57 Misc. 2d 373 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1968
The motions now decided, however styled, are treated as applications for orders suppressing the use in evidence — and directing the return — of property, including papers and personal effects seized in the execution of invalid search warrants (Code Crim. Pro., §§ 813-c to 813-e).
These motions are decided upon the respective warrants, the supporting affidavits (read collectively) and the credible evidence received upon an evidentiary hearing conducted in accordance with the provisions of an intermediate order of the court. My findings are embodied in the factual statements made in this opinion.
In granting these motions to the extent just indicated I hold (1) that all of the warrants in question were invalid because issued upon affidavits that were patently insufficient in that they failed to inform the issuing Magistrate of the underlying circumstances supporting the affiant’s conclusion that his confidential informants were credible and their information reliable; (2) that the deficiency was not cured by supplemental verbal statements which the officer-applicant made in response to the Magistrate’s questions on the occasions of the applications for the warrants because (a) the statements were not made under oath and (b) were not recorded nor judicially noted and are not a part of the record basis of the warrants. In view of these conclusions, it is unnecessary to pass upon the further issue arising from the Magistrate’s determination of probable cause for belief that some of the individuals possessed dangerous weapons, etc. upon their persons, in their homes or automobiles,
(1) I do not interpret the United States Supreme Court’s preference for searches under warrants issued upon 1 ‘ the informed and deliberate determinations of magistrates empowered to issue warrants ” (Aguilar v. Texas, 378 U. S. 108, 110-111; United States v. Ventresca, 380 U. S. 102, 106-107) as qualifying the well-established rule that a warrant may rest upon hearsay information and need not reflect the direct personal observations of the affiant “ so long as the magistrate is ‘ informed of some of the underlying circumstances ’ supporting the affiant’s conclusions and his belief that any informant involved * # * was ‘ ‘ credible ’ ’ or his information 1 ‘ reliable ” Aguilar v. Texas, supra, at 114 ” (United States v. Ventresca, supra, p. 108). No modification of constitutional standards is involved in the statement that 1 ‘ affidavits for search warrants * * * must be tested and interpreted by magistrates and courts in a commonsense and realistic fashion ’ ’ nor is there any compromise with the propositions that probable cause cannot be made out by purely conclusory affidavits and that “ recital of some of the underlying circumstances in the affidavit is essential if the magistrate is to perform his detached function and not serve merely as a rubber stamp for the police. ’ ’ However, “ where these circumstances are detailed, where reason for crediting the source of the information is given * * * the courts should not invalidate the warrant by interpreting the affidavit in a hypertechnical, rather than a commonsense, manner.” (United States v. Ventresca, supra, pp. 108,109; emphasis supplied.) But what the highest court considered “ hypertechnical ” was the Circuit Court’s view that the affidavit was inadequate because the facts were not so detailed as to enable a! reviewing court to single out any possible “ hearsay-upon-hearsay ’ ’ and in shunning such ‘1 an unduly technical and restrictive reading” (pp. 110, 111) the Supreme Court did not lessen the basic necessities.
All were sworn to the same day, by the same officer, before the same Magistrate and in all but one the affiant stated that he had received recent information from “ a reliable and confidential informant ” (the other assigned it to a “ reliable and confidential source ”) but nowhere did he disclose the fact that the informant was a fellow police officer assigned to investigate the matter and that in the performance of his duty the unidentified informant had ‘ ‘ joined ’ ’ the ‘ ‘ violent organization ’ ’ mentioned, and thus gained direct personal knowledge of the facts abridged in the affidavit. The omission violated the precepts of both the Federal and New York cases
(2) The warrants now under review were part of some 20 which the Magistrate was called upon to issue in one day. Some were preferred in the morning, in his chambers, and the others at his home, about 9 o’clock that night. The Judge spent about
(a) Had the affidavits themselves satisfied the Judge of the existence of sufficient grounds for doing so, he could have issued the warrants forthwith (Code Crim. Pro., § 796) but if not, he was only empowered to “ examine, on oath, the person seeking the warrant ” (Code Crim. Pro., § 794; emphasis supplied). In following the course that he did, he may very well have been misled by an authoritative comment to the effect that, as a matter of common judicial knowledge, ‘1 search warrants have in practice usually been issued on affidavits with the Judge making such oral inquiries as he thought appropriate ” (People v. Marshall, 13 N Y 2d 28, 36, supra). But when read in context, it is clear that this judicial utterance was not intended to skirt the constitutional edict that “ no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported hy oath or affirmation ” (N. Y. Const., art. I, § 12; U. S. Const., 4th Arndt.; emphasis supplied). And since these additional statements were not made under oath, fundamental law forbade the Magistrate to consider them in acting upon the applications for the warrants, even if they had been recorded.
