MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
The four defendants in this case were indicted on September 26, 2000 on multiple counts, including, inter alia, narcotics trafficking, racketeering, and murder. The Government alleges that they were all members of a criminal enterprise referred to in the Indictment as the “Torres Organization.” 1
Before the Court are numerous pre-trial motions by the defendants. On October 16-17 and 30-31, 2001, and on November 1, 2001, the Court held evidentiary hearings in regard to several of these motions. The Court heard testimony from Detectives James Cvetic and Gary Tallant of the Allegheny County Police Department as well as from Special Agent Robert Ryan of the Internal Revenue Service. No defendant testified at these hearings, nor did any defendant call any witnesses. The findings of fact herein are based upon the testimony adduced at these hearings and *272 we dispose of the defendants’ motions 2 as follows:
A. Michael and Xavier Williams’s motions to suppress evidence seized from their apartments at 5631 Rip-pey Street in Pittsburgh on or about February 21, 1996 are denied.
B. Xavier Williams’s motions to suppress evidence seized from his Toyota Land Cruiser and his person on or about March 1, 1996 are denied.
C. Xavier Williams’s motions to suppress evidence seized from his apartment at 1609 East 174th Street in the Bronx and from his Nissan Maxima on or about September 28, 2000 are denied.
D. Xavier Williams’s motion to suppress evidence seized from his Lincoln Navigator on or about November 2, 2000 is denied.
E. Michael Williams’s motion to suppress a post-arrest statement he made on March 22, 1996 is granted.
F. Elijah Bobby Williams’s motion to suppress a post-arrest statement he made on April 21, 1996 is denied.
G. Michael Williams’s motion to dismiss Counts Five, Six, and Seven of the Indictment is denied.
H. Xavier Williams’s motion to dismiss Count Three and Racketeering Act 1 of Count One of the Indictment is denied.
I. Xavier and Michael Williams’s motions to compel the Government to provide the defendants with a bill of particulars is denied.
J. Xavier and Michael Williams’s motions to compel certain discovery is denied in part and granted in part.
K. Xavier Williams’s motion to hold government prosecutors in contempt is denied.
L. Xavier Williams’s motion for an order mandating the return of cеrtain items seized from him is denied.
M. Michael Williams’s motion for severance is denied.
N. Kelly Rolon’s motion for severance is granted.
I. BACKGROUND
The defendants are accused of being members of a narcotics trafficking organization responsible for various acts of violence, including murder. Indictment at 3. Xavier Williams and Elijah Bobby Williams are brothers, and Michael Williams is Elijah Bobby Williams’s son. 3 Kelly Rolon is Xavier Williams’s wife. A lengthy investigation conducted primarily by the New York Police Department (“NYPD”) and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms (“ATF”) led to a grand jury returning a 17-count indictment. Because the Williams defendants are accused, in Counts Five, Six, and Seven, of crimes for which the death penalty may be sought, each has been appointed two attorneys, one of whom is “learned in the law applicable to capital cases” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. § 3005.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Motions to Suppress the Fruits of the Searches of the Rippey Street Apartments
In connection with their investigation of the triple homicide of February 18, 1996, *273 the Allegheny County Police Department obtained and executed a search warrant for three apartments located near the scene of the shootings. These apartments were leased by the Williams defendants, and the search produced narcotics, firearms, and other evidence which the Government presumably intends to introduce at trial. Transcript of Suppression Hearing held November 1, 2001 (“11/1 Tr.”) at 3; Gov’t Opp. at 5. Defendants Xavier Williams and Michael Williams move to suppress the fruits of the searches of apartments B-3 and C-2, respectively, at 5361 Rippey Street in Pittsburgh (the “Rippey Street apartments”). Xavier Williams’s Memorandum of Law (“XW.Mem.”) at 1; Michael Williams’s Memorandum of Law (“M.W.Mem.”) at 3. Elijah Bobby Williams has not moved to suppress the fruits of the search of apartment C-5.
1. Facts
On February 21, 1996, Detective Tallant drafted an affidavit (the “Tallant affidavit”) in support of an application for a warrant to search the Rippey Street apartments. 11/1 Tr. at 6-7. 4 He did not consult any prosecutors from the District Attorney’s Office or anywhere else for drafting assistance. Id. at 9. Det. Cvetic reviewed the affidavit, and then they both swore to it before a night court magistrate. Id. at 21-22. The Tallant affidavit reads as follows:
Your affiants are Detectives assigned to the Homicide Unit of the Allegheny County Police Department. All of the information contained in this affidavit was learned directly by your affiants, or relayed to your affiants by other police officers involved in this investigation.
On the evening of February 18, 1996, the Wilkinsburg Police Department requested investigative assistance from the Allegheny County Police Homicide Unit. This request was in regards [sic] to a recent shooting incident that occurred in the 1100 block of Sperling Street in Wilkinsburg. It was subsequently learned that there were three (3) victims in this case, and all of the shooting victims were pronounced dead at the scene by Emergency Medical Personnel. The victims were all shot while seated in a parked 1982 Ford Bronco. The victims were Timothy A. Moore, B/M/25, Joel MOORE, B/M/19, and Robert JAMES, B/M/33. The investigation revealed that two armed suspects approached the victim’s vehicle, and that the suspects then fired numerous gunshots into the victim’s [sic].
During the course of this investigation, it was learned that the three victims were involved in drug related activities. It was also learned that the victims had made a recent drug deal(s) with individuals known to frequent the Wilkinsburg/East Liberty Section of Allegheny County.
Numerous interviews have been conducted in this case. The identity of these witnesses is known to your affi-ants. These witnesses will be available to testify at any necessary court proceedings. It was collectively learned through these witnesses that several days prior to the shooting incident, Timothy MOORE (victim), made a crack cocaine drug deal with individuals that he knew as “BOB” and “MIKE”. Bob and Mike previously indicated that they were brothers, and they were from New *274 York. It was learned that the drug deals in question were set up through the use of telephone pagers. The telephone pager numbers for Bob and Mike were # 574-5647 and # 574-1745 respectively.
It was learned that during the investigation that “Bob” had a home telephone number of # 661-4862. This telephone number is listed to a David Michael TORRES of 5681 Rippey Street, Apt. C-2, Pittsburgh, PA 15206. This apartment is located in the East Liberty Section of Pittsburgh. The age of Torres is consistent with the approx, age of “Bob” (as given by various witnesses).
The investigation revealed that on the evening in question, the victims agreed to meet with BOB and MIKE in Wil-kinsburg to settle a drug related debt. It was reported that Tim MOORE had previously paid Bob and/or Mike approx. $2,300 for crack cocaine, but that Moore was not given any drugs in return for the money. The victims were to meet Bob and Mike at approx. 8:30 PM (2-18-96) in a parking lot of a Texaco Gas Station in Wilkinsburg. The purpose of the meeting was to resolve the dispute over the aforementioned crack cocaine deal. Witnesses indicated that the victim’s departed from the New Stanton area of Westmoreland County for Wil-kinsburg at approx. 8:00 PM. It should be noted that the planned meeting place for the drug deal was in close proximity to the shooting scene.
During the investigation, your affiant learned through witnesses that the suspects, (BOB/MIKE) lived in the area of Rippey Street in the East Liberty Section of Pittsburgh. It was also learned that Bob and Mike lived with a relative known as “X”. The investigation revealed that David MICHAEL TORRES resides at 5631 Rippey Street, Apt. C-2 and that two relatives lived at that same address. These relatives are Robert TORRES, AKA “BOB” Torres, and Xavier TORRES. Robert Torres lives in apartment # C-5, while Xavier resides in apartment B-3.
During a recent surveillance of the apartment building in question, a vehicle was found to be parked in front of the structure. This vehicle had a New York license plates [sic] affixed to it. The description of this car was consistent with the description of the suspect car that was observed fleeing the shooting scene.
Based on the above facts and circumstances, your affiants respectfully request a Search Warrant for the above listed residence.
The warrant was subsequently issued by the night court magistrate and executed by state officers the same day. Id. at 7.
Following the search, Michael Williams and Xavier Williams were arrested and charged in Pennsylvania state court with homicide and drug possession, respectively.
See Commonwealth v. Torres,
2. Analysis
a. Applicability of the Exclusionary Rule
The Government argues that the exclusionary rule should not be applied to the searches of the Rippey Street apartments because the search was conducted by agents of the State of Pennsylvania without any assistance from the federal agencies involved in obtaining the present indictment. Gov’t Opp. at 5-10. Specifically, the Government contends that because the goal of the exclusionary rule is to deter official misconduct, and because this prosecution is so far removed from the search at issue, when we balance the “ ‘additional marginal deterrence’ obtained by invoking the [exclusionary] rule ‘against the cost to the public interest of further impairing the pursuit of truth’ ” we should decline to invoke the exclusionary rule.
