MATERIAL FACTS, RULINGS OF LAW, AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ OMNIBUS MOTION TO SUPPRESS
Defendants Steven Soto, Pedro Soto, Carmen Soto, and Kimberly Litwin move to suppress evidence
1
seized in May of 2007 pursuant to search warrants executed at residences located at 56 Lawrence Road and 14 Moulton Street in Lynn, Massachusetts, as well as the contents of the hard drive of a Gateway laptop computer seized in February of 2007. Defendants further seek to suppress recordings of monitored telephone calls made by Steven Soto in 2007 from the Essex House of Correction. Finally, they request a hearing pursuant to
Franks v. Delaware,
BACKGROUND
During the afternoon of April 28, 2006, a federal-state task force descended on 56 Lawrence Road in Lynn, Massachusetts, to execute arrest warrants for Steven Soto and his brother, Pedro Soto, Jr. 2 The Soto brothers had listed 56 Lawrence Road as their mailing address in various Registry of Motor Vehicles (RMV) documents, including vehicle registrations and drivers’ *213 licenses. 3 Steven Soto did not live at 56 Lawrence Road, although he often spent the night visiting his brother and his father and mother, Pedro, Sr. and Carmen Soto. A neighbor told the officers when they arrived that Steven Soto’s car was frequently parked at 56 Lawrence Road and had been seen there as recently as the previous day.
Several officers went to the front door of 56 Lawrence Road while others took up defensive positions around the house. Detective Michael Murphy entered the side yard through a gate in the fence. Peering through a window of the attached garage with the aid of a flashlight, Murphy was able to make out a motorcycle with a Massachusetts registration number SZ6659. Officers later learned that a motorcycle bearing that registration number had been reported stolen by its owner earlier in the month.
Finding no one at home at 56 Lawrence Road, the officers set up surveillance. Eventually, Pedro, Sr. appeared. He told the officers that Steven was on his way “home.” 4 While the officers waited, Detective Thomas Mulvey obtained a search warrant from the Lynn District Court. The affidavit submitted in support of the warrant relied heavily on Murphy’s observation of the stolen motorcycle. During the subsequent search of 56 Lawrence Road, police seized the motorcycle and other evidence, including incriminating records stored on the hard drive of a Dell desktop computer. On August 20, 2009, Steven Soto was indicted by a federal Grand Jury for mail fraud, wire fraud, bank fraud, and aggravated identity theft (crimes for which he was ultimately convicted on December 20, 2010).
In an Order dated June 23, 2010, Judge Tauro suppressed the evidence seized during the search of the home and the desktop computer. Judge Tauro held that the officers lacked a reasonable belief that Steven Soto lived at 56 Lawrence Road or would be present when they arrived with the arrest warrants. 5 The prosecution therefore could not rely on the arrest warrant for Steven Soto to justify Detective Murphy’s trespass of the curtilage (the side yard) of the home. Because Murphy’s illegal viewing of the stolen motorcycle was the only information Judge Tauro found to link Steven Soto’s criminal activity to 56 Lawrence Road, once that information was excised from the affidavit, probable cause for issuance of the search warrant disappeared. 6 The government did not appeal Judge Tauro’s Order.
On March 30, 2007, a year after the initial search of 56 Lawrence Road, Magis *214 trate Judge Hillman issued a warrant for the search of the contents of a Gateway laptop computer seized from a Chrysler automobile impounded by the Saugus Police Department. 7 Trent Everett, an agent of the United States Secret Service, submitted the supporting affidavit. Everett, who had been a member of the Lawrence Road task force in 2006, alluded to Detective Murphy’s espying of the stolen motorcycle through the garage window. The affidavit also related the seizure and subsequent search of the hard drive of the Dell desktop computer, as well as the evidence it contained implicating Steven Soto in bank fraud, identity fraud, and motor vehicle theft. 8
The affidavit then described evidence gathered apart from and subsequent to the 2006 search of 56 Lawrence Road. On February 2, 2007, Agent Everett received a fraud alert from Eastern Bank informing him that Steven Soto had opened a checking account for a company called Aggressive Construction, identifying himself as its owner, “Gregory E. Bradley.” Everett quickly established that the real Bradley was then incarcerated at the Essex County House of Correction. Later that day, Steven Soto was arrested by Saugus police at a branch of Eastern Bank where he was attempting to cash a fraudulent check for $5,700 made out to Bradley. Soto had presented the teller with a driver’s license and an American Express card in Bradley’s name. As Soto was being escorted out of the bank by police, he gestured to a Hispanic woman (later identified as Yessica Amaro), who then drove off in the Chrysler. A record search indicated that the Chrysler had been purchased and registered in the name of “Gregory Bradley” in February of 2007.
