SearchWarrant Manual
SearchWarrant Manual
SearchWarrant Manual
Warrant, Annotated
Consolidated Edition
By
Albert M. Rosenblatt
Copyright 2005
New York State Unified Court System
All rights reserved
PREFACE
"Where is your warrant?"
This question has been asked countless times, but
rarely with more drama than in "The Disappearance of Lady
Frances Carfax," a Sherlock Holmes adventure. The villain, a
bogus preacher named Holy Peters, was unlawfully secreting
his victim and Holmes demanded entry. On his side, the great
detective had only justice and a revolver. Where was the
warrant? Holmes half drew the revolver from his pocket and
replied, "This will have to serve till a better one comes,"
Holmes explained.
The approach worked well for Sherlock Holmes but will
not do for American law enforcement officials. A revolver can
be as effective as a warrant, and may even produce prompter
compliance, but given the exclusionary rule, it would be
uneconomical to trade in this modest volume for a Colt .45.
This is the most recent incarnation of a work that I wrote
as a prosecutor in 1973. Much has happened over the
ensuing 31 years. The cases (not to mention the writer) have
grown older but the inventory has been replenished several
times over, and so what began as a 44 page work has grown
to 120 pages. In 1973 the piece was published by the New
York State District Attorneys' Association, under the able aegis
of Richard L. Friedman. I updated the work for a few years,
with the help of the Bureau of Prosecution and Defense
Services, expertly directed by Bill Dowling and Michael Gross.
1997 saw a revised edition, and so the work stood until this
past year.
In preparing it, I relied not only on the abundant body of
decisional law but on a number of publications, particularly the
excellent treatises by Judge William C. Donnino (New York
Court of Appeals on Criminal Law), Barry Kamin's book on
New York Search and Seizure, and Wayne R. LaFave's
Search and Seizure volumes. In addition, and with their eagle
eyes, Judge Donnino and Judge Steven W. Fisher read the
manuscript and made a number of valuable suggestions that
I have included in the text.
At a judicial training event at our Pace Law School
facility, Judge Juanita Bing Newton generously commented
iii
that the work was still on its feet (although a bit wobbly with
age, I submit), and that her office would publish a new version.
She offered to have her staff collate the earlier editions and
their supplements. This took not only astute computers but the
energy and creativity of Justin Barry, who designed the
program for the table of contents and more, Ellen Magid who
diligently helped stitch together all the previous editions, and
Janine Zanin, who aided immeasurably in updating the version
immediately preceding this one. I thank them all for their
valued contributions, along with Lisa DellAquila, and Justin
Long for their helpful comments.
ALBERT M. ROSENBLATT
iv
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
I.
II.
III.
1
15
19
19
22
25
29
29
30
31
35
36
37
38
40
41
42
42
44
46
46
49
52
55
56
61
64
PAGE
25.
26.
27.
IV.
vi
66
68
69
71
72
72
73
75
78
78
79
80
80
81
82
82
82
83
83
85
86
87
89
89
90
91
94
98
98
99
100
102
PAGE
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
105
106
107
108
110
111
112
113
113
114
115
115
115
117
118
118
119
120
120
121
121
123
vii
viii
of the
(Agency)
for a
search warrant to search the following premises.2
(Describe the structure and it components, e.g.: #2F; the ground floor of a two family
dwelling; a barn, a garage, etc.)3
County of
IF APPLICABLE:
and the person(s) of 5
wherever (he) (she) (they) be found.6
IF APPLICABLE:
and pursuant to CPL 690.15 (2), the search of any person found in the designated
premises or vehicle7
There is reasonable cause10 to believe that certain property, hereinafter described, (may
be found at) (will within the next _______ [hours] [days] be arriving at)11 the following
premises12
(c) property that has been used (and/or) is possessed for the purpose of being used
to commit an offense (or to conceal the commission of an offense15c), to wit (identify
property as explicitly as possible):
the attached arrest warrant has been issued (CPL 690.05 [2] [b]) may be found at
.
In support of your deponents assertion as to the existence of reasonable cause, the
following facts are offered,18 based on your deponent's personal knowledge19 as attested
to by your deponent (and by the supporting affidavits of others who have personal
knowledge).
Set forth, as explicitly as possible, the supporting facts, using
dates, places, names, and the source(s) of the deponent's
personal knowledge. This paragraph is to be used in cases
where the facts are being supplied by the applicant-deponent,
supplemented, if necessary, by the affidavits of others who
have personal knowledge. (CPL 690.35. [3] [c])
IF APPROPRIATE
Moreover, members of this department, including your deponent, have independently
confirmed the confidential informants assertions in the following respect, and to the
following degree:24
IF APPROPRIATE
Furthermore, the informants assertions are reliable because they represent declarations
against penal interest.25
IF THE INFORMANT IS W ILLING, THE FOLLOWING
SHOULD BE DONE, AND ALLEGED:
The confidential informant, though undisclosed by name, is now being produced before this
court,26 in order that the informant may, under oath, furnish the court with evidence in
support of this search warrant. The informant is amenable to any questioning the court
deems necessary for purposes of issuing this warrant. I request that questioning be
recorded under the courts authority, in the courts own notes, or by use of a stenographer27
or tape recorder, with the record to be sealed by the court, until further order of a court
having jurisdiction to order disclosure.
IF FACTS ARE FURNISHED BY A CITIZEN W HO W ANTS
ANONYMITY (AS OPPOSED TO A RELIABLE CONFIDENTIAL
POLICE INFORMANT) ALLEGE AS FOLLOWS:
I have received information from an individual who is not a regular police informant but an
ordinary citizen who, owing to fear of involvement or reprisal, wishes to remain anonymous
(or, if not, name the person). The individual told me the following (relate what the citizen
9
claims to have actually seen or heard, and what the citizen asserts, based on first hand
knowledge and observations28):
10
IF APPROPRIATE
Moreover, members of this department, including your deponent, have independently
confirmed the veracity of the individuals assertions in the following respects, and to the
following degree:
IF APPROPRIATE
Additional grounds exist establishing reasonable cause, namely, the prior criminal
record of the individual (who) (whose premises) (whose car) is (are) to be searched. The
prior criminal record consists of the following:30
Based on CPL 690.35 (4) (a), I request a determination pursuant to CPL Section 690.40(2)
that the search warrant contain an authorization for execution at any time of the day or
night,31 on the ground that there is reasonable cause to believe that:
(a) It cannot be executed between 6:00 A.M. and 9:00 P.M. because (set forth the
11
AND/OR
(b) The property sought will be removed or destroyed if not seized forthwith,
because (set forth reasons, based on facts)
(c) [For use in arrest warrant cases (CPL 690.05 [2] [b])]: The person is likely to flee
or commit another crime or may endanger the safety of the executing police officer
or another person if not seized forthwith or between the hours of 9:00 P.M. and
6:00A.M.
Based on CPL 690.35 (4) (b), I request a determination pursuant to CPL Section 690.40(2)
that the executing officer(s) be authorized to enter the premises to be searched without
giving notice of authority or purpose,32 on the ground that there is reasonable cause to
12
believe that
(a) the property sought may be easily and quickly destroyed or disposed of (set forth
facts in support of this belief)
and/or
(b) such notice may endanger the life or safety of the executing police officer or
another person (set forth facts in support of this belief):
Or
(c) [For use in arrest warrant cases (CPL 690.05 [2] [b])]: The person sought is likely
to commit another felony or may endanger the life or safety of the executing officer
or another person
13
Wherefore, your deponent requests that the court issue a search warrant directing a
search for and seizure of33 the following property or (if searching for a person pursuant to
CPL 690.05 [2] [b]), the following person34
Dated:
, New York
35
(Deponent)
Approved by:
, 20
36
14
Court,
, State of New York.
SEARCH WARRANT
1.
3.
You are hereby authorized and directed39 to search for and to seize the following
property40 :
or (if the search warrant is based on an arrest warrant pursuant to CPL 690.05 [2]
[b]), the following person:
4 (a) If applicable: (if inapplicable, strike the following paragraph)
You are authorized and directed to search the following premises41 :
15
Pursuant to CPL 690.45 (6), this warrant must be executed between 6:00 A.M. and
9:00 P.M. or,
6.
16
7.
8.
This warrant must be executed not more than 10 days43 after the date of its
issuance and any property seized shall be returned and delivered to the court
without unnecessary delay.44
9.
(If appropriate): Having heard and recorded the testimony of the confidential
informant, the court orders the record of that testimony sealed until further court
order.
Dated:
45
, N.Y.
46
Court,
County, New York
17
18
FOOTNOTE 1
PROPER COURT TO ISSUE WARRANT
The application must contain the name of the court (CPL 690.35 [3] [a]). Search
warrants are issuable by local criminal courts (CPL 690.35 [2] [a]). A superior court (a
supreme court or a county court) may issue a search warrant, but when those courts do
so they sit as "local criminal courts" (CPL 690.20 [1]; CPL 10.10 [1], [2]). Under CPL
690.20 (1), a search warrant of the Supreme Court, County Court, District Court, or the
New York City Criminal Court may be executed anywhere in the State.
The language authorizing "a local criminal court" to issue a search warrant comports
with CPL 10.10 (3) (f) and (g), which contemplates supreme court justices or county court
judges sitting as local criminal courts. The New York City criminal court is a local criminal
court (CPL 10.10 [3] [b]), as is any district court (CPL 10.10 [3] [a]). Thus, in People v
Carson (216 AD2d 965 [4th Dept 1995]), the appellate division upheld a search warrant
issued by the county court sitting as a local criminal court even though the warrant did not
say so. In People v Johnson (165 Misc 2d 227 [Rochester City Ct 1995]), the court
invalidated a search warrant (issued by a county judge) because it did not indicate that the
court was sitting as a local criminal court. This decision was rejected, correctly, in People
v Rhoades (166 Misc 2d 979 [Sup Ct, Monroe County 1995]).
City courts, town courts and village courts are local criminal courts (CPL 10.10 [3])
and hence are authorized to issue search warrants, but the warrants may be executed
pursuant to their terms only in the county of issuance or an adjoining county (CPL 690.20
[2]). There is a bit of history here. In 1976, the Court of Appeals held that a town court or
19
justice court may not issue a search warrant unless it has geographic (though not
necessarily trial) jurisdiction (see e.g. People v Hickey, 40 NY2d 761, 762-63 [1976] [the
Town Justice of Orchard Park lacked jurisdiction to issue a search warrant for narcotics
directed at an apartment in the city of Buffalo since the offense was not committed in
Orchard Park, the geographic jurisdiction of the Town Justice]). By contrast, see People
v Johnson (44 AD2d 451 [1st Dept 1974], affd 36 NY2d 864 [1975]) in which the Court held
that a district court may issue a search warrant to be executed anywhere in the State (CPL
690.20[1]) and that a warrant issued by a Suffolk County district court judge authorizing a
search in Bronx County for the proceeds of a Suffolk County jewelry store robbery was
lawful, notwithstanding that it uncovered evidence of a crime in Bronx County (criminal
possession of stolen property). See also People v Herrara (112 AD2d 315 [2d Dept 1985])
in which a search warrant, executed in Nassau County, was issued by a Suffolk County
District Court. The affidavits did not contain a specific allegation that crimes had been
committed in Suffolk County. The seizure was upheld on the ground that it could be
inferred that crimes were allegedly committed in Suffolk County because the police
applicant and assistant district attorney were both Suffolk officials.
In the aftermath of Hickey, the legislature amended CPL 690.35 in 1992 to broaden
the choice of courts empowered to issue search warrants (L 1992, ch 815, 816). The
application may now be made to any judge having geographic jurisdiction or "preliminary
jurisdiction" over the underlying offense (CPL 690.35 [2] [a]; see also CPL 1.20 [25]
[defining preliminary jurisdiction] and CPL 100.55).
Further, by way of alternative and given the road map of CPL 690.35 (2) (a) (i), if a
town court has such preliminary or geographical jurisdiction, but is not available, the
20
jurisdiction at the time (citing United States v Strother, 578 F2d 397 [DC Cir 1978]).
CPL 690.10 (3) and (4) were amended in 1994 to make it clear that New York courts
may issue search warrants for property relevant to out-of-state crimes.
A search warrant application must contain the name of the court (CPL 690.35 [3]
[a]), but in People v Pizzuto (101 AD2d 1024 [4th Dept 1984]), the court stated that the
failure of judge to fill in the space at the top of the search warrant, intended for the
designation of the court, was a technical and non-fatal omission where it was elsewhere
identified (see also People v Smythe, 172 AD2d 1028 [4th Dept 1991]).
An issuing judge was not disqualified from acting as suppression motion judge
(People v McCann, 85 NY2d 951 [1995]; cf. Pierce v Delameter, 1 NY 3 [1847]).
After a judge declined to sign a search warrant, the applicant was free to go to
another judge. The first judge's refusal was not the law of the case (People v Bilsky, 95
NY2d 172 [2000]).
See generally Annotation, Requirement, Under Federal Constitution, That Person
Issuing Warrant for Arrest or Search Be Neutral and Detached Magistrate Supreme Court
Cases, 32 L Ed 2d 970 (2004).
FOOTNOTE 2
AUTHORIZING SEARCH OF MORE THAN ONE PERSON,
PLACE, OR VEHICLE
A court may issue a search warrant for a designated premises, vehicle, or person
(CPL 690.05 [2] [a]; 690.15 [1]). Accordingly, a search warrant may cover more than one
22
entity, provided there is reasonable cause for each (People v Tambe, 71 NY2d 492 [1988];
People v Vanderpool, 217 AD2d 716 [3d Dept 1995]; see also Annotation, Propriety and
Legality of Issuing Only One Search Warrant to Search More Than One Place or Premises
Occupied by Same Person, 31 ALR2d 864).
In People v De Sivo (194 AD2d 935 [3d Dept 1993]), the facts justified a search
warrant for defendant's trailer, outbuildings, and vehicle. A search of two residences was
upheld in People v Alaxanian (76 AD2d 187 [3d Dept 1980], affd sub nom People v Lanier,
54 NY2d 725 [1981]). A search warrant authorizing the search of defendant's house
justified a search of his car (trunk) which was parked at the premises (see People v
Powers, 173 AD2d 886 [3d Dept 1991]; United States v Ross, 456 US 798 [1982]).
In People v Cahill (2 NY3d 14 [2003]), a search of defendants shed was justified
because the warrant was explicitly identified as an addendum to a warrant issued three
days earlier which permitted searches in the defendants home or within any unattached
garage or storage shed.
A search warrant that did not specifically authorize the search of an automobile
could not be used to search a car that was driven into the driveway of the house specified
in the warrant (see People v Dumper, 28 NY2d 296, 299 [1971]; but see United States v
Combs, 468 F2d 1390 [6th Cir 1972], cert denied 411 US 948 [1973] [valid seizure of a gun
from defendant's car, under a warrant for his house, on the theory that the car was "on the
premises" situated close enough to the house to be within its curtilage]).
