OPINION OF THE COURT
The defendant was convicted of felony murder and related offenses for killing and raping Linda Jack in Brooklyn in the summer of 1974. The Appellate Division affirmed, without opinion. The defendant appeals. The primary issue is whether admissions made by the defendant to the police following an arrest without probable cause were properly allowed into evidence.
On the morning of August 10, 1974, the partly clad body of Linda Jack was found in an alleyway of a residential area of Coney Island. She had been stabbed in the throat and abdomen. A broad path of blood indicated that after being stabbed her body was dragged along the sidewalk and into an alleyway where, while dying, she was raped. Personal property belonging to the victim was found under a car near the scene of the stabbing. A palm print, found on the door of the car. was later identified, during the trial, as belonging to the defendant. In addition, there was the imprint from the sole of a corrugated boot found in the pool of blood at the scene of the stabbing.
Despite the overwhelming proof of guilt at trial the record of the suppression hearing indicates, that at the time defendant was taken into custody the limited information the police possessed which connected the defendant to the murder did not constitute probable cause for an arrest.
The evidence at the suppression hearing revealed that following the discovery of Linda Jack’s body in the alley
The next day, the officers sought out the brother, whose name they had been told was Paul. When the officers arrived at the frozen food establishment Paul was out and the officers decided to wait. After a time they heard a woman’s voice say “[n]o ‘Ritchie’, Paul is not here.” Concluding that the person to whom the remark was addressed met the general description of the person last seen with the murder victim, the officers took “Ritchie” into custody without any preliminary inquiries to determine his possible connection to the crime.
Of course, at the time the police confronted the defendant they could, acting on reasonable suspicion, have stopped him long enough to make inquiries concerning his possible involvement in the crime (see People v De Bour,
However, it must be emphasized that the Constitution does not require a person illegally detained be forever granted immunity from prosecution or conviction (United
The defendant was not immediately questioned when he was taken to the police station. Instead, the officers left to speak to defendant’s girlfriend who they found at the frozen food establishment still waiting for her brother. Upon inquiry by the officers, she mentioned that although defendant rented an apartment across the street from hers, he frequently stayed with her, her brother and her mother at their apartment. The detectives requested that they be permitted to examine the clothes which the defendant kept at her apartment and she consented. A pair of the defendant’s boots apparently covered with blood were found.
Approximately three hours after defendant’s arrest and after advising defendant of his rights, Detective Zigo began the interrogation. In doing so he confronted defendant with the boots as well as with a bloody shirt discovered by the police at the scene of the crime. Defendant admitted owning the boots, but denied that the shirt was his. He then stated that he did not wish to undergo further questioning without first speaking to his brother, who was a police officer. The brother was called, and after defendant conversed with him privately, defendant gave two more statements which, like the first, were used by the People at trial. Defendant argues on this appeal that all three statements resulted directly from exploitation of the illegal arrest and therefore should have been suppressed.
While it is generally recognized that statements derived from an illegal detention will be suppressed and cannot be used at trial (Wong Sun v United States,
At the suppression hearing the trial court concluded that the challenged statements were the result of confronting the defendant with the physical evidence and defendant’s conversation with his brother. The question, then, is whether these significant intervening events are legally sufficient to justify the conclusion that the taint of the illegal detention effectively was removed. We agree with the courts below that they are.
There is ample support for the conclusion that the boots were discovered not as a result of defendant’s detention, but rather as a result of the previously established lead between the “Ritchie” who had been seen with the deceased, and a girlfriend whose brother worked in Brooklyn. The police received no aid from defendant in tracking down this lead, and it was the independent act of consent by the girlfriend which resulted in the discovery of the boots. Similarly, the discovery of the bloody shirt was totally independent of the arrest, as it had been found at the death scene prior to any detention at all. As already noted, evidence unconnected with the detention need not be suppressed, since it was not the fruit of the illegal detention (see United States v Crews,
There is no indication that the arrest was orchestrated in such a manner as to intimidate or provoke defendant so as to overcome his reluctance to communicate with the officers (see Brown v Illinois,
Finally, we reject defendant’s reading of Dunaway v New York (
The exclusionary rule exacts a heavy penalty, and although its operation is justified, the exclusion of evidence
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Jones, Fuchsberg and Meyer concur.
Order affirmed.
Notes
Although defendant was not told that he was under arrest at this time, but rather that he was being taken in for questioning, it is clear that his freedom to leave was effectively terminated and as Detective Zigo stated, he was under arrest for “all intents and purposes” (see Dunaway v New York,
