MEMORANDUM DECISION & ORDER
Before the Court is defendant David Delva’s motion to suppress his cellular telephone (the “Cell Phone”),
On June 4, 2013, law enforcement entered the apartment located on the second floor of 832 South Oak Drive, Bronx, New York (the “Apartment”) to arrest one of Delva’s roommates, Gregory Accilien. Ac-cilien was alleged to have participated in a brutal robbery and kidnapping. At the time of the arrest, the officers who entered the Apartment knew that one or more cell phones had been used during the robbery and kidnapping. Delva was later arrested for participation in the same offense and his trial on those charges is scheduled to commence on June 23, 2013.
On January 21, 2014, this Court held an evidentiary hearing with respect to seizure of the items from the Apartment. During that hearing, evidence relating to the seizure of two cell phones, one of which was later determined to belong to Delva,- was adduced. Delva’s counsel then amended his original motion to suppress (as to drugs and a loaded gun) to add a motion to suppress the Cell Phone. {See January 21, 2014 Hearing Transcript (“Tr.”) at 100.) The Court requested additional briefing on this additional motion. That briefing was fully submitted on February 26, 2014. (ECF Nos. 95,102,114.)
There is no factual dispute that the Cell Phone is Delva’s. Further, defendant has proffered no evidence, nor elicited any evidence on cross-examination, that at the time it was seized, the Cell Phone was not in plain view in a bedroom that had been occupied the previous night by Accilien (the robbery and kidnapping suspect). .
The Government does not base the legality of its seizure of the Cell Phone on the receipt of consent to search the bedroom. According to the Government, during the course of legitimate efforts incidental to a protective sweep that was itself incident to the arrest of Accilien, law enforcement officers (“Officers”) saw drugs, a gun, and the Cell Phone in plain view. It is undisputed that the Officers saw the drugs and gun prior to seeing the Cell Phone.
Delva’s arguments on this motion are the same as those on his prior motion with respect to the gun and drugs: (1) the Officers’ had no need or right to enter the Apartment; (2) once in the Apartment, the Officers had no right to enter the bedroom
At the evidentiary hearing on January 21, 2014, the Government called Special Agent John Reynolds of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) who was the lead investigator with respect to this robbery and kidnapping, and Detective Ellis Deloren of the New York Police Department (“NYPD”), who was the lead detective in that investigation. The only testimony elicited about the location and seizure of the two cell phones was from Special Agent Reynolds. (Deloren knew that cell phones had been seized but no more than that.) The defendant called one of his other roommates in the Apartment as of the date of the search, Mackenzie Bruno. Bruno had also been an occupant of the bedroom the previous night and may have had information regarding the cell phones. Bruno presented no testimony regarding the cell phones.
For the reasons set forth below, Delva’s motion to suppress is DENIED.
I. FACTS
The facts relevant to resolution of this motion were established at the evidentiary hearing on January 21, 2014. They are recited in this Court’s January 27, 2014,
As the Court previously noted in its January 27, 2014 decision, it found both of the Officers who testified — Reynolds and Deloren — very credible. Reynolds has worked for the FBI for six years. Prior to that, he was a police officer with the NYPD for six years. Detective Deloren is assigned to the NYPD’s Bronx robbery squad. He has been with the NYPD for over fourteen years and has been a detective since 2009.
On June 4, 2013, approximately ten officers arrived at the Apartment to execute an arrest warrant for Accilien. (Tr. at 59.) Deloren and Reynolds knew that Accilien had a significant criminal history, that he was being arrested in connection with a brutal robbery and kidnapping which had occurred over the course of several days, and that these events involved serious bodily injury and a sexual assault. (Id. at 9, 57.) Deloren and Reynolds knew that guns were used in connection with these crimes. (Id. at 9, 57.) Reynolds testified that Accilien had previously been charged with assaulting a police officer. (Id. at 9.) On the day the Officers were executing the arrest warrant, Deloren believed that Acci-lien could be dangerous. (Id. at 58.) Reynolds and Deloren were armed and wearing bulletproof vests. (Id. at 10, 59.)
The building at 832 South Oak Drive, in which the Apartment is located, is a two-story building. (Id. at 10.) The Apartment is on the second floor, which was accessible through an outer door at street level, (Id. at 10-11.) The outer door entered onto a staircase that leveled off at a landing adjoining the kitchen. (Id. at 10-11.) There was no interior door between the stairs and the kitchen. (Id. at 15, 60.) The Apartment was about 500 square feet in total, consisting of a kitchen with a bedroom/living room off it on the far right, a second bedroom off it on the far left, and a bathroom at the far end. (Id. at 15, 60.)
