The defendant was convicted of five counts 1 оf various drug-related offenses after a jury-waived trial in a District Court, at which the Commonwealth relied upon evidence garnered as a result of two discrete warrant-less searches: the first involved Hector Rodriguez, to whom the defendant allegedly sold cocaine; the second, of the defendant himself, led to his arrest. At the trial, the Commonwealth offered evidence in some rеspects different from what had been presented to the same judge at the hearing on the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence obtained in the search of his person.
Our task has been made more difficult because the judge did not make any findings after he ruled against the defendant on the motion to suppress evidence obtained in searches of his person and of a nearby mailbox.
2
This failure, which is not, in and of itself, reversible error, requires us carefully to examine “the record to see if the findings implicit in the judge’s ruling are supported.”
Commonwealth
v.
Gaulden,
The trial.
Following the denial of his suppression motion, the defendant was convicted: (1) of the knowing possession of a Class A substance, heroin, and a Class B substance, cocaine, with intent to distribute both (G. L. c. 94C, § 32); (2) of separate counts alleging that those offenses occurred
The Commonwealth’s case against the defendant ran as follows. On October 15, 1990, at about 1:00 p.m., a seven-person team of pоlice officers was assigned to the surveillance of a block of apartments on Ferguson Place in Holyoke, an area known by the police to be favored by drug dealers to hawk their wares. From his vantage in an unmarked cruiser, Officer Guzman peered through his binoculars and spied the defendant, about 200 feet away, talking to several persons on the sidewalk near the apartment building. He observed a motor vehicle driven by a woman pull into a vacant lot in front of No. 3 Ferguson Place. A male occupant, later identified as Hector Rodriguez, got out of the automobile, engaged the defendant in conversation, and handed him money. This was followed by their entrance into No. 3 Ferguson Place. A moment later Rodriguez — now alone — left the building, put а small package into his left front pants pocket and departed in the same vehicle. Believing this to be a drug transaction, Guzman radioed his observations to the other officers patrolling the area in unmarked cruisers.
Officers Gelinas and Marouka, who received Guzman’s radio transmissions, stopped the vehicle described in the message. Rodriguez was asked to step out and was patted down. Officer Marouka, knowing that Rodriguez had placed something in his pocket, removed needles and syringes from his left front pocket and Gelinas removed four bags of cocaine (about 6 grams) from his right front pocket.
While this was going on, two other officers, Egan and Fletcher, approached the defendant, who remained on the sidewalk outside No. 3 Ferguson Plaсe which, as it turned
1. The Failure of Counsel to Contest the Search of Rodriguez.
Apart from claimed emanations from the negative decision on the suppression motion defense counsel did file, the defendant argues that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 12 of the Declaration of Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution because of trial counsel’s failure to move to suppress the cocaine found on Rodriguez. The defendant contends that had the search of Rodriguez, which netted the four bags of cocaine, been successfully challenged, the evidencе would have been insufficient to convict him of cocaine distribution. Further, the argument goes, all of the other evidence should have been suppressed as “fruit of the poisonous tree.” The Commonwealth, on the other hand, counters that defense counsel was not ineffective because filing a motion to suppress the evidence from the search of Rodriguez would havе been futile as the defendant lacked the requisite standing. On this score, we agree with the Commonwealth’s position.
The defendant does not claim that he had an expectation of privacy to contest the search of Rodriguez or the automo
His argument ignores the central premise of the automatic standing rule; namely, that the crime for which the defendant is convicted must have as an essential element of guilt, possession (either actual or constructive) at the time of the contested search.
Amendola, supra
at 601. Admittedly, possession is an essential element in one of the categories of activity prohibited by G. L. c. 94C, § 3 2A, under which the defendant was convicted.
Commonwealth
v.
Frazier,
2. Search of the Defendant and the Mailbox.
The next claim of error concerns the judge’s denial of the motion to suppress evidence — cocaine and heroin — seized without a warrant from the defendant’s mailbox. The defendant claims that the officers’ actions do not fall within any recognized exception to the warrant requirement. The Commonwealth responds that the defendant had no expectation of privacy in the mailbox and the key case found inside it. In our review of the judge’s ruling on the suppression motion, we may not rely on the facts as developed at trial.
Commonwealth
v.
Singer,
At the suppression hearing Officer Guzman testified that during the surveillance he observed the defendant walking in and out of No. 3 Ferguson Place several times. Guzman also testified that the defendant and Rodriguez merely had a conversation after Rodriguez got out of the car. He did not testify that he saw Rodriguez hand the defendаnt money, or that he saw Rodriguez put a small packet in his pocket. Rather Guzman stated that he saw Rodriguez put “something” in his pocket. Officer Fletcher stated at the suppression hearing that, as a result of his subsequent search of Rodriguez, he found heroin, rather than cocaine, as well as needles and a syringe.
As to what preceded the search of the mailbox, Fletcher testified that, after a brief conversation, he collared the defendant on the sidewalk and obtained the keys as a result of a “pat-down” search. There was no testimony offered by any of the officers that they suspected any contraband to be found in the mailbox before it was searched. Nor was there any evidence that the mailbox and the keys found on the defendant hаd similar markings. Finally, it is unclear from the hearing transcript whether the defendant was in the vicinity of the mailbox when the search took place.
a.
