Lead Opinion
In affirming the judgments of conviction of these defendants on gambling indictments, we consider that the intercepted telephone conversations on which these convictions depend are not rendered inadmissible by recent Federal decisions. The other points raised do not require discussion. They have been examined carefully and resolved in favor of respondent.
In many criminal prosecutions evidence obtained by wire tapping authorized by orders granted under the New York State Constitution (art. I, § 12) and Code of Criminal Procedure (§ 813-a) has been introduced in criminal trials in New York State courts. In 1928 the United States Supreme Court held that the tapping of telephone wires is not in violation of the Fourth Amendment protecting against unreasonable searches and seizures (Olmstead v. United States, 277 U. S. 438, 465). In the opinion it was said: “ Congress may of course protect the secrecy of telephone messages by making them, when intercepted, inadmissible in evidence in federal criminal trials, by direct legislation, and thus depart from the common law of evidence. But the courts may not adopt such a policy by attributing an enlarged and unusual meaning to the Fourth Amendment.”
Six years later, in June, 1934, section 605 of the Federal Communications Act was enacted in response to this suggestion. Section 605 was held to render wire-tap evidence inadmissible in the Federal courts in Nardone v. United States (
A contrary policy has been adopted in New York State (People v. Variano, 5 N Y 2d 391; People v. Dinan, 7 A D 2d 119, 6 N Y 2d 715), pursuant to the power reserved in the States by Schwartz v. Texas (supra).
Appellants argue that the decision in Mapp v. Ohio (
The identical result does not necessarily follow in case of divulging telephone conversations in violation of section 605 of the Federal Communications Act, inasmuch as a statute may not possess the sanction of a constitutional inhibition pro
There is an indication that the Supreme Court of the United States adopted this distinction in deciding Pugach v. Dollinger (
It needs to be borne in mind that nothing in the Fourth Amendment or section 605 of the Federal Communications Act expressly
Notes
Nardone and Benanti were decided as a matter of Federal policy rather than directly in pursuance of the command of the statute. Not without significance is the analogy with McNabb v. United States (
Dissenting Opinion
There can no longer be any doubt that section 605 of the Federal Communications Act is violated when a person—whether private individual or law enforcement official—taps telephone wires and discloses the contents of intercepted communications. (See Benanti v. United States,
We have here the unusual circumstance that it is the very introduction of the wire-tapping evidence in open court, the very disclosure of the intercepted communication to the jury, which violates the Federal statute and constitutes the Federal crime. (See Benanti v. United States,
The circumstance that adoption of a rule excluding such testimony may, as I noted, in a somewhat different context, in People v. Lane (10 N Y 2d 347, 357, concurring opinion), ‘1 make it more difficult for police or prosecutors to gain convictions does not warrant its rejection. What is significant and decisive is that ‘ the imperative of judicial integrity ’ demands that the court should give sanction neither to illegal enforcement of the criminal law nor to the corrosive doctrine that the end justifies the means.”
I would reverse the judgments appealed from and direct a new trial.
Judges Dye, Froessel and Foster concur with Judge Van Voorhis; Judge Fuld dissents in an opinion in which Chief Judge Desmond and Judge Burke concur.
Judgments affirmed.