Id.
at 6 (quoting
Tirado v. Commissioner,
We do not, however, have discretion in the matter. In
Elkins v. United States,
the Supreme Court rejected the argument put forth by the Government and held that “evidence obtained by state officers during a search which, if conducted by federal offiсers, would have violated the defendant’s immunity from unreasonable searches and seizures under the Fourth Amendment is inadmissible over the defendant’s timely objection in a federal criminal trial.”
b. Probable Cause
In
Commonwealth v. Torres,
the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania carefully considered the issue of whether the Tallant affidavit stated probable cause. We agree with its conclusion that, on its face, the Tallant affidavit did not satisfy the probable cause requirement of the Fourth Amendment as articulated in
Illinois v. Gates,
c. Good Faith Exception
Unlike Pennsylvania, which does not have a “good faith exception” to the exclusionary rule,
Commonwealth v. Edmunds,
In
Leon,
the Supreme Court held that the Fourth Amendment does not bar the Government from using “evidence obtained by officers acting in reasonable reliance on a search warrant issued by a detached and neutral magistrate but ultimately found to be unsupported by probable cause” in its case-in-chief.
Here, Det. Tallant not only swore to the affidavit that led to the Rippey Street search warrant, he captained the execution of the warrant that very evening. 11/1 Tr. at 16-18 (Det. Tallant explaining how he led several “teams” of officers in executing the search). Thus, our inquiry focuses on whether a “reasonably well trained officer” who drafted and swore to this affidavit, then led the search pursuant to a warrant supported by the affidavit, would have “known that the search was illegal, despite the magistrate’s authorization.”
Leon,
Given the availability of the good faith exception, the November 1, 2001 hearing provided Det. Tallant with an opportunity to fill in many of the gaps that led us to conclude that the warrant was facially detective. See Section II.A.2.b, supra. Det. Tallant was entirely credible throughout *277 his testimony, and no other witnesses were called. Once the Court received an accurate picture of what Det. Tallant knew when he swore to the Tallant affidavit and searched the Rippey Street apartments, we were convinced that, had Det. Tallant included in the affidavit all the information he actually knew at the time, we would have found that the ensuing warrant was, in fact, supported by probable cause. In short, we find that while the affidavit was poorly drafted, the ensuing search was conducted in good faith.
Det. Tallant testified that the information in the affidavit was primarily obtained from several sources: Roger Moore, brother of homicide victim Timothy Moore; Tica Carter, Timothy Moore’s live-in girlfriend; and an unnamed live-in girlfriend to Robert James. 11/1 Tr. at 58-68. He further testified that he carefully drafted the affidavit so as to prevent the defendants from learning the identities of the witnesses in order to protect them from possible retaliation by the defendants, who would receive a copy of the affidavit at the time of the search. Id. at 9-12, 42-44. Thus, Det. Tallant did not put the names of any witnesses in the affidavit. Id. at 10. In addition, he gave all the information in a “collective” manner, because a defendant might have been able to identify an unnamed witness by the specific information with which they are credited. Id. at 43. While this methodology is the primary reason for the warrant’s invalidity, see Section II.A.2.b, swpra, we find that it was done in good faith and that a reasonably well trained officer could believe that, because a magistrate had accepted an affidavit written in this style, it was valid under the Constitution.
Det. Tallant testified as to the basis of knowledge of the sources who provided the information contained in the Tallant affidavit. For our purposes, it will suffice to mention just a few excerpts from Det. Tallant’s testimony. He testified that Roger Moore and the victims’ girlfriends had personal knowledge of the victims’ drug activities. 11/1 Tr. at 58. He testified that the pager numbers listed in the affidavit were obtained from a girlfriend of one of the victims, who had “dialed some of those pager numbers herself.” Id. at 59. He stated that Roger Moore had spoken to victim Tim Moore on the dаy of the homicides, and the latter told him that he was going to settle a drug debt of approximately $2,000-$3,000 that night, and that Robert James’s girlfriend also told him of the debt-settlement meeting. Id. at 63-64. Finally, Det. Tallant testified that one of the girlfriends told him that the defendants lived in the Rippey Street Apartments. Id. at 66-67.
Det. Tallant also testified as to the reliability of the witnesses:
W/hat satisfied me about their reliability is that they related to me things that they knew personally, not things that were told to them by others, that they had conversations with the victims, that they had in fact, in the case of one witness, had actually met [Elijah Bobby Williams] and [Michael Williams] and that they knew about drug transactions because they had witnessed them.
One witness was even admitting to the fact that this witness was using drugs with them and [ ], in my estimation, was very straightforward because this information put this particular witness in a bad light, explaining that they also had this drug-related lifestyle. I felt that they were very forthcoming with the information. Their concerns to me were not about things that they had done or illegal activities that they were involved with, they were very open about that, *278 their concerns were safety concerns. So I felt that they were reliable.
Id. at 55-56.
Finally, Det. Tallant repeatedly testified that he honestly believed that the warrant was valid.
See, e.g., id.
at 8, 20. As
Leon
announced an objective test, this fact may seem irrelevant.
Leon,
In conclusion, we find that Det. Tallant and the other officers who conducted the search of the Rippey Street apartments did so in reasonable reliance on the later-invalidated search warrant, and, therefore, are entitled to the Leon “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule. Accordingly, we do not suppress the fruits of the searches of the Rippey Street apartments for violating defendаnts’ Fourth Amendment rights.
B. Motions to Suppress the Fruits of the March 1,1996 Searches
1. Facts
On October 7, 1995, the NYPD received a phone call stating that two men had been shot on 174th Street in the Bronx, New York. Transcript of Suppression Hearing-held October 16, 2001 (“10/16 Tr.”) at 9. NYPD Detective Robert A. Nugent and Officer Hector Rivera, among others, went to the scene, where Det. Nugent spoke to one of the victims, Victor Mercado. Id. at 9, 12. Mercado was badly injured as a result of the shooting, and the police feared that he might die from his injuries. Id. at 35, 9. As Mercado was being placed in an ambulance, Det. Nugent asked him for the identity of the perpetrator. Id. Mercado replied that “X” had shot him, and when Det. Nugent asked for the identity of “X,” Mercado told him that “X” was Xavier Williams. Id. at 10.
At the scene of the shooting, Det. Nu-gent also spoke with the other victim, Jose Vazquez. Id. at 27. Vazquez told Det. Nugent that he thought the shooter was a dark-skinned Hispanic man in a hooded sweatshirt. Id. at 27-28; Det. Nugent’s Investigation Notes at “2305.”
Several days later, Det. Nugent again interviewed the victims in the hospital where they was receiving treatment. 10/16 Tr. at 10, 40. Again, Mercado repeated that it was Xavier Williams, whom Mercado claimed to have known since the fifth or sixth grade of grammar school, who had shot him. Id. at 10. In addition, he picked out a picture of Xavier Williams from a array of photographs of six men. Id. at 39. Det. Nugent also showed Vazquez the same photograph array that was shown to Mercado. Id. at 40. Vazquez, however, did not pick anyone out as the perpetrator. Id.
In response to these interviews, NYPD officers from Det. Nugent’s precinct immediately began searching for Xavier Williams. Id. at 11. Det. Nugent also prepared a “wanted card” and “wanted poster” for Xavier Williams, so that if he were stopped by law enforcement officers, they would know that he was wanted by the NYPD in connection with the October 7,1995 shooting. Id.
As part of this investigation, Det. Nu-gent received information from an unnamed informant. Id. at 12. The informant was brought to Det. Nugent by an investigator at the Bronx District Attornеy’s Office who had used the informant in the past and found him reliable. Id. at 40. *279 The informant told Det. Nugent that Xavier Williams frequently drove a Toyota Land Cruiser with Pennsylvania plates that contained secret compartments where narcotics, weapons, and currency were often stored. Id. at 12, 14. Mercado had also told Det. Nugent that Xavier Williams drove, among other vehicles, a Toyota Land Cruiser with a secret compartment. Id. at 14. Further, the informant had given Det. Nugent information regarding a sequence of buttons to press in the Toyota in order to open the secret compartment. Id. at 13,
On March 1, 1996, shortly after midnight, NYPD Officer Rivera stopped a Toyota Land Cruiser driven by Xavier Williams, who was then arrested by officers of the NYPD. Id. at 15. Upon arresting him, the officers searched Xavier Williams and seized certain items from his person. Det. Nugent instructed Officer Rivera not to touch any buttons inside the vehicle, and to have it driven to the precinct and parked there with the engine running. Id. at 15. Sergeant Achille of the NYPD drove the vehicle to the precinct, parked it with the engine running, and guarded it until Det. Nugent arrived there, shortly after Xavier Williams was arrested. Id. at 16.