According to the affidavit, Amaro later arrived at the Saugus police station in the Chrysler, accompanied by defendant Kimberly Litwin. Amaro attempted to retrieve a set of car keys from Steven Soto’s impounded belongings. When officers confronted the women about the ownership of the Chrysler, they claimed that it had been purchased a few days earlier by Bradley (an impossibility given his incarceration). Police then impounded the Chrysler. An inventory of the contents disclosed the Gateway laptop. 9
On May 16, 2007, Magistrate Judge Hill-man issued search warrants for the Soto family residence at 56 Lawrence Road and for Kimberly Litwin’s apartment at 14 Moulton Street. 10 The affidavit in support of the warrant was again prepared by Agent Everett. The affidavit essentially *215 tracked the contents of the March 30, 2007 affidavit, while offering greater detail about what was learned from the search of the Dell desktop computer, including Steven Soto’s (and Amaro’s) involvement in motor vehicle-related identity fraud, using the names of Bradley and a “Christine Escribano.” Everett also related his subsequent unearthing of a scheme in which Steven Soto used the forged signatures of Milagros Espinal, a notary, to fraudulently finance non-existent car sales through a fictitious automobile dealership. The affidavit then recited the events leading up to the search of the Gateway laptop. That search uncovered false pay stubs and W-2 forms, records of fraudulent vehicle purchases, records of fraudulent real estate purchases conducted by Steven and Pedro, Sr. in Bradley’s name, rental receipts for a storage unit where in April of 2007, Steven Soto had hidden a Dodge Charger purchased in Bradley’s name, 11 and a website advertising an illegal lottery linked to 56 Lawrence Road and Paradise Real Estate, Pedro, Sr.’s real estate business.
The affidavit finally related incriminating telephone conversations placed by Steven Soto while he was incarcerated at the Essex County House of Correction from February through March of 2007. 12 At the time, the Essex County Sheriffs Department had a written policy governing the recording and retention of inmate telephone calls. As set out in the Inmate Orientation Handbook (which was distributed to every new inmate), “[a]ll inmate calls are subject to telephone monitoring and recording, except pre-authorized numbers for an attorney.” Before a call is connected, both the inmate and the recipient heard the following message: “Hello, this is a call from, [caller], an inmate at the Essex County Sheriffs Department. To accept charges, press [ ]. This call is subject to monitoring and recording.”
DISCUSSION
Standing
In
Rakas v. Illinois,
having ... reaffirmed the principle that the ‘rights assured by the Fourth Amendment are personal rights, [which] ... may be enforced by exclusion of evidence only at the instance of one whose own protection was infringed by the search and seizure,’ ... the question necessarily arises whether it serves any useful analytical purpose to consider this principle a matter of standing, distinct from the merits of a defendant’s Fourth Amendment claim.
*216
Id.
at 138-139,
In
United States v. Salvucci,
Privacy analysis involves a two-part inquiry. First, did the defendant manifest a subjective expectation of privacy in the premises or property that is the subject of the search? Second, is that expectation one that society is prepared to recognize as objectively reasonable?
See Rakas,
Thus, the Court has examined whether a person ... took normal precautions to maintain his privacy.... Similarly, the Court has looked to the way a person has used a location, to determine whether the Fourth Amendment should protect his expectations of privacy.... The Court on occasion also has looked to history to discern whether certain types of government intrusion were perceived to be objectionable by the Framers.... And, as the Court states today, property rights reflect society’s explicit recognition of a person’s authority to act as he wishes in certain areas....
Rakas,
*217
The government first argues that the Sotos cannot show that they had a reasonable expectation of privacy in Litwin’s residence at 14 Moulton Street. Conversely, the government argues that Litwin cannot establish that she had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the Soto residence at 56 Lawrence Road. Defendants do not contend otherwise; however, they ask the court to apply the First Circuit’s “holding” in
United States v. Scott,
The difficulty with the argument is that while
Scott
contemplated the theoretical possibility of vicarious standing, it did so in the context of a discussion of the inevitable discovery doctrine. The First Circuit expressed a concern that the “application of the inevitable discovery exception to [the
Scott
] case would allow the government to benefit at least somewhat from the unconstitutional actions” of the police.
