STATE of Arizona, Appellant, v. Edward DWYER, Appellee.
No. 1 CA-CR 2734.
Court of Appeals of Arizona, Division 1, Department C.
Aug. 17, 1978.
Rehearing Denied Oct. 18, 1978.
585 P.2d 900
Hoffman, Anderson & Brown, P. C. by David S. Hoffman, Tucson, for appellee.
OPINION
DONOFRIO, Judge.
The State appeals the granting of appellee Edward Dwyer‘s motion to suppress conversations between him and Mrs. Sandy Austin overheard by telephone operators in Bisbee, Arizona and all evidence derived therefrom. We affirm the trial court‘s granting of the motion to suppress.
On the evening of May 6, 1976 appellee called the operator in Bisbee, Arizona to place an emergency phone call. The operator he reached was Ms. Mary Ida Silva. Appellee gave Ms. Silva the number he wanted to reach, told her it was an emergency call and asked her to please interrupt. Ms. Silva dialed the number appellee wished to reach and discovered that it was busy. She then went on what is called a verifying trunk line and heard Mrs. Sandy Austin talking to another woman. Ms. Silva was acquainted with Mrs. Austin and identified her by her voice immediately upon breaking in. She interrupted and told Mrs. Austin that she had an emergency call. Mrs. Austin said she would hang up in a minute. Ms. Silva left the verifying trunk line connected to giver her light supervision which would enable her to determine when the call was completed without having to listen to the conversation. As soon as the light went out she dialed Mrs. Austin‘s number to connect her with Mr. Dwyer but it was busy. About that time Mrs. Wilma Atkinson, another operator told her that she had Mrs. Austin on another line. Ms. Silva therefore connected Mr. Dwyer to Mrs. Austin on the other line. Pursuant to normal telephone company procedures she listened on the connection briefly to determine that it had been properly connected and to determine that it was actually an emergency call. Ms. Silva then cut off and began picking up the rest of her calls.
After the connection was made between Mrs. Austin and appellee Mrs. Atkinson was told by one of the other operators to “Go into a Bisbee light.” She plugged in and heard the telephone conversation between appellee and Mrs. Austin. She listened for approximately 15 minutes. Several other operators were also listening in on the telephone conversation between appellee and Mrs. Austin. On the basis of what the operators overheard they placed an anonymous phone call to the Scottsdale Police Department warning them that Mrs. Austin‘s husband, Jesse Austin, who was going to be released from the State Hospital, was in danger. The police made no follow-up on this call.
On May 7, 1976, one day after the conversations were overheard, Jesse Austin was released from the State Hospital. On the morning of May 8, 1976 Jesse Austin was found dead, his body bearing approximately 28 stab wounds. On May 9, 1976 one of the telephone operators related to her husband, Douglas Knipp, who was at the time a lieutenant in the Cochise County Sheriff‘s Department, the nature of the conversations which had been overheard by several of the operators on May 6. The following
“Aside from corroborating circumstancial evidence, the major portions of the State‘s case are the conversations overheard by the Bisbee operators, the statement made by Sandra Austin, and the statement of Anthony Ridings.”
After conducting an evidentiary hearing and considering the arguments and citations supplied by the parties the court suppressed the phone conversations and the statements of Sandra Austin and Anthony Ridings. The court ruled that the telephone operators had, with the exception of Ms. Silva‘s initial brief verification of the connection, illegally intercepted the telephone conversation between Mrs. Austin and appellee. She therefore imposed the exclusionary rule provisions of Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968,
The statutory exclusionary rule provision of the act is as follows:
“Whenever any wire or oral communication has been intercepted, no part of the contents of such communication and no evidence derived therefrom may be received in evidence in any trial, hearing, or other proceeding in or before any court, grand jury, department, officer, agency, regulatory body, legislative committee, or other authority of the United States, a State, or a political subdivision thereof if the disclosure of that information would be in violation of this chapter.”
18 U.S.C. § 2515 .
The Senate Report on this section, see 1968 United States Code Congressional and Administrative News, 90th Congress, 2nd Session at 2112, 2184-2185, states that this section must be read in conjunction with the provisions of
(10)(a) “Any aggrieved person in any trial, hearing, or proceeding in or before any court, department, officer, agency, regulatory body, or other authority of the United States, a State, or a political subdivision thereof, may move to suppress the contents of any intercepted wire or oral communication, or evidence derived therefrom, on the grounds that-
(i) the communication was unlawfully intercepted; . . .”
