United States v. Robertson

239 F. Supp. 3d 426, 2017 WL 931615, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33290
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMarch 8, 2017
DocketNo. 3:16-cr-107 (JAM)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 239 F. Supp. 3d 426 (United States v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Robertson, 239 F. Supp. 3d 426, 2017 WL 931615, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33290 (D. Conn. 2017).

Opinion

RULING GRANTING MOTION TO SUPPRESS

Jeffrey Alker Meyer, United States District Judge

BACKGROUND.. .432

[432]*432A. Events of November 7, 2015, at the Mohegan Sun Casino... 433

B. Events of May 2016 re the Arrest of Robertson and Related Searches and Seizures ...435

1.' The Arrest of Robertson.,. 435

2. The Protective Sweep of Robertson’s Apartment.. .436

3. The Seizure of the Safe.. .437

4. The Securing and Search of Robertson’s Apartment.. ,438

5. The Search of the Safe.,. 440 DISCUSSION,. .441

A. Evidence Seized at the Mohegan Sun Casino... 442

1. Terry Stop and Frisk,. .442

2. Consent Search... 445

3. Inevitable Discovery.. .446

B. Evidence Seized from Robertson’s Apartment.. .448

1. Robertson’s Expectation of Privacy. ..448

2. Entry into Robertson’s Apartment and Initiation of Protective Sweep... 449

3. Duration and Scope of Protective Sweep and Search Incident to .Arrest. . ,450

4. Seizure of the Safe.. .452

a. Plain View Exception... 452

b. Exigent Circumstances Exception... 453

5. Fruit of the Poisonous Tree and the Exclusionary Rule.., 456

a. Fruits of Unlawful Search of Robertson at the Mohegan Sun Casino. . .457

b. Fruits of Unlawful Search of Table Drawer in Robertson’s Apartment. . .458

c. Fruits of Unlawful Seizure of the Safe,.,459

CONCLUSION.. .460

RULING GRANTING MOTION TO SUPPRESS : .

Defendant Ellsworth ' Robertson is charged with multiple drug trafficking and firearms offenses. He moves to suppress essentially all of the incriminating evidence against him,.On the grounds that the police obtained this evidence in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. I agree that the police violated Robertson’s rights and that they did so in a reckless and flagrant manner that warrants invocation of the exclusionary rule. Accordingly, I will grant defendant’s motion to suppress.

Background

The charges against Robertson stem from physical evidence recovered during the course of two encounters that he had with law enforcement authorities. The first occurred late one night in November 2015 at the Mohegan Sun casino in Uncasville, Connecticut. While investigating a reported stabbing incident, a tribal police officer at the casino searched Robertson and recovered crack cocaine from a small drawstring bag that the officer found in one of Robertson’s pockets.

The second encounter occurred more than six months later in mid-May 2016. By that point, Robertson was under intense investigation for narcotics trafficking by a consortium of federal, state, and local law enforcement authorities. The authorities decided to arrest Robertson late one night at his apartment in New London, Connecticut. This in turn led to a cascading series of searches and seizures of narcotics and firearms that Robertson had stored in his apartment and in a safe he had kept there.

Based on the evidence presented at the suppression hearings, I make the following factual findings about each of these two encounters:

[433]*433A Events of November 7, 2015, at the Mohegan Sun Casino

Around midnight on November 7, 2015, someone stabbed a victim with a knife at a nightclub at the Mohegan Sun casino. The casino is run by the Mohegan Tribe, and tribal police soon arrived on the scene and interviewed witnesses who described the suspect. At about 1:30 a,m., a witnéss pointed out a person who was sitting on a bench in the box office area of the casino as “possibly” the person responsible for the stabbing. Officers saw that the person on the bench matched the physical description of the suspect that they had received earlier. The person on the bench was Ells-worth Robertson, the defendant in this case.

Sergeant Clifford Barrows of .the tribal police approached Robertson and asked to speak with him. Robertson agreed, and the two walked over to the middle of the box office’s retail area. Barrows saw that a pocketknife was clipped to the right side pocket of Robertson’s pants, and he seized the knife.

Sergeant Barrows and Robertson then had a conversation. Consistent with the testimony of Sergeant Barrows at the suppression hearing and as shown in video from the casino’s surveillance cameras, four other officers stood nearby, a few feet behind Robertson to either side. None of the officers had their weapons drawn, and Robertson was not handcuffed.

While still standing with Sergeant Barrows, Robertson briefly took a call on his cell phone. After this phone call, Sergeant Barrows told Robertson that police were investigating a stabbing incident and asked if he was involved. Robertson denied involvement.

Sergeant Barrows told Robertson, “I want to check you for similar weapons.” Robertson responded with words to the effect of “Go ahead.”- Doc. #38 at 20. Sergeant Barrows then walked Robertson over to the wall, near the box office window. Robertson put his arms on the wall in order to be frisked.

Sergeant Barrows proceeded to search Robertson for more, than two minutes, which included patting down his clothing as well as reaching into his pockets and removing various items. He first removed a black cloth bag that was sewn closed and had some hard objects in it.' Robertson said that the bag contained religious items. Sergeant Barrows placed the bag on a nearby shelf without opening it. He then removed- a number of additional items from Robertson’s pockets, including a wallet, a large quantity of cash, and a cell phone. He placed each item on the shelf.

Finally—and most critically for purposes of this ruling—Sergeant Barrows removed from one of Robertson’s jacket pockets another black, cloth drawstring bag. The bag was about six to eight inches long. Sergeant Barrows testified that the bag was a “pouch [that] was not drawn fully closed” and that “it could be opened or reclosed at any point.” Id. at 22. The bag was neither “drawn tightly closed” nor “wide-moúth open,” and it was open at the top about a “quarter inch, half inch opening, I’m going to guess.” Id. at 63; see also Doc. # 39 at 48-49 (same).

Sergeant Barrows felt the outside of the bag and felt “rocks in it” and thought this was “weird.” Doc. #38 at 60. He then decided to look inside the bag without opéning it:

I could see white and what appeared to be white material wrapped in plastic, like Saran wrap or a plastic bag type of material. I’ve commonly seen narcotics packaged that way for sale on the street.

Id. at 58-59; see also id. at 21 (Sergeant Barrows’ testimony on direct examination that “I could see into the interior of the [434]*434bag” and saw “what appeared to be white material wrapped in plastic” and that “being involved in narcotics cáses in the past, I thought that this might be narcotics packaged for sale or just narcotics”).

Based allegedly on what he saw when he looked into the bag, Sergeant Barrows then “opened up the bag and it appeared to me that it was white rock-like powder.” Ibid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 F. Supp. 3d 426, 2017 WL 931615, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-robertson-ctd-2017.