Scott,
The ultimate holding in Scott is very different than the one that defendants portray. The defendant in Scott received no benefit from the Court’s musings. Rather, the Court held that “a defendant cannot obtain the remedy of suppression by simply relying solely on an illegality ... if the illegality did not violate the defendant’s personal rights.” Id. Here, the government does not rely on the inevitable discovery doctrine, nor does the validity of the 2007 search warrants depend solely— in fact, hardly at all — on the evidence seized in the 2006 search of 56 Lawrence Road. Although it referenced the 2006 search at 56 Lawrence Road, the 2007 affidavit submitted by Agent Everett focused on details of defendants’ criminality compiled after the 2006 seizures of evidence.
Because they have no standing to challenge the search of Litwin’s apartment at 14 Moulton Street, the Sotos’ motion, to suppress the fruits of that search will be denied. Conversely, because Litwin lacks standing to challenge the search of 56 Lawrence Road, her motion to suppress the evidence seized in that search will also be denied.
The government next contends that defendants lack standing to challenge the search of the Gateway laptop found in the impounded Chrysler. The Saugus police, it will be recalled, seized the Chrysler after learning it had been acquired by Steven Soto using Bradley’s identity. That probable cause existed to impound the Chrysler and that the inventory of its contents, including the laptop, was proper is not a matter of serious debate. 16
*218
It is a common-sense proposition that “a defendant who knowingly possesses a stolen car has no legitimate expectation of privacy in that car.”
United States v. Tropiano,
Assuming that the inventory policy of the Saugus police permitted the opening of closed containers (there is no evidence of the policy in the record, but most do), it is doubtful that such a policy would permit the “inventory” of the contents of a computer hard drive, effectively a secure container within a closed container.
See United States v. Payton,
There is some authority supporting the proposition that a person may retain a reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of a closed or locked container that he leaves in a place in which he can claim no reasonable expectation of privacy.
17
See, e.g., State v. Mooney,
Steven Soto’s claim is more properly weighed in the context of the law of abandonment. Abandonment in a Fourth Amendment sense is not a function of property law.
In the law of property, the question ... is whether ... the owner has voluntarily, intentionally, and unconditionally relinquished his interest in the property so that another, having acquired possession, may successfully assert a superior interest.... In the law of search and seizure, however, the question is whether the defendant has, in discarding the property, relinquished his reasonable expectation of privacy so that its seizure and search is reasonable within the limits of the Fourth Amendment.... In essence, what is abandoned is not necessarily the defendant’s property, but his reasonable expectation of privacy therein.
City of St. Paul v. Vaughn,
Summary
WTiere the defendants stand: The Sotos, collectively, have no standing to challenge the warrant to search Litwin’s apartment at 14 Moulton Street. Litwin, in turn, has no standing to challenge the search of 56 Lawrence Road. Conversely, the Sotos collectively have standing to challenge the search of 56 Lawrence Road, and Litwin has standing to challenge the search of 14 Moulton Street. No defendant has standing to challenge the seizure of the Chrysler or the laptop. Steven Soto lacks standing to challenge the search of the hard disk of the impounded laptop. All defendants have standing to challenge the interception and recording of the telephone calls made by Steven Soto from the Essex House of Correction. 19
*220 Turning to the substance of the motions, I will first dispose of the issue of the monitored telephone calls, and then turn to the warrants for 56 Lawrence Road and 14 Moulton Street.
Recordings of Steven Soto’s Essex House of Correction Telephone Calls
Defendants argue that the monitoring of Steven Soto’s telephone calls during his incarceration at the Essex House of Correction violated Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 (Title III), 18 U.S.C. § 2510.
20
The argument, however, is foreclosed in this Circuit by
United States v. Lewis,
May 16, 2007 Search of 56 Lawrence Road
a. Connection to the Premises
The Sotos first assert that the supporting affidavit failed to establish a nexus between Steven Soto’s criminal activity and the Soto family residence at 56 Lawrence Road.