(b) These additional statements were not recorded, although the omission occurred before its significance was pointed up by the majority opinion in People v. Schnitzler (18 N Y 2d 457, 461) and accented in Matter of Sarisohn (21 N Y 2d 36, 42, 43).
If the analogies between eavesdropping and search warrant procedures do not extend to the recording of additional statements made in an application for a search warrant and if Schnitsler does not reach back to affect the omission in this case, the fact remains that the proper course of judicial action was directed by the provisions of section 794 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, in effect at the time when these warrants were issued. •
After providing that the Magistrate “ may, before issuing the warrant, examine, on oath ” the applicant and his witnesses, if any, the statute specifically required — as it still does — that the Judge “ must take the affidavit or deposition of the person seeking the warrant ” (emphasis supplied). In People v. Marshall (13 N Y 2d 28, 35-36, supra), the court decided that the predecessor statute did not oblige the Magistrate to take a separate deposition. It held that, notwithstanding the old section 794 requirement that the Magistrate must take “depositions in writing ”
The 1962 amendment was part of the statutory revision thought necessary to “ clarify and modernize ” search warrant procedures, in the wake of Mapp v. Ohio (N. Y. Legis. Annual, 1962, pp. 350, 351). The choice of language suggests that the draftsmen and the members of the Legislature were familiar with the atmosphere in the Federal jurisdiction and in the courts of sister States (while New York had declined to follow the exclusionary rule) and that section 794, as amended, reached a compromise between two widely different points of view, one of which insisted that the affidavit be self-sufficient, on its face, and forbade supplementation by other affidavits or by sworn, oral testimony, whether recorded, written, subscribed or not.6
The Glodowski rationale was, that “ it is an anomaly in judicial procedure to attempt to review the judicial act of a Magistrate issuing a search warrant upon a record made up wholly or partially by oral testimony taken in the reviewing court long after the search warrant was issued. Judicial action must be reviewed upon the record made at or before the time that the judicial act was performed. The validity of judicial action cannot be made to depend upon the facts recalled by fallible human memory at a time somewhat removed from that when the judicial determination was made. This record * * * need take no particular form. The record may consist of the sworn complaint, of affidavits, or of sworn testimony taken in shorthand and later filed, or of testimony reduced to longhand and filed, or of a combination of all * * *. The form is immaterial. The essential thing is that proof be reduced to permanent form and made a part of the record, which may be transmitted to the reviewing court.” (pp. 271-272, followed in State v. Ripley, 196 Wis. 288 [June, 1928], and in Mundon v. State (196 Wis. 469 [July, 1928]).
The Indiana court’s restrictive interpretation of a local statute was supported by its conviction that if the additional proof were oral, it was ‘1 doubtful from a practical viewpoint whether it can ever be reproduced with exactitude,” besides which “ the trial court would be confronted with conflicting evidence as to what facts had been adduced in the first instance ” (Bedenarzik v. State, 204 Ind. 517, 522, 523 [March, 1933] ). Later in 1933, the Legislature enacted a statute which provided, in substance, that if other evidence were heard for the purpose of establishing probable cause, it should be reduced to writing and filed with the affidavit for the search warrant but a 1941 amendment eliminated this feature of the warrant procedure, with the result that the law, insofar as probable cause was concerned, became “ the same as it was prior to the 1933 act, and [did] not provide for the hearing of oral evidence upon which to base probable cause ” (Rohlfing v. State, 227 Ind. 619, 623, supra [Oct., 1949]).
The authorities thus far collected existed before our code
It has been said that “the Fourth Amendment’s policy against unreasonable searches and seizures finds expression in Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure ” (United States v. Ventresca 380 U. S. 102, 105, n. 1, supra) and although neither State nor Federal courts have regarded it as binding in State proceedings,
Between 1962, when section 794 was amended, and December 1, 1966, when Schnitsler was decided, the Federal courts had maintained the necessity of totally sufficient affidavits on appli
In another setting, the People would be entitled to the benefit of reasonable doubt about the law (People v. Reed, 276 N. Y. 5, 9) but here they have the right to appeal from the orders made in accordance with this decision (Code Crim. Pro., § 518, subd. 6; § 518-a). The substantial, arguable questions in this case should be tested before — rather than after — a trial which might result in a conviction, reversed on appeal, and a retrial contributing to congestion.
