405 A.2d 93 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1979
On December 9, 1978, the Fritz Hawley Camera Company in New Haven was burglarized. On December 18, 1978, in connection with that burglary, two New Haven police officers presented a search warrant application to Judge Frank J. Kinney, Jr. The search warrant was *226 directed against the person of the defendant, his motor vehicle, and his residence, and described certain cameras and camera equipment stolen from Fritz Hawley.
It is undisputed that Judge Kinney signed the application in the appropriate places after having read the supporting affidavits and after having made a determination that probable cause existed to search the defendant's person, car and home. The police, however, when executing the search warrant, served upon the defendant a photocopy of the warrant and affidavits prepared prior to the time that Judge Kinney signed those documents. Subsequently, without objection by the defendant as to the missing signatures, the police seized a number of items from his home. For the most part, they matched those listed in the warrant as property to be seized.
On February 1, 1979, the defendant filed the present motion to suppress the evidence thus obtained from his home. Practice Book, 1978, § 820. The defendant's argument is that the state failed to comply with §
Section
The defendant argues that, because the requisite signatures were omitted from the copy of the warrant and affidavits served upon him, the subsequent search and seizure was void and illegal. Therefore, the defendant asks this court to apply the exclusionary rule, and to hold that all evidence obtained from the search on December 18, 1978 is inadmissible.
Except for a pair of binoculars the defendant's motion lacks merit.
The research of counsel and the court has not revealed any Connecticut case squarely in point relative to the defendant's specific objections herein. In any event, the present case is a clear example of what may be termed an administrative or clerical error, not falling within the prohibitions of the rule. The procedures required by §
In the totality of the circumstances herein, the omission was harmless error. Chapman v. California,
Thus the granting of the defendant's motion could in no way serve the very purposes for which the exclusionary rule was created.
In California, for example, it was held that a magistrate's inadvertent failure to sign a search warrant did not require suppression of the evidence seized where the magistrate did determine that probable *229
cause existed and where the deputy believed the warrant to be legally sufficient at the time he executed the warrant. People v. Superior Court,
The thrust of the exclusionary rule has been substantially narrowed by the United States Supreme Court in recent years, beginning in 1974. When it has been invoked, the Supreme Court has been increasingly careful to balance the deterrent effect of the rule in a particular case against the cost to government and society of losing the use of probative evidence. The "balancing technique" was employed in the three leading cases of Stone v.Powell,
Finally, it is significant that a comprehensive article entitled "The Exclusionary Rule, Why Suppress Valid Evidence?" by Judge Malcolm Richard Wilkey of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia appeared in the November, 1978 issue of Judicature, the official publication of the American Judicature Society. Judge Wilkey's article contains a summary of the arguments for and against the exclusionary rule. His interesting conclusion *230 is that the rule should be abolished in toto. He contends that it is simply a judge-made rule of evidence, that it unjustly frees many criminals, and that alternative methods exist, or should be found, to deter police from violating fourth amendment rights.
Accordingly, the defendant's motion to suppress is denied, except with respect to the binoculars. It is granted, solely and exclusively, as to those binoculars.