The unlawful interception of wire or oral communications is prescribed in
“(1) Except as otherwise specifically provided in this chapter any person who-
(a) willfully intercepts, endeavors to intercept, or procures any other person to intercept or endeavor to intercept, any wire or oral communication; . . . shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both.”
Several of the terms used in
“any communication made in whole or in part through the use of facilities for the transmission of communications by the aid of wire, cable, or other like connection between the point of origin and the point of reception furnished or operated by any person engaged as a common carrier in providing or operating such facilities for the transmission of interstate or foreign communications.”
18 U.S.C. § 2510(1) .
“Intercept” is defined to mean “Aural acquisition of the contents of any wire or oral communication through the use of any elec-
“any device or apparatus which can be used to intercept a wire or oral communication other than-(a) any telephone or telegraph instrument, equipment or facility, or any component thereof, (i) furnished to the subscriber or user by a communications common carrier in the ordinary course of its business and being used by the subscriber or user in the ordinary course of its business; or (ii) being used by a communications common carrier in the ordinary course of its business, or by an investigative or law enforcement officer in the ordinary course of his duties.”
18 U.S.C. § 2510(5)(a) .
The only lawful intercepts allowed by the statutes are those obtained pursuant to an application to a federal judge by the Attorney General or his specially designated Assistant Attorney General or, at the state level, pursuant to an application by the principal prosecuting attorney of a state or a political subdivision thereof to a state court judge under a state statute authorizing such application.
“(2)(a) It shall not be unlawful under this chapter for an operator of a switchboard, or an officer, employee, or agent of any communication common carrier, whose facilities are used in the transmission of a wire communication, to intercept, disclose, or use that communication in the normal course of his employment while engaged in any activity which is a necessary incident to the rendition of his service or to the protection of the rights or property of the carrier of such communication: Provided, That said communication common carriers shall not utilize service observing or random monitoring except for mechanical or service quality control checks.” (Emphasis theirs)
18 U.S.C. § 2511(2)(a) .
The cases arising under this exception primarily involve internal phone company investigations of the users of “blue boxes” designed to enable callers to make long distance calls without paying for them. See United States v. Auler, 539 F.2d 642 (7th Cir. 1976), [cert. denied 429 U.S. 1104, 97 S.Ct. 1132, 51 L.Ed.2d 555]; United States v. Goldstein, 532 F.2d 1305 (9th Cir. 1976), [cert. denied 429 U.S. 960, 97 S.Ct. 384, 50 L.Ed.2d 327]; United States v. Clegg, 509 F.2d 605 (5th Cir. 1975).
It is readily apparent that the Bisbee telephone operators were persons within the meaning of the statute. They also intercepted within the meaning of the statute because they aurally acquired the contents of the telephone conversation between Mrs. Austin and appellee through the use of an electronic device. Although telephone equipment or any component thereof is excepted from the meaning of “electronic, mechanical or other device” in the statute it is so excepted only for those telephone facilities being used by a communications common carrier in the ordinary course of its business. Ms. Silva‘s monitoring of the telephone conversation for a short time in assurance that an emergency call was actually being made was a legitimate use of a telephone facility in the ordinary course of the telephone company‘s business. See also
The trial court found that these interceptions were illegal within the meaning of the federal statute and we agree. The Arizona Supreme Court has held that the inadvertent or accidental overhearing of a telephone conversation by an operator is not a willful interception as proscribed by
The next question is whether, granting the illegality of the interception, the exclusionary rule set forth in
Affirmed.
SCHROEDER, P. J., Department C, concurs.
WREN, Judge, specially concurring.
I have searched in vain for a legal premise upon which to dissent from this bizarre result. The privacy of the phone has been infringed by an uninvited ear and a suspected murderer goes free; and all without the slightest hint of any police misconduct. The exclusion required by this invidious statute offends every fiber of my being and I therefore join in the opinion simply because I have no other course. Never have I felt more strongly the need to right a wrong or more strongly the lack of tools to do it with.
Notwithstanding the obvious guilt of the appellee-defendant to the crime of murder this Court has struck down evidence that plainly makes it impossible to ever convict him. Admittedly, the terminology of
Admittedly, eavesdropping is not ranked as one of the most learned or respected of professions. In fact it is the greatest of all invasions of privacy. It places a government agent in the bedroom, in the business conference, in the social hour, in the lawyer‘s office and everywhere and anywhere a “bug” can be placed. The law must obviously be offended by violations of statutes
I find it even more incredible that Ms. Silva could monitor the telephone conversation for a short time to ascertain that an emergency call was actually being made, and that if the incriminating statements had been made during the monitoring, she could have continued to listen and the State could have used the entire conversation as evidence.