Det. Nugent then entered the Toyota and observed that the right rear window was down. Id. Following the informant’s instructions, he raised that window, and then pressed the button for the left rear window. Id. at 13, 16. This caused the center console to “pop[ ] open.” Id. at 16. Using a flashlight, Det. Nugent looked into the compartment and saw several pieces of identification, credit cards, a piece of paper with a phone number written on it, and a handgun. Id. at 16-17. Det. Nugent seized these items. Id. at 17. Xavier Williams seeks to suppress all evidence seized that night from his person and the Toyota.
2. Analysis
Neither the search of Xavier Williams himself, nor the initial search
7
of the Toyota were executed with a warrant. Thus, they are presumptively unconstitutional.
See, e.g., Maryland v. Dyson,
a. Search of Xavier Williams
As to the search of Xavier Williams himself, the government asserts that, because the search occurred contemporaneously with a lawful custodial arrest, the fruits should not be excluded because it was a search incident to a valid arrest.
See, e.g., New York v. Belton,
Arrest pursuant to probable cause “requires the arresting officer to have knowledge or reasonably trustworthy information sufficient to warrant a person of reasonable caution in the belief than an offense has been committed by the person to be arrested.”
Martinez v. Simonetti,
Officer Rivera was at the scene of the shooting when Mercado told Det. Nu-gent that he knew Xavier Williams for many years, and that it was he who shot him. Whether Officer Rivera overheard Mercado make this accusation or whether Det. Nugent told Officer Rivera of it is unclear from the testimony, but it is plain that Officer Rivera became aware of Mercado’s statements at some time before he arrested Xavier Williams. In addition, Officer Rivera was likely aware of the “wanted card” and “wanted poster” prepared by Det. Nugent for the very purpose of informing other officers that Xavier Williams should be arrested on sight.
“[I]t is well-established that a law enforcement official has probable cause to arrest if he received his information from ... the putative victim.”
Miloslavsky v. AES Eng’g Soc’y,
Therefore, Officer Rivera’s knowledge of Mercado’s credible statements implicating Xavier Williams gave Officer Rivera the probable cause needed to effect a constitutional warrantless arrest of Xavier Williams. The fact that Vazquez did not identify Xavier Williams as the shooter but, rather, thought it was a Hispanic man who had shot him (Xavier Williams is an African-American) does not change the analysis. Mercado was a long-time acquaintance of Xavier Williams, while Vazquez did not know him. Furthermore, it should be recalled that the shooting occurred at night and that Vazquez was *281 being fired upon at the moment he saw his assailant. It is entirely reasonable, in such a situation, for Det. Nugent and Officer Rivera to determine that Mercado’s statement was closer to the truth than Vazquez’s statement and that, therefore, Xavier Williams was likely the shooter. 8
“Probable cause does not require the same type of specific evidence of each element of the offense as would be needed to support a conviction.”
Adams v. Williams,
b. Search of the Toyota Land Cruiser
Det. Nugent conducted a warrantless search of Xavier Williams’s 1994 green Toyota Land Cruiser. We find this search was lawful, however, under both the automobile and the search incident to valid arrest exceptions to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement.
See generally, United States v. Ross,
Under the automobile exception, a “war-rantless search of a movable vehicle is permissible when the police have probable cause to believe that the vehicle contains contraband.”
United States v. Harwood,
Warrantless searches authorized by the automobile exception are, however, “no broader and no narrower than a magistrate could legitimately authorize by warrant.”
Ross,
The most powerful probable cause for this search comes from the statements of Mercado and the unnamed informant. We cannot, however, blindly accept these statements as true and reasonаble to rely upon. Rather, we are obligated to determine their reliability based on the “totality of the circumstances,” including the perceived “veracity” and “basis of knowledge” of the declarants.
Illinois v. Gates,
Here, Det. Nugent had information from both Mercado and the unnamed informant that Xavier Williams’s Toyota contained a secret compartment that often contained narcotics, currency and/or weapons. Statements made by a victim of a crime are presumed to be truthful,
Ro-well,
Furthermore, the search occurred less than an hour after Xavier Williams was pulled over by police in the Toyota. From experience with other suspects, it was reasonable for the police to believe that Xavier Williams may have stashed narcotics, weapons, or other evidence in the secret compartment when he realized he was about to be pulled over and possibly arrested. Cf
., e.g., Texas v. Brown,
While we decline to consider whether Det. Nugent would have had probable cause at that time to search the entire Toyota, we find that he clearly had probable cause to search the secret compartment. As Det. Nugent limited his war- *283 rantless search to the secret compartment, see 10/16 Tr. at 42 (“I didn’t search the [whole] car. I just went for the sole purpose of the compartment.”), we find that this search was, in fact, undertaken with the requisite probable cause.
Finally, we note that Det. Nugent did not conduct the search of the Toyota’s secret compartment at the site where Xavier Williams was pulled over. Rather, another officer drove the vehicle to the precinct house where it was subsequently searched by Det. Nugent. This, however, has no impact on the constitutionality of the search.
See, e.g., Florida v. Meyers,
C. Motions to Suppress the Fruits of the September 28, 2000 Searches
L Facts
On September 27, 2000, pursuant to an arrest warrant issued in connection with the present indictment, NYPD Detective Peter Foreelli was searching the Bronx for Xavier Williams. Transcript of Suppression Hearing held October 17, 2001 (“10/17 Tr.”) at 89. At one point, he spotted Xavier Williams’s car, but the NYPD was unable to catch up to him and effect an arrest. Id. The next morning, however, Internal Revenue Service Special Agent Robert Ryan saw Xavier Williams’s black 1993 Nissan Maxima (the “Nissan”) parked in the parking lot outside 1609 East 174th Street, Bronx, New York. 10/16 Tr. at 53. Agent Ryan telephoned Det. Foreelli and other NYPD officers and requested their assistance in arresting Xavier Williams. Id.; 10/17 Tr. at 89-90.
The NYPD officers arrived shortly thereafter, whereupon they observed that Xavier Williams was in the process of driving the Nissan out of the parking lot. 10/16 Tr. at 53. The officers blocked the exit to the lot with a police car and arrested Xavier Williams, who was behind the wheel of the Nissan. Id. Xavier Williams was then handcuffed with his hands behind his back and placed in the back passenger-side seat of an unmarked police car. Id. at 54.
Det. Forcelh, 'in plain clothes and with his firearm holstered on his hip, sat down in the driver’s seat of the police car and introduced himself to Xavier Williams. 10/17 Tr. at 90-92. Agent Ryan then sat down in the passenger seat, and Det. For-celli read Xavier Williams his Miranda rights. Id. at 91; 10/16 Tr. at 54. When asked if he wished to waive his right to remain silent and speak with the officers, Xavier Williams responded that he was not sure, and had nothing to say at that time. 10/16 Tr. at 54-55; 10/17 Tr. at 92. Det. Foreelli then asked Xavier Williams if he would permit the officers to search the Nissan and his apartment. 10/16 Tr. at 55; 10/17 Tr. at 92-93. Xavier Williams responded, in substance, “Go ahead, you won’t find anything.” 10/16 Tr. at 55; 10/17 Tr. at 92-93. Agent Ryan then took the key chain containing both the Nissan and apartment keys, showed them to Xavier Williams, whereupon the latter pointed out which keys would access each. 10/16 Tr. at 55-56; 10/17 Tr. at 93. Throughout this exchange, the officers used a “calm” *284 tone of voice, and Xavier Williams was “calm” and “cordial.” 10/16 Tr. at 65; 10/17 Tr. at 92. Officers then unlocked the Nissan and the apartment using the keys identified by Xavier Williams, seized items from each, and then drove the Nissan to an NYPD precinct. 10/16 Tr. at 56; 10/17 Tr. at 94-95. These items are the subject of the present motion.
2. Analysis
Both the search of the Nissan and the apartment were carried out without search warrants and, as such, are presumptively unconstitutional as violative of the Fourth Amendment.
See, e.g., Dyson,
For consent to validate an otherwise unconstitutional search, it must be “freely and voluntarily given” under the “totality of the circumstances.”