Curtilage: This term is defined (according to Webster) in People v Reynolds (71
NY2d 552 [1988]) as a yard, a garden, enclosure, or field near or belonging to a building.
In areas outside the curtilage, an owner of open fields enjoys no fourth amendment
23
protection (see Oliver v United States, 466 US 170 [1984]), but state constitutional law will
require a search warrant where the owner posts signs signifying an expectation of privacy
(see People v Scott, 79 NY2d 474 [1992]).
Courts have allowed some flexibility in sustaining searches executed within the
"curtilage" of the premises when the search warrant does not name the curtilage area as
an area to be searched (see generally 2 LaFave, Search and Seizure, 4.10 [a] [3d ed];
United States v Dunn, 480 US 294 [1987]). Curtilage searches were upheld as within the
search warrant in United States v Earls (42 F3d 1321 [10th Cir 1994] [outbuildings]; United
States v Griffin, 827 F2d 1108 [7th Cir 1987] [tool shed]; People v Davis, 146 AD2d 942
[3d Dept 1989] [tool shed]; United States v Frazin, 780 F2d 1461 [9th Cir 1986] [garage]).
But there are limits. A search warrant for a first floor apartment in a 20-unit building did not
authorize a search of the basement (see United States v King, 227 F3d 732 [6th Cir 2000]).
These issues may sometimes be averted by specific language in the application and
warrant particularizing the outbuildings (see e.g. State v Pelletier, 673 A2d 1327 [Me 1996];
see generally Annotation, Search Warrant: Sufficiency of Description of Apartment or
Room to be Searched in Multi-Occupancy Structure, 11 ALR3d 1330).
Severability: When reasonable cause exists with respect to one premises or
person, but not another, the warrants, as severable, have been sustained as to the
reasonable cause segment (People v Hansen, 38 NY2d 17 [1975]; see also People v
Brown, 96 NY2d 80 [2001]; People v Robinson, 68 NY2d 541 [1986]; People v Scavone,
59 AD2d 62 [3d Dept 1977]; People v Hines, 62 AD2d 1067 [3d Dept 1978]; People v
Nyemczycki, 67 AD2d 442 [2d Dept 1979]. See generally Annotation, Propriety in State
Prosecution of Severance of Partially Valid Search Warrant, 32 ALR 4th 378, 6;
24
FOOTNOTE 3
PRECISENESS OF DESCRIPTION OF PREMISES -- MISDESCRIPTION
The premises named in the search warrant should be particularly identified. For
example, a search warrant directing a search of a building, was struck down as overbroad
when the police knew or should have known that it contained more than one apartment
(see People v Rainey, 14 NY2d 35 [1964]; People v Henley, 135 AD2d 1136 [4th Dept
1987]; People v Sprague, 47 AD2d 510 [3d Dept 1975] [wrong building]; People v Sciacca,
45 NY2d 122 [1978] [evidence of crime seized from van must be suppressed where the
van was in garage when searched since search warrant authorized only search of van but
not garage]).
By contrast, see People v Teicher (52 NY2d 638 [1981] [upholding execution of a
search warrant authorizing videotaping of a dentist's sexual abuse of patients, although
warrant stated that camera was to be placed in one examining room, and was actually
placed in another]), People v Horton (32 AD2d 707 [3d Dept 1969] [search valid though it
encompassed room not found in warrant; defendant rented the room, which was adjacent
to his apartment, the subject of the search warrant]), and People v Salgado (57 NY2d 662
[1982] [erroneous designation of apartment to be searched as number 25J instead of
number 25C held immaterial where informant accompanied police to apartment, was
admitted by occupant, and confirmed that occupant was person referred to in warrant;
25
before search was conducted, warrant was amended to state correct designation of
apartment]). See also People v Hammock (182 AD2d 1114 [4th Dept 1992] [no hearing
necessary to deal with alteration of address in search warrant intended to encompass
entire premises]).
In People v Tramell (152 AD2d 989 [4th Dept 1989]), the Court held that the
description in the search warrant, when read with the affidavit, sufficiently delineated the
area to be searched, as against defendant's claim of overbreadth (see also People v De
Lago, 16 NY2d 289 [1965]; Maryland v Garrison, 480 US 79 [1987] [upholding the seizure
of contraband where police believed there was only one apartment at the named location
but where there were actually two]).
Warrants were upheld when the description (of the premises identified in the search
warrant) enables the officers with reasonable effort to ascertain and identify the place to
be searched even if the warrant contains a partial misdescription (see People v Graham,
220 AD2d 769 [2d Dept 1995]; People v Rodriguez, 254 AD2d 95 [1st Dept 1998]; People
v Davis, 146 AD2d 942 [3d Dept 1989]).
An inconsequential misdescription did not invalidate a search warrant when there
was no possibility that the wrong premises would be searched (People v Eldridge, 173
AD2d 975 [3d Dept 1991]). Nor was slight misdescription of the name of the premises'
occupant fatal in People v Earl (138 AD2d 839 [3d Dept 1988]; see also People v Graham,
220 AD2d 769 [2d Dept 1995]). In People v Lavin (220 AD2d 886 [3d Dept 1995]), a slight
address imprecision was excused (see also People v Chandler, 212 AD2d 623 [2d Dept
1995]; People v Mabrouk, 290 AD2d 235 (1st Dept 2002); People v Riddick, 143 AD2d
1060 [2d Dept 1988]); and in People v Webb (97 AD2d 779 [2d Dept 1983]), the warrant
26
shop. In People v Santana (154 Misc 2d 994 [Westchester County Ct 1992]), the search
warrant for an entire multiple occupancy (which is to be distinguished from a multiple unit
dwelling) was sustained, in that all the occupants had unlimited access to the entire
premises.
A search warrant authorizing the search of defendant's house justified a search of
his car (trunk) which was parked at the premises (see People v Powers, 173 AD2d 886 [3d
Dept 1991]; see also United States v Ross, 456 US 798 [1982]). In People v De Sivo (194
AD2d 935 [3d Dept 1993]), the court held that in addition to authorizing a search of
defendant's trailer, it was permissible to include the defendant's storage buildings and the
surrounding area over which he had control. In People v Padilla (132 AD2d 578 [2d Dept
1987]), the court held that a search warrant for defendant's home was properly read to
include a combination safe in the bedroom closet. In People v Brito (__ AD3d __ [4th Dept
2004]), the court sustained the search of defendant's attic which was accessible only
through the upstairs apartment and therefore considered a part of it.
See generally Larry EchoHawk and Paul EchoHawk, Curing a Search Warrant that
Fails to Particularly Describe the Place To Be Searched, 35 Idaho L Rev 1 (1998);
Annotation, What Is Within "Curtilage" of House or Other Building, So As To Be Within
Protection From Unreasonable Searches and Seizures, Under Federal Constitution's
Fourth Amendment Supreme Court Cases, 94 L Ed 2d 832; Annotation, Error, in Either
Search Warrant or Application for Warrant, As To Address of Place To Be Searched as
Rendering Warrant Invalid, 103 ALR5th 463; Annotation, Search Warrant as Authorizing
Search of Structures On Property Other Than Main House or Other Building, or Location
Other Than Designated Portion of Building, 104 ALR5th 165.
28
FOOTNOTE 4
VEHICLE DEFINED
A search warrant may direct the search of a described vehicle (CPL 690.15 [1] [b]).
For search warrant authorization purposes, a vehicle is a motor vehicle, trailer, or semitrailer (as defined in the Vehicle and Traffic Law), an aircraft, any vessel equipped for
propulsion by mechanical means or by sail, and any snowmobile as defined in the parks
and recreation law (See Penal Law 10.00 [14]).
A search for "all vehicles" on the premises may be problematic (but see United
States v Gentry, 839 F2d 1065 [5th Cir 1988]) as contrasted with specified vehicles (see
United States v Finnigin, 113 F3d 1182 [10th Cir 1997] ["any and all vehicles driven by or
registered to the owners or occupants of said trailer home"]; see generally 2 LaFave,
Search and Seizure, 4.5[d], at 538 et seq [3d ed]; see also Annotation, Sufficiency of
Description in Search Warrant of Automobile or other Conveyance to be Searched, 47
ALR2d 1444).
That the warrant application stated the vehicle was in a parking lot when in fact it
had been towed to police garage was not fatal in People v La Bombard (99 AD2d 851 [3rd
Dept 1984]).
FOOTNOTE 5
CERTAINTY OF IDENTIFICATION OF KNOWN TARGET
Where a targets name is unknown, a search may be performed if the target is
identified with certainty. CPL 690.45 (5) contemplates this by allowing searches of people
29
FOOTNOTE 6
SEARCH OF PERSON WHEREVER FOUND
If the person is to be searched outside of the described premises, the warrant
should say so by authorizing a search of the named target " wherever (s)he be found," and
30
the allegations of probable cause should include facts supporting the reasonable
contention that the target, when found, will have the evidence (see People v Darling, 263
AD2d 61 [4th Dept 1999], affd 95 NY2d 530 [2000] [not necessary to specify location in
county in which it is sought]).
In People v Green (33 NY2d 496 [1974]), the Court remanded because the warrant
did not specifically authorize a search of the subject wherever found. After a further
hearing, the trial court found probable cause because the informant whose information was
the basis for the search warrant had observed narcotics at the premises (see People v
Green, 80 Misc 2d 626 [Sup Ct, NY County 1975]). Although the Appellate Division
reversed (51 AD2d 928 [1st Dept 1976]), the Court of Appeals found probable cause,
reversed the Appellate Division decision, and remitted the case to the Appellate Division
for a review of the facts (42 NY2d 1023 [1977]) (See also People v Sanin, 60 NY2d 575
[1983] [search of defendant in driveway upheld]).
See Discussion Item #31, infra, relating to search warrants for non-suspects, and
Footnote 34, relating to searches for the suspect at a third person's premises, as well as
Discussion Item 9, pertaining to the arrest of a suspect in a third-party's premises.
FOOTNOTE 7
SEARCH OF ANY PERSON "THEREAT OR THEREIN"
CPL 690.15 (2) provides that a search warrant directing a search of a designated
or described place, premises, or vehicle may also direct the search of any person present
thereat or therein. In some cases, provisions of this type have been held overbroad, but
in others the doctrine of severability has been applied to validate the remainder. Although
31
a search warrant was overbroad where it gave authority to search "any other person" who
might be found at defendant's apartment, this unlawful command did not vitiate the
legitimate command to search the premises and person of defendant. Warrants have
been held severable where the surviving portion:
1)
2)
3)
involve "protective sweeps." In United States v Daoust (916 F2d 757 [1st Cir 1990]), the
court held that police may conduct a protective sweep while executing a search warrant.
The court applied the rationale of Maryland v Buie (494 US 325 [1990]) that police may do
so as in an arrest situation when they have a reasonable belief based on articulable
facts that the area to be swept harbors danger. As of 2004, the issue has not been
addressed in any New York appellate decision. In general, see 2 LaFave, Search and
Seizure, 4.9 (c) and (d) (3d ed) (see also People v Smith, 78 NY2d 897 [1991]; People
v Wheeler, 2 NY2d 370 [2004]).
The police were justified in questioning defendant (who entered the apartment which
the police were searching for narcotics under a search warrant that did not name or
describe him) but were not justified in searching him even though his raincoat fell to the
floor with a thud. The Court suppressed the gun seized from the raincoat pocket (People
v Costales, 39 NY2d 973 [1976]). Where agents were executing a search warrant, the
search of a latecomer was not justified in People v Fripp (58 NY2d 907 [1983]).
A valid search warrant for a gambling premises justified the arrest of a person
present, talking on a telephone hooked up to a tape recorder (People v Paccione, 80 NY2d
1019 [1992]; cf. People v Rossi, 80 NY2d 952 [1992] [in which the charges were dismissed
against a defendant who was unlawfully arrested while the police were executing a valid
search warrant]).
The court upheld the search of a person unnamed in the search warrant but in the
apartment in People v Abernathy (175 AD2d 407 [3d Dept 1991]; see also People v
Vanderpool, 217 AD2d 716 [3d Dept 1995]; People v Ortiz, 103 AD2d 303 [2d Dept 1984],
affd 64 NY2d 997 [1985]). The arrest of an unnamed third party was proper when he held
34
contraband in plain view (People v McLeod, 281 AD2d 746 [3d Dept 2001]). In People v
Easterbrook (35 NY2d 913 [1974]), the search warrant authorized the search of a named
person at a premises and any other person who may be found to have such property in
his possession or under his control or to whom such property may have been delivered.
The Court upheld the search of the defendant while he was leaving the premises (see also
Guy v Wisconsin, 509 US 914 [1993]).
See generally Angela S Overgaard, Comment, People, Places, and Fourth
Amendment Protection: The Application of Ybarra v Illinois to Searches of People Present
During the Execution of Search Warrants on Private Premises, 25 Loy U Chi LJ 243 [1994].
FOOTNOTE 8
APPLICANT'S USE OF FICTITIOUS NAME
The application must contain the name of the applicant (CPL 690.35 [3] [a]). Federal
courts have ruled that the applicant's willful or intentional use of a fictitious name voids the
warrant (see King v United States, 282 F2d 398 [4th Cir 1960]; United States ex rel Pugh
v Pate, 401 F2d 6 [7th Cir 1968]; United States ex rel Maxey v Morris, 591 F2d 386 [7th
Cir 1979]; United States v Thomas, 489 F2d 664 [1973]; but see United States v McCoy,
478 F2d 176 [10th Cir 1973] [error in name not fatal]). This is to be distinguished from
situations in which the court allowed a police witness to use a fictitious name at trial
(People v Frost, 100 NY2d 129 [2003]) or to conduct a search warrant suppression hearing
ex parte (People v Castillo, 80 NY2d 578 [1992]). In United States v Soriano (482 F2d 469
[5th Cir 1973]), the failure of the warrant to specify the name of the affiant did not require
35
suppression of the seized evidence. The names of the affiants appeared in the supporting
papers.
FOOTNOTE 9
PUBLIC SERVANT DEFINED
It is necessary to list the name and title of the applicant (CPL 690.35 [3] [a]).
According to CPL 690.35 (1), the applicant must be a public servant of the kind specified
in CPL 690.05 (1), namely, "a police officer, a district attorney, or other public servant
acting within the course of his official duties." A "police officer" includes all of the officials
identified in CPL 1.20 (34). A district attorney includes assistants and, where appropriate,
the Attorney General and assistants (CPL 1.20 [32]).
Pursuant to CPL 690.35 (1), a written search warrant application must be made,
subscribed, and sworn to by a CPL 690.05 (1) type public servant. An unsworn application
failed in People v Dunn (117 AD2d 863 [3d Dept 1986]; see also People v Coburn, 85 Misc
2d 673 [Rensselaer County Ct 1976]). In People v Butchino (152 AD2d 854 [3d Dept
1989]), People v Rodriquez (150 AD2d 622 [2d Dept 1989]), and People v Zimmer (112
AD2d 500 [3d Dept 1985]), on the basis of substantial compliance, search warrants were
upheld as against assertions that the applications were unsworn (see also Footnotes 32
and 33-a).
