763 N.E.2d 1222 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2001
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *632 This cause was heard upon the record in the trial court. Each error assigned has been reviewed and the following disposition is made: Appellant, Brian Davies, has appealed a decision of the Summit County Common Pleas Court which denied his motion to suppress all of the state's evidence. This Court affirms.
In or around December of 1998, James Pannunzio telephoned Detective Robert J. Bailey of the Akron Police Department and left a message requesting Detective Bailey to return his call. Detective Bailey returned the call but did not reach James personally, so he left a message. James did not respond to the call. However, some short time later a relative of James called Detective Bailey and informed Detective Bailey that James had called the Detective to report the allegations of illegal drug activity taking place in Dr. Brian Davies' office, but that James had gotten "cold feet." The relative further informed Detective Bailey that James learned of the allegations by listening to tapes he had secretly recorded of calls between his wife Dina and Patricia Houck. Detective Bailey retorted that he did not want to hear any information that came from the tapes, but said that he would like to speak with James.
In January of 1999, James contacted Detective Bailey and reported the allegations of prescription drug abuse. James relayed specific names of some prescription drugs. James told Detective Bailey that his wife Dina had told him this information. There was no mention of the tapes. Detective Bailey then contacted Robert Mandi, a pharmacist specialist, for advice on investigating prescription drug writing. Mandi recommended calling the Ohio Board of Pharmacy to obtain a list of all of the prescriptions for controlled substances that had been written by Dr. Davies, and filled in Summit County. In response to Detective Bailey's request, the Ohio Board of Pharmacy sent a mailer to all the pharmacies in *633 Summit County requesting a reply from them as to any controlled substances they filled that were written by Dr. Davies. The request produced a voluminous list.
In June of 1999, Detective Bailey and James Pannunzio met face-to-face for the first time. James gave Detective Bailey specific names of people who may have been involved in having the prescriptions written in their names, which included Patty Houck's mother, Patty Houck's brother Christopher, who was the man with whom Dina allegedly was having the affair, and Patty Houck's sister, Susan Wilster. There was no mention of the tapes James had recorded. Two agents from the Ohio Board of Pharmacy then approached Susan Wilster under the pretext that they were investigating a bogus pharmacist in the area. The agents asked her what doctor she had seen, what kind of drugs she had been prescribed, and if she had been seen by Dr. Davies. Wilster said she had seen Dr. Davies a couple of years earlier for minor surgery. The agents also asked Wilster if she had ever been prescribed any kinds of injectable drugs. She replied she had not. According to the list compiled by the pharmacies, however, Wilster was receiving an injectable form of the drug Demerol, proscribed by Dr. Brian Davies.
A search warrant was issued for Dr. Davies' office, and was executed on September 10, 1999. The warrant authorized police to search for the medical records of certain patients such as Wilster. Police were looking for proof that Davies had written prescriptions that were not for legitimate medical purposes. This search and subsequent investigations established a case against the doctor.
Davies was indicted on eighteen counts of aggravated trafficking of drugs, fourth degree felonies. He filed a motion to suppress, among other things, all of the results of the police investigations. Davies asserted that since James Pannunzio surreptitiously listened to conversations between his wife Dina and Patty Houck in violation of R.C.
The trial court erred in denying the motion to suppress as all evidence against appellant derived from interception of telephone communications which was *634 prohibited by [R.C.] 2933.52(A) and which evidence was inadmissable [sic] pursuant to [R.C.] 2933.62(A).
In his sole assignment of error, Davies maintains the trial court erred in refusing to suppress all of the state's evidence, which he argues was derived solely from the illegal wiretap. His contention is that because police had no reason to suspect him of criminal conduct prior to receiving a call from James Pannunzio, and because police knew that James had obtained the information illegally, police were prohibited from investigating the allegations. The state argues that Davies does not have standing to contest the admission of the tapes or any investigation derived from information on the tapes. The state further contends that even if this Court finds that Davies does have standing, this Court must affirm because the issue is one of credibility.
Our standard of review of the trial court's decision on a motion to suppress is de novo. State v. Bing (1999),
R.C.
In the present case, the trial court found that James Pannunzio violated R.C.
The record contains insufficient evidence to determine whether James Pannunzio recorded the conversations in an attempt to find out if Davies was the man with whom his wife was having an affair, i.e. whether the interception of the calls was directed at Davies. James Pannunzio did not testify at the suppression hearing. Detective Bailey testified that James told him that he and his wife, Dina, were having "some marital problems[,]" and that James "suspected that his wife was having an affair," and that James "originally thought that was with Dr. Davies[.]"
Furthermore, even if Davies does not meet the definition of an "aggrieved person," R.C.