21
As a matter of first principle, police must establish probable cause to believe that the place to be searched is connected to the suspected criminal activity and is thus a likely repository of relevant evidence.
22
See United States v. Hove,
As to 14 Moulton Street, nothing more need be recited than Litwin’s complaints to Steven Soto in the monitored jailhouse calls about “all of the mail that I was getting” in Bradley’s name and that “I have a problem because I’m getting certified letters now. From the mortgage companies[,]” and Soto’s response that “I put that address so everything goes to that address.” Everett Aff. ¶ 27.
b. Particularity of the Warrant and Affidavit
The Fourth Amendment requires that a warrant “particularly describe” the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.
Groh v. Ramirez,
c. Staleness
The affidavit must contain information sufficiently fresh to suppose that the items sought will still be on the premises when the warrant is executed.
Sgro v. United States,
Defendants’ assertion that the information in the affidavit was stale is difficult to parse given the nature of the Sotos’ protracted conduct. The argument appears to confuse the virtue of inclusiveness with the sin of staleness. As the government points out, while the affidavit referenced conduct that dated back to the 2006 search, it included information about a continuing scheme gathered as recently as several weeks prior to the issuance of the warrants, including the incriminating conversations recorded during Steven Soto’s incarceration at the Essex House of Correction. On balance, the information “presented enough circumstantial evidence from which a judicial officer reasonably could have inferred that documentary and physical evidence of the alleged ongoing conspiracy would be located in the [area named in the warrant].”
United States v. Bucuvalas,
d. Collateral Estoppel
Defendants next argue that Judge Tauro’s suppression ruling in the earlier case has the effect of collaterally estopping the government from defending the motion to suppress in this case. The doctrine of collateral estoppel prohibits re-litigation of any factual or legal issue that was actually decided in a previous judicial proceeding involving the same parties.
See Grella v. Salem Five Cent Sav. Bank,
Motion for a Franks Hearing
To be entitled to a
Franks
hearing, a defendant must make a “sub
*223
stantial preliminary showing” that an affidavit contains intentionally false or recklessly untrue statements that are material to a finding of probable cause.
Franks,
If a hearing is warranted, the defendant must prove the knowing falsity or recklessness of the affiant’s statements by a preponderance of the evidence.
Franks,
The basis under which defendants move for a Franks hearing rests on “two glaring misstatements” that they take from the original 2006 affidavit. Specifically, defendants object to the suggestion in the original affidavit that Detective Murphy was able to make out the VIN of the stolen motorcycle through the garage window. They also maintain that Murphy could not have seen the motorcycle he claims to have seen because the particular bike described in the affidavit had been sold to a third party prior to the search. Id. (A photograph of the motorcycle taken at the residence shows it to have been a Honda, not a Suzuki as claimed in the Mulvey affidavit). For its part, the government explains that the source of the statement that Murphy saw a motorcycle through the garage window “bearing Massachusetts SZ6659 VIN # JS1GT75A532109394,” is not Murphy, but Mulvey, who attributes the suggestion of supernatural vision on Murphy’s part to his own bad writing. The second statement regarding the incorrect identification of the motorcycle resulted from defendants’ switching of the original license plate with the license plate for another stolen motorcycle. Neither of these lapses seems terribly significant, but in any event, they are immaterial as neither appears in the 2007 affidavit, which was prepared by a different affiant. 24
ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion to suppress the search of the Gateway laptop hard drive is DENIED for lack of standing. Litwin’s motion to suppress evidence seized from the May 16, 2007 *224 search of 56 Lawrence Road is DENIED for lack of standing; the Sotos’ motion is DENIED as a matter of substance. The Sotos’ motion to suppress evidence seized from the May 16, 2007 search of 14 Moulton Street is DENIED for lack of standing; Litwin’s motion is DENIED for lack of substance, as is her motion objecting to the seizure of the Chrysler automobile. The motion by all defendants to suppress the telephone conversations recorded during Steven Soto’s incarceration at the Essex House of Correction is DENIED for want of substance. Defendants’ motion for a Franks hearing is DENIED for the reasons stated. The Clerk will now set the case for trial.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendants had also moved to suppress the fruits of searches conducted in 2006 of the Soto home at 56 Lawrence Road and a desktop computer seized from the home. The government, however, has since undertaken to offer in its case-in-chief only the evidence seized pursuant to the three warrants issued in 2007.