Schneckloth,
A brief survey of the “totality of the circumstances” demonstrates that the Government has fulfilled its burden and proved that Xavier Williams’s consent to the searches of the Nissan and apartment was voluntary. First, the officers present when Xavier Williams gave his consent were speaking in a calm manner, did not threaten him in any way, and had their weapons holstered at all relevant times.
Cf. United States v. Wilderness,
In response to the request for consent, Xavier Williams explicitly told the officers, in plain language, to “go ahead” and search the apartment and Nissan.
Cf. United States v. Lyton,
Of particular significance is the fact that Xavier Williams assisted the officers by pointing out which keys would unlock the Nissan and the apartment.
Cf. United States v. Glover,
In sum, Xavier Williams’s consent was voluntary, 9 and the searches of the Nissan and the apartment were not “unreasonable” under the Fourth Amendment. Consequently, his suppression motion is denied.
D. Motion to Suppress the Fruits of the November 2, 2000 Searches of the Lincoln Navigator
1. Facts
During the September 28, 2000 search of Xavier Williams’s Bronx River apartment, police seized a parking receipt or voucher from the Sheridan Garage Corporation. 10/16 Tr. at 59. On November 2, 2000, John O’Malley, an investigator from the United States Attorney’s Office, faxed a copy of this receipt to IRS Special Agent Robert Ryan, who was participating in the investigation of Xavier Williams. Id. Following this lead, Agent Ryan went to the Sheridan Garage (“Garage”), identified himself to the owner, and showed her a copy of the receipt, which she recognized. Id. She told Agent Ryan that the owner of the vehicle’s name was Xavier and that some friends of his had told her the previous day that they were going to remove an expensive radio from the vehicle that day as per Xavier’s instructions. Id. at 59-60.
Agent Ryan then went with the Garage owner to the vehicle, a Lincoln Navigator sports-utility vehicle, noted the license plate, then left the Garage to call the NYPD for backup. Id. at 60; 10/17 Tr. at 96. Shortly thereafter, several NYPD officers arrived at the Garage. 10/16 Tr. at 60. Agent Ryan and these officers entered the Garage and were given the key to the Lincoln by the Garage’s owner. Id. They entered the vehicle and tried to start the ignition but the battery was dead. Id. The officers jump-started the Lincoln and then Det. Nugent drove it to the precinct house. 10/16 Tr. at 60-61; 10/17 Tr. at 96. Upon jump-starting the vehicle, Det. Nu-gent heard a strange sound, one that sounded like a hydraulic motor, which later was determined to be a motor that operated a secret compartment in the Lincoln. 10/17 Tr. at 98-100.
Once back at the precinct, Det. Nugent parked the Lincoln in the secure supervisors’ parking lot, and taped a garbage bag over the rear passenger-side window, which was brоken prior to its seizure. 10/17 Tr. at 96. At some point while the vehicle was at the precinct, 10 Agent Ryan *286 looked in the window of the Lincoln and observed, scattered throughout the vehicle, various documents, including receipts and invoices with the names “Anthony Walker” and “Xavier Torres” on them. 10/16 Tr. at 61-62. Agent Ryan testified that these names were known aliases of Xavier Williams. Id. at 62.
A search warrant was subsequently issued by this Court to search the Lincoln. 10/17 Tr. at 97. NYPD officers searched the vehicle, obtaining finger prints and tape lifts, and then an expert from the Drug Enforcement Agency crossed certain wires which opened a secret compartment located in a console between the front driver and passenger seats. Id. at 97-99. The compartment was empty. Id. at 99. Xavier Williams seeks to suppress the evidence obtained during these searches.
2. Analysis
When Det. Nugent removed the Lincoln from the Garage and drove it to the precinct, this constituted a warrantless seizure, as the Government concedes. Gov’t Opp. at 57;
see Cardwell v. Lewis,
For the automobile exception to apply and for the seizure to be valid, the Government must prove that the law enforcement officers who seized the vehicle had probable cause to believe it contained evidence, contraband, or weapons. Id. We find that Det. Nugent, at the time he seized the Lincoln, did have the requisite probable cause to do so for several reasons.
First, Det. Nugent had reason to believe that the Lincoln was recently driven by Xavier Williams, because a parking receipt matching the one attached to the Lincoln’s keys had been found in Xavier Williams’s Bronx River apartment. Furthermore, the Garage owner had told Agent Ryan that the vehicle belonged to “Xavier,” and he believed that “Xavier” was, in fact, Xavier Williams. 10/16 Tr. at 60. Xavier Williams had been arrested one month before, on a multiple-count indictment alleging serious crimes including narcotic-trafficking and murder. The officers knew that he had previously hidden weapons and contraband, as well as other potential evidence, in secret compartments in the various vehicles he used, such as the Toyota. See Section II.B.l, supra. Thus, it was reasonable for them to believe that the Lincoln might contain contraband or weapons, possibly in a secret compartment.
Second, the owner of the Garage told Agent Ryan that “Xavier’s” friends intended to come by the Garage that day in order to remove an expensive radio from the Lincoln. It was reasonable for the officers to suspect that these friends intended not to remove a radio from the vehicle but, rather, they were planning to remove contraband that Xavier Williams did not want the police to find while they built their case against him. For these reasons, we find that Det. Nugent had probable cause to believe the Lincoln contained contraband and seize the Lincoln.
Moreover, the lawfulness of the seizure is bolstered by the exigent circumstances
*287
created when the officers became aware that “Xavier’s” friends were due to remove something from the Lincoln that very day.
See, e.g., Schmerber v. California,
Finally, we assume, without deciding, that when Agent Ryan peered into the windows of the Lincoln, this constituted a “search” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. As Det. Nugent had probable cause to seize the vehicle because he believed it likely contained contraband, weapons, or other evidence, we find that Agent Ryan also had such probable cause because he was working so closely with the NYPD and others in its investigation of Xavier Williams. Thus, for the same reasons that Det. Nugent’s search was Constitutionally permissible, 11 we find that this search, too, was lawful. Finally, we note that all subsequent searches of the Lincoln were done under the authority of a search warrant issued by this Court, and are unchallenged. The motion to suppress is denied.
E. Motion to Suppress Michael Williams’s March 22,1996 Statement
Michael Williams moves to suppress a statement he made to Detective James Cvetic of the Allegheny County Police Department on the evening of March 22, 1996. The Court held a hearing on this motion on October 30, 2001, where we heard testimony from only one witness, Det. Cvetic, who was called by the Government. Based on the evidence adduced at the hearing and a record which had come into the United States Attorney’s possession only the day before, the conclusion could have been reached that Det. Cvetic had actual knowledge that Michael Williams was represented by counsel at the time he interviewed him. 12 If so, Michael Williams’s March 22, 1996 statement would be inadmissible. 13 Following the hearing, the Government “withdrfew] its opposition to the motion of defendant Mi *288 chael Williams to suppress the [March 22, 1996] statement” and will “not seek to admit the defendant’s statement [] in its case-in-chief.” Letter dated Oct. 31, 2001 (“10/31 Ltr”) at 1-2.
In its October 31, 2001 letter, however, the Government “reserv[ed] the option of seeking to admit the March 22, 1996 statement to impeach the defendant, should he testify at trial, or to rebut evidence advanced by the defendant at trial that is inconsistent with, or contradicted by, his statement.” Although it is premature to rule on such trial evidence issues, we note thаt, while use of a defendant’s statement to impeach his testimony is a well-settled exception to the exclusionary rule, 14 the Government’s other “reservations” are significantly more problematic. 15
F. Motion to Suppress Elijah Bobby Williams’s April 21,1996 Statement
1. Facts
On April 21, 1996, Elijah Bobby Williams was arrested by the West Virginia State Police in connection with a reported stolen vehicle. Transcript of Suppression Hearing held October 31, 2001 (“10/31 Tr.”) at 4-5. At that time, he was a wanted person in connection with a triple homicide that occurred in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Id. at 5. The West Virginia State Police, being aware that the Allegheny County Police Department sought Elijah Bobby Williams, notified the latter that they had him in custody in Morgantown, West Virginia. Id. at 4-5, 20. Upon receiving this information, Detectives Gary Tallant and Regis Kelly of the Allegheny County Police Department, drove to Morgantown to interview Elijah Bobby Williams. Id. at 6, 23.
Det. Tallant found Elijah Bobby Williams in the sergeant’s office at the West Virginia Police Department in Mor-gantown, introduced himself, and told the latter that he (Tallant) was there in connection with the triple homicide that occurred in Pittsburgh. Id. at 7-9. Det. Tallant told Elijah Bobby Williams, in substance, that he wanted to question him about background or pedigree information, such as name, date of birth, and address. Id. at 9; Affidavit of Elijah Williams (“E.B.W.Aff.”) ¶ 2.
