46 Misc. 2d 860 | New York County Courts | 1965
Pursuant to an order of this court, a hearing was held on a motion to suppress evidence procured by means of a wire-tap order and an order of search and seizure. This court held (46 Misc 2d 405), in a prior decision, that since intercepted telephonic conversations were used to
State Police Officer Louis Lonsani testified and admitted that he had spoken to Mrs. Cook and had received these notes over a period of approximately one year, and further admitted that he instructed the witness to eavesdrop on all telephone conversations of the defendant. The third witness to testify for the People was Lt. Warren Surdam, a lieutenant-supervisor of the State Police stationed at headquarters in Oneida. Lt. Surdam testified, and admitted upon cross-examination that sometime in July of 1964 he assumed that Mrs. Cook was eavesdropping and intercepting telephonic communications between the defendant and other persons. He further stated that, in the early part of 1964, he was not aware that Mrs. Cook was eavesdropping in any manner.
Lt. Surdam was the State Police Officer who signed the affidavits in order to procure the wire-tap orders. In the prior motion before this same court, the court understood, and it was presented to the court that only one order concerning a wire tap of the defendant’s telephone was issued and that was on September 23, 1964. Upon the hearing, it was learned that three Avire-tap orders were issued, namely, one on June 4, 1964; one on July 30, 1964 and the last order on September
All the affidavits and court orders procured by the State Police were received in evidence at this hearing. All the affidavits, as executed by Lt. Surdam, are identical in their wording and in their allegations. The pertinent part of each affidavit consists of three short paragraphs. The first paragraph states, in substance, “ that the investigation to date indicates that one Dr. Sheldon Bogers is engaged in the crime of bookmaking and gambling and is using a telephone listed under the records of the Trumansburg Home Telephone Company, Phelps, New York as Willard 869-5625 in conducting illegal calls relative to gambling and other crimes.” The second paragraph states, ‘ ‘ further, that confidential information has been received that the aforesaid Dr. Sheldon Bogers is engaged in illegal bookmaking and other crimes and that this information has been, in part, substantiated by toll-slip analysis which disclose numerous calls to known gamblers in various states.” The third paragraph reads, “ further, that the investigation to date reveals reasonable grounds to believe that the aforesaid Dr. Sheldon Bogers is involved with an interstate gambling syndicate encompassing the activities of all sporting events. ’ ’
It is provided under Federal statute (U. S. Code, tit. 47, § 605), that wire tapping or eavesdropping on telephonic communications is illegal, and it is also illegal under section 813-b of the Code of Criminal Procedure, except when it is procured by a court order by law-enforcement officials. Assuming for the moment that Mrs. Cook’s co-operation with the 'State Police was a matter of deep concern for herself in that she, as a private individual, was attempting to co-operate and work toward the means of effectuating justice, and that her eavesdropping and her interception of telephonic communications was done with all good intent and purpose. The State Police, by instructing her to continue the interception of telephonic communications and, furthermore, to even go one step further, and to make notes and prepare extracts of the telephonic communications between the defendant and other persons places and law-enforcement officials in a position where they actively participated in the use of intercepted telephonic communications which is a violation of not only the Federal law, but also of the State law.
The State Police violation of the law is further heightened since these intercepted conversations procured and transmitted by Mrs. Barbara Cook became a part of the criminal investí
The intermingling of illegal evidence procured by Mrs. Cook with, possibly, some legal evidence procured by means of the wire-tap order casts a shadow upon the entire investigation, and upon the means and methods of procuring evidence; and since there was scienter at the time when court orders were issued, the nebulous affidavits which, upon their face, seemingly presented probable cause, but only after a hearing actually revealed their true basis initially hidden behind cliche phrases such as, “ The investigation to date indicates ”, “ Further, that confidential information has been received ’ ’, and ‘1 Further, that investigation to date reveals reasonable grounds.”
The rule preventing the use of evidence procured or derived through primary illegality was set forth by the Court of Appeals in People v. Robinson (13 N Y 2d 296, 301), wherein it was stated, ‘ ‘ we are compelled by decisions of the United States Supreme Court to apply the rule that, if the evidence to which objection is made was acquired by exploitation of the primary illegality, such evidence must also be excluded.” (Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U. S. 471, 488.)
The primary illegal eavesdropping permeates the wire-tap orders and since the order for search and seizure is dependent and based upon the telephonic communications of the defendant, the illegal thread has entwined itself throughout the order for search and seizure.
Therefore, the motions for the suppression of all evidence procured by means of the wire-tap orders and the order for search and seizure is hereby granted in all respects.