The New York State Organized Crime Task Force ("OCTF") had lacked the statutory
authority to apply for search warrants as part of its general investigatory authority, although
it was permitted to do so in appropriate cases in which it had prosecutorial powers, if it had
received prior authorization by the Governor and the approval of the local district attorney
36
(see B.T. Productions v Barr, 44 NY2d 226, 235-37 [1978] [under Executive Law 70a];
see also Agresta v Roberts, 66 AD2d 929 [3d Dept 1978]). However, by Chapter 667 of
the Laws of 1982, section 70a (4) of the Executive Law was amended to empower OCTF
to apply for search warrants generally.
In People v Brancato (101 Misc 2d 264 [Sup Ct, Kings County 1979]), the Court held
that a search warrant addressed "to any police officer of the City of New York" may be
executed by a police officer whose geographic authority extends to the City of New York,
including an officer employed by the Waterfront Commission.
Regional "Task Force" applications were upheld in People v Martin (163 AD2d 536
[2d Dept 1990]) and People v Pearson (179 AD2d 786 [2d Dept 1992]).
The New York State Commission of Investigation does not have the authority to
obtain search warrants. Any evidence so obtained will be suppressed (People v Cardillo,
80 AD2d 952 [3d Dept 1981]).
FOOTNOTE 10
PROBABLE CAUSE (REASONABLE CAUSE)
The Fourth Amendment requires probable cause for the issuance of a search
warrant. CPL 690.10 and 690.35 (3) (b) require a showing of reasonable cause (see also
CPL 690.40). For our purposes, they mean the same thing. As the Court held in People
v Bigelow (66 NY2d 417, 423 [1985]), probable cause does not require proof sufficient to
warrant a conviction beyond a reasonable doubt, but merely information sufficient to
support a reasonable belief that ... evidence of a crime may be found in a certain place
(see also People v Pinchback, 82 NY2d 857, 858 [1993]).
37
Reasonable cause lies at the heart of the search warrant application, but failure to
recite those very words did not nullify the warrant if the proof is there and can be inferred
(see People v Robinson, 68 NY2d 485 [1986]; see also People v Bowers, 92 AD2d 669 [3d
Dept 1983]).
See also Annotation, Odor Detectable by Unaided Person as Furnishing Probable
Cause for Search Warrant, 106 ALR5th 397; Annotation, Propriety of Considering Hearsay
or Other Incompetent Evidence in Establishing Probable Cause for Issuance of Search
Warrant, 10 ALR3d 359.
FOOTNOTE 11
ANTICIPATORY SEARCH WARRANT; CONTROLLED DELIVERY
This contemplates the issuance of a warrant where the designated property has not
yet arrived at the premises (or is not yet on the person to be searched) but probable cause
exists to believe that it will arrive before execution of the warrant. The Court of Appeals
upheld such a search warrant in People v Glen (30 NY2d 252 [1972]; see also People v
Wyatt, 46 NY2d 926 [1979]; People v Giammarino, 42 NY2d 1090 [1977]).
In People v Singer (44 AD2d 730 [3d Dept 1974], affd without opinion 36 NY2d 1006
[1975]), the Court upheld a search warrant authorizing the seizure of a package of
marihuana enroute to defendant's residence. Similarly, a search warrant specifying that
property to be seized consisted of untaxed cigarettes which "will be delivered" was valid
since the affidavit established probable cause to believe that this contraband was being
taken in and out of the subject premises (People v Giammarino, 53 AD2d 871 [2d Dept
1976], affd on opinion below, 42 NY2d 1090 [1977]).
38
For a variation on this theme, see People v Mahoney (58 NY2d 475 [1983]), where
police seized contraband while awaiting the actual arrival of the search warrant which
another officer was bringing to the scene. Since a "no-notice" warrant was issued, the
officers' knowledge that it was en route justified police entry, even though they did not
possess the warrant when entering.
In People v Aaron (172 AD2d 842 [2d Dept 1991]), the expected delivery of a
package of drugs justified a search warrant for the entire apartment (i.e. in addition to the
package) (cf. People v Pokun, 135 AD2d 1064 [3d Dept 1987]). For cases involving the
police securing premises while applying for a search warrant, see Discussion Item #12,
infra.
The concept involved here is often in the form of a "controlled delivery" by which the
police learn of the expected arrival of contraband. In People v Offen (78 NY2d 1089
[1991]), authorities were told that the defendant was receiving UPS parcels containing
drugs. They employed a dog to sniff the packages and thereby established probable cause
for a search warrant. The warrant was valid, as based on probable cause (i.e., the dog
sniff) which in turn was based on reasonable suspicion, satisfying the dog sniff criterion
(see People v Dunn, 77 NY2d 19 [1990]; see also People v Rodriguez 181 AD2d 1049 [4th
Dept 1992] [a controlled delivery, non-canine case]).
For federal dog-sniffing, "controlled delivery" cases, see United States v Gonzalez,
90 F3d 1363 (8th Cir 1996); United States v Hayes, 49 F3d 178 (6th Cir 1995); United
States v Smith, 34 F3d 514 (7th Cir 1994); United States v Hall, 20 F3d 1084 (10th Cir
1994); see also Annotation, Opening, Search, and Seizure of Mail, 61 ALR2d 1282; Dogs,
Discussion Item # 16).
39
For other controlled delivery cases, see United States v Lora-Solano, 330 F3d 1288
(10th Cir 2003) and United States v Ware, 338 F3d 476 (6th Cir 2003). In United States
v Martin (157 F3d 46 [2d Cir 1998]), the Court held that the police were justified in directing
UPS to delay delivery pending the acquisition of a search warrant.
See generally James A. Adams, Anticipatory Search Warrants: Constitutionality,
Requirements, and Scope, 79 Ky LJ 681 (1991); John Magee, Case note, Kostelec v.
State: Present Tense Language of Search Warrant Statute Does Not Permit Issuance of
Anticipatory Search Warrant Based on Future Evidence of a Criminal Act, 28 U Balt LF 31
(1998); Joshua D. Poyer, Note & Comment, United States v. Miggins: A Survey of
Anticipatory Search Warrants and the Need for Uniformity Among the Circuits, 58 U Miami
L Rev 701 (2004); Jeanine Perella McConaghy, Survey of First Circuit Law 1993-1994:
Topical Survey: Constitutional Law Anticipatory Search Warrants Survive Fourth
Amendment Challenge United States v. Ricciardelli, 998 F.2d 8 (1st Cir. 1993), 28
Suffolk U L Rev 876 (1994); Michael J. Flannery, Note, Abridged Too Far: Anticipatory
Search Warrants and the Fourth Amendment, 32 Wm and Mary L Rev 781 (1991); David
P. Mitchell, Recent Development: Anticipatory Search Warrants: The Supreme Court's
Opportunity to Reexamine the Framework of the Fourth Amendment, 44 Vand L Rev 1387
[1991].
FOOTNOTE 12
MATCHING DESCRIPTIONS
See Footnotes 2 and 3 with regard to a description of the premises. The description
40
in this portion of the affidavit should match the description in the caption and be equally
explicit.
FOOTNOTE 13
DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY TO BE SEIZED
Subparagraphs (a) through (e) in paragraph 2 of the model affidavit consist of a
required statutory statement prescribed by CPL 690.35 (2) (b) identifying, in extensive
detail, the type of property sought. The five subparagraphs are simply recitations of the
"seizable" categories set forth under CPL 690.10. Needless to say, the property may be
of a type described in more than one category. For example, an unlicensed firearm is
unlawfully possessed (subpar. b), may be used to commit a crime (subpar. c), may
constitute evidence demonstrating the commission of or participation in an offense (subpar.
d) and may, indeed, be stolen (subpar. a). See generally Joseph G. Cook, Requisite
Particularity in Search Warrant Authorizations, 38 Tenn L Rev 496 [1971].
Article I, 12 of the New York State Constitution imposes a higher standard for the
issuance of a search warrant where books and other items that may be protected by the
First Amendment are the objects to be seized (see People v P.J. Video, 65 NY2d 566, rev
sub nom New York v P.J. Video, 475 US 868, on remand 68 NY2d 296 [1986]).
See Marcus v Search Warrant, 367 US 717, 722 [1961]), relating to obscenity.
Child pornography is not protected and may be seized pursuant to a search warrant (see
People v Keyes, 75 NY2d 343 [1990]; People v Burke, 287 AD2d 512 [2d Dept 2001]
[requisite particularity established]; People v Fraser, 264 AD2d 105 [4th Dept 2000];
People v Duboy, 150 AD2d 882 [3d Dept 1989]).
41
FOOTNOTE 14
STOLEN PROPERTY -- BASIS FOR CONCLUSION
If the property is purportedly stolen, there must be authentication, by alleging the
basis for the conclusion that it is stolen (see Rugendorf v United States, 376 US 528
[1964]) Also, it must be adequately particularized (See footnotes 15 a-c).
FOOTNOTES 15 a-c
PARTICULARITY OF DESCRIPTION; OVERBREADTH
There is an unfortunate tendency on the part of unskilled search warrant drafters
to seek (and all too often receive) authorization to search for items of a far broader nature
than probable cause establishes. Proof that suggests the possession of a certain type of
drug should not be broadened to include every conceivable controlled substance the
drafter can imagine (see People v Brown, 96 NY2d 80, 88 [2001]). Extravagance invites
invalidity through overbreadth. Furthermore, overbroad descriptions are hardly necessary:
for example, courts have held that if during the course of the search for the one named
drug, other drugs are seen, they may be seized (see footnote 14).
Dozens of cases illustrate the point. Because the facts and descriptions vary
widely, the cases are not always easy to reconcile (see e.g. descriptions were held too
broad in: People v Yusko, 45 AD2d 1043 [2d Dept 1974] [dangerous drugs]; People v
Giordano, 72 AD2d 550 [2d Dept 1979] [any other contraband]; People v Conte, 159
AD2d 993 [4th Dept 1990] [other contraband]; People v Price, 204 AD2d 753 [3d Dept
42
1994] [grab what you think pertinent quaint and trusting, but overbroad]; People v
Couser, 303 AD2d 981 [4th Dept 2003] [papers of defendant relating to a specific
homicide]; United States v Brown, 984 F2d 1074, 1077 [10th Cir. 1993] [other items "the
officers determine or have reasonable belief [are] stolen"]).
On the other hand, warrants that qualified include People v Sinatra, 102 AD2d 189
(2d Dept 1984) (handguns, rifles, narcotics, and narcotics paraphenalia); People v De
Meo, 123 AD2d 879 (2d Dept 1986) (drugs"); People v Augustine, 235 AD2d 915 (3d Dept
1997) (gambling records); People v Graham, 69 AD2d 544 (3d Dept 1979), vacated on
other grounds 446 US 932 (1980), mod on other grounds 76 AD2d 228 (3d Dept 1980)
(other evidence of a specific homicide); see also People v Lanier, 54 NY2d 725 (1981);
People v Ashley, 2 AD3d 1321 (4th Dept 2003) (vehicle adequately described); People v
Welch, 2 AD3d 1354 (4th Dept 2003) (controlled substance sufficiently described). For a
catalog of decisions, see 2 LaFave Search and Seizure, 4.6, at 549-583 (3d ed); see also
Annotation, 94 L Ed 813; B. Kamins, New York Search & Seizure, at 288-291 (14th ed
2004).
If the warrant fails to specify adequately the material to be seized, thereby leaving
the scope of the seizure to the discretion of the executing officer, it will be unconstitutionally
overbroad (see Marron v United States, 275 US 192 [1927]; see also Groh v Ramirez, __
US __, 124 S Ct 1284 [2004]). Obscenity search warrants have frequently suffered from
this infirmity (see e.g. People v Rothenberg, 20 NY2d 35 [1967]).
The Court of Appeals has held that a search warrant that is overbroad in describing
the property to be seized may be severed, to allow seizure of items based on probable
cause (see People v Brown, 96 NY2d 80, 85-88 [2001]; People v Couser, 303 AD2d 981
43
FOOTNOTE 16
MERE EVIDENCE -- CONTRABAND -- PLAIN VIEW
Authorities may search for stolen property (CPL 690.10[1]), for contraband (i.e.
property unlawfully possessed) (CPL 690.10[2]), and for instrumentalities of a crime (CPL
44
690.10[3]). The Supreme Court has held that property consisting of evidence tending to
show the commission of a crime ("mere evidence") may also be seized constitutionally
(CPL 690.10[4]). See Warden v Hayden (387 US 294 [1967]), which eliminated the
distinction between criminal "instrumentalities" and "mere evidence" (e.g. sneakers
seizable as evidence in People v Thomas, 188 AD2d 569 [2d Dept 1992]) (see also
Andresen v Maryland, 427 US 463 [1976]).
When executing a valid search warrant, officers properly seized contraband not
mentioned in the warrant but in plain view (see People v Brown, 96 NY2d 80 [2001];
People v Hardwick, 137 AD2d 714 [2d Dept 1988]; People v Matos, 94 AD2d 950 [4th Dept
1983]; People v Tangney, 306 AD2d 360 [2d Dept 2003]).
Plain view contemplates an inadvertent observation of contraband by officers
lawfully in a position to observe what they observe (Coolidge v New Hampshire, 403 US
443, 465-472 [1971]; Horton v California, 496 US 128, 136 [1990]; People v Brown, 96
NY2d 80, 89 [2001]; People v Diaz, 81 NY2d 106, 110 [1993]; People v Farmer, 198 AD2d
805 [4th Dept 1993]). The court upheld the seizure of inadvertently observed mere
evidence during a lawful search for other objects in People v Watson (100 AD2d 452, 4623 [2d Dept 1984]; see also People v Christopher, 101 AD2d 504, 528 [4th Dept 1984], revd
on other grounds 65 NY2d 417 [1985]). See Annotation, Seizure of Books, Documents
and Other Papers Under Search Warrant Not Describing Such Items, 54 ALR4th 391. If
the items character is not obviously criminal, the police should acquire a second search
warrant, according to People v McCullars (174 AD2d 118 [3d Dept 1992]). See also
Discussion Item # 11, securing the scene pending a search warrant.
45
FOOTNOTE 17
REQUIREMENT FOR FACTUAL RECITATION OF
SPECIFIC ACTS OF CRIME
In describing the alleged crime, a factual recitation of specific acts is required. It will
not do to simply allege that the target is violating section "XYZ" of the Penal Law or the like.
Such conclusory assertions, standing alone, have not survived attack in People v Politano,
17 AD2d 503 [3d Dept 1962], affd 13 NY2d 852 [1963] and People v Hendricks, 45 Misc
2d 7 [Sup Ct, Queens County 1965], affd 30 AD2d 640 [2d Dept 1968], rev'd on other
grounds 25 NY2d 129 [1969].
adequately spelled out, a court has held it unnecessary to recite the section of the law
violated (United States v Averell, 296 F Supp 1004, 1014 [ED NY 1969]).
