109 Misc. 2d 832 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1981
OPINION OF THE COURT
The principal legal issue raised on this motion to suppress evidence obtained pursuant to an eavesdropping warrant is whether Justice George Roberts, an Acting Supreme Court Justice sitting in a Centralized Special Narcotics Part of the Supreme Court located in one judicial district, has the authority to issue an eavesdropping warrant which is to be executed in another judicial district. An ancillary issue raised on this motion is whether the New York County District Attorney had the authority to apply for an eavesdropping warrant that was to be executed in a different judicial district. The court holds that Justice
Defendant Pedro Luis Rodriguez y Paz (Paz) is variously charged under Indictment Nos. SN3153/80 and SN3158/80 with the crimes of conspiracy in the second degree, criminal sale of a controlled substance in the first degree, criminal possession of a controlled substance in the second, third and seventh degrees, as well as other offenses involving the criminal use of drug paraphernalia and a hypodermic instrument. Both indictments also allege three counts of criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree. Arturo Martinez and Daniel Gonzalez, as well as other individuals, are charged under Indictment No. SN3155/80 with the crime of conspiracy in the second degree. Defendants Martinez and Gonzalez have adopted the instant motion by defendant Paz to suppress eavesdropping evidence upon which the respective conspiracy charges are founded.
On May 12, 1980 an eavesdropping warrant was issued by Justice George Roberts in New York County, upon the application of New York County District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau. The warrant authorized the interception of telephonic communications of defendant Paz and one Victor Perez over a telephone listed to Estanislao Diaz, and located inside apartment 26W at North Shore Towers, Building One, 271-26 Grand Central Parkway in Queens County.
The defendants argue that Justice George Roberts did not have the authority to issue the eavesdropping warrant. The essence of this argument is that the New York wire
The People vigorously refute the defendants’ argument that Justice Roberts lacked the authority to sign an eavesdropping warrant that was to be executed in the Eleventh Judicial District. The People argue that article 5-B of the Judiciary Law does not itself provide for the substantive grant of jurisdiction to the Judges sitting in the Centralized Special Narcotics Parts. Instead, the jurisdiction of these Judges emanates from the State Constitution, which authorizes the temporary assignment of a Supreme Court Justice to a Supreme Court in any judicial district (NY Const, art VI, §26, subd a). The essence of the People’s argument is that since the special narcotics courts are endowed with five-county, city-wide jurisdiction, the Justices temporarily assigned to these parts pursuant to the procedures set forth in article VI of the State Constitution acquire the powers and jurisdiction of a Judge sitting in each of New York City’s three judicial districts. Because a Judge sitting in a Special Narcotics Part in one county is constitutionally empowered to hear narcotics cases ema
The “crisis” in narcotics law enforcement in New York City was described by our Legislature as an “emergency of grave dimensions” which transcends traditional jurisdictional boundaries and demands co-ordinated prosecution through an emergency narcotics court program (Judiciary Law, § 177-a). In response to the problem, Special Centralized Narcotics Parts of the Supreme Court were established under article 5-B of the Judiciary Law to hear and determine narcotics indictments assigned to them from any part of the Supreme Court in any county within cities having a population of one million or more (Judiciary Law, §§ 177-a, 177-b, subd 1). The effect of this legislation is to combine the five counties of New York City into a single unit for the purpose of prosecuting narcotics indictments (People v Taylor, 39 NY2d 649).
In light of the legislative findings concerning the “crisis” in narcotics law enforcement and the resultant creation of the centralized special narcotics courts with city-wide jurisdiction, this court cannot accept defendants’ invitation to rule that Justice Roberts lacked the power to issue an eavesdropping warrant authorizing the interception of telephonic communications outside the judicial district in which he was sitting.
The defendants’ position appears to be predicated upon a narrow interpretation of CPL 700.05 (subd 4). It also reflects an unduly restrictive view of article 5-B of the Judiciary Law which consolidated the five counties within New York City into a single unit for the purpose of prosecuting narcotics indictments in the centralized special narcotics courts.
The court is of the opinion that the phrase “of the judicial department in which the eavesdropping warrant is to be executed” as it is used in CPL 700.05 (subd 4), should be liberally construed so that the Centralized Special Narcotics Parts can most effectively hear and determine
Defendants argue that all of the provisions of CPL article 700 must be strictly construed, which means that only a Supreme Court Justice sitting in the Eleventh Judicial District “[where] the eavesdropping warrant is to be executed” (CPL 700.05, subd 4) would be empowered to issue a warrant that was to be executed in Queens County. Because Justice George Roberts was sitting in the First Judicial District, defendants contend that strict compliance with CPL 700.05 (subd 4) precluded him from issuing the eavesdropping warrant in the case at bar. Defendants cite United States v Giordano (416 US 505) and United States v Chavez (416 US 562), in support of their position. In those cases, evidence was secured by wiretap interceptions pursuant to a court order issued upon an application which was not authorized by “[t]he Attorney General, or
By liberally construing the definition of “judicial district” as it is used in GPL 700.05 (subd 4) so that it will be consistent with the policy underlying the creation of the Centralized Special Narcotics Parts, the court is not necessarily following an uncharted course. In People v Marino (49 NY2d 774), a section of the wiretapping statute
The court at bar is inclined to follow the Marino (supra) approach and is of the opinion that a liberal interpretation of the term “judicial district” under CPL 700.05 (subd 4) is consistent with the legislative intent underlying the creation of the specialized narcotics courts which were necessary to implement the “coordinated prosecution” of narcotics offenses. (Judiciary Law, § 177-a.) Because those courts were created in response to a crisis in narcotics law enforcement which “transcends * * * traditional jurisdictional boundaries” (Judiciary Law, § 177-a) of the counties within New York City, this court concludes that a Justice temporarily assigned to the special narcotics courts pursuant to the State Constitution would be concomitantly assigned to each of the city’s judicial districts. Accordingly, the court rules that at the time he signed the eavesdropping warrant while sitting in Part 30 in the First Judicial District, Justice George Roberts was a Justice “of the judicial district in which the * * * warrant [was] to be executed” within the meaning of CPL 700.05 (subd 4), and was authorized to issue an eavesdropping warrant that was to be executed in the Eleventh Judicial District.
Defendants’ remaining contention is that the eavesdropping warrant was invalid because it was issued upon the application of the New York County District Attorney who, in that capacity, lacked authority to apply for a warrant that was to be executed in another judicial district. Defendants argue that the Special Narcotics Prosecutor should have instead turned to the Queens County District Attorney, whose jurisdiction encompasses the judicial district in which the warrant was executed, and should have asked him to apply for the warrant before a Judge at that district. The court rejects this argument.
At bar, the court also finds that the New York County District Attorney had the authority to apply for the eavesdropping warrant because the indictments, which include charges of conspiracy stemming from activities that allegedly occurred in Bronx, Queens and New York Counties,
It is the opinion of this court that the New York County District Attorney was authorized to apply for an eavesdropping warrant before Justice George Roberts who was sitting in that county. For the reasons set forth above, Justice Roberts was empowered to issue an eavesdropping warrant that was to be executed on a telephone located in another judicial district.
Accordingly, defendants’ motion to suppress evidence obtained pursuant to the eavesdropping warrant is in all respects denied.