The Officers knocked on the outer door and announced; “Police department.
As Reynolds was climbing the stairs, he could see Accilien at the top of the stairs looking down at him. (Id. at 18.) Both Reynolds and Deloren were stating: “Police, get down.” (Id. at 63.) Accilien complied and lied down on the floor in the kitchen. (Id. at 18, 63-64.) As Reynolds reached the top of the stairs, he saw two other men in the kitchen; Reynolds stepped further into the kitchen and instructed the two other men to get down. (Id. at 22.) The kitchen was very small. (Id. at 25.) Reynolds then noticed somebody in the second bedroom — the bedroom closest to the bathroom and off the kitchen. (Id. at 23.) Reynolds later identified the individual as Delva. (Id.) Reynolds was standing in the kitchen and saw Delva walking towards the kitchen from inside the second bedroom. (Id.) Deloren also noticed that Delva was in the second bedroom and was walking towards the kitchen. (Id. at 65-66.)
Reynolds instructed Delva to get down on the ground. (Id. at 25.) Delva did not immediately comply; Reynolds had to instruct him several times, and he did eventually comply. (Id.) When Delva was lying on the ground, his head was in the bedroom near the doorway, with the rest of his body and legs stretching behind him into the bedroom. (Id. at 25-26.) Reynolds then stepped either to the side of Delva or over Delva to make sure no one else was in the room. (Id. at 26, 31.) Reynolds testified that he could not see the entire bedroom from the kitchen and needed to enter the bedroom to determine if anyone else was in that room and whether there could be any threats coming from that room. (Id. at 27, 31.)
When Reynolds entered the bedroom and looked to see if anyone else was present, he noticed a closet, the door of which was ajar. (Id. at 27.) He saw what he believed to be drugs on the floor of the closet. (Id.) Immediately thereafter, Delo-ren entered the bedroom. (Id. at 67.) He saw that Delva was on the ground, his body completely inside the bedroom. (Id.) Reynolds was focused on Delva and told Deloren about the bag in the closet. (Id.) Deloren stated that the closet door was open when he approached it. (Id. at 68.) He could see the floor of the closet and saw a clear, plastic bag with a white powdery substance in it; based on his experience he believed it to be cocaine. (Id.) Deloren bent down to pick the bag up and saw that just to the side of it, only a few inches away, was a sneaker with a firearm in it. (Id.) The gun was inserted barrel-first into the shoe. (Id. at 69.) Deloren then quickly recovered the gun and made it safe by removing the magazine and emptying the chamber. (Id. at 69-70.)
Reynolds then moved Delva into the kitchen with the others. (Id. at 29.) Only two minutes had elapsed between the time the Officers entered the Apartment and the Apartment was secured with the men in handcuffs in the kitchen.
The Apartment was small. (Id. at 15.) Two Officers stepped into the bedroom with Aceilien to ask him who the other individuals were and to whom the items in the closet belonged. (Id. at 70-71.) While that was occurring, the Officers noticed and seized a letter and two cell phones. (Id. at 82, 87.) The two cell phones were in plain view: one on a television stand and the other on the bed. (Id. at 99.) At about the same time, Reynolds also saw an envelope in plain view with Accilien’s name as the addressee. (Id. at 89, 92.) Reynolds saw that the sender of the envelope was one of the suspects in the same robbery and kidnapping; the letter had been sent from the sender’s place of incarceration. (Id. at 88-89.) While the cabinet on which the letter was located had a number of items on it, Special Agent Reynolds testified credibly that there was room for the letter to be in plain view on the cabinet with the address information visible. (Id. at 91.)
It is undisputed that the contents of the Cell Phone were only searched after a warrant was obtained. (Id. at 101.)