Det. Tallant testified at a hearing before the Court that while he was asking these pedigree questions, Elijah Bobby Williams interrupted him, saying, in substance, that he did not understand why he was arrested because he had nothing to do with the homicides, and, further, that he wanted to talk to the Detective about the homicides. 10/31 Tr. at 10-11. At this point, according to Det. Tallant, he stopped taking the pedigree information, and told Elijah Bobby Williams that “if he wanted to speak to *289 me in regards to the homicide, that I was going to advise him first of his Miranda rights.” Id. at 11. Det. Tallant testified that, at this point, he read Elijah Bobby Williams his Miranda rights from a pre-printed form, and then presented the form to him and had him read it. Id. Elijah Bobby Williams signed the form. Id. See Gov’t Ex. 1 from October 31, 2001 hearing (signed Miranda form). Det. Tallant testified, further, that Elijah Bobby Williams stated that “he did not have an attorney, he did not wаnt one either, and that he wanted to answer questions.” 10/31 Tr. at 11. Finally, Det. Tallant testified that, on April 17, 1996, several days earlier, he happened to run into James Ecker, a Pittsburgh attorney who had previously contacted the Allegheny County Police Department regarding Elijah Bobby Williams. Id. at 13. At that time, Mr. Ecker indicated to Det. Tallant that the former no longer represented Elijah Bobby Williams. Id. .
Elijah Bobby Williams, who did not testify at the suppression hearing, stated in a signed affidavit that after he agreed to be interviewed about background information, Detective Tallant “began to ask questions about a homicide, [and] I asked to speak to my lawyer. The detective refused my request and continued his interrogation for approximately five hours.” E.B.W. Aff. ¶ 2. Elijah Bobby Williams moves to suppress the statement he made to Det. Tal-lant on the grounds that it was taken in violation of his Sixth Amendment right.to counsel.
2. Analysis
“The Sixth Amendment right to counsel attaches at ‘the time that adversary judicial proceedings have been initiated.’”
Deshawn E. by Charlotte E. v. Safir,
At the time Elijah Bobby Williams was arrested, however, he had neither been charged with the triple homicide, nor had he been brought before a magistrate and informed of any charge against him with regard to that event. See Gov’t Ex. 2 from October 31, 2001 hearing at 6 (Det. Tallant’s report of interview with Elijah Bobby Williams ended when the time came for the latter to be arraigned). Thus, under either Pennsylvania or West Virginia law, Elijah Bobby William’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel had not attached at the time he spoke with Det. Tallant on April 21,1996.
Furthermore, .even assuming,
arguendo,
that Elijah Bobby Williams’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel had attached, that right may be waived. The Supreme Court has held that an “accused who is admonished with the warnings prescribed by this Court in
[Miranda]
has been sufficiently apprised of the nature of his Sixth Amendment rights, and of the consequences of abandoning those rights, so that his waiver on this basis will be considered a knowing and intelligent one.”
Patterson v. Illinois,
*290
G. Motion to Dismiss Counts Five, Six, and Seven for Lack of Venue
1. Facts
Michael Williams moves to dismiss Counts Five, Six, and Seven, asserting that venue is improper in the Southern District of New York. These Counts of the indictment accuse the three Williams defendants of the murders of Timothy Moore, Joel Moore, and Robert James, respectively, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1959. 17 It is undisputed that the “fatal blow” was dealt in the Western District of Pennsylvania. Consequently, Michael Williams contends that venue is only proper in that district, and that these Counts should be dismissed by this Court for lack of venue.
2. Analysis
Article III of the Constitution requires that “[t]he trial of all Crimes ... shall be held in the State where the said Crimes have been committed.” Furthermore, the Sixth Amendment declares that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed.” These Constitutional precepts 18 have been embodied in Rule 18 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which states that criminal “prosecution *291 shall be had in a district in which the offense was committed.”
The Supreme Court has recently reaffirmed that the place where a crime is deemed to have been сommitted, or
locus delicti,
is “ ‘determined from the nature of the crime alleged and the location of the act or acts constituting it.’ ”
United States v. Cabrales,
Counts Five, Six, and Seven all accuse the Williams defendants of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1959. To prove its case on these Counts, the Government must show that the defendants (1) committed the alleged murders (2) “as consideration for the receipt of, [or] as consideration for a promise and agreement to pay, anything of pecuniary value from the Torres Organization, [or] for the purpose of gaining entrance to [or] maintaining and increasing their positions in the Torres Organization, an enterprise engaged in racketeering activity.” Indictment ¶¶ 24, 26, 28;
see also Saavedra,
The defendants have not, in Counts Five, Six, and Seven, been accused simply of murdering the three victims. Rather, the Government charges, and has the burden of proving at trial, that they committed the murders within the framework of the Torres Organization. See Indictment ¶¶ 24, 26, 28; Gov’t Opp. at 82 n. 17. These Counts аllege that the Williams defendants committed these murders in aid of racketeering “in the Western District of Pennsylvania and elsewhere.” Indictment ¶¶ 24, 26, 28 (emphasis supplied). It is clear from the indictment that the Government alleges that the Williams defendants were actively engaged in the Torres Organization in the Southern District of New York. See, e.g., id. at ¶¶ 4, 5, 7, 21-22 (accusing the Williams defendants of conspiring to murder Timothy Moore and Robert James “in the Southern District of New York”). Therefore, the “enterprise” element of 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a) was allegedly “committed in more than one district,” one of which was the Southern District of New York and venue is proper in this district under 18 U.S.C. § 3237(a). Accordingly, defendants’ motions to dis *292 miss Counts based on lack of venue is denied.
H. Motion to Dismiss Counts for Violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause
Xavier Williams moves to dismiss Count Three and Racketeering Act One of Count One, which allege the conspiracy to murder and attempted murder of Victor Mercado in October of 1995, because the “inclusion of these charges in this indictment violates [his] constitutional protection against double jeopardy and his rights under the Petite policy of the United States Attorney’s Office since he has previously been charged, tried and acquitted by a jury of that charge in the Bronx Supreme Court.” X.W. Mem. at 28. For the following reasons, his motion is denied.
1. Dual Sovereignty Doctrine
Successive prosecutions brought by different sovereigns do not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Heath v. Alabama,
In
Bartkus v. Illinois,
the Supremе Court left open the possibility that successive prosecutions may violate the Double Jeopardy Clause if the second prosecuting sovereign was “merely a tool” of the first.
Finally, Xavier Williams invites this Court to simply “eliminate[] or severely restrict ]” the dual sovereignty doctrine and dismiss the Counts pertaining to the attempted murder of Victor Mercado. X.W. Mem. at 32. We decline this invitation and hold that the present indictment does not violate his rights under the Double Jeopardy Clause.
2. Petite Policy
Xavier Williams also asserts that the present indictment violates “his rights under the Petite policy of the United States Attorney’s Office.” 19 Id. at 28. This argument is unavailing.
*293 First, we note that the Government submitted a copy of a letter from James K. Robinson, Assistant Attorney General, to the Honorable Mary Jo White, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, granting authorization to prosecute Xavier Williams for conspiracy to murder and attempted murder of Victor Mercado. Gov’t Opp. Ex. G. This letter makes clear that, as far as the Department of Justice is concerned, the Petite policy is inapplicable to the present indictment. Id.
In any event, this decision by the Department of Justice is “not subject to judicial review.”
Ng,
Accordingly, because the Department of Justice followed the Petite policy and because, even if they had not, that failure is not reviewable here, we refuse to dismiss Count Three and Racketeering Act One of Count One on this ground.
I. Motions to Order the Government to Provide the Defendants With a Bill of Particulars
Xavier and Michael Williams seek an order directing the Government to provide them with a bill of particulars. For the reasons that follow, these motions are denied.
1. Background
The present indictment charges Xavier Williams with, inter alia, the murders of Timothy Moore, Joel Moore, and Robert James on or about February 18, 1996, as well as conspiracy to commit those murders. In his brief, Xavier Williams states that “[t]he discovery materials which the government has provided to date ... indicate that on [or about February 18, 1996], ‘two armed suspects [shot the victims],’ ... and that those two shooters are alleged to be co-defendants Michael Williams and Elijah Williams.” X.W. Mem. at 34. Xavier Williams states that he has
repeatedly asked the government to specify whether it is claiming that defendant Xavier Williams was a shooter or present at the scene of the shootings or if not, then what role it is claiming that defendant Xavier Williams played in those shootings. However, to date, the government has refused to provide any information beyond a general statement that defendant Xavier Williams was “involved.”