I agree that the constitutional right of privacy should not be diminished by the fact that the person involved also committed a crime, but defendant‘s privacy here had already been invaded prior to the ruling on the motion to suppress. Full disclosure of the murder plot had previously been made by the eavesdropping operators to the grand jury, the police investigators, and to the court. Was anything salvaged or retained by thereafter standing law enforcement on its head by the exclusion of competent evidence that he was guilty of murder? The fact that a defendant‘s rights are violated should not have a bearing on whether he committed a crime. Both matters should receive a full airing in the proper forum. No one was punished by throwing out the evidence and dropping the prosecution here except the public and justice. To me this case graphically illustrates what has become a cliché-“We use a shotgun to kill a fly.”
The “right of privacy“, like a chameleon, has a different color for every turning. Why cannot we examine the circumstances of its application in each case to determine whether the evidence should be suppressed? Such a procedure would produce no “Frankenstein Catalog of Horrors“. There is nothing magic about the word “constitutional“. Violations of constitutional rights, like any others, cover a spectrum from innocently trivial to deliberately terrible, and it is unreasonable to fail to recognize the difference. As Chief Justice Burger reasoned in his dissent in Bivens v. The Six Unknown F.B.I. Agents, 403 U.S. 388, 91 S.Ct. 1999, 29 L.Ed.2d 619 (1971), when he criticized the exclusionary rule of the Fourth Amendment:
“Freeing either a tiger or a mouse in a schoolroom is an illegal act, but no rational person would suggest that these two acts should be punished in the same way.” 403 U.S. at 419, 91 S.Ct. at 2016, 29 L.Ed.2d at 640.
The disparity between the error committed by the telephone operators and the windfall accorded the defendant by the exclusion is too obvious to merit comment. Moreover, suppression has done nothing to further the right of privacy. If that is its purpose then I submit that imposing upon the telephone operators the indirect sanction of exclusion of criminal evidence is nothing less than sophisticated nonsense. It in no way dissuades the private citizen from eavesdropping. To say that it does is to engage in not only fantasies but absurdities; especially when, as here, obtaining criminal evidence was not the purpose of eavesdropping in the first place. Not even in the complex and turbulent history of the exclusionary rule under the Fourth Amendment and Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643, 81 S.Ct. 1684, 6 L.Ed.2d 1081 (1961), has any court ever applied it to exclude evidence obtained by a private citizen. The stated reason for application of the exclusionary rule has always been to deter the police
Any assertion that the exclusionary rule provisions are not intended to deter interceptions by private citizens, but are designed solely to prevent disclosure of the communication itself is to ignore the fact that
Moreover, the Senate Report accompanying the Wire Interception and Interception of Oral Communications Act stated as the purpose of the rule: “[I]t should serve to guarantee that the standards of the new chapter will sharply curtail the unlawful interception of wire and oral communications.”1 In other words, the object is to deny to the perpetrator the fruits of his unlawful actions in both civil and criminal proceedings.
In spite of the plain language of the Act, it seems clear to me beyond cavil that Congress could not have intended the absurd result reached here. I submit that private rights will not atrophy by allowing such intercepted evidence to be introduced in a criminal court of law. Suppression in instances of non-police activity should be re-
I concede that safeguards are needed. Technological advances have produced remarkably sophisticated electronic devices of which the “cocktail olive” and “cufflink microphone” are illustrative. Progress is also being made toward utilizing a laser beam to pick up conversations within a room by focusing upon the glass of a window.
The public telephone plays a vital role in private communications, and surely the person placing the call is entitled to assume that the words he utters into the mouthpiece will not be broadcast to the world. Today, however, Arizona must release a man charged with murder; not because it has deprived him of his constitutional right of privacy, but because in its haste to give force to distasteful eavesdropping Congress has adopted a bad statute.
I feel fully justified in saying, admittedly as pure obitur dictum, that I question the legislative wisdom in the passage of this Act. As stated by Judge McCord in his special concurrence in Horn v. State, 298 So.2d 194, 201 (Fla.App.1974), which involved an eavesdropping situation by a private citizen on an extension line under an identical Florida statute and a charge of murder: “I believe we would be impressed with the desirability of amending the statute in question . . . .”
To Judge McCord‘s comment, I say, “Amen.”
