Under the decision of the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Benanti (
As wе have no system of advisory opinions in this State and, according to our practice, applications for wiretaps are made at Special Term, Part II, this memorandum will apprise enforcement and prosecuting officers that while I preside at Special Term, Part II during this month, no application for a wiretap order mil be honored.
Under the decision in Benanti, orders authorizing interceptions are contrary to controlling Federаl law. Its authority requires me, therefore, to deny any application for such an order. For all wiretaps, whether ‘ ‘ authorized ’ ’ or not, in this State are now illegal. In Matter of Interception of Tel. Communications (
There may be those who differ from this interpretation of the Supreme Court decision. In that event, the result of these proceedings may be the salutary one that the view expressed here can be challenged and become the subject of authoritative determination by our State appellate courts; subject, of course, to any ultimate review in the United States Supreme Court.
Eecent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States have adumbrated the expectancy that legal safeguards will provide the needed bridge between the morаl and legal law. Time and again, the gap between moral and legal law has been spanned — sometimes by the slow and painful process of the innovation of time, and sometimes by a courageous leap into the future. Such an advance has been effected by the Benanti case. In clear accents, it tolls the knell of all wiretapping, including so-called “ legal ” wiretapping, in our State. Following the holding in Weiss v. United States (
New York police officers, susрecting one Benanti of dealing in narcotics, obtained a wiretap order from the court. As a result of the wiretap he was arrested. It was found that he was not a dealer in narcotics but a bootlegger of whiskey. He was turnеd over to Federal agents for prosecution. On his trial the State officers were permitted to testify to the wiretapped conversations. On appeal from his conviction the United States Court of Appeals decided, as a matter of first impression, that where there is no participation by a Federal officer the Communications Act does not bar, in a Federal court, the admissibility of evidence obtained by State officers by wiretaрs in violation of the act.
The Supreme Court disagreed with this conclusion. It held unanimously that wiretapping by New York State law enforcement officers, although authorized by the State Constitution and statutes, violated Federal law and the evidence was inadmissible. The court found no exemption for State officials in section 605 of the Federal Communications Act of 1934, which reads: “ no person not being authorized by the sender shall intercept any communicatiоn and divulge or publish the existence, contents, substance, purport, effect, or meaning of such intercepted communication ”.
Chief Justice Waerek said: “ The Constitution and statutes of the State of New York provide that an ex parte order authorizing a wiretap may be issued by judges of a certain rank * * * Respondent does not urge that, constitutionally speaking, Congress is without power to forbid such wiretapping even in the face of a conflicting state law * * * Rathеr the argument is that Congress has not exercised this power and that Section 605, being general in its terms, should not be deemed to operate to prevent a State from authorizing wiretapping in the exercise of its legitimate pоlice functions. However, we read the Federal Communications Act, and Section 605 in particular, to the contrary.
11 The Federal Communications Act is a comprehensive scheme for the regulation of interstate cоmmunication. In order to safeguard those interests protected under Section 605, that portion of the statute pertinent to this case applies both to intrastate and to interstate communications. * * * In light of the above considerations, and keeping in mind this comprehensive scheme of interstate regulation and the public policy underlying Section 605 as part of that scheme, we find that Congress, setting out a prohibition in plain terms, did not
In the Benanti case, the United States Court of Appeals for this circuit had said: “ Despite the warrant issued by the New York State court pursuant to New York law, we have nо alternative other than to hold that by tapping the wires, intercepting the communication made by appellant and divulging at the trial what they had overheard, the New York police officers violated the federal statutе. Nardone v. United States,
These views of the Court of Appeals regarding the illegality of the “ authorized ” wiretap were confirmed by the Supreme Court, but its ruling of the admissibility of the fruits of the tap was overruled, the Supreme Court basing its decision on the intent of the Federal Communications Act.
After its first pronouncеment, the United States Court of Appeals, several months later, reiterated its views on the illegality of intrastate interceptions, saying: ‘ ‘ Appellant next contends that the act does not apply to the calls he intercepted, because they were intrastate in character rather than interstate or foreign. This contention is completely refuted by Weiss v. United States,
Thus, section 605, as interpreted by сontrolling Federal judicial authority renders unlawful the interception of all telephone messages within our State, even by an officer acting under an order of this court; it cannot be within the competence of this court, рroperly exercised, to “ authorize ” such an unlawful act — section 813-a of the Code of Criminal Procedure to the contrary notwithstanding. For “ In case of conflict, the state
The supremacy clause of the United States Constitution, clause 2 of article VI, provides: ‘ ‘ This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States, which shall be made in Pursuance thereof * * * shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” And, since Gibbons v. Ogden (9 Wheat. [U. S.] 1), it has been firmly established that when Congress enacts legislation within its competence, and it becоmes the ‘ ‘ supreme Law of the Land ” under the Constitution, State interests must yield to the paramount national concern. The law of the general government governs. The exercise by Congress of its power is absolute — it precludes, mоdifies, or suspends — as the case may be — local legislation in conflict or inconsistent with Federal enactments.
In the interpretation and construction of Federal statutes, Federal judicial rulings are controlling.
Hence, even when authorized, interceptions of telephone messages within this State are illegal. Yet, orders have been issuing and interceptions have been made. As Benanti and Gris now make it painfully clear, the orders so issuing out of the courts to ‘ ‘ authorize ’ ’ interceptions, have been void because contrary to law.
These decisions require that we now cease and desist, for it cannot be lawful to authorize what is an illegal act. It is more and worse than a mere futility — for if the police officer violates the Federal statute by tapping wires notwithstanding a warrant issued out of this court pursuant to New York law — if that act be illegal — those who set the act in motion have condoned if not instigated illegality. Clearly a judge may not lawfully set the wheels in motion toward the illegality by signing an order — the warrant itself partakes of the breach, willful or inadvertent, of the Federal law. Such breaсh may not find sanction in the orders of courts charged with the support of the law of the land and with enforcing that law!
Notes
. So far as here material, section 813-a of the Code of Criminal Procedure (enacted under art. I, § 12 of the Statе Constitution) reads: “An ex parte order for the interception * * * of * * * telephonic communications may be issued by any justice of the supreme court * * * [when] there is reasonable ground to believe that evidence of crimе may be thus obtained ”. Any reference in this memorandum to this section applies only to telephone interceptions.
. Pennsylvania v. Nelson (
. (Sadowski v. Long Island R. R. Co.,