Id. Xavier Williams contends that, as a “defendant’s involvement in a capital offense must be ‘substantial’ in order to render that defendant death eligible,” information regarding Xavier Williams’s alleged role in the triple homicide is “vitally important” not only for general trial preparation, but also “for his opposition in the *294 death-penalty authorization process which is currently under way.” Id. at 35. Thus, Xavier Williams petitions the Court to order the Government to produce a bill of particulars describing exactly what role the Government alleges that Xavier Williams’s played in the triple homicide.
Michael Williams, too, requests that the Court order the Government to provide him with a bill of particulars. His reasoning, however, is based on the fact that the indictment makes numerous references to “others known and unknown.” See, e.g., Indictment ¶ 1 (“The Torres Organization, whose members and associates at various times included [Xavier Williams, Elijah Bobby Williams, Michael Williams, Kelly Rolon] and others known and unknown, operated in the New York Metropolitan area, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere.”). Michael Williams seeks the names of these “known and unknown” persons.
2. Analysis
Rule 7(f) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure state that “the court
may
direct the filing of a bill of particulars.” (emphasis supplied). Thus, the issue of whether to direct the Government to file a bill of particulars is reserved to the discretion of the court. In exercising this discretion, we are guided by the purpose a bill of particulars is designed to serve, namely, “to provide [the] defendant with information about the details of the charge against him if this is necessary to the preparation of his defense, and to avoid prejudicial surprise at the trial.”
United States v. Torres,
As “an indictment is adequate so long as it contains the elements of the offense, sufficiently apprises [sic] the defendant of what he must be prepared to meet, and is detailed enough to assure against double jeopardy,”
United States v. Salazar,
The present indictment is sufficient to apprize Xavier Williams of that which he is accused. It alleges that he murdered, and conspired to murder, Robert James, Tim Moore, and Joel Moore, in the Western District of Pennsylvania, on or about February 18, 1996. At trial, the Government will have the burden of proving these charges and, after it attempts to do so, Xavier Williams will know with complete specificity the precise theory of the Government’s case against him. For now, however, the indictment provides him with enough information to determine the charge he must be prepared to meet, 20 and, therefore, a bill of particulars is not warranted. Xavier Williams’s motion is denied.
The motion by Michael Williams for a bill of particulars naming the persons list
*295
ed as “others known and unknown” in the indictment is likewise denied. This request is nothing more than an “ill-disguised attempt[] at general pre-trial discovery,” Torr
es,
J. Motions for Discovery
Michael Williams and Xavier Williams also move for an order requiring the Government to provide them with certain discovery in advance of trial. Michael Williams petitions the Court to order the Government to provide Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) “other bad acts” evidence “several months before trial commences.” M.W. Mem. at 15. Xavier Williams requests that the Court enter an order to compel the Government to “disclose immediately” many classes of discovery. X.W. Mem. at 35. These classes are, in general terms, 21 “Evidence and Information Tending to Show the Existence of Mitigating Factors,” 22 “Evidence and Information Tending to Show the Non-Existence 'of Aggravating Factors,” 23 “Evidence and Information Tending to Show the Strength of the Evidence Supporting the [Xavier Williams’s] alleged guilt of the Murders charged and Possible Disproportionate Treatment of Minority Defendants in the Implementation of the Federal Death Penalty,” 24 “all statements of coconspirators which the government alleges were made during the course of and in furtherance of the conspiracies charged,” and “all information of other crimes, wrongs or bad acts alleged to have been committed by the defendants which the government intends to proffer against them under Rule 404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence.” X.W. Mem. at 47-58.
The defendants offer several theories to undergird their claims that they are entitled to this discovery, namely the Jencks Act, Brady, Giglio, Rule 404(b), and the USAM “Death Penalty Protocol” § 9-10.000 et seq. (the “Protocol”). Each will be discussed seriatim.
1. Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500, Fed. R.Crim.P. 26.2
In
Jencks v. United States,
the Supreme Court held that a criminal defendant had a due process right to inspect prior statements of government witnesses for impeachment purposes.
To be sure, we merely refuse to
order
the Government to produce their witnesses’ prior statements before those witnesses testify on direct examination at trial. The Government is, however, perfectly free to disclose such statements earlier, of its own volition.
See, e.g., In re United States,
2. Brady and Giglio
a. Scope
The Supreme Court, in
Brady v. Maryland,
held that “the Government has a constitutional duty to disclose favorable evidence to the accused where such evidence is ‘material’ either to guilt or to punishment.”
In re United States,
267 F.8d at 139 (quoting
Brady,
Framing the test in this manner, however, creates a practical problem:
An assessment of whether an outcome would have been different if undisclosed evidence had been disclosed is best made after a trial is concluded. At that point the significance of the undisclosed evidence can be considered in light of the strength of all the evidence indicating guilt. The prosecutor, however, cannot await the outcome and must therefore make a prediction before the trial as to how the nondisclosure of favorable evidence will be viewed after the trial.
Id.
at 143. Thus, a prosecutor is forced to make an educated guess as to whether the withholding of a given piece of evidencе will have a "reasonable probability” of affecting the outcome of the case or undermining confidence in the verdict.
Bagley,
b. Timing
Not surprisingly, Xavier Williams would like all
Brady
material, including
Giglio
material, to be turned over immediately. X.W. Mem. at 38-40, 46-47. The Government, for its part, wishes to reserve the option to wait until its witnesses are “called to testify at trial” before disclosing
Giglio
material. Gov’t Opp. at 103. The Government makes a distinction between “directly exculpatory”
Brady
material, on the one hand, and “impeachment”
Brady
material, also known as
Giglio
material.
Id.
at 103-04,
The Second Circuit has recently made clear that the timing of
Brady
disclosure is a matter to be determined in a case-by-case manner by holding that the Govern
*298
ment must disclose
Brady
material “no later than the point at which a reasonable probability will exist that the outcome would have been different if an earlier disclosure had been made.”
In re United States,
Nevertheless, the Government has stated that it “intends to make [Giglio ] material [available] a reasonable period of time before the witness is called to testify on direct examination.” Gov’t Opp. at 106. We accept this representation and expect the Government to abide by its promise. Therefore, Xavier Williams’s motion seeking an order is denied.
3. Rule 404(b)
Rule 404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides that evidence of “other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith,” but such evidence may be admissible for other purposes. A condition of its admissibility, however, is that “upon request by the accused, the prosecution in a criminal case shall provide reasonable notice in advance of trial, or during trial if the court excuses pretrial notice on good cause shown, of the general nature of any such evidence it intends to introduce at trial.” Fed.R.Evid. 404(b). Xavier Williams and Michael Williams request that the Court order the Government to give such notice immediately, or at least one month before trial, respectively. X.W. Reply at 44; Michael Williams’s Reply Memorandum of Law (“M.W.Reply”) at 13. The Government, for its part, proposes that it provides this notice two weeks before trial. 27 Gov’t Opp. at 108.
The Rule does not offer a definition of “reasonable notice,” but rather leaves it to the discretion of the district courts to decide on the basis of the “circumstances of each case.” Fed.R.Evid. 404 Advisory Committee Note (1991 Amends). Furthermore, in deciding what will constitute “reasonable notice” in this case, we are mindful of the purposes of the notice requirement, namely, “to reduce surprise and promote early resolution on the issue of admissibility.” Id. As this is a complex case in which the defendants are accused of very serious crimes, we will order the Government to provide a statement of the general nature of any evidence it intends to offer under Rule 404(b), as well as a brief statement of the grounds of its admissibility, well in advance of trial, and we will also provide sufficient time for any motions by defendants for exclusion of such evidence. 28 A specific order will be set when the trial date is set.
*299 4. United States Attorneys’ Manual “Death Penalty Protocol”
Finally, Xavier Williams requests certain discovery pursuant to the Department of Justice’s Death Penalty Protocol, USAM § 9-10.000 et seq. The Protocol “sets forth policy and procedures to be followed in all Federal cases in which a defendant is charged with an offense subject to the death penalty, regardless of whether the United States Attorney intends to request authorization to seek the death penalty.” 29 Id. § 9-10.010. As the three Williams defendants have been charged with offenses whose maximum punishment is the death penalty, the Protocol, by its terms, is applicable to this case. Section 9-10.030 of the Protocol states: “At the time an indictment charging a defendant with an offense subject to the death penalty is filed ... the United States Attorney should give counsel for the defendant a reasonable opportunity to present any facts, including any mitigating factors, to the United States Attorney for consideration.” Xavier Williams argues that in order for him to have a “reasonable opportunity” to present facts and reasons why the United States Attorney should not seek the death penalty, he must be given access to certain information in the Government’s possession. X.W. Mem. at 50-57.
