The defendants are charged in numerous complaints with exposing and keeping alcoholic beverages for sale without authority, retailing soft drinks without a license, operating a place of assembly which exceeds the occupancy limit,
The judge ordered the evidence suppressed after conducting an evidentiary hearing on the defendants’ motion to suppress. In a written memorandum of findings and rulings, the judge stated that the search warrants were based on two affidavits, each of which contained the following introductory recitation: “As a result of a complaint received by the Vice Control Section relative to illegal activities being conducted at the ‘Loft’ which is located at 21 Stanhope St., Boston, Mass., an investigation was ordered by Lieutenant Edward J. McNelley of the Vice Control Section relative to these alleged activities, which investigation commenced on March 19, 1983, with an undercover police operation.” The judge’s memorandum then states that following that introductory recitation the affidavits set forth detailed observations made at The Loft by two undercover police officers on four different occasions. 3
The judge reasoned that affidavits in support of search warrants “must stand or fall solely on their contents,” and that the two affidavits in this case were insufficient to support the issuance of search warrants because they failed to provide sufficient information about the complaint or the source of the complaint to which reference was made in the introductory recitation, and which prompted Lieutenant McNelley’s decision to conduct an undercover investigation at The Loft. The
Our determination that the judge was in error in ruling that the affidavits were defective because they did not demonstrate that the officer’s observations were made lawfully does not end our inquiry. Even though there is no requirement that the affidavits themselves demonstrate that Officer Dovidio’s observations were lawful, if, as a matter of fact, the observations resulted from a violation of the defendants’ Fourth Amendment rights, the observations cannot support the issuance of search warrants, and any evidence traceable to those observations must be suppressed. See
Maryland
v.
Macon,
It is undisputed that when Dovidio made the relevant observations he was inside The Loft without the benefit of a search warrant. The Commonwealth does not contend that Dovidio’s presence there was justified by probable cause and exigent circumstances. Instead, the Commonwealth’s position is that when Dovidio entered The Loft the defendants had no reasonable expectation of privacy there, and that while Dovidio was located where he had a right to be he observed the items in plain view described in the affidavits.
Whether or not Dovidio’s observations resulted from a violation of the defendants’ Fourth Amendment rights depends on whether Dovidio intruded on the defendants’ reasonable expectation of privacy.
Commonwealth
v.
Cadoret,
Although the burden of establishing that a warrantless search is reasonable, and therefore lawful, is on the Commonwealth,
Commonwealth
v.
Antobenedetto,
The Loft Twenty-One Association, Inc., is a fraternal organization, structured as a nonprofit corporation, that operates an after-hours club, called The Loft, in a building at 21 Stanhope Street in Boston. The defendants are officers of the corporation and central figures in the management of the club. Individuals seeking membership are required to complete applications and to pay a membership fee. In addition, members are required to pay a cover charge of $5 and sign a sign-in sheet on each occasion they enter the premises. The sign-in sheets contain the following statements: “By signing this sheet of the Loft Twenty-One Association I represent that I am a member . . . or a guest of a member, I hereby acknowledge truthfully and honestly that I am not a member of nor working for the police department or any other law enforcement agency. I have no objection to observing or being asked to participate in same sex dancing or other private expressions of same sex affection or eroticism; I endorse private consensual adult homosexual activity. Only members or guests who have signed the above
On March 20, 1983, in the early morning, the defendant D’Onofrio was checking persons entering the premises. He allowed a group of four people to enter the club. One of the four was a member. Officer Dovidio was the last person in that group and he told D’Onofrio that he was a guest of Robert Sterling, who was a member known to D’Onofrio. Dovidio, attired in casual clothes, paid the $5 cover charge and signed a false name to the sign-in sheet. On March 27, 1983, Dovidio, again in civilian attire, paid the cover charge, told D’Onofrio that he was a guest of a member, signed the sign-in sheet, and entered. On this occasion, according to D’Onofrio’s testimony, “there were other people lined up, and there wasn’t time to adequately ask everybody who they were with. [D’Onofrio] just asked them to sign their names. If they were recognized by [him, he] didn’t ask any further questions. . . . Mr. Dovidio, having been in the prior week, [D’Onofrio] knew to be a guest of a member.” According to the testimony, Dovidio entered the premises early in the morning on April 3 and April 10, 1983, under conditions similar to those of his earlier visits. On April 10, 1983, Dovidio was evicted from The Loft on the ground that he was neither a member nor a guest of a member. Within a few minutes thereafter, several members of the Boston police department entered the premises to execute the search warrants which are the subject of this dispute.
To establish a reasonable expectation of privacy, it is not enough for the defendants to show that they had an unenforced “policy” of restricting access to The Loft to members and guests of members. In
Commonwealth
v.
Simmons,
We have set forth all the evidence at the suppression hearing having a tendency to show enforcement of the admissions policy at The Loft. In the absence of evidence that the defendants made reasonable efforts to corroborate the claims of guest status made by persons seeking admission to the club, the evidence fails to show that the public was not freely admitted there. If the public was freely admitted, the defendants did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy, and Officer Dovidio’s entrance into the club and observations of things in plain view did not violate the defendants’ Fourth Amendment rights. As we have said before, “police officers may accept a general public invitation to enter commercial premises, and while there . . . they may take note of anything in plain view.”
Commonwealth
v.
Cadoret,
Even if the evidence would have warranted a finding that a policy of excluding police officers, but not the public, was enforced, that would not have established an expectation of privacy that is reasonable, and therefore protected, under the Fourth Amendment. “The test of [reasonableness] is not whether
The evidence also would have warranted a finding that Dovidio misrepresented that he was a guest of a member of the club. That misrepresentation, too, is without consequence in view of the insufficiency of the evidence to show reasonable enforcement of a policy to exclude persons other than members and their guests. The defendants’ position is not advanced by viewing Dovidio as a trespasser by reason of having gained entrance to the club by misrepresentation. “The fact that the [officer] may have committed a technical trespass does not create a Fourth Amendment violation when no expectation of privacy exists. As the United States Supreme Court has noted on several occasions, ‘the Fourth Amendment protects people, not places .... [t]he premise that property interests control the right of the Government to search and seize has been discredited.’
Katz
v.
United States,
In summary, there is no requirement that search warrant affidavits containing the observations of police officers establish that the observations were made without infringement on Fourth Amendment rights. However, evidence obtained by the execution of search warrants issued on the basis of affidavits setting forth observations made as a result of an unlawful search must be suppressed on a proper motion. The burden of proving that a search was made, in the Fourth Amendment sense, is on the defendant. The evidence at the suppression
So ordered.
Notes
This court and the Appeals Court have previously considered the lawfulness of earlier searches conducted at the same premises. See
Commonwealth
v.
Cadoret,
The evidence at the suppression hearing indicated that two officers made observations at The Loft, but the affidavits referred only to observations made by Officer Daniel Dovidio.
The defendants’ argument is limited to the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. No separate State constitutional argument has been advanced.
In
Commonwealth
v.
Cadoret,