II. APPLICABLE LEGAL STANDARDS
“Generally, the police do not need a search warrant to enter a suspect’s home when they have an arrest warrant for the suspect.” United States v. Lauter,
Here, there is no dispute that the Officers were in possession of a valid arrest warrant for Aceilien. There is also no dispute that the Officers reasonably believed Aceilien to be present in the Apartment — it was Accilien’s last known address, and Aceilien himself opened the door previously when Deloren went to the Apartment. However, once the Officers entered the premises at 832 South Oak Drive, there are two additional issues: (1) were the Officers entitled to conduct a “protective sweep” of the Apartment, including the bedroom in which the defendant was located; and (2) were the Officers entitled to seize the Cell Phone, which Special Agent Reynolds testified he saw in plain view in the defendant’s bedroom. See, e.g., Terry v. Ohio,
The Fourth Amendment protects persons against unreasonable searches and U.S. Const, amend. IV (emphasis added). This is a basic constitutional right that “belongs as much to the citizen on the streets of our cities as to the homeowner closeted in his study to dispose of his secret affairs.” Terry,
Evidence seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment is subject to exclusion at trial. Id. at 13,
The Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment recognizes that judicial approval of seizures of the person do not run afoul of a person’s constitutional right to be free from such restraint. U.S. Const, amend. IV (“[N]o Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”); see also Terry,
When police officers validly enter a residence, such as in aid of executing an arrest warrant, facts and circumstances incident to that entry may provide them with legal authority to ensure their own safety by performing a “protective sweep.” See Maryland v. Buie,
When law enforcement are engaged in otherwise lawful activities (such as the execution of a valid arrest warrant), and see illegal or evidentiary items in plain view, they may seize them without a warrant. Scopo,
This exception has three elements: (1) the evidence must, in fact, be in plain view; (2) the officers who seize such evidence must not have violated the Fourth Amendment in arriving at the place in which the evidence is plainly viewed; and (3) the incriminating charac
The plain view doctrine applies to objects which are not in and of themselves contraband, so long as the nature of the object is readily or the object is or contains evidence of a crime. See Arizona v. Hicks, 480 U.S. 321, 327-28,
Thus, under the plain view the incriminating nature of an object is generally deemed “readily apparent” where law enforcement have reason to it is or contains evidence of a crime. See United States v. Ochs, 595 F.2d 1247, 1258 (2d Cir.1979); see also Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
It is not necessary that an know with certainty that an object seized is or contains evidence of a crime at the moment of seizure; it is enough that there be probable cause to associate the object with criminal activity. See Texas v. Brown,
Whether an object is perceived as evidence or containing evidence of a crime depends on the assessment of the law officer at the scene. United States v. Barrios-Moriera,
This Court previously determined that the Officers entry into both the Apartment and the bedroom in which the defendant had been living was lawful. (Decision at 13-14.) The Court also previously determined that the drugs and gun which the Officers seized were in plain view. (Id. at 15.) No facts have been proffered disputing the fact that the cell phones were observed by Special Agent Reynolds in plain view on a table and on the bed in the bedroom in which Delva was arrested.
There were multiple lawful reasons why the Officers had probable cause to believe that the Cell Phone was evidence of or contained evidence of criminal activity: the Officers were in the Apartment to arrest a man (Accilien) whom they were arresting for kidnapping, and they knew that cell phones had been used in connection with that crime. Accilien identified himself as an occupant of the bedroom in which the cell phones were found, and a letter addressed to Accilien was found on a table in that bedroom from another individual who was already incarcerated for the same crime. At the time of its seizure, the Officers believed that the cell phones belonged to Accilien.
The Officers had probable cause to seize the Cell Phone even if they believed or had reason to believe that it may have belonged to defendant Delva: Delva had just been handcuffed in the same room, drugs and a gun had been found in plain view near him, and Accilien had identified the items in the closet as belonging to Delva. The association between narcotics trafficking (for which Delva was initially arrested) and cell phones has been long established&emdash;cell phones can store information and images relating to the crime and participants in the crime (that is, who bought and sold the drugs).
In determining whether probable cause to seize the Cell Phone existed, the Court looks at the totality of the facts and circumstances as they existed at the scene. See Barrios-Moriera,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the instant motion to suppress is DENIED. The Clerk of the Court is directed to terminate the motion at ECF No. 75.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. As is discussed infra, two cell phones were seized as part of the search, one of which is Delva's.
. On October 8, 2013, a grand jury returned Superseding Indictment SI 12 Cr. 802 against Delva, which charged him with seven criminal counts: conspiracies to commit Hobbs Act robbery and kidnapping, the Hobbs Act robbery and kidnapping themselves, the possession or use of a firearm in furtherance of these conspiracies in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(l)(A)(i), conspiracy to distribute various controlled substances (marijuana, crack, and cocaine) in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and the possession or use of a firearm in furtherance of this narcotics conspiracy in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A)(i). (ECF No. 50.)
. Reynolds and Deloren testified that a woman and two children were also at the apartment; they were in the first bedroom/living room off of the kitchen. (Id. at 67.)
. On cross-examination, Deloren testified that, when the Officers first entered the Apartment, their intent was to arrest Accilien but not to conduct a search; after recovering the drugs and gun, the Officers then performed a general search. (Tr. at 76.) This testimony does not undermine the legality of the recovery of the Cell Phone-&emdash;it was found in plain view during what was clearly a protective sweep.