Regardless of the merits of Xavier Williams’s interpretation of “reasonable opportunity,” logic requires that we first consider his assertion that the Protocol establishes a protected interest in death-eligible defendants. The vast majority of courts to consider this question have held that the Protocol does not create any such legally enforceable rights, and that, therefore, they lack the power to order the Government to abide by it.
United States v. Fernandez,
We agree with this weight of authority for two reasons, one founded in text and оne in policy.
30
First, the USAM explicitly states that it “is not intended to, does not, and may not be relied upon to create any rights, substantive or procedural, that are enforceable at law by any party in any matter, civil or criminal ....”
Id.
§ 1-1.100. Second, “[t]o hold the policy legally enforceable would be to invite the Attorney General to scrap it, which would hardly be in the public interest.”
Ng,
*300 K. Motion to Hold the Government Prosecutors in Contempt
The discovery package that the Government provided the defendants included, inter alia, numerous letters that Xavier Williams had sent to female friends of his, or that they had sent him, while he was housed in the Metropolitan Correctional Center following his arrest. Xavier Williams contends that these letters have no evidentiary value and that the Government’s “obvious purpose in including these letters in the discovery package was to make sure that defendant Xavier Williams’ wife, co-defendant Kelly Rolon, saw these letters in the hope that that would drive a wedge between defendant Xavier Williams and his wife in these proceedings.” X.W. Mem. at 18. He requests that the Court sanction the prosecutors for producing 32 these letters, because, he claims, such production violated his and his correspondents’ rights under the First, Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments and the federal Privacy Act.
The Government counters that this motion should be denied because all of the letters produced “have evidentiary value and may be offered as evidence in the Government’s case-in-chief or at a penalty phase, or used for impeachment or cross-examination.” Gov’t Opp. at 112. Furthermore, the Government claims that other “very personal” letters that were seized were not produced, because they lacked evidentiary value. Id. As Xavier Williams offers no reason for us to reject the Government’s representation, we accept the Government’s assertion that it produced only letters with actual evidentiary value.
Moreover, the Court has examined the letters in question and we agree with the Government that they contain information that could be useful in prosecuting this case, impeaching witnesses, or determining a proper sentence. As these letters were provided to the Court under seal, we will not cite specific quotations to support our conclusion. Nevertheless, we will note that the letters include, inter alia, names and phone numbers of possible co-conspirators or witnesses, allusions to drug use, and professions of innocence. For these reasons, we refuse to hold the prosecutors in contempt for producing the letters in question. The motion is denied.
L. Motion for an Order Mandating the Return of Seized Items
When Xavier Williams was arrested in front of the Bronx River Apartments, the police seized jewelry, including a watch, religious beads, and more than $1,300 in cash from his person. He has previously requested the Government to return these items but the Government has refused. Xavier Williams now requests that we order the Government to return these items to him pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(e) which provides that “[a] person aggrieved by an unlawful search or seizure or by the deprivation of property may move ... for the return of the property on the ground that such person is entitled to lawful possession of the property.”
The Government represents that “the money and jewelry ... is evidence that will be offered at trial” to prove that the defendants were engaged in a lucrative narcotics trafficking business, and that the religious beads will be “offered to corrobo *301 rate other evidence at trial.” Gov’t Opp. at 113. Xavier Williams suggests that the Government take photographs of this evidence, and that defendants can stipulate that the photographs are admissible as evidence in place of the original items. X.W. Mem. at 26.
As the Advisory Committee Note to Rule 41(e) states, “[i]f the United States has a need for the property in an investigation or prosecution, its retention of the property generally is reasonable.”
See also Podlog v. United States,
M. Michael Williams’s Motion for Severance
Michael Williams asserts that his trial should be severed from that of the other defendants because “‘acceptance of one party’s defense would tend to preclude the acquittal of [the] other.’ ” M.W. Mem. at 15 (quoting
United States v. Salameh,
In general, “[t]here is a preference in the federal system for joint trials of defendants who are indicted together.”
Zafiro v. United States,
In sum, Michael Williams has offered no reason, apart from a single unexplained quotation from Salameh, to sever his trial. Thus, given the strong preference for a joint trial in a case like this and the absence of a persuasive reason to depart from that preference, we deny his motion.
N. Kelly Rolon’s Motion for Severance
Kelly Rolon was charged, together with the other three defendants, with a single count of narcotics conspiracy. She is not named in any of the other sixteen counts of the indictment. She moves for severance, under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 14, on the ground that she would be prejudiced by a joint trial. For the reasons that follow, we grant her motion.
As noted above, when defendants are charged with a common plan or scheme, there is a strong preference for trying them together in a single trial.
See
Section II.M,
supra,
and cases cited therein.
See.
Nevertheless, if the defendant can show that “there is a serious risk that a joint trial would compromise a specific trial right of one of the defendants, or prevent the jury from making a reliable judgment about guilt or innocence,” the district court may order separate trials.
Zafiro,
First, we are concerned that Ms. Rolon would suffer “spillover prejudice” in a joint trial. Such prejudice occurs “when proof inadmissible against a
*302
defendant becomes a part of his trial solely due to the presence of co-defendants as to whom its admission is proper.”
Salameh,
Thus, we must make a preliminary determination whether the evidence the Government will introduce against Ms. Rolon’s co-defendants would also be admissible against her, even if she were granted a separate trial.
33
The present indictment includes both RICO counts and non-RICO counts. Ms. Rolon is not charged in any RICO counts, however. At trial, the Government will be permitted to introduce “evidence of criminal activities in which a defendant did not participate to prove the enterprise element” of the RICO counts.
United States v. Tellier,
The Government counters with the argumеnt that since the acts of violence charged in the RICO count were carried out in furtherance not only of the RICO enterprise, but also of the narcotics conspiracy, proof of murder and attempted murder would be admissible against Ms. Rolon as overt acts in furtherance of the conspiracy. Government’s Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendants’ Pretrial Motions (“Gov’t Opp.”) at 92. Even assuming, arguendo, that the Government is correct in this assertion, while proof of the violent acts themselves may be admissible, evidence of the details of those acts, such as grisly photos of the crime scene or the victims, would likely not be admissible to prove the narcotics conspiracy. See Fed.R.Evid.. 403. Thus, it appears that there is a significant risk that powerful evidence that would not be admissible against Ms. Rolon will be introduced in a joint trial against her co-defendants, and, consequently, a real risk of spillover prejudice.
Moreover, the inclusion of death penalty-eligible counts against all three of Ms. Rolon’s co-defendant’s, but not against her, counsel in favor of severance.
34
See, e.g., United States v. Bin Laden,
While the Government requests that we wait until it decides whether it will seek the death penalty to decide whether to grant Ms. Rolon’s motion for severance, a substantial amount of time has already passed and still remains for the decision
*303
making process to conclude. Gov’t Opp. at 86 n. 18. Thus, the “participation of the death-eligible defendants in the case [] may cause the case to proceed on two different tracks” and judicial economy may not be best served by conducting a joint trial in this case.
Maisonet
Thus, because of the danger of spillover prejudice, and because of the inclusion of death-eligiblе counts against her co-defendants, we find that Ms. Rolon will be prejudiced by a joint trial. As we do not believe a limiting instruction to the jury will suffice to remove this prejudice, we hereby grant Ms. Roloris motion for severance under Rule 14 of the Federal Rules of Evidence. Furthermore, we hereby schedule a conference in anticipation of the trial of Ms. Rolon for December 17, 2001 at 12:00 p.m. The Williams defendants need not attend.
III. CONCLUSION
All of the defendants’ pretrial motions are denied, except as follows:
• Kelly Rolon’s motion for severance is granted. A conference will be held to schedule her trial on December 20, 2001 at 10:00 a.m.
• Michael Williams’s motion to suppress a post-arrest statement he made on March 22,1996 is granted.
• Xavier and Michael Williams’s motions to compel certain discovery is granted in part and denied in part, as elaborated in Section II.J, swpra.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Xavier and Elijah Bobby Williams's mother’s maiden name is Torres, and the Williams defendants, apparently, often use that surname.
. Both Michael and Xavier Williams joined the motions of their codefendants to the extent applicable. For the sake of clarity, however, we refer only to the defendant who briefed a motion when discussing it herein.