FOOTNOTE 18
POLICE DEPONENT -- DIRECT, KNOWLEDGEABLE OBSERVATIONS -RELIABILITY
Many, or even most, applications are based upon direct police observation or
knowledge, together with evidence supplied by informants. Note that the special skills or
background of a police officer deponent have contributed to findings of probable cause.
46
In People v Germaine (87 AD2d 848 [2d Dept 1982]), the expertise of a narcotics squad
detective was made a part of the search warrant application in an affidavit which
"translated" code words used by suspected narcotics traffickers during telephone
conversations lawfully intercepted pursuant to an eavesdropping warrant. The court held
that the magistrate properly considered and evaluated this evidence to find reasonable
cause to support the issuance of the warrant. Observations by police of football betting
sheets and systematic transportation of bundles of paper, established probable cause in
People v Contento (105 AD2d 918 [3d Dept 1984]).
Establishing reliability of the police deponent was held unnecessary, for the veracity
of government agentsunlike confidential informantscould be relied upon with relative
assurance when based on personal observations or communications from fellow officers
(see United States v Ventresca, 380 US 102 [1965]; People v Montague, 19 NY2d 121,
122-23 [1967]; People v Brown, 40 NY2d 183, 186 [1976]; People v Robinson, __ AD3d
__, 2004 NY App Div Lexis 8538 [1st Dept, June 14, 2004]; People v Slater, 173 AD2d
1024 [3d Dept 1991]; People v Cuyler, 44 AD2d 881 [3d Dept 1974]; People v
Contompasis, 108 AD2d 1077 [3d Dept 1985]) (Aguilar-Spinelli does not apply when a
warrant is based on a police officers direct observations). (Accord People v Rivenburgh,
1 AD3d 696 [3d Dept 2003]; People v Telesco, 207 AD2d 920 [2d Dept 1994]; People v
Gaviria, 183 AD2d 913 [2d Dept 1992]; People v Londono, 148 AD2d 753 [2d Dept 1989]).
Search warrants have been upheld based on facts "incorporated by reference" that
are contained in an earlier application. Search warrant #1 was issued for location X.
Before executing the warrant, police were able, by lawful observation, to tie the defendant
to location #2. The evidence submitted for warrant #1 could properly be "incorporated by
47
reference" to support warrant #2, which authorized the search of location #2. To do this
properly, the earlier application should be presented to the issuing judge (see People v
Tambe, 71 NY2d 492 [1988]).
Incorporation by reference was upheld in People v Cahill, 2 NY3d 14 (2003), and
People v Augustine, 235 AD2d 915 (3d Dept 1997). The affidavit incorporated by
reference in United States v Vesikuru, 314 F3d 1116 (9th Cir 2002), cured the warrant's
lack of particularity (see also United States v $92,422.57, 307 F3d 137 [3d Cir 2002];
United States v Thomas, 263 F3d 805 [8th Cir 2001]).
A showing of reasonable cause to believe that particular property may be found at
a particular place is the central requirement of a search warrant application (CPL 690.35
[2]). Where the facts described in the affidavit were as susceptible of innocence as they
are of guilt, the warrant failed (see People v Dantzig, 40 AD2d 576 [4th Dept 1972]), as
where the allegations consist merely of the single assertion that "LSD users and sellers are
frequenting [a designated house]" (People v Dumper, 28 NY2d 296 [1971]) or that known
gamblers were entering premises that contained unlisted telephones (see People v Fino,
14 NY2d 160 [1964]), or that two men who had been arrested for gambling offenses 16
years before were meeting in daylight hours on a residential street and exchanging a brown
paper bag (see People v Germano, 91 AD2d 1137 [3d Dept 1983]).
The warrant is to be judged in terms of the proof proffered and, absent deception,
courts have held that there is no requirement to include exculpatory evidence in a search
warrant application (see Seigel v. City of Germantown, 25 Fed Appx 249 [6th Cir 2001];
Mays v City of Dayton, 134 F3d 809 [6th Cir 1998]; United States v Krech, 1990 US App
Lexis 18895 [9th Cir 1990]; United States v Wolfe, 375 F Supp 949 [ED Pa 1974]).
48
FOOTNOTE 19
MANNER OF ACQUISITION OF PROOF
The affiants allegations of facts in support of probable cause may of course be
made on personal knowledge (CPL 690.35 [c]; see e.g. People v Badia, 232 AD2d 241 [1st
Dept 1996]), but they must be under oath to establish probable cause (see People v Lalli,
43 NY2d 729 [1977]). How the police acquire personal knowledge is sometimes open to
question. Courts have upheld convictions where an officer gained the facts by "window
peeking" in support of a search warrant (see People v Lucente, 39 AD2d 1003 [3d Dept
1972]). But the officer must have a right to be at the location at the time of the observation
(see People v Costanzo, 14 NY2d 596 [1964] [search warrant for betting paraphernalia
issued on information about conversation overheard by police]; see also People v Spinelli,
35 NY2d 77 [1974]). A search warrant based on an aerial viewing was valid (People v
Reynolds, 71 NY2d 552 [1988]) but not where the land was fenced or had signs posted to
impart privacy (People v Scott, 79 NY2d 474 [1992]).
Use or exploitation of illegal evidence to acquire search warrant
In Scott, a search warrant based directly on illegally acquired evidence failed (79
NY2d 474 [1992] [acquisition of marijuana sample based on illegal entry on to "open fields"
poisoned the search warrant which was based on the sample]; see also People v Guins,
165 AD2d 549, 553 [4th Dept 1991], citing Wong Sun v United States, 371 US 471 [1963];
see also People v Soto, 96 AD2d 741 [4th Dept 1983]; People v Jackson, 235 AD2d 923
[3d Dept 1997]). This is to be contrasted with the federal rule (Oliver v United States, 466
US 170 [1984]) in which neither the construction of fences nor signs will create an
49
expectation of privacy in open fields beyond curtilage (see United States v Scott, 975 F2d
927 [1st Cir 1992]). See also Annotation, Supreme Court's Development of "Open Fields
Doctrine" With Respect To Fourth Amendment Search and Seizure Protections, 80 L Ed
2d 860; Annotation, Aerial Observation or Surveillance as Violative of Fourth Amendment
Guaranty Against Unreasonable Search and Seizure, 56 ALR Fed 772.
Evidence produced by a search warrant based on an illegal wiretap will be
suppressed (see People v Brenes, 42 NY2d 41 [1977]; People v Fino, 29 AD2d 227 [4th
Dept 1968], affd 24 NY2d 1020 [1969]).
A hearing is necessary to determine whether reasonable cause for the search
warrant was derived solely from the fruits of an invalid wiretap or if there was independent
evidence supporting the search warrant (see People v Capolongo, 85 NY2d 151, 166
[1995]; see also People v Harris, 62 NY2d 706 [1984]). While a search warrant based on
an illegal wiretap will be nullified, a violation of the wiretap sealing requirements (CPL
700.50 [2]) which occurred after the search warrant issuance did not invalidate the warrant
(see People v McGuire, 109 AD2d 921 [3d Dept 1985]; see also People v Weiss, 48 NY2d
988 [1980]).
The issue will generally turn on whether officials got the information by an invasion
of privacy within the meaning of Katz v United States (389 US 347 [1967]). See, for
example, People v Price (78 AD2d 24 [4th Dept 1981]), holding that there is no reasonable
expectation of privacy in baggage transported by plane; therefore a search warrant for
luggage was valid though obtained after a police dog sniffed luggage and detected drugs.
The independent source rule. Evidence from a search warrant obtained when
police illegally entered defendants premises was not suppressed where lawful evidence
50
was gathered independent of the illegal entry (see People v Robertson, 48 NY2d 993
[1980]; People v Arnau, 58 NY2d 27 [1982]; People v Lee, 58 NY2d 771 [1982]; People
v Plevy, 52 NY2d 58 [1980]; People v Harris, 62 NY2d 706 [1984]; People v Seidita, 49
NY2d 75 [1980]; People v Burr, 70 NY2d 354 [1981]). See generally Murray v. United
States, 487 US 533 (1988).
Search warrants have been upheld when the lawful information was gained
independent of the unlawfully acquired information (see People v Vonderhyde, 114 AD2d
479 [2d Dept 1985]; People v Pizzichillo, 144 AD2d 589 [2d Dept 1988]; People v
Woodward, 127 AD2d 929 [3d Dept 1987]; People v Thorne, 275 AD2d 681 [1st Dept
2000]). If the illegally obtained evidence forms the sole basis for the search warrant, the
fruits of the search will be suppressed (see People v Cirrincione, 207 AD2d 1031 [4th Dept
1994]; People v Polanco, 203 AD2d 942 [4th Dept 1994]).
Where evidence was seized before the search warrant was obtained and was
come at by exploitation of the illegal police activity, the independent source rule was
inapplicable and the evidence suppressed (People v Soto, 96 AD2d 741 [4th Dept 1983]).
In People v Van Luven (96 AD2d 805 [1st Dept 1983]), the search was upheld where
(according to the concurring opinion) the warrant was based not on an illegal intrusion but
on information defendant voluntarily furnished before he knew that police opened the
locker and were aware that guns were inside.
In People v Rossi (80 NY2d 952 [1992]), the court allowed the evidence acquired
by the search warrant, but barred evidence linking the defendant to it as illegally obtained.
See generally Comment Note, "Fruit of the Poisonous Tree" Doctrine Excluding
Evidence Derived From Information Gained in Illegal Search, 43 ALR3d 385.
51
FOOTNOTE 20
STALENESS
If the facts are not reasonably recent, the warrant may suffer from staleness (see
Sgro v United States, 287 US 206 [1932]). Two types of issues arise: (1) the deponent's
or informant's clarity as to when he saw what he says he saw and (2) the affiant's recital
of the dates, whether or not an informant used. When the crime is an isolated one- - as
opposed to a continuing enterprise- - there is a more pressing duty to act (see People v
Glen, 30 NY2d 252 [1972]).
It is critical for the officer to learn from the informant (and to recite) the date the
informant claims to have seen what he saw. That the informant communicated the information recently is not the test. Sometimes the date of the informants observation may be
gleaned from a fair reading (see People v Brandon, 38 NY2d 814 [1975]; People v Hanlon,
36 NY2d 549 [1975]; see also People v Engle, 68 AD2d 915 [2d Dept 1979] [affidavit for
search warrant based on information supplied by an informant failed to specify the date the
informer saw the drugs in defendant's possession, raising the possibility that the
information was stale. A hearing was ordered to determine whether a "confidential
affidavit" of the informant specified a date and if in fact the issuing court read the "confidential affidavit" before issuing the warrant]).
A search warrant was not stale when issued several hours after the officer had for
the first time seen stolen property in the defendant's apartment; it is immaterial that the
officer began his investigation of the burglary involving this particular property almost two
months earlier (see People v Burke, 53 AD2d 802 [3d Dept 1976]). A search warrant
issued on May 2 was not stale where it was based on a police officer's affidavit alleging
52
that informants had told him in the latter part of April that the defendant was continuously
selling narcotics (see People v De Luca, 54 AD2d 1061 [3d Dept 1976]).
In People v McCants (59 AD2d 999 [3d Dept 1977]), police did not execute a search
warrant because defendant had left town. They made a new application on the same
affidavit eleven days later. The second search warrant was not stale since "[t]he
information which was the basis of the warrants was quite detailed and indicated frequent
illicit drug activity by defendant. In view of the fact that the delay was only 11 days and was
caused by the defendant's absence, his present claim [of staleness] is without merit" (id.
at 1000).
9 were not so far removed from the October 20 search warrant date as to be considered
stale in People v Padilla (132 AD2d 578 [2d Dept 1987]). The court found no staleness,
despite lengthy periods, owing to on-going events in Town of East Hampton v Omabuild
USA (215 AD2d 746 [2d Dept 1995]). Staleness arguments were rejected in People v
Mallory (234 AD2d 913 [4th Dept 1996] [crime of a continuing nature]; People v Gilfus, 4
AD2d 788 [4th Dept 2004] [same]). Similar arguments were rejected despite three-year
delay, holding that staleness depends on the nature of the crime (United States v Wright,
343 F3d 849 [6th Cir 2003]). The courts found no staleness in United States v Pinson (321
F3d 558 [6th Cir 2003]) and United States v Leisure (319 F3d 1092 [9th Cir 2003]).
Evidence was, however, stale in People v Acevedo (175 AD2d 323 [3d Dept 1991])
(two months) and in People v Rodriguez (303 AD2d 783 [3d Dept 2003] (see also People
v Beaufort-Cutner, 190 AD2d 992 [4th Dept 1993] [stale as to some, but not others]).
An affidavit of April 22nd based on April 10th and April 13th admissions freshened
stale information that a friend of defendant saw defendants rifle a year earlier (see People
v Christopher, 101 AD2d 504, 528 [4th Dept 1984], revd on other grounds 65 NY2d 417
[1985]).
The failure to include the dates of the officers observation does not invalidate the
warrant if a common-sense reading of the papers implies close proximity in time (People
v Sinatra, 102 AD2d 189, 191 [2d Dept 1984], citing United States v La Monte, 455 F Supp
952 [ED Penn 1978]; United States v Ciaccio, 356 F Supp 1373 [D Md 1972]; People v
Walker, 285 AD2d 660 [3d Dept 2001]) Practicalities dictate whether property will still be
there based on the nature of the evidence.
See also Annotation, When Are Facts Relating to Marijuana, Provided By Police or
54
FOOTNOTE 21
SPECIFICITY OF LOCATION
It is important to specify that there is (i.e. why there is) reasonable ground to believe
that the objects to be seized relate to the particular crime and will be found at a specified
location or locations (see People v Robinson, 68 NY2d 541 [1986]).
55
FOOTNOTE 22
RELIABILITY OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMANT
CPL 690.35 (3) (c) provides that allegations of fact in support of a search warrant
may be based on information and belief if the sources of such information and the grounds
of such belief are stated. Often this type of proof involves informants.
It is elementary that an affidavit for a search warrant may be based upon hearsay
founded on informants account (see Aguilar v Texas, 378 US 108 [1964]; Spinelli v United
States, 393 US 410 [1969]; Draper v United States, 358 US 307 [1959]). That the
information is even hearsay on hearsay did not necessarily preclude its use in determining
probable cause (see People v Watson, 100 AD2d 452, 462n [2d Dept 1984]; People v
Bush, 266 AD2d 642 [3d Dept 1999]; People v Simon, 107 AD2d 196 [4th Dept 1985];
United States v Fiorella, 468 F 2d 688 [2d Cir 1972]; United States v McCoy, 478 F2d 176
[10th Cir 1973]). It all (as they say) depends. See Annotation, Propriety of Considering
Hearsay or Other Incompetent Evidence in Establishing Probable Cause for Issuance of
Search Warrant, 10 ALR3d 359
Search warrant law involves a debate over what constitutes sufficiently reliable
hearsay. In Illinois v Gates (462 US 213 [1983]), the Supreme Court held that in assessing
its value, the informant's veracity, reliability and basis of knowledge are all highly relevant,
but need not be rigidly applied in every case. Gates expressly overruled both Aguilar v
Texas (378 US 108 [1964]), and Spinelli v United States (393 US 410 [1969]), to the extent
they required that these tests must always be satisfied.
