’s known nickname, contained information disclosing Moore’s interest in obtaining amphetamines [552]*552through Lindsay.7 Over defense objection, Prosecution Exhibits 1 and 2 were admitted in evidence. In holding these exhibits inadmissible, we stated:

The record in the instant case refutes any contention that OSI agents acquired knowledge of Prosecution Exhibits 1 and 2 through information derived from a source other than the unwarranted search of Moore’s barracks room.

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22 C.M.A. 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-peurifoy-cma-1973.