The defendant moves to suppress evidence seized from his possession at the time of his arrest. Although there was considerable conflict in the testimony elicited at a hearing held on the motion, the following facts were established.
At about 3:15 a.m., on the morning of July 29,1962, two police officers in a patrol ear saw the defendant walking south on Havemeyer Avenue near Powell Street, in Bronx County, wearing a sport coat, “ chino ” pants and low shoes, and carrying in his hand a gun ease of a size used for a rifle or shotgun. When questioned, the defendant first said he was going to hunt ducks, but upon being told that there was no duck season in July said that he was going to hunt woodchucks. One officer then asked to see the kind of a gun the defendant was going to use, and the defendant took a shotgun out of the case. While the shotgun was still in the defendant’s hands, the officer released the catch causing the gun to open and permitting the officer to see that it was loaded. At this point the officer told the defendant he would have to come to the station house for further questioning, and before putting him in the patrol car touched the outside of the defendant’s clothing and felt a hard object the size of a pistol near the defendant’s waist. A more formal search of the defendant’s person revealed that the object was a loaded Mauser automatic pistol concealed in the defendant’s belt and that the defendant also had on his person a fountain-pen-type tear gas gun loaded with a blank cartridge and two hunting knives. The defendant was then formally arrested and subsequently booked
The defendant now contends that the officer at no time had a right to arrest or search him and that the evidence discovered by the illegal search should be suppressed, under the exclusionary doctrine of Mapp v. Ohio (
The suppression of evidence obtained by an unlawful search and seizure is provided for in section 813-c of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which was enacted in 1962 to provide an orderly procedure for the application of the exclusionary rule mandated by the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the United States Constitution. The rule requires that evidence obtained by State or Federal officers in violation of such amendments be excluded from a criminal trial. Its purpose is to deter overzealous law enforcement officers from infringing upon the rights of privacy guaranteed to every citizen by the Bill of Rights. (Mapp v. Ohio, supra; Elkins v. United States,
The first question to be decided on this motion is whether the police violated the Fourth Amendment at the time the officer ing. While such a touching might technically constitute an released the catch on the shotgun which the defendant was hold-
Secondly, it must be decided whether the police had the right to search the defendant at the time the officer touched the defendant’s clothing and felt the Mauser pistol. Such a right would exist if the officer then had a right to arrest the defendant, and it matters not that the search preceded the formal arrest. (Husty v. United States,
Probable cause originally meant “ circumstances which warrant suspicion”. (Locke v. United States,
Even where probable cause does exist, a search warrant is required by the Fourth Amendment except under exceptional circumstances. Since, it is well established that the Fourth Amendment imposes more stringent requirements for a warrant
It would also appear that the reasonableness of the search depends to some extent upon the seriousness of the crime suspected and the degree of public danger involved. A greater degree of probability is required where the search is aimed at a violation of gambling or obscenity laws (Mapp v. Ohio, supra [obscenity]; MacDonald v. United States, supra [gambling]; People v. Moore, 11 N Y 2d 271 [gambling]; People v. O’Neill, supra [obscenity]; see United States v. Di Re,
Applying the above constitutional principles to the circumstances in this case, I find that the officer had probable cause to search the defendant prior to the time he told the defendant he would have to come to the precinct and felt the defendant’s clothing and discovered the pistol. The officer already knew
Moreover, the defendant stated that he was about to use the gun to hunt animals, and hunting with a dangerous weapon within the limits of a city also constitutes a misdemeanor (Penal Law, § 1897, subd. 6-b.) Thus, at the time the officer touched the defendant’s clothing he had probable cause to believe the defendant was committing a misdemeanor in his presence and was therefore authorized to arrest the defendant or to search his person incidental to such an arrest. (Draper v. United States,
Even if the officer had not had probable cause to believe a crime was being committed in his presence sufficient to justify an arrest, I believe he had a right under the common law to take certain minimum action to investigate the defendant’s intended use of the shotgun. It is true that numerous opinions discuss police search and detention in terms of being exclusively either an unlawful trespass or a lawful search or arrest. (Henry v. United States,
Extreme examples of circumstances in which police must be permitted some powers of investigation come readily to mind. Suppose an officer finds a man standing alone next to a bloody corpse, or suppose a child has been kidnapped in an area that can be readily isolated by road blocks. Recognizing the need for police detention powers in such circumstances, several jurisdictions have adopted the uniform arrest act which specifically provides that police may detain persons prior to arrest for limited periods of time where the circumstances warrant a reasonable suspicion that the person is or has been committing a crime. (Delaware Code, tit. 11, §§ 1901-1932; New Hampshire Rev. Stat. Ann., § 594:2; Rhode Island Gen. Laws, tit. 12, ch. 7; see, also, N. Y. General Business Law, § 218.)
As a practical matter it is well known to be common police practice in all jurisdictions to exercise limited powers of detention, frisk and interrogation. (Police Detention and Arrest Privileges by O. W. Wilson, 51 J. of Crim. Law, p. 395, 399 [Nov.-Dec., 1960]; see The Law of Arrest by E. W. Machen, Jr. [1950], pp. 3-6.) Such powers, particularly, with respect to “nightwalkers ”, can be traced back for many years. (History of the Pleas of the Crown by Hale [1847], vol. 2, p. 96; Lawrence v. Hedger [1810], 3 Taun. 14, 128 Eng. Rep. 6; Rex v. Bootie [1759], 2 Burr. 864, 97 Eng. Rep. 605.)
Under the circumstances of the instant case, the police cannot be criticized for not having followed the defendant until they obtained more positive proof of his guilt. The officers were in uniform in a painted patrol car. Having once stopped the defendant, they could not then decide to follow him. Their choice was to investigate immediately or give up all surveyance and risk the commission of a serious crime. Having chosen
Motion denied.