In People v Griminger (71 NY2d 635 [1988]) however, the Court of Appeals,
applying state constitutional law, determined to continue the Aguilar-Spinelli two-prong test,
56
as to (1) informant's reliability and (2) basis of informant's knowledge. The Court chose to
do so even though Gates allows a "totality of circumstances" test which is an easier
standard to satisfy. The Court of Appeals had previously rejected the Gates approach and
maintained Aguilar-Spinelli in evaluating warrantless searches (see People v Johnson, 66
NY2d 398 [1985]).
The Court in People v Bigelow (66 NY2d 417 [1985]) also declined to follow the
federal "good faith exception" to the search warrant analysis of United States v Leon (468
US 897 [1984]).
The Aguilar-Spinelli test did not apply to cases in which the information constituting
probable cause for the warrant was derived from firsthand knowledge of the police officer
applicant (see People v Contompasis, 108 AD2d 1077 [3d Dept 1985]), or fellow officer
(see People v Rivenburgh, 1 AD3d 696 [3d Dept 2003]).
An informant's reliability was satisfied by the deponent's assertion that the informant
has, in the past, supplied facts leading to specific arrests and convictions (see People v
Cerrato, 24 NY2d 1 [1969]; People v Montague, 19 NY2d 121 [1967]; People v Rogers, 15
NY2d 422 [1965]). Under United States v Harris (403 US 573 [1971]), reliability may be
established by a number of other means, including the magistrate's reliance on information
given under oath, that the statements were against the informant's penal interest, and that
two or more informants tended to confirm the information which each gave (see People v
Wheatman, 29 NY2d 337, 345 [1971]).
An informant's reliability based upon information previously provided need not have
resulted in a conviction; it was enough that the past information led to arrests (see People
v West, 92 AD2d 620 [3d Dept 1983] reversed on other grounds, 62 NY2d 708 [1984]).
57
[1992]; People v Edwards, 95 NY2d 486 [2000]; People v Binns, 299 AD2d 651 [3d Dept
2002]; People v Bell, 299 AD2d 582 [3d Dept 2002]; People v Allen, 298 AD2d 856 [4th
Dept 2002]; People v Laughing, 288 AD2d 885 [4th Dept 2001]; People v Morton, 288
AD2d 557 [3d Dept 2001] [reliability prong satisfied]; People v Williams, 284 AD2d 564 [3d
Dept 2001]; People v Brown, 267 AD2d 874 [3d Dept 1999]; People v Park, 266 AD2d 913
[4th Dept 1999]; People v Bush, 266 AD2d 642 [3d Dept 1999]; People v Pratt, 266 AD2d
318 [2d Dept 1999] [informant produced]; People v Hines, 262 AD2d 423 [2d Dept 1999];
People v Christopher, 258 AD2d 662 [2d Dept 1999] [informant produced, therefore,
Aguilar-Spinelli inapplicable]; People v Walker, 257 AD2d 769 [3d Dept 1999]; People v
Shetler, 256 AD2d 1234 [4th Dept 1998] [informant produced]; People v Calise, 256 AD2d
64 [1st Dept 1998]; People v Tyrell, 248 AD2d 747 [3d Dept 1998]; People v Walker, 244
AD2d 796 [3d Dept 1997] [informant produced]; People v Hazel, 92 AD2d 691 [3d Dept
1983] [information from two undisclosed informants and some personal corroboration by
detectives]; People v Davis, 93 AD2d 970 [3d Dept 1983] [informant, personal
observations]; People v Brown, 95 AD2d 569 [3d Dept 1983] [citizen informant case];
People v Demers, 96 AD2d 714 [4th Dept 1983] [the source of knowledge of the Ontario
police officer who transmitted information to New York police, was undisclosed, but
sufficiently confirmed by police observation]; People v Levy, 97 AD2d 800 [2d Dept 1983]
[Aguilar-Spinelli, satisfied, based on informants past performance and his personal
knowledge]; People v Marinelli, 100 AD2d 597 [2d Dept 1984] [based on a sworn
statement from an identified person, on personal knowledge with some police
confirmation]; People v Santana, 106 AD2d 523 [2d Dept 1984]; People v Murray, 233
AD2d 95 [4th Dept 1996]; People v Davis, 146 AD2d 942 [3d Dept 1989]).
59
The difficulty with unnamed informants is the fear frequently expressed by courts
that the "informant" is nonexistent (see People v Verrecchio, 23 NY2d 489 [1969]). This
fear may be dispelled by production of the (anonymous) informant before the magistrate
(see Footnote 25), but even production of the informant before a prosecutor would go a
long way toward establishing the informant's existence and reliability (see e.g. People v
Malinsky, 15 NY2d 86 [1965]; People v Coffey, 12 NY2d 443, 452 [1963]; cf. People v
Salgado, 57 NY2d 662 [1982] [no need to produce informant at hearing on warrant where
he testified under oath before the issuing magistrate and transcript was presented at
hearing]).
The Aguilar-Spinelli reliability prong was not established in People v Rivera (283
AD2d 202 [1st Dept 2001]) when court did not meet informant. In People v Martinez (80
NY2d 549 [1992]), the search warrant was struck down and evidence suppressed where
the viewing judge did not examine the confidential informant, the affidavit of the confidential
informant was merely signed "confidential informant," and the police did not adequately
specify the reasons for the confidential informant's reliability (i.e. past results, independent
verification) (see People v Dukes (245 AD2d 1052 [4th Dept 1997]) (Aguilar-Spinelli not
satisfied); accord People v McGriff, 130 AD2d 141 [1st Dept 1987]).
Aguilar-Spinelli decisional law will not always invalidate search warrants in which the
confidential informant's recitations are based on less than personal knowledge. The
problem with relying on informant's second-hand information is that it is hearsay-onhearsay and is obviously far weaker than when the confidential informant relays first-hand
knowledge.
information although not based on personal knowledge the search warrant may meet
60
the Aguilar-Spinelli test. The caveat is that the informant's second-hand information must
bear compelling indicia of reliability (see e.g. Spinelli v US, 393 US 410, 416; People v
Parris, 83 NY2d 342 [1994]; United States v Spach, 518 F2d 866, 869 [7th Cir 1975];
United States v McCoy, 478 F2d 176, 178-179 [10th Cir 1973]; United States v Smith, 462
F2d 456, 459 {8th Cir 1972]).
See generally Note, Proof of Informer's Reliability in Probable Cause Affidavits, 85
Harv L Rev 53 (1971); Note, The Undisclosed Informant and the Fourth Amendment:A
Search for Meaningful Standards, 81 Yale LJ 703 (1972); Annotation, Sufficiency of
Affidavit for Search Warrant Based on Affiant's Belief, Based in Turn on Information,
Investigation, Etc., By One Whose Name Is Not Disclosed, 14 ALR2d 605.
FOOTNOTE 23
BASIS OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMANTS KNOWLEDGE
A frequent ground on which search warrants are vacated is the applicants failure
to describe how the informant acquired the information (basis of informants knowledge).
This infirmity was fatal in People v Wright (37 NY2d 88 [1975]); People v Hendricks (25
NY2d 129 [1969]); People v Mitchell, (24 NY2d 952 [1969]); and People v Powers (37
AD2d 678 [4th Dept 1971]).
Although Federal courts use the "totality" test in Illinois v Gates (462 US 213 [1983])
and the "good faith" test in United States v Leon (468 US 897 [1984]), New York (under
its State constitution) continues to follow the stricter Aguilar-Spinelli test (see People v
Johnson, 66 NY2d 398 [1985] [declining Gates]; see also People v Griminger, 71 NY2d
61
635 [1988]; People v Bigelow, 66 NY2d 417 [1985] [declining Leon]; People v Edwards,
95 NY2d 486 [2000], People v DiFalco, 80 NY2d 693 [1993]).
The basis of the informant's information must set it apart from the category of rumor
(see People v Hendricks, 25 NY2d 129 [1969], citing Draper, 358 US 307 [1959]) making
it clear that the informant is speaking from first-hand knowledge (see People v Hanlon, 36
NY2d 549 [1975]; People v Munger, 24 NY2d 445 [1969]; People v Scavone, 59 AD2d 62
[3d Dept 1977]).
Where the police observation did not establish probable cause, a mere tip from an
informer that did not state the underlying circumstances forming the basis for the
informant's conclusion (that the defendant is engaged in criminal activity) was not a
sufficient basis for a search warrant (People v Wirchansky, 41 NY2d 130 [1976]; see also
People v Germano, 91 AD2d 1137 [3d Dept 1983] [defendant's 16 year-old conviction
could not bolster officer's observations to the point where probable cause is established;
but see People v Weygant, 79 AD2d 667 [2d Dept 1980] [warrant to search premises for
evidence of illegal gambling was supported by probable cause where it was based on (1)
informant's tip; (2) defendant's criminal reputation; and (3) police officers' observations of
known gamblers engaging in behavior consistent with a policy scheme]).
In People v Sall (295 AD2d 812 [3d Dept 2002]), the search warrant was upheld
based on an affidavit by defendant's roommate as to the existence and location of
contraband. The search warrant was also upheld in People v Walker (257 AD2d 769 [3d
Dept 1999]) on the basis of informant's knowledge (see also People v McQueen,
__ AD3d __ [4th Dept 2004]).
First-hand observations by an informant that youths were going into defendant's
62
apartment and buying drugs established the reliability of the information in People v
Ambrozak (54 AD2d 735 [2d Dept 1976]; see also People v Hitt, 61 AD2d 857 [3d Dept
1978]). An affidavit which set forth an informant's firsthand observations of defendant's
criminal activity (but did not specify the dates on which the informant made these
observations) established probable cause where the affiant police officer personally made
observations corroborating those of the informant's (see People v Brandon, 38 NY2d 814
[1975]).
The informant's information was amply corroborated by the police supervision of his
drug purchases and the independent investigation by police into defendant's criminal
activity in People v Thomas, 78 AD2d 940 (3d Dept 1980).
established by the informant's statements that he personally saw "a lot of marihuana in
cardboard boxes" in the closet in the living room, that he saw it the night before the
application for a warrant was made, that he bought some marihuana from one of the
defendants at that time, and that he knew that he would go to jail if his statement was false
(People v Sullivan, 101 Misc 2d 526 [Albany County Ct 1979], affd 82 AD2d 997 [3d Dept
1981], affd 56 NY2d 378 [1982]). Where an informant is less than convincing, a confession
of the codefendant attached to the warrant application provided sufficient added
information to establish probable cause (see People v Everett, 60 AD2d 693 [3d Dept
1977]).
The "basis of knowledge" test (Aguilar-Spinelli's second prong) was not met in
People v Parris (83 NY2d 342 [1994]), where the officer's characterization of "eyewitness"
was conclusory. Parris was not a search warrant case, but the Aguilar-Spinelli standard
applies. The basis of knowledge" test was also not met in People v Edwards (69 NY2d
63
814 [1987]), or in People v Wright (37 NY2d 88 [1975]) where the affidavit in support of the
search warrant did not indicate how the informant knew that defendant had been given a
pistol nor did it state when or where it had happened.
The ordinary citizen who provides the authorities with information is not as inherently
suspicious as police informants (see People v Hicks, 38 NY2d 90, 93-4 [1975]; People v
Robertson, 61 AD2d 600 [1st Dept 1978], affd, 48 NY2d 993 [1980]). Hence, the stringent
reliability tests devised for unidentified-informants are not necessary in cases of named,
eyewitness-informants. Their information, however, must be based on personal knowledge
or on proof that otherwise satisfies Aguilar-Spinelli. For a discussion of citizen-informants,
see Footnotes 28 and 29, infra.
FOOTNOTE 24
VERIFICATION OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMANT'S ASSERTIONS
Assertions by informants are most effectively enhanced by police corroboration. An
informant's "tip" that the defendant was engaged in gambling activities was, however, not
sufficiently corroborated by police officers's observations of the defendant's repeated
entrance into and exit from an apartment building every day of one week since (1) the
police officer affiant did not allege the underlying circumstances upon which the informant
based his conclusion that the defendant was engaged in gambling activities and (2) the
only fact alleged by the police officer affiant to support his observations was that the
defendant was reputed to be a gambler (People v Wirchansky, 41 NY2d 130 [1976]; see
also People v Yedvobnik, 48 NY2d 910 [1979]), where the Court held that the affidavit in
support of the search warrant was not sufficient when it stated only that the informant had
64
previously supplied accurate information and had told the police that defendant was
conducting a bookmaking operation. The affidavit failed to demonstrate probable cause
to believe that contraband could be found in the apartment to be searched. Neither
observation by police of defendant exiting the apartment at a time informant told police
operations closed for the day nor defendant's reputation as a known bookmaker served to
raise informant's information to a sufficient showing of reasonable cause (cf. People v
Germano, 91 AD2d 1137 [3d Dept 1983]). Informant's observations were confirmed by
independent proof in People v Jenkins (184 AD2d 585 [2d Dept 1992]).
The reliability prong of Aguilar-Spinelli was satisfied in People v Lavere (236 AD2d
809 [4th Dept 1997]). The affidavit of the military police investigator was presumed reliable;
the informant's reliability was established through evidence that he participated in a
"controlled buy" from the defendant.
An informant's "tip" was corroborated where the police officer affiant personally
observed the defendant enter the premises where the informant had said that the heroin
was stored and exit with a glassine envelope containing a white powder (see People v
Scavone, 59 AD2d 62 [3d Dept 1977]). Similarly, the warrant was valid where police
searched the informant to insure that he did not possess drugs and then observed him
purchase drugs from the defendant (People v Hitt, 61 AD2d 857 [3d Dept 1978]).
The informant was sufficiently corroborated where (1) he was present when the
defendant went to certain premises, returned with heroin and gave the informant a phone
number to call if he wished to purchase more heroin and (2) the police checked that phone
number and determined it was listed to the premises where the informant had observed
the defendant go to "make the buy" (People v Carmichael, 61 AD2d 411 [4th Dept 1978]).
65
The Aguilar-Spinelli test was satisfied for a warrant issued to search a car lot although the
informant did not give basis for his belief that cars were stolen, the affiant officer stated that
he had undertaken surveillance of the car lot and had independently observed the
presence of late-model automobiles with missing license plates and punched out trunk
locks, and had seen cut-up late model cars being loaded on a flat-bed truck (People v
Maldonado, 80 AD2d 563 [2d Dept 1981]).