Expectation of privacy.
We conclude that the mailbox was constitutionally protected here because the defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in that area. In order for the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution or art. 14 tо be implicated, the defendant must show that he subjectively believed he had a privacy interest in the thing searched and that this expectation is one society is prepared to recognize as reasonable.
Commonwealth
v.
Cadoret,
Unquestionably the defendant thought he had a privacy interest, because he locked the mailbox in order to keep others out. Security of one’s mail is an intеrest which society
It strikes us as elementary that the receipt of letters and sealed packages is inherently private; mail has long been recognized as deserving of protection under the Fоurteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. See
United States
v.
Jacobsen,
b. Search incident to arrest. The Commonwealth suggests as an alternative argument that the search was incident to the defendant’s arrest. Even assuming the police had probable cause to arrest the defendant, the Commonwealth’s argument fails. 8
The defendant concedes that he was under arrest when he was searched. A search incident to an arrest “generally is limited for purposеs of both the Fourth Amendment . . . and art. 14 . . .to the body of the person arrested and the area and items within his or her immediate possession and control at the time.”
Commonwealth
v.
Santiago,
c.
Exigent circumstances.
Short of a search incident to arrest, the Commonwealth asserts that exigent circumstances justified the search. Under this exception, “there must be a showing that it was impracticable for the police to obtain a warrant and the standards as to exigency are strict.”
Commonwealth
v.
Huffman,
The record is devoid of any evidence that the mailbox and its contents would soon be removed or that it would have been impracticable to get a search warrant. The search took
Since the Commonwealth has failed to meet its burden of justifying the warrantless search of the mailbox and the key case, the motion to suppress the cocaine and heroin found inside should have been allowed. Huffman, supra at 127, and cases cited. The judge’s ruling was incorrect.
3. Required Finding of Not Guilty.
Even if the cocaine and heroin found in the mailbox had been suppressed, the judge would still have been amply warranted in denying the defеndant’s motion (made at the close of the Commonwealth’s case) for a required finding of not guilty on the distribution charge. If brought home to the defendant, the evidence that he had just been seen with Rodriguez by experienced drug enforcement officers inside a building known by them as a haven for drug sellers; the observations of one officer who witnessed Rodriguez give money to the defendant and thеn walk out as he was placing a small packet into his front pocket; and the search of Rodriguez which revealed cocaine and the paraphernalia associated with its use, satisfied the standard under
Commonwealth
v.
Latimore,
4. Conclusion. Had the defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence seized from the mailbox been successful, the twin charges of unlawful possession of cocaine and heroin with intent to distribute would lack evidentiary support. Therefore, we are required to reverse both convictions, as well as those which alleged that the underlying offenses occurred within 1,000 feet of school property. The judgments on those four counts are reversed and the findings are set aside; judgments are to enter for the defendant. The judgment founded on the judge’s finding of guilty of unlawful distribution of cocaine is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
Two of the convictions were filed, but as the record does not reflect that the defendant consented to the filing, we review those convictions as well.
Commonwealth
v.
Paniaqua,
The Supreme Judicial Court has repeatedly said that it is both “prudent” and “desirable” for a judge to make findings at the conclusion of the suppression hearing.
Commonwealth
v.
Forrester,
The defendant was also charged with a separate count of unlawful distribution of heroin, a Class A substance, under G. L. c. 94C, § 32A, which resulted in a rеquired finding of not guilty. Additionally, the defendant was charged with conspiracy to violate the controlled substances laws, G. L. c. 94C, § 40, but the District Court lacked jurisdiction over this offense and the judge dismissed that count prior to the trial, see G. L. c. 218, § 26.
In Amendola, the police searched two automobiles, finding narcotics in one and a scale in the other. The defendant disclaimed any interest in the drugs, the scale, or the automobiles, and the judge denied his motion to suppress. The Supreme Judicial Court held that the defendant had automatic standing to challenge the search of a vehicle driven by him in which the drugs were found, but that he had to show a legitimate expectation of privacy in the automobile in which the scale was found because the possession of the scale was not an еssential element of proof for any of the offenses charged.
Frazier
held that the defendant had standing to contest the search where he was convicted of trafficking based upon cocaine seized from the handbag of a woman with whom he was acting in concert, although he was not present at the place where the search was conducted. In
Santaliz,
the defendant was granted standing to challenge the search of his companion as he was charged with possession of heroin with intent to distribute on the
The defendant does not argue that he had a supportable basis to contеst the search of the passenger in connection with his conviction of possession with intent to distribute a Class B substance.
For a discussion of factors to examine when determining if the defendant has an expectation of privacy in the area searched see
Commonwealth
v.
Pina,
“[P]robable cause exists where, at the moment of arrest the facts and circumstances within the knowledge of thе police are enough to warrant a prudent person in believing that the individual arrested has committed or was committing an offense.”
Commonwealth
v.
Santaliz,
There was no evidence that the police department was short-handed or that the officers were called away to another location.
