The defendants move for reconsideration of the court’s holding that the tapes of conversations between a government informant and the defendants, tapes allegedly made with the informant’s consent, were not required to be sealed under 18 U.S.C. § 2518(8)(a), which requires the sealing of tapes of “any wire or oral communication intercepted by any means authorized by this chapter [18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520].” They argue that “any means authorized by this chapter” includes all lawful means of intercepting oral or wire communications, because “except as otherwise provided in this chapter” all interceptions are illegal, and in particular they argue that “any means authorized by this chapter” includes consensual interceptions because such interceptions are “authorized” by § 2511(2)(c).
However, § 2511(2)(c) simply provides that consensual, interceptions (by persons acting under color of law) “shall not be unlawful under this chapter.” We do not read this as “authorizing” such intercep
United States v. Cianfrani,
Defendants’ second point is well taken, but unavailing. They argue that the rationale for the sealing requirement, which is essentially that of protecting the integrity of evidence, applies with as much force to tapes of consensual interceptions as to tapes of judicially authorized ones. However, this is an argument that should be addressed to the legislature. Congress did not subject tapes of consensual interceptions to the sealing requirement, and it is not for the court to rewrite the statute, whatever the merit of the suggestion. Only if the failure to seal constituted a violation of the defendants’ due process rights would it provide grounds for the exclusion at trial of the unsealed tapes, and that in turn would appear to depend upon whether, as a result of the failure to seal the tapes, they were in fact tampered with, which would be reason enough in itself to exclude them.
For the reasons stated, the motion is denied.
It is so ordered.