The informant's information was satisfactorily corroborated where he was searched,
sent into the target premises, and returned with the contraband (see People v
Backenstross, 73 AD2d 796 [4th Dept 1979]; see also People v Davis, 146 AD2d 942 [3d
Dept 1989]).
A statement concerning the experience of the observing officers in narcotics
investigations strengthened a claim of probable cause (see People v McRay, 51 NY2d 594
[1980]), but was mandatory in United States v Doty, 714 F2d 761 [8th Cir 1983]; see also
People v Sinatra, 102 AD2d 189 [2d Dept 1984]).
FOOTNOTE 25
INFORMANTS DECLARATIONS AGAINST PENAL INTEREST
United States v Harris (403 US 573 [1971]) upholds the validity of declarations
against penal interest as a legitimate basis for assessing the reliability of the informant's
assertions. Declarations against penal interest established reliability in People v Tune
(103 AD2d 990 [3d Dept 1984]) and People v Harwood (90 AD2d 923 [3d Dept 1982]).
See also People v Comforto (62 NY2d 725 [1984]) (informant under arrest, would not lie
and further exacerbate his predicament citing People v Rodriguez (52 NY2d 483, 490
66
[1981]; see also People v Bowers, 92 AD2d 669 [3d Dept 1983]; People v Wolzer, 41
AD2d 679 [3d Dept 1973]).
In People v Barcia (37 AD2d 612 [2d Dept 1971]), a possessor of drugs, upon
arrest, identified his supplier. The Court upheld a search warrant directed at the supplier
because the possessor's admissions, and the identification of the supplier were
declarations against penal interest. In People v Wheatman (29 NY2d 337, 345 [1971]),
the Court noted that the issuing judge may rely on the informant's declarations against
penal interest as an element in assessing reliability (see also People v Everett, 60 AD2d
693 [3d Dept 1977] [accomplice's detailed statement about defendant's use of the gun
sufficiently corroborated his reliability since the statement was against his penal interests].
Declaration against penal interest also supported search warrants in People v
Walker (257 AD2d 769 [3d Dept 1999]; People v Shetler, 256 AD2d 1234 [4th Dept 1998];
People v Morelock, 187 AD2d 756 [3d Dept 1992]). An accomplice's statements to the
police established probable cause in People v McCann (85 NY2d 951 [1995]) (see also
People v Sturgis, 177 AD2d 991 [4th Dept 1991]). In People v Lisk (216 AD2d 851 [3d
Dept 1995]), the accomplice's statement, as an admission against interest, contributed to
probable cause.
Note: Where an informant made two different statements, both against penal
interest, neither was credited over the other (People v Cadby, 62 AD2d 52 [4th Dept
1978]).
67
FOOTNOTE 26
SWORN TESTIMONY OR PRODUCTION OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMANT
In People v Wheatman (29 NY2d 337 [1971]), the Court of Appeals, in a different
context, stressed the value of sworn testimony as a means of establishing reliability.
Wheatman may thus be relied upon to establish reliability of an informant who, though
unidentified, is produced before the court, and sworn. See People v Hicks, (38 NY2d 90
[1975]) upholding a warrant on the sole ground that a named informant submitted a
detailed statement under oath. Reliability was ensured because the informant could be
prosecuted if his information was proven wilfully false Ibid. See also People v Salgado (57
NY2d 662 [1982]); People v Sullivan (56 NY2d 378 [1982]); People v Bradley, (181 AD2d
316 [1st Dept 1992]; People v Bartolomeo, 53 NY2d 225 [1981]). Thus, production of the
informant before the issuing magistrate serves to establish existence and reliability (People
v Serrano, 93 NY2d 73, 77 [1999]; People v Rodriguez, 182 AD2d 439 [1st Dept 1992];
See also People v Gilmore, 6 AD3d 748 [3d Dept 2004]; People v Walker, 244 AD2d 796
[3d Dept 1997] [Issuing magistrate heard testimony from both investigator and informant,
thus obviating need to establish informants reliability and basis of knowledge]; see also
People v Doyle, 222 AD2d 875 [3d Dept 1995] [Aguilar-Spinelli inapplicable when warrant
based on informants sworn statement, citing Bartolomeo]; see also People v Mendoza, 5
AD3d 810 [3d Dept 2004]).
The failure to record the informant's testimony, however, was fatal in People v
Taylor, 73 NY2d 683 [1989]; cf. People v Brown, 40 NY2d 183 [1976] [holding that an
unnamed informant's reliability was established because he was examined by the court
under oath prior to the issuance of the search warrant even though the examination of the
68
FOOTNOTE 27
FACTS NOT INCLUDED IN AFFIDAVITS BUT PRESENTED WHEN WARRANT IS
ISSUED -- METHOD OF RECORDING
CPL 690.40 (1) provides that in determining an application for a search warrant, the
court may examine, under oath, any person whom it believes has pertinent information.
The examination must be recorded or summarized on the record. Failure to comply
substantially with this provision resulted in suppression (see People v Taylor, 73 NY2d 683
[1989]). A tape recorder or court reporter is best. Although in several cases "literal
compliance" was not required (see People v Brown, 40 NY2d 183, 186-188 [1976]; People
v Cunningham, 221 AD2d 358 [2d Dept 1995]; People v Valdez-Rodrigues, 235 AD2d 627
[3d Dept 1997]; People v Miller, 187 AD2d 930 [4th Dept 1992]; People v Stewart, 159
AD2d 971 [4th Dept 1990]; People v Sullivan, 56 NY2d 378 [1982]; People v Dominique,
229 AD2d 719 [3d Dept 1996] affd 90 NY2d 880 [1997]; People v McGourty, 188 AD2d
679 [3d Dept 1992]; People v Lopez, 134 AD2d 456 [2d Dept 1987]), the use of informal,
sketchy notes is a risky, and possibly fatal practice, under Taylor (see People v Isenberg,
188 AD2d 1042 [4th Dept 1992]; People v Blair, 155 AD2d 676 [2d Dept 1989]). Court
applied "presumption of regularity" to issuing magistrate's failure to record oral testimony
69
under CPL 690.40 (1) (see People v Serrano, 93 NY2d 73 [1999], citing People v
Dominique, 90 NY2d 880 [1997]).
For federal counterpart, see Annotation, Federal Court Determination of Probable
Cause for Search Warrant: Consideration of Oral Testimony Which Was, in Addition to
Affidavit, Before Officer Who Issued Warrant, 24 ALR Fed 107.
It is also permissible to expand the proof at the time of the issuance of the warrant,
by presenting to the issuing judge any facts not included in the affidavit (see e.g. People
v Marshall, 13 NY2d 28 [1963]).
Moreover, at a suppression hearing to controvert the warrant, the prosecution was
barred from supplying other facts claimed to have been furnished to the issuing judge, but
not presented in the affidavit or recorded under oath (see People v Asaro, 34 AD2d 968
[2d Dept 1970]; but see People v Cerrato, 24 NY2d 1 [1969] [detective at suppression
hearing permitted to elaborate on his affidavit about illegal drug sellers frequenting the
apartment of the target of the stakeout]). In People v Fici, 114 AD2d 468 [2d Dept 1985],
the informant was produced, but not sworn where police had established probable cause.
CPL 690.35 permits a sworn oral application for a search warrant by telephone,
radio or other electronic communication. The applicant and any informants must be
examined by the judge under oath and the examination and all communications with the
judge must be recorded electronically or manually. (See Discussion Item13, infra; Cf.
Note, The Constitutionality of the Use of Unrecorded Oral Testimony to Establish Probable
Cause for Search Warrants, 70 Va L Rev 1603 [1984]).
Note: If the informant refuses to appear before the judge even anonymously, his
appearance before the prosecutor could help establish the informants existence and
70
reliability (see People v Malinsky, 15 NY2d 86, 93 [1965]; People v Coffey, 12 NY2d 443,
452 [1963]).
FOOTNOTE 28
CITIZEN-INFORMANT -- CRIME VICTIM
A number of cases stand for the proposition that citizen informants who act openly
and out of a desire to aid in enforcement of the law should be encouraged, and that less
rigid standards of testing reliability apply to them.
The reliability of the citizen-informant was established in that that she was not a
regular police informant but an identified member of the community who had personally
observed narcotics in the defendant's apartment, personally testified before the justice who
issued the warrant, and had signed a sworn affidavit (see People v Parliman, 56 AD2d 966
[3d Dept 1977]). Similarly, information given by three citizen informants who were victims
of defendant's sexual abuse justified the issuance of a search warrant to videotape a
possible attempt by defendant to sexually abuse an undercover policewoman (see People
v Teicher, 52 NY2d 638 [1981]). Information given by a citizen-informant, a relative of the
suspect, was reliable particularly when considered in conjunction with the accomplice's
confession (see People v Everett, 60 AD2d 693 [3d Dept 1977]). In People v McCulloch,
226 AD2d 848 [3d Dept 1996], the named informants signed statement supported
probable cause, taking the case out of the Aguilar-Spinelli requirements.
For other citizen-informant cases, see People v Hicks, 38 NY2d 90 (1975); People
v Brown, 40 NY2d 183, 186 (1976); People v Robertson, 61 AD2d 600 (1st Dept 1978),
affd 48 NY2d 993 (1980). A citizen informant was presumptively reliable in People v
71
Chipp, 75 NY2d 327, 339-340 [1990]; People v Bourdon, 258 AD2d 810 (3d Dept 1999);
People v Wilson, 284 AD2d 958 (4th Dept 2001); People v Brown, 95 AD2d 569 (3d Dept
1983); People v Simon, 107 AD2d 196 (4th Dept 1985); People v Allen, 209 AD2d 425 (2d
Dept 1994); see also People v Crowder, 198 AD2d 369 [2d Dept 1993]; People v Reid, 184
AD2d 668 [2d Dept 1992]; People v David, 234 AD2d 787 [3d Dept 1996]; People v Slater,
173 AD2d 1024 [3d Dept 1991]).
Aguilar-Spinelli test was satisfied even though the citizen may have been motivated by
non-altruistic considerations.
FOOTNOTE 29
ESTABLISHING RELIABILITY
The word of a decent citizen with no motive to lie may form the basis for a finding
of probable cause.
establishing the citizens responsibility and cooperation (see People v Ernest E., 38 AD2d
394 [2d Dept 1972]; People v Talutis, 39 AD2d 815 [3d Dept 1972]; People v Parliman, 56
AD2d 966 [3d Dept 1977].
FOOTNOTE 30
PRIOR RECORD OF SUSPECT
Although in United States v. Harris (403 US 573 [1971]), the Court ruled that the
suspect's reputation could be considered in assessing the reliability of an informant's tip,
a defendant's criminal reputation alone was held insufficient to corroborate the informant's
72
FOOTNOTE 31
NIGHTTIME (ANYTIME) SEARCH WARRANTS
A search warrant may be executed any day of the week, and only between the
hours of 6:00 A.M. and 9:00 P.M. (CPL 690.30 [2]). In order to authorize a nighttime
search (CPL 690.45 [6]), the warrant must contain certain allegations supporting the
exercise of the judge's discretion in making that provision (CPL 690.35 [4] [a]; 690.40 [2]).
But even if the nighttime authorization is inserted erroneously or without foundation, it will
not invalidate a warrant executed during the day (see People v Ferguson, 25 NY2d 728
[1969], cert. denied 399 US 935 [1970]; People v Costanzo, 14 NY2d 596 [1964]; People
v Varney, 32 AD2d 181 [2d Dept 1969]; People v Midgett, 86 Misc 2d 1003 [App Term 9th
& 10th Jud Dists 1976]).
The court suppressed the evidence in People v Acevedo (179 AD2d 813 [2d Dept
1992] [no basis for nighttime search]). In contrast, courts upheld anytime warrants in
People v Alston, 1 AD3d 627 (3d Dept 2003); People v Lee, 303 AD2d 839 (3d Dept 2003);
People v Bell, 299 AD2d 582 (3d Dept 2002); People v Ackerman, 237 AD2d 849 (3d Dept
1997); People v Roxby, 224 AD2d 864 (3d Dept 1996); People v Kane, 175 AD2d 881 (2d
Dept 1991); People v Israel, 161 AD2d 730 (2d Dept 1990). In People v Henderson (307
AD2d 746 [4th Dept 2003]), nighttime entry was upheld as authorized by court even
though nighttime entry was not requested (see also People v Rodriguez (270 AD2d 956
[ 4th Dept 2000]; People v Silverstein, 74 NY2d 768 [1989]).
Under decisional law a small degree of flexibility or informality is possible, in
73
connection with the "anytime" directive (see People v Crispell, 110 AD2d 926 [3d Dept
1985]), so that it will not be interpreted hypertechnically, but there is risk in not following
the format precisely. Moreover, if an ordinary search warrant is executed within the 6:00
A.M.-9:00 P.M. time frame, the search may lawfully extend beyond 9:00 P.M. (see People
v Vara, 117 AD2d 1013 [4th Dept 1986]). A nighttime execution was upheld owing to
readily destructible items (People v Conklin, 139 AD2d 156 [3d Dept 1988]; People v
Wollenberg, 123 AD2d 413 [2d Dept 1986]; People v Alston, 1 AD3d 627 [3d Dept 2003]).
Failure to meet statutory requirements will invariably lead to suppression of evidence
(see People v Izzo, 50 AD2d 905 [2d Dept 1975]; People v Tarallo, 48 AD2d 611 [1st Dept
1975]). On the other hand, courts will search supporting affidavits and testimony to uphold
such warrants in spite of technical or procedural defects if there is substantial adherence
to the statute.
In People v Arnow (108 Misc 2d 128 [Sup Ct, New York County 1981]), a failure to
include the phrase "nighttime execution" was not fatal to a search warrant, where the
affidavit of police officers requested permission to enter at night. Citing United States v
Searp (586 F2d 1117, 1125 [6th Cir 1978]), the court found that the "technical defect" of
the warrant -- the inadvertent exclusion of the phrase "nighttime execution" -- would "not
preclude a consideration and examination of the substance of the application for the
warrant" (108 Misc 2d at 132). The totality of circumstances demonstrated persuasively
that nighttime execution was "correct, proper and authorized" (Id. at 132). A similar result
was reached in People v Harris (47 AD2d 385 [4th Dept 1975]), where an express
nighttime entry was granted although not requested by affidavit, with the court finding the
explicit request for a no-knock entry to prevent destruction of contraband necessarily
74
incorporated a nighttime entry. On similar reasoning evidence was suppressed for failure
to establish in fact the necessity for a nighttime search (see People v Miller, 109 Misc 2d
276 [Crim Ct, New York County 1981]).
Where the search warrant was ambiguous as to its character as an all hours
warrant (CPL 690.35 [3] [a]), the court upheld a night-time execution where the justice
testified as to his intention to make it an all-hours warrant, and the exigencies call for it (see
People v Crispell, 110 AD2d 926 [3d Dept 1985]; see generally Annotation, Propriety of
Execution of Search Warrant at Nighttime, 41 ALR5th 171, for a 600-page treatment).