The Fourth Amendment has no application in this context. James Pannunzio committed the illegal act without the assistance or appeal of the government. See United States v. Jacobsen (1984)
Accordingly, Davies' suppression motion rests completely upon the violation of Ohio's wiretapping statute and the statutory prohibition against using evidence derived from such a violation. It was Davies' burden to prove that the evidence obtained in violation of the statute should have been suppressed. State v. Childs (2000),
Davies argues that he met his burden under Childs, and therefore the trial court was required to grant his suppression motion. Childs is not dispositive of the issue in this case. In Childs, the Supreme Court of Ohio explained that it is the burden of the party "seeking to suppress evidence allegedly obtained in violation of R.C.
Although Davies did present evidence that neither Dina nor Patty Houck consented to James' taping their conversations, this evidence is irrelevant to the present appeal because neither party has challenged the trial court's determination that the tapes were made in violation of the wiretapping statute. Rather, the issue was, given that R.C.
R.C.
No part of the contents, and no evidence derived from the contents, of any intercepted wire, oral, or electronic communication shall be received in evidence in any trial * * * in or before any court * * * of this state * * * if the disclosure of that information is in violation of sections
2933.51 to2933.66 of the Revised Code.
(Emphasis added.) The trial court found that the statute did not prohibit the admission of the results of the investigation because the "[t]he investigation was independent of any information derived from the illegal wiretap." Davies claims that this finding is in direct contrast to Detective Bailey's testimony that the sole reason for the *637
investigation was the information he received from James. We find this mistake of fact to be irrelevant because the issue is not whether the investigation was derived from the contents of the illegal tap. Rather, the issue is whether the evidence was derived from the contents of the illegal tap. R.C.
This Court finds that the evidence was not derived from the contents of the illegal tapes; the evidence was derived from subsequent in-depth investigations. For purposes of R.C.
In that case, as condition of his probation, Thomas was to abstain from using any non-proscribed hallucinogen, and to have no contact with his former girlfriend, Offerman, or her present boyfriend, Huff. One day while Thomas was talking with Offerman on the telephone, Huff was secretly listening to their conversation on an extension in Offerman's apartment, which she shared with Huff. Huff learned that Thomas and Offerman planned to meet, and he telephoned Thomas' probation officer and relayed the information. Id. at *3. Based on this information, the officer went to look for Thomas, and initiated a stop when he saw Offerman enter Thomas' car. Upon smelling marijuana, the officer searched Thomas' vehicle and found four grams of marijuana under a floor mat. Thomas was charged with two parole violations. Id. at *4.
Thomas moved to suppress the evidence, arguing that R.C.
Whenever there is a violation of the wiretap law, a person who unknowingly had his conversation intercepted suffers from an invasion of privacy. The invasion of privacy is not a one time occurrence. Every time the contents of the illegally intercepted conversation are disclosed, the person will suffer a further invasion of privacy. Therefore, the federal wiretap law, and, we assume, the Ohio *638 statute, prohibits further disclosure of the contents regardless of whether the illegal interception was made by a state official or private individual.
In the case at bar, however, there was no further invasion of privacy by the courts failure to suppress. What appellant sought to suppress was not the contents of the conversation between himself and Offerman, but instead the marijuana which the parole officer found in appellant's car. Once the parole officer spotted Offerman getting into appellant's car, the contents of the illegally intercepted conversation became irrelevant except as to how the officer initially became aware of the meeting. Because there was no further invasion of privacy by admitting the marijuana into evidence, that purpose of the wiretap law would be satisfied.
We are still faced with what appears to be all encompassing language in the statute. There are no explicit exceptions within the provisions of the statute. However, several limited exceptions have been formulated. See United States v. Winter (1981),
663 F.2d 1120 (contents may be disclosed for purpose of impeachment), United States v. Libby (1973),354 F. Supp. 217 (contents may be disclosed in prosecution of person who made the illegal interception). We, therefore, believe that where both purposes of the wiretap law have been satisfied — i.e. implementation of the constitutional exclusionary rule and protection of the right to privacy — evidence discovered as fruits of an illegal wiretap need not be suppressed.
Id. at *13-14.
We adopt the Fourth District's reasoning. We note that the present case is distinguishable from Thomas because Davies was not a party to the conversation and his right to privacy was not violated. It was the privacy rights of Dina and Patty Houck that were affected. We find, however, that the trial court's refusal to suppress the evidence derived from the investigations, which were derived from the contents of the interception, was no further invasion of their privacy.
After a thorough review of the record, this Court finds that Davies failed to prove that the evidence should have been suppressed. His sole assignment of error is overruled.
The Court finds that there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common Pleas, County of Summit, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy of this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App.R. 27.
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the period for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(E).
Costs taxed to Appellant.
Exceptions.
____________________________ BETH WHITMORE
BATCHELDER, P.J., BAIRD, J. CONCUR. *639