The grounds upon which a warrant was issued may be “ controverted,” as a matter of right, in the court which issued it, upon return of the warrant and delivery of an inventory (Code Crim. Pro., §§ 802, 805-809). Other procedural devices are discussed in People v. Gatti (16 N Y 2d 251, 253-255).
The affidavits were prepared and at least some were submitted to the Magistrate by an Assistant District Attorney who had access to the source material, i.e., intelligence communicated by undercover police officers engaged in an official investigation into the persons, matters and things referred to therein. Neither he nor the issuing Magistrate testified on the suppression-hearing. The official status — and hence the reliability — of the informers is a prerequisite of an assessment of the substantive worth of the facts set forth in the affidavit, on information provided by them.
In addition to those already cited, see People v. Coffey (12 N Y 2d 443, 452 [May, 1963], cert. den. 376 U. S. 916); People v. Marshall (13 N Y 2d 28, 34 [June, 1963]); People v. Santiago (13 N Y 2d 326, 329, 332 [Jan., 1964]); People v. Malinsky (15 N Y 2d 86, 91 [Jan., 1965]); People v. White (16 N Y 2d 270, 274 [Dec., 1965]); People v. Misuraco (16 N Y 2d 542 [May, 1965]); People v. McCall (17 N Y 2d 152, 157-158 [March, 1966]).
Having read the record and points on appeal, I note that the District Attorney depended on speculative inference that the assurance was given under oath.
Prior to its amendment (L. 1962, ch. 542, § 3) the statute read: “ The magistrate must, before issuing the warrant, examine, on oath, the complainant and any witnesses lie may produce, and take their depositions in writing, and cause them to be subscribed by the parties making them.”
The District Attorney has suggested that an “ informal ” examination by the Magistrate would be permitted by the “ under oath or otherwise ” content of subdivision 1 of section 365.40. Apart from the constitutional provision earlier noted (p. 6, ante) an “ oath ” is defined as including an “ affirmation and every other mode authorized by law of attesting to the truth of that which is stated.” (See Proposed Criminal Procedure Law, § 1.20, subd. 19.) Obviously, the “ or otherwise ” means “ every other mode authorized by law.”
See, e.g., United States v. Casino (286 P. 976, 978 [Feb., 1923]); United States v. Williams (43 F. 2d 184, 186 [Aug., 1930]); People v. Elias (316 Ill. 376 [April, 1925]); Lampkins v. State (205 Ind. 589 [Nov., 1933]); Rohlfing v. State (227 Ind. 619 [Oct., 1949]).
See, e.g., Sparks v. United States (90 F. 2d 61, 64 [April, 1937]) criticizing Poldo v. United States (55 F. 2d 866 [Feb., 1932]); State v. Doe (227 Iowa 1215 [March, 1940]), following Burtch v. Zeuch (200 Iowa 49 [March, 1925]).
See, e.g., Miller v. Sigler (353 F. 2d 424, 426) ; State v. Sherrick [98 Ariz. 46, cert, den., 384 U. S. 1022); Sherrick v. Eyman (Federal writ) (389 F. 2d 648, 652); Commonwealth v. Crawley (209 Pa. Super. Ct. 70); State v. Walcott (435 P. 2d 994, 999 [Wash.]).
Since Schnitzler, the affidavit, exclusively, has been held essential in Sessoms v. State 239 A. 2d 118,121 [Md., Feb., 1968]). The unreeorded-testimonyauthorities have been increased by State v. Lampson 149 N. W. 2d 116, 117, 119, [Iowa, March, 1967]; State v. Oliveri [Iowa, 156 N. W. 2d 688, 692-694 Feb., 1968] and State v. Walcott, [Wash., 435 P. 2d 994, 999 Dec., 1967]). The dissenting opinion favors the Glodowski stand (pp. 1002-1003). In the Federal jurisdiction, see United States v. Sterling (369 F. 2d 799, 802, n. 2 [Dec., 1968]) and United States v. Pinkerman (374 F. 2d 988, 989 [March, 1967]).