FOOTNOTE 32
NO-KNOCK WARRANTS
CPL 690.35 (4) (b) and 690.40 (2) allow entry without announcing authority or
purpose, if the court finds that the property is readily removable or destructible.
A no knock warrant was upheld, owing to possible physical injury or danger to
police in People v Israel, 161 AD2d 730 (2d Dept 1990). No-knock search warrants were
also upheld in People v Kusse, 288 AD2d 860 (4th Dept 2001); People v Roxby, 224 AD2d
864 (3d Dept 1996); People v Henderson, 307 AD2d 746 (4th Dept 2003); People v Lee,
303 AD2d 839 (3d Dept 2003); People v Bell, 299 AD2d 582 (3d Dept 2002); People v
Anderson, 291 AD2d 856 (4th Dept 2002); People v Skeete, 257 AD2d 426 (1st Dept
1999); People v Ackerman, 237 AD2d 849 (3d Dept 1997). See also Randall S. Bethune,
Note and Comment, The Exclusionary Rule and the Knock-and-Announce Violation:
Unreasonable Remedy for Otherwise Reasonable Search Warrant Execution, 22 Whittier
L Rev 879 [2001].
75
A warrant with a no-knock provision, obtained without complying with the procedures
mandated by CPL 690.35 and 690.40, is nevertheless valid if the invalid no-knock provision
was not utilized in the execution of the warrant (see People v Parliman, 56 AD2d 966 [3d
Dept 1977]).
Under former Code of Criminal Procedure 801, a substantially similar section,
courts have not strictly required proof by affidavit to support no-knock authorization, holding
that the nature of the contraband itself may enable the judge to notice judicially that the
items are readily capable of destruction or removal (see People v DeLago, 16 NY2d 289,
292 [1965] [gambling materials]; People v Horton, 32 AD2d 707 [3d Dept 1969] [whiskey,
beer, etc.]; People v Rose, 31 NY2d 1036 [1973] [narcotics]).
For Supreme Court jurisprudence, see United States v Banks, 540 US 31 (2003);
United States v Ramirez, 523 US 65 (1998); Richards v Wisconsin, 520 US 385 (1997);
Wilson v Arkansas, 514 US 927 (1995).
For treatises on no-knock search warrants, see Goddard, The Destruction of
Evidence Exception to the Knock and Announce Rule: A Call for Protection of Fourth
Amendment Rights, 75 Boston University L Rev 449; Garcia, The Knock and Announce
Rule: A New Approach to the Destruction-of-Evidence Exception, 93 Colum L Rev 685;
Josephson, Supreme Court Review: Fourth Amendment -- Must Police Knock and
Announce Themselves Before Kicking in the Door of a House?, 86 J Crim L 1229; Allegro,
Police Tactics, Drug Trafficking, and Gang Violence: Why the No-Knock Warrant is an Idea
Whose Time Has Come, 64 Notre Dame L Rev 552).
See Annotation, Sufficiency of Showing of Reasonable Belief of Danger to Officers
or Others Excusing Compliance With Knock and Announce" RequirementState Criminal
76
to Breaking Open Door or Window or Other Part of House to Execute Search Warrant, 21
ALR Fed 820; What Constitutes Compliance with Knock and Announce Rule in Search of
Private PremisesState Cases, 85 ALR5th 1; Annotation, Applicability and Application,
to Questions Concerning What Violates Federal Constitution's Fourth Amendment
Guarantee Against Unreasonable Searches and Seizures, of "Knock and Announce"
Doctrine that Law Enforcement Officers, Before Entering Premises, Must Knock and
Announce Some Matters Supreme Court Cases, 140 L Ed 2d 1111; Annotation,
Sufficiency of Showing to Support No-Knock Search Warrant Cases Decided After
Richards v. Wisconsin, 520 U.S. 385, 117 S. Ct. 1416, 137 L Ed 2d 615 (1997), 2003
ALR5th 6.
FOOTNOTE 33
DIRECTIVE FOR SEARCH AND SEIZURE
Pursuant to CPL 690.35 (3) (d), the application must contain a request for the court
to issue a warrant directing a search for, and seizure of, property or the person in question.
If the search warrant is for someone sought on the basis of an arrest warrant (CPL 690.05
[2] [b]), it is necessary to attach a copy of the arrest warrant and the underlying accusatory
instrument (CPL 690.35 [3] [e]).
FOOTNOTE 34
SEARCHING FOR SUSPECT IN THIRD PERSONS PREMISES
In 1991, the legislature amended the statute to allow authorities to search for a
78
person in someone elses premises (L 1991, at 504). This applies to a search for someone
wanted under an arrest warrant. (CPL 690.05 [2] [a]). See Steagald v United States, 451
US 204 (1981); see also Discussion Item 9, infra.
FOOTNOTE 35
SUBSCRIBING AND SWEARING TO THE APPLICATION
CPL 690.35 (1) permits both written and oral search warrant applications. (For oral
applications, see Discussion Item #13, infra). If in writing, the application must be sworn
and subscribed to by a public servant of the type described in CPL 690.05 (see People v
Dunn, 117 AD2d 863 [3d Dept 1986]; n 9 on Public Servants).
Defects in a warrant "may not be overcome by the unsworn, unwritten, and
unrecorded details of the investigation related by a police detective to the Town Justice
who issued the warrant [citation omitted]" (People v Lalli, 43 NY2d 729, 730-1 [1977]).
An affidavit from the issuing judge, stating that he recalls orally swearing in the
police officer, satisfied CPL 690.35, in People v Butchino (152 AD2d 854 [3d Dept 1989];
see also People v Rodriguez, 150 AD2d 622 [2d Dept 1989]; People v Oxx, 155 AD2d 851
[3d Dept 1989]). Although unsworn, the informant's statement included a perjury warning
and was held valid in People v Sullivan (56 NY2d 378 [1982]). See also People v Johns,
41 AD2d 342 (3d Dept 1973); Annotation, Requirement, Under Federal Constitution's
Fourth Amendment Guarantee Against Unreasonable Searches and Seizures, That
Warrants, When Issued Upon Probable Cause, Must Be Supported "by Oath or
Affirmation" Supreme Court Cases, 139 L Ed 2d 971.
For "Requirement of Swearing" cases, see 2 LaFave, Search and Seizure, 4.3(e),
79
FOOTNOTE 36
JURAT
The jurat is evidence that the oath was properly taken before a duly authorized
officer. In law, jurat means a statement by the magistrate that the application was sworn
to before the magistrate (see Vittorio v St Regis Paper Co, 239 NY 148 [1924]). It is no
part of the oath. Its absence is a defect curable by subsequent affidavits or testimony.
The absence of a jurat was not necessarily fatal (see People v Zimmer, 112 AD2d
500 [3d Dept 1985]; People v Morelock, 187 AD2d 756 [3d Dept 1992]; People v Butchino,
152 AD2d 854, 855 [3d Dept 1989]; People v Rodriguez, 150 AD2d 622 [2d Dept 1989];
see also People v Sullivan, 56 NY2d 378 [1982]; People v Marshall, 13 NY2d 28 [1963]).
FOOTNOTE 37
NAME OF COURT
CPL 690.45 (1) provides that a search warrant must contain the name of the issuing
court. The name of the court was omitted, but it was not fatal, where it was elsewhere
identified (People v Pizzuto, 101 AD2d 1024 [4th Dept 1984]). In People v Smythe (172
80
AD2d 1028 [4th Dept 1991]), the court held that this requirement was substantially fulfilled
when stating that the venue was in Erie County and it was signed by a County Court
Judge of Erie County, designated as a JCC. As for the courts that are authorized to issue
search warrants, see Footnote 1, P.__, supra. Even so, omitting the name of the court is
not a good idea.
FOOTNOTE 38
PERSON OR AGENCY TO WHOM SEARCH WARRANT IS ISSUED; FAILURE TO
ADDRESS WARRANT TO PARTICULAR POLICE AGENCY
CPL 690.45 (3) states that the search warrant must contain the name, department,
or classification of the police officer to whom it is addressed. The failure to specifically
address the warrant to a particular police agency was however, non-fatal, clerical omission
in People v. Davis (93 AD2d 970 [3d Dept 1983]). Also, search upheld where warrant,
addressed to New York City police officer is executed by a deputy warden, while observed
by a police officer (People v Gamble, 122 Misc 2d 960 [Sup Ct, Bronx County 1984]).
Civilian assistance in executing the search warrant for confirmatory viewing of
seized property violates no rights of defendant (People v Boyd, 123 Misc 2d 634 [Sup Ct,
New York County 1984]).
CPL 690.25 provides that a search warrant must be addressed to a police officer
whose geographical area of employment embraces (or is embraced wholly or partially by)
the county of issuance. The warrant need not be addressed to any specific police officer;
it may be addressed to any police officer of the designated classification or to any police
officer of any classification employed or having general jurisdiction to act in the county (See
81
FOOTNOTE 39
AUTHORIZATION AND DIRECTIVE
You are hereby authorized and directed is a reminder that a search warrant is a
court order and process (CPL 690.05 [2]). Issuance of a search warrant is a "judicial act."
(Burns v Reed, 500 US 478 [1991]).
FOOTNOTE 40
DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY
CPL 690.45 (4) requires that the search warrant contain a description of the property
that is the subject of the search [See footnotes 13,15a-c]. A search warrant that does not
contain this provision is invalid (see Groh v Ramirez, ____US____, 124 S.Ct 1284 [2004])
even though the application contains a description. The applications content alone is
insufficient unless the search warrant uses appropriate words of incorporation and the
supporting document accompanies the warrant (id. at 1290).
FOOTNOTE 41
IDENTIFICATION OF PLACE, PREMISES, OR PERSON
Pursuant to CPL 690.45 (5), the search warrant must designate address, ownership,
82
name, or any other means essential for identification with certainty, the place, premises,
or person to be searched (or searched for). See footnotes 2, 3, 4, 5.
FOOTNOTE 42
AUTHORIZATION TO SEARCH ANY PERSON "THEREAT OR THEREIN."
See footnote 7.
FOOTNOTE 43
EXECUTION OF WARRANT: WHERE AND WHEN
Pursuant to CPL 690.25 (2), a police officer to whom a search warrant is addressed
(as provided in CPL 690.25 [1]) may execute it in the county of issuance or the adjoining
county and may execute it in any other county in which it is executable if (a) the officers
geographical area of employment embraces the entire county of issuance or (b) the officer
is a member of the police department of a city in the county of issuance. See also footnote
1.
Under CPL 690.30(1) a search warrant must be executed within ten days after
issuance. The warrant may be executed any day of the week, including Sunday (CPL
690.30 [2]; People v Childers, 54 Misc 2d 752 [Sup Ct, Queens County 1967]) and must
be executed between 6:00 A.M. and 9:00 P.M., unless it is a nighttime ("any hour")
warrant, as specifically authorized under CPL 690.45 (6), as provided for in CPL 690.40
(2). The court excused an apparent typographical error directing the search between 6:00
P.M. and 9:00 P.M. in People v Shetler (256 AD2d 1234 [4th Dept 1998]). See nn 29, 30.
Cases arising under a similar ten-day rule in the federal courts (FED R CRIM P 41c)
83
have held a delay of six days valid even though the federal warrants contained a provision
that the warrants be executed "forthwith" (United States v Nepstead, 424 F2d 269 [9th Cir
1970]; United States v McClard, 333 F Supp 158 [E D Ark 1971]; United States v
Dunnings, 425 F2d 836, 841 [2d Cir 1970], cert.denied 397 US 1002 [1970] [nine days late,
valid]; United States v Harper, 450 F2d 1032, 1043 [5th Cir 1971] [nine days late, valid];
United States v Rael, 467 F2d 333 [10th Cir 1972] [five days late, valid]). A delay in the
execution of the search warrant was not fatal in United States v Gerber (994 F2d 1556
[11thCir 1993]; See also United States v Gibson, 123 F3d 1121 [8th Cir 1997]).
Even if the several day delay is strategic (i.e. timed for execution at the most
propitious moment) it will not be invalidated before the ten day period (United States v
Wilson, 491 F2d 724 [6th Cir 1974]).
The warrant was not executed until 17 days after issuance, in violation of CPL
690.30 and the evidence suppressed in People v Jacobowitz (89 AD2d 625 [2d Dept
1982]; see also People v Patterson, 78 NY2d 711 [1991]; but see People v Bryan, 191
AD2d 1029 [4th Dept 1993]).
A search conducted three days after the initial search pursuant to a search warrant
was not illegal in People v Graham (90 AD2d 198, 204-5 [3d Dept 1982]).
If the warrant fails for lack of timely execution, the applicant may start over again,
by resubmitting the proof for a new finding of probable cause (see People v Tambe, 71
NY2d 492, 502 [1988]; People v Glen, 30 NY2d 252 [1972]; People v McCants, 59 AD2d
999 [3d Dept 1977]).
For a discussion of the manner and extent of execution, see Discussion Item #26
(searching containers and the like). See also Brad M. Johnston, Note, The Media's
84
Presence During the Execution of a Search Warrant: A Per Se Violation of the Fourth
Amendment, 58 Ohio St LJ 1499 [1997]. For a discussion relating to the search of
unnamed others, see footnote 5. Plain view seizures of unnamed items are covered in
footnote 16, supra.
See generally Annotation, Timeliness of Execution of Search Warrant, 2002 ALR5th
20; see also Annotation, Civilian Participation in Execution of Search Warrant as Affecting
Legality of Search, 68 ALR5th 549. Note also that the Supreme Court has held that a
prosecutor does not violate an attorney's Fourteenth Amendment right to practice his
profession by executing a search warrant while the attorney's client is testifying before a
grand jury (see Conn v Gabbert, 526 US 286 [1999]).
FOOTNOTE 44
RETURN OF WARRANT
CPL 690.45 (8) requires that the warrant contain a directive that any property seized
be returned and delivered to the court without unnecessary delay (see also CPL 690.30
[1]). CPL 690.50 (5) involving the return and filing of an inventory of items seized is
ministerial, and noncompliance will not vitiate search warrant (see People v Dominique,
229 AD2d 719 [3d Dept 1996], affd 90 NY2d 880 [1997]; see also People v Davis, 93 AD2d
970 [3d Dept 1983] [failure to file not fatal]; People v LaBombard, 99 AD2d 851 [3d Dept
1984] [deficient return not fatal]; People v Nelson, 144 AD2d 714 [3d Dept 1988]).
In People v Rubicco (30 NY2d 897 [1972]), a search warrant issued by one city
judge and returned to another, was impliedly upheld. A search warrant cannot be
invalidated on the ground that it does not contain a direction for its return; this is a
85
ministerial omission (People v Pietramala, 84 Misc 2d 496 [Crim Ct, Queens County
1975]).