. The Pedro Soto named in the indictment is the brothers' father, Pedro, Sr.
. The government asserts that a Lynn Police report dated April 12, 2006, and several insurance claim forms also list 56 Lawrence Road as Steven Soto's residence. However, Steven Soto points to an RMV record dated May 2, 2006, in which he declared his domicile as 242 Main Street in Springfield, Massachusetts.
. It is unclear whether Pedro, Sr. was referring to the Soto family residence or to Steven Soto's Springfield address.
. Pedro, Jr. was not indicted as a codefendant in the case, and Judge Tauro's Order did not discuss the possible implications of the companion warrant issued for Pedro, Jr.’s arrest.
.Judge Tauro ruled that "[t]he remnants of the affidavit, together with whatever nonspeculative inferences might plausibly be drawn therefrom, are too meagre to warrant reasonably prudent persons believing that the articles sought ... were likely located at the situs.” June 23, 2010 Order at 5, quoting
United States v. Curzi,
. The government states that it does not intend to offer evidence of the seizure of the automobile itself. In their Supplemental Memorandum, defendants appear to be under the mistaken impression that Magistrate Judge Hillman’s March 30, 2007 warrant authorized the seizure of the Chrysler, which it did not. The warrant was directed to a search of the contents of the laptop found in the Chrysler after the car had been impounded. As will be seen, Saugus police had ample cause to seize and impound the vehicle.
. This is the extent of the material facts carried over from the 2006 affidavit to the 2007 affidavit (which was prepared by a different affiant).
. The affidavit related evidence that Steven Soto had purchased the Chrysler using false identification documents for Bradley. He had also financed the purchase using Bradley's identity to obtain credit.
. A warrant was also issued for Paradise Real Estate, a business owned by Pedro, Sr. at 5 Broad Street in Lynn, although defendants dropped their challenge to this warrant in later briefs based on the government's stated intent regarding the evidence it plans to offer at trial.
. Everett stated that he had since interviewed Bradley, who told him that he had not authorized Steven Soto to use his name for any purpose.
. According to the affidavit, Steven Soto alluded to his criminal activity while speaking with his mother and father. Agent Everett noted that these confidences supported a finding of probable cause to believe that Steven Soto would have been comfortable storing records of his fraudulent undertakings in his parents’ home. During a call made by Steven Soto to Litwin, she complained about "all of the mail that [she] was getting” regarding applications for credit cards in Bradley’s name and stated, "I have a problem because I’m getting certified letters now. From the mortgage companies." Everett Aff. ¶¶ 26, 27.
.
.
. The Supreme Court has emphasized repeatedly that the Fourth Amendment accords its highest protections to the home. "[P]hysical entry of the home is the chief evil against
*217
which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.”
Wilson v. Layne,
. Litwin's assertion that she has standing to challenge the seizure of the Chrysler because *218 she was given a power of attorney by Bradley is puzzling and irrelevant as Bradley has no claim of an actual ownership interest in the vehicle.
. The government does not contest Steven Soto’s claim of ownership of the laptop.
. Here, the officers took no chances and did what has been counseled by courts in the context of dwelling searches — they secured the laptop and obtained a warrant to search its hard drive. See,
e.g., United States v. Place,
. Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. *220 § 2518(10)(a), confers statutory standing on any person whose electronic communications are intercepted by government officials with or without a warrant.
. Title III prohibits the interception of electronic, wire, and oral communications without prior judicial authorization except under carefully delineated circumstances.
See United States v. Giordano,
. Litwin makes the same assertion with respect to 14 Moulton Street.
.Probable cause "merely requires that the facts available to the officer would 'warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that certain items may be contraband or stolen property or useful as evidence of a crime; it does not demand any showing that such a belief be correct or more likely true than false.”
Texas v. Brown,
. To be clear, Judge Tauro did not suppress the 2006 affidavit, only the fruits of the search.
. This is not to suggest that a Franks issue can be avoided by simply switching affiants. The critical point is that apart from the boilerplate, the two affidavits are dissimilar in their factual recitations and their origins: the 2006 affidavit was prepared by a local officer for a state court; the 2007 affidavit was prepared by a federal agent for a federal Magistrate Judge.
