United States v. Stephen J. Riccio

726 F.2d 638, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25982
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 1984
Docket83-1025
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 726 F.2d 638 (United States v. Stephen J. Riccio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Stephen J. Riccio, 726 F.2d 638, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25982 (10th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

CHILSON, Judge.

The appellant, Riccio, was indicted, tried, and convicted of the armed robbery of the Burns National Bank of Durango, Colorado, on June 11, 1982, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a), (d) and (e).

Prior to trial, Riccio moved to suppress certain evidence seized by police officers from Riccio’s residence, pursuant to a search warrant.

Among the articles seized were $14,826.00 of United States currency. The ground for the motion to suppress was that the seizure was the result of an illegal search of Ric-cio’s residence in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

The trial court, after an evidentiary hearing, denied the motion to suppress and this denial is the sole ground for appellant’s appeal.

At the suppression hearing, appellant called two witnesses, Lt. Smith of the Du-rango Police Department, who headed the investigation of the crime and Jasper Valle-jos, a reserve officer of the Police Department, who participated in the investigation.

The evidence submitted at the hearing is not in dispute in any material respects. The evidence reveals that about noon on June 11, 1982, the Durango Police were notified of an armed robbery of the Burns National Bank by a male individual wearing a ski mask and armed with a pistol.

Lt. Smith, with the assistance of other officers and F.B.I. agents, began an immediate investigation from which they obtained the following information.

At about noon on June 11, 1982, the robber entered the bank wearing a ski mask and armed with a pistol. • He approached a bank teller, one Sandra Bush, and demanded that she collect currency from all the teller drawers and put it in a brown paper sack which he produced. She complied and placed all the currency in the brown paper sack. The robber took the sack, ran out of the bank and stopped a passing motorist, one Raymond Foster, at gun point. He ordered Foster to take him across the Ninth Street Bridge to the JayCee Campground. Foster complied. At the campground, the robber left the Foster car and disappeared into the hills.

Sandra Bush informed an officer that she believed the voice of the robber to be that of a person known to her as “Steve” who had previously cashed salary checks of the Federal Lumber Company at the bank. She also stated that she believed “Steve” had been fired by the company.

A surveillance camera in the bank photographed the robber in the act of robbing the bank with a gun. The bank supplied this picture to the officers.

One of the officers was informed by an employee of the Federal Lumber Company that Steve Riccio had been employed by the company, but was recently fired. He furnished the officer with Riccio’s address which was a trailer house in Perrins Peak Trailer Park, in Durango, Colorado, and gave the officer a description of the physical appearance of Riccio.

An officer of the bank informed Smith that the amount taken in the robbery was in excess of $18,000.00.

After the foregoing information was obtained, the officers went to Riccio’s trailer *640 house about 3:00 P.M. Riccio was not there, but his two roommates, Blauart and Testoni, were in the trailer. They informed the officers that Riccio was not there, that he had been fired by the lumber company and had informed them that he planned to leave the area the next day to seek employment.

When shown the picture of the robber taken at the bank, Blauart said he had not known Riccio long enough to identify it as a picture of Riccio.

Testoni said he was a classmate of Riccio in high school, that they were old buddies and that the picture looked similar to a photograph of Riccio which was in the trailer.

The roommates left the trailer and agreed not to return without the officers’ permission.

Between 3:00 and 4:00 P.M., Lt. Smith left the trailer to make arrangements to put the trailer house under surveillance. The surveillance was established about 7:00 P.M.

The surveillance consisted of parking a van where the officers inside the van could see the front doors of the trailer, but there was no surveillance of the back of the trailer which contained windows through which it was possible for a person to enter the trailer without being seen by the surveilling officers.

About 9:30 or 10:00 P.M., one of Riccio’s roommates entered the trailer by the front door and came out with a rifle and pistol stating to the officers he was taking them “so there would be no danger”. He was not detained and left.

About 10:30 P.M., the officers saw a man enter the trailer. Lt. Smith was notified and arrived shortly thereafter and stationed officers around the trailer.

By loud speaker, Smith identified himself to the' occupant of the trailer and advised the occupant that police officers had the trailer surrounded and asked him to come out with his hands in the air.

Within thirty seconds thereafter, four shots were fired from a window of the trailer in Smith’s direction. The officers did not return the fire. Smith again tried to talk the occupant into coming out of the trailer. The response was two more shots out of the same window fired in Smith’s direction.

Smith continued to urge the occupant to give up and come out of the trailer. The occupant then indicated he wanted to give up. The man, later identified as Riccio, came to the front door with a pistol in his right hand, dropped to a crouching position, and fired another shot in Smith’s direction.

One of the police officers fired at Riccio who fell back into the trailer house.

Smith then requested Riccio to throw the pistol out the door, but some twenty minutes elapsed before Riccio complied and threw the pistol out the front door.

Thereupon, the officers entered the trailer and found Riccio on the floor with a bullet wound in his chest.

Two officers immediately began to administer aid to Riccio and other officers went in different directions throughout the trailer to secure the trailer and make sure no one else was in it. This is referred to by the parties as a “sweep” or “security search”. In the course of this search, Smith saw on the bed in the middle bedroom, a large amount of currency which was in part banded with Burns National Bank currency bands.

The currency was not seized at that time, nor was any search made of the premises other than the observations of the officers in going through the trailer to ascertain whether or not there was anyone else in it.

The officers then assisted in transporting Riccio to the hospital. Smith then obtained a search warrant. The officers returned to the trailer and „ pursuant to the warrant, seized the currency and other items inventoried in the return of the warrant.

The motion to suppress attacks the validity of the search warrant on the ground that the affidavit, pursuant to which the warrant was issued, contains false statements which were known by the affiant to be *641 false or were made with reckless disregard for the truth.

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Bluebook (online)
726 F.2d 638, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-stephen-j-riccio-ca10-1984.