A 13-day delay between search warrant issuance and return was a ministerial
irregularity that did not invalidate the warrant (see People v Frange, 109 AD2d 802 [2d
Dept 1985]; see also People v Earl, 138 AD2d 839 [3d Dept 1988]; People v Frange, 109
AD2d 802 [2d Dept 1985]; People v. Hernandez, 131 AD2d 509 [2d Dept 1987]; People
v Morgan, 162 AD2d 723 [2d Dept 1990]).
The failure to provide defendant with a receipt for the contraband seized (CPL
690.50 [4]) was ministerial and not fatal (see People v Morgan, 162 AD2d723 [2d Dept
1990]). CPL 690.50 (6) requires that when a person is apprehended pursuant to a CPL
690.05 (2) (b) search warrant, the officer must follow procedures involving the search
warrants return and inventory, and that the person apprehended has been brought before
the appropriate court.
FOOTNOTE 45
DATING THE WARRANT
Police officers with knowledge that a search warrant has been issued and is en
route may enter the premises before the search warrant arrives (see People v Mahoney,
58 NY2d 475 [1983]; People v Williams, 275 AD2d 753 [2d Dept 2000]). It is, therefore,
useful to note the hour and minute at which the warrant was signed.
A warrant inadvertently dated two days after the judge signed it was not invalidated
(see People v Horton, 32 AD2d 707 [3d Dept 1969]). In People v Pietramala, (84 Misc 2d
496 [Crim Ct, Queens County 1975]), the court held that the lack of a specific date on a
86
search warrant will not void the warrant provided it is executed within ten days after
issuance, as required by CPL 690.30 (1).
FOOTNOTE 46
SIGNING THE WARRANT
The judge should sign the search warrant here. Although the failure to sign has
been held ministerial (see, e.g., State v Huguenin, 662 A2d 708 [RI 1995]; Commonwealth
v Pellegrini, 405 Mass 86, 539 NE2d 514 [1989]), it is a risk best avoided.
87
88
DISCUSSION ITEMS
1.
a warrantless search (see Whiteley v Warden, Wyoming State Penitentiary, 401 US 560,
566 [1971]; United States v Smith, 797 F2d 836, 840 [10th Cir 1986]) a warrant is preferred
and will be given the benefit of the doubt (see United States v Ventresca, 380 US 102
[1965]). Put differently, courts will exercise a high level of scrutiny when reviewing
warrantless searches (see People v Bigelow, 66 NY2d 417 [1985]; People v Harper, 236
AD2d 822 [4th Dept 1997]).
standards for search warrant vs warrantless searches, see Malcolm v State (70 Md App
426, 521 A2d 796, affd in relevant part, 314 Md 221, 550 A2d 670).
In People v Roberts (79 NY2d 964 [1992]), the Court noted that in buy and bust
operations, a drive-by is not the only way to assure reliability of an identification and the
fact that the search warrant for the defendants premises was executed only minutes after
the undercover left the apartment substantially reduced the risk of arresting the wrong
person (see also People v Castillo, 80 NY2d 578, 585 [1992] in which the court stressed
that the issuing judge had examined the confidential informant, a factor in extending
People v Darden, 34 NY2d 177 [1974], so as to authorize a post-issuance hearing in which
the defendant was not a participant.)
A search warrant serves a high function (Groh v Ramirez, __US__, 124 S Ct 1284
[2004]) and while there is a benefit in using one, the presumptive rule against warrantless
searches applies with equal force to searches whose only defect is a lack of particularity
89
2. BURDEN OF PROOF
A defendant has the burden of proof in attacking the sufficiency of a search warrant
(People v Glen, 30 NY2d 252 [1972]; see generally B. Kamins, New York Search &
Seizure, at 597 [14th ed 2004]). A defendant who makes a substantial preliminary showing
that false statements were knowingly submitted in obtaining a warrant is entitled to a
hearing on the issue (see People v Ingram, 79 AD2d 1088 [4th Dept 1981]; cf. Franks v
Delaware, 438 US 154 [1978] [which held that a defendant challenging the issuance of a
warrant must establish reckless and deliberate disregard of the truth]).
In People v Price (54 NY2d 557 [1981]), the Court refused to order the production
for examination, of a dog whose superior senses detected the aroma of a controlled
substance in defendant's luggage since defendant had failed to come forward with any
evidence challenging the dog's accuracy (see also United States v Johnson (660 F2d 21
[2d Cir 1981]). Defendant has the burden of proof to show the officers reckless disregard
for truth. See Discussion Item #9 with regard to Franks v Delaware, 438 US 154 (1978).
90
3. ADMINISTRATIVE SEARCHES
Search warrants for administrative purposes -- such as health, fire, safety inspection
-- were thought to be unnecessary until the United States Supreme Court decided Camara
v Municipal Court (387 US 523 [1967]) and See v City of Seattle (387 US 541 [1967]).
Eleven years later, the Court held that an administrative search warrant is required to
search business premises for violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA)
(Marshall v Barlow's Inc., 436 US 307 [1978]). An administrative search is one based on
the duty to enforce a non-penal statute or regulation. An administrative search warrant may
be based upon specific evidence of violations or "reasonable legislative or administrative
standards" for conducting an inspection rather than the stringent criminal search warrant
standard of probable cause (Id. at 320). However, if during the course of an administrative
search, the investigation changes from administrative to criminal, probable cause is
required (see Michigan v Tyler, 436 US 499 [1978]).
In Michigan v Tyler, the Court reversed defendant's conviction for arson on the
ground that a warrantless search of the burned premises conducted three weeks after the
fire violated the Fourth Amendment. The Court also formulated standards for administrative
warrants required before officials may inspect to determine the cause of the fire once the
emergency has been controlled. The Court stated:
In the context of investigatory fire searches, which are not
programmatic but are responsive to individual events, a
more particularized inquiry may be necessary. The
number of prior entries, the scope of the search, the time
of day when it is proposed to be made, the lapse of time
since the fire, the continued use of the building, and the
owner's efforts to secure it against intruders might all be
relevant factors. Even though a fire victim's privacy must
normally yield to the vital social objective of ascertaining
91
(Michigan v Tyler, 436 US at 507 [citations omitted]). The Court added that evidence of
arson seized in a search under an administrative warrant is admissible in an arson
prosecution but that where the officials' purpose is to search for evidence of arson they
must obtain an ordinary search warrant based on probable cause.
In re Worksite Inspection of Quality Products, Inc. (592 F2d 611 [1st Cir 1979]),
involved a motion to suppress an OSHA warrant. The subject of the search, Quality
Products, Inc. (having contested administratively the three citations it received after the
execution of the warrant and before the commission decided its case) brought a motion
before the issuing magistrate to stay and recall the warrant. He granted it on the ground
that (1) the Act's inspection procedures violated the Fourth Amendment; (2) the warrant
was issued without probable cause; and (3) the complaint violated OSHA's regulations as
it was not in writing and was not made by a current employee. The district court reversed,
ruling that the magistrate had no jurisdiction to stay and recall the warrant. Treating Quality
Products' motion as a suppression motion, the court denied it on the merits. The Court of
Appeals for the First Circuit affirmed, holding (1) that the magistrate had no jurisdiction to
stay and recall the warrant; and (2) the district court had jurisdiction to decide the motion
and properly denied it on equitable grounds. The First Circuit found that:
In the present case, as we suspect will be true in the
vast majority of OSHA enforcement cases, the
challenges to the warrant can be adequately
considered in the statutory enforcement proceedings
if not by the Commission then by the Court of
Appeals. Quality's specific challenges to the warrant
92
Quality Products, 592 F2d at 615-616 (footnotes omitted). The court concluded that
equitable grounds for deciding the motion are present only when veracity is at issue.
New Yorks legislature has authorized various forms of civil search warrants (see
e.g. Agriculture & Markets Law 20-a; Environmental Conservation Law 71-0525; Family
Court Act 1034; General Business Law 279-g). In Matter of Shankman v Axelrod, (73
NY2d 203 [1989]), the Court held that the Office of Professional Medical Conduct (OPMC)
lacks authority to obtain an inspection warrant to seize a physicians record pursuant to
93
Public Health Law 230 (10), although it may issue subpoenas pursuant to section 230
(10) (K).
In People v Keta (79 NY2d 474 [1992]), the Court struck down as unconstitutional
Vehicle & Traffic Law 415-a (5) (a) insofar as it purported to authorize warrantless
administrative searches of vehicle dismantling businesses.
In People v Calhoun (49 NY2d 398 [1980]), the Court in affirming an arson
conviction stated that it did not reach any question involving the use of an administrative
warrant (49 NY2d at 408; n 3; see also People v Quackenbush, 88 NY2d 534, 542 [1980];
People v Scott, 79 NY2d 474, 501 [1992]).
An ordinance of the Town of Babylon permitted warrantless searches of residential
rental property authorities sought to defend the ordinance on the ground that there was no
violation of Camara because the inspectors were instructed to request permission before
entering. The court held the procedure invalid because under the ordinance, landlords
could be subject to criminal prosecution if they failed to permit an inspection (see Pashcow
v Town of Babylon, 96 Misc 2d 1036 [Sup Ct, Suffolk County 1976]). See also Sokolov v
Village of Freeport, 52 NY2d 341 [1981]), where the Court struck down as unconstitutional
a village's rental permit requirement which essentially compelled a landlord's "consent" to
the warrantless inspection of his residential property.
An administrative search (under the tax law) will not be justified in the absence of
probable cause (see People v Rizzo, 40 NY2d 425, 429 [1976]).
4. DISCLOSURE OF INFORMANT
The Supreme Court has held that disclosure of the informant's identity is required
94
when necessary to a fair hearing on the issue of probable cause (see Roviaro v United
States, 353 US 53 [1957]; People v Malinsky, 15 NY2d 86 [1965]). The requirements for
disclosure will correspond proportionately to the lack of certainty as to the informants
existence or reliability of the informant. Thus, where the search rested solely upon the
unconfirmed assertions of an informant whose source of information is not specified,
disclosure was warranted (see People v Verrechio, 23 NY2d 489 [1969] [warrantless
search]; see also People v Jonas, 33 AD2d 831 [3d Dept 1969] [search warrant based on
informant, no corroboration of his existence or his tale, held, disclosure ordered]; accord
People v Tatum, 36 AD2d 635 [2d Dept 1971] and People v Elwell, 66 AD2d 172 [3d Dept
1979], affd 50 NY2d 231 [1980]). But where there was adequate evidence of informants
reliability and information, based upon police confirmation, disclosure was not required
(see People v Castro, 29 NY2d 324 [1971] [warrantless arrest], citing McCray v Illinois, 386
US 300, 302 [1967]; accord People v Cerrato, 24 NY2d 1 [1969] [proven reliable informant
plus independent police observations, held, no disclosure required in search warrant case];
People v Smith, 21 NY2d 698 [1967] [search warrant based on proven reliable informant
plus independent police observations, held, no- disclosure required]; see also People v S
& L Processing Lab, Inc., 33 NY2d 851 [1973]; People v White, 16 NY2d 270 [1965]
[warrantless search based on proven reliable informant, plus independent police
observations, held, no disclosure required]; People v Maddox, 24 NY2d 924 [1969] [search
warrant based on informant who previously supplied information leading to "arrests,"
coupled with police observations of addicts entering premises, held, no disclosure
required]; People v Coffey, 12 NY2d 443 [1964] [held, disclosure not required where
informant, in warrantless arrest case, was produced before district attorney]).
95
The Court of Appeals has held that a defendant may not, by subpoena, acquire
records of payments made to informants, if disclosure is not otherwise indicated (see
People v Rubicco, 30 NY2d 897 [1972]).
Upon a motion to suppress the court may examine the informant in camera even
where he was the sole support for the proof (see People v Darden, 34 NY2d 177 [1974];
see also People v Brown, 294 AD2d 513 [2d Dept 2003] [motion for discovery of redacted
portions of search warrant]; People v Little, 48 AD2d 720 [3d Dept 1975]; People v Davis,
93 AD2d 970 [3d Dept 1983]).
Courts have held that a Darden hearing is not necessary if the police officers
testimony at the suppression hearing satisfies Aguilar-Spinelli (see People v Edwards, 95
NY2d 486 [2000]; see also People v Mendoza, 5 AD3d 810 [3d Dept 2004]). Nor was a
Darden hearing necessary when the informant had previously appeared before the issuing
magistrate during the application (see People v Serrano, 93 NY2d 73 [1999]). Under
Serrano, the informant was kept confidential and a record of his testimony kept from
defendant. Edwards held that at a Darden hearing the defense can be excluded but may
submit questions for the court to ask the informant (see also People v Castillo, 80 NY2d
578 [1992]).
In People v Castillo, 80 NY2d 578 [1992], the Court denied the defendant access
to the search warrant and supporting affidavits and to protect the confidentiality of the
informant conducted a hearing without the defendants participation. The issuing judge had
taken sworn testimony from the confidential informant and sealed the papers and record.
The Court held that defendant had no right to take part in the hearing. The defense did
not participate in the hearing and the court in effect took the defendants role in questioning
96
the search (see also People v Rodriguez, 182 AD2d 439 [1st Dept 1992]; People v.
Peterson, 159 AD2d 983 [4th Dept 1990]; People v Delgado, 134 AD2d 951 [4th Dept
1987]). Note that Darden involved a warrantless search, whereas in Castillo the issuing
judge had interviewed the confidential informant. The Castillo court stressed that this
procedure is not to be routinized or trivialized, but is allowable only when special
circumstances justify the procedure and the compelling need for confidentiality.
When, at a suppression motion, the prosecution could not produce the confidential
informant owing to his fear, the People were allowed to establish the confidential
informants existence by alternative means, using extrinsic evidence (see People v
Carpenito, 80 NY2d 65 [1992]).
Where an informer plays a part in the transaction forming the basis for the
prosecution (as opposed to a role in the acquisition of a search warrant), the informant was
indispensable, and an ex parte proceeding did not meet constitutional standards (People
v Goggins, 34 NY2d 163 [1974]; Roviaro v United States, 353 US 53 [1957]; see also
People v Castro, 63 AD2d 891 [1st Dept 1978]; People v Alamo, 63 AD2d 6 [1st Dept
1978]; People v Tranchina, 64 AD2d 616 [2d Dept 1978]).
informant's part in the transaction (and hence his value) was limited, disclosure was
improperly ordered (see People v Casiel, 42 AD2d 762 [2d Dept 1973]). Under those
circumstances, the Appellate Division ruled that it would not be improper for the court to
conduct an in camera inquiry -- without the defense present -- to determine the issue by
interviewing the informant (see People v Delgado, 40 AD2d 554 [2d Dept 1972]). See also
United States v White, 324 F2d 814 [2d Cir 1963]; United States v Cimino, 321 F2d 509,
512 [2d Cir 1963]) (If the informant's presence at the trial is deemed necessary, the
97
prosecution must go to reasonable lengths to locate and produce him; but if good faith
efforts fail, non-production will not be held against the prosecution).
98