. Throughout this opinion, we refer to Xavier Williams, Elijah Bobby Williams, and Michael Williams collectively as the "Williams defendants.”
. Det. Tallant actually drafted three separate affidavits, one for each Rippey Street apartment. These documents are, however, identical with the lone exception of the apartment number. Therefore, we will treat them as if they were a single affidavit and we will treat the three search warrants it led to as if they were a single search warrant.
. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court did, however, uphold the reversal of the suppression order with respect to Elijah Bobby Williams's apartment solely because he lacked standing to challenge the search.
Torres,
. In Gates, the United States Supreme Court stated:
The task of the issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical, common-sense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit before him, including the "veracity” and "basis of knowledge” of persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place. And the duty of a reviewing court is simply to ensure that the magistrate had a substantial basis *276 for ... conclud[ing] that probable cause existed.
Id.
at 238-39,
. Approximately three hours after the search of the Toyota described above, Xavier Williams signed a written consent permitting Det. Nugent to search the vehicle. Gov't Exhibits, Ex. D at 4. A search warrant to search the vehicle was subsequently issued by a New York Criminal Court Judge. Id. at 5. The only challenge Xavier Williams makes to the fruits of the search conducted pursuant to this warrant and consent is that these were both "tainted fruit” of Det. Nugent’s initial search because, he asserts, they were secured on the basis of the items seized in the initial search. Xavier Williams's Reply Memorandum of Law ("X.W.Reply”) at 14-15. Our finding that Det. Nugent’s initial search was constitutional obviates these arguments. Thus, we expressly find that none of the further searches of the Toyota, conducted pursuant to either or both of the search warrant or Xavier Williams's consent, violated Xavier Williams’s Fourth Amendment rights. For the sake of clarity, we refer hereinafter to the initial, warrantless, search of the Toyota as "the search” of the Toyota.
. In a post-hearing letter memorandum, counsel for Xavier Williams asserts that the Second Circuit has “expressly rejected” the government's contention that “a police officer can always find probable cause to arrest based solely upon the complaint of a victim,” citing
Oliveira v. Mayer,
Moreover, Oliveira is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar. In that case,
a private motorist spotted [] three dark-skinned males, handling an expensive video camera while driving in a dilapidated station wagon through an affluent area of North Stamford, Connecticut. Suspicious merely because the camera appeared quite valuable and because the vehicle had New York license plates and had emerged from a dead-end street, the motorist called the police from his car phone and reported that there may have been a burglary.
Oliveira,
Oliveira, thus, concerned a radically different set of facts than those we face here. Moreover, in that case, the Court took pains to distinguish cases where a victim of, rather than a witness to, a crime reports it to the police. Id.
The only other case from this Circuit on this issue cited in the letter,
Wu v. City of New York,
simply provides further support for our decision.
. We note that the fact that Xavier Williams was under arrest, in custody, and handcuffed at the time he gave consent to the sеarches does not as a matter of law require a finding of involuntariness.
Crespo,
. It is unclear from the testimony whether it occurred before or after Det. Nugent sealed the window.
. See discussion immediately above.
. Michael Williams was arrested in New York in March 1996. Transcript of Suppression Hearing held October 30, 2001 ("10/30 Tr.”) at 3. He was subsequently extradited to Pennsylvania, and, on the morning of March 22, 1996, he was arraigned before a deputy coroner, who completed a "Criminal Arraignment Procedure Form” (the "CAP form”) as a record of the arraignment. Id. at 11-12. The CAP form indicates that Michael Williams told the deputy coroner that he was represented by Paul Gettleman, a Pittsburgh attorney. Id. at 12-13. Although he denies being there, Detective James Cvetic of the Allegheny County Police Department is clearly listed as "present” on the CAP form. Id.
.In
Michigan v. Jackson,
.
Michigan v. Harvey,
.
See, e.g., James v. Illinois,
. We note that Elijah Bobby Williams did not testify at the hearing. Therefore, we had no opportunity to examine his demeanor when giving his version of events. In addition, his two paragraph affidavit did not provide enough detail to create a meaningful dispute.
. Sec.1959. Violent crimes in aid of racketeering activity:
(a) Whoever, as consideration for the receipt of, or as consideration for a promise or agreement to pay, anything of pecuniary value from an enterprise engaged in racketeering activity, or for the purpose of gaining entrance to or maintaining or increasing position in an enterprise engaged in racketeering activity, murders, kidnaps, maims, assaults with a dangerous weapon, commits assault resulting in serious bodily injury upon, or threatens to commit a crime of violence against any individual in violation of the laws of any State or the United States, or attempts or conspires so to do, shall be punished - (1) for murder, by death or life imprisonment, or a fine under this title, or both ... (2) for maiming, by imprisonment for not more than thirty years or a fine under this title, or both;
:«« sjs sfs * % %
(b) As used in this section -
(1) "racketeering activity” has the meaning set forth in section 1961 of this title; and (2) "enterprise” includes any partnership, corporation, association, or other legal entity, and any union or group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity, which is engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce.
.For a discussion of the historical background of these constitutional provisions,
see United States v. Saavedra,
. The
Petite
policy “is an internal statement by the United States Attorney General setting forth guidelines for federal prosecutors regarding dual and successive federal prosecu
*293
tions.”
United States v. Ng,
. Moreover, in addition to the information contained in the indictment, the Government has also provided the defendants with an abundance of discovery which should help рlace the defendants on notice as to the crimes for which they are charged.
See,
e.g.,
United States v. Society of Indep. Gasoline Marketers of Am.,
. Within these general categories, Xavier Williams requests no fewer than sixteen specific types of discovery. X.W. Mem. at 48-57. As the present discussion will make clear, there is no need to enumerate each specific request.
. See 18 U.S.C. § 3592(a), 21 U.S.C. § 848(m).
. See 18 U.S.C. § 3592(c), 21 U.S.C. § 848(n).
. See 18 U.S.C. § 3593(f).
. Fed.R.Crim.P. 26.2 incorporates the requirements of the Jencks Act, but is broader in scope. Rule 26.2 applies to all witnesses, while the Jencks Act applies only to government witnesses. For the present discussion, however, this distinction is immaterial.
. We note that several courts have found informal agreements by the prosecution to provide Jeneks Act material to the defense earlier than contemplated by the statute to be binding.
See United States v. Lopez,
147 F.3d
1,
3-5 (1st Cir.1998) (where defendant moved for early Jeneks Act disclosure, government had agreed to produce Jeneks Act material fourteen days before trial, and district court had issued an order stating that "[t]o the extent of [the government's] compliance, the defendant's motion is allowed,” this order was binding on the government (although the government’s eventual failure to comply was held harmless));
United States v. Mavrokordatos,
. The Government also informs the Court that "much of the evidence concerning the defendants' prior criminal conduct is direct proof of the racketeering enterprise,” and, therefore, will not be introduced under Rule 404(b). Gov’t Opp. at 107. The Government correctly notes that, in racketeering cases, it "may introduce evidence of uncharged criminal acts in order to establish the existence of the criminal enterprise charged in the Indictment.”
Id..; see, e.g., United States v. Brady,
. While we decline to mandate the exact format of this document, it must be "sufficiently clear to permit pretrial resolution of the issue of its admissibility.” 2 Jack B. Weinstein & Margaret A. Berger, Weinstein’s Federal Evidence, § 404.23(1) (Joseph M. MchLaughlin, ed., Matthew Bender 2d ed.1997)
. For a detailed discussion of the procedures outlined in the Protocol,
see United States v. Shakir,
. See also our discussion of the Petite policy in Section II.H.2, supra.
. Xavier Williams, in a last-ditch effort, invokes the All Writs Act as a grounds for the Court to order the discovery he seeks.
Id.
at 39-42. We are unpersuaded that the denial of Xavier Williams motions for extensive discovery will lead to an unfair trial, and, therefore, refuse to invoke the extraordinary All Writs Act here.
Cf.
244
Platt v. Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co.,
. Xavier Williams does not contest the Bureau of Prison’s authority to inspect incoming and outgoing prisoner mail, but only the Government's disclosing it to all the defendants, specifically Kelly Rolon. X.W. Mem. at 18.
. We refer to this as a "preliminary” determination because we are merely attempting to predict what evidence the Government will introduce at trial, and against whom it may be admitted. This discussion is not a final ruling on the merits of any evidentiary issues that may arise during trial.
. We are well aware that the trial of a non-capital defendant before a death-qualified jury does not, in and of itself, work a constitutional violation.
Buchanan v.
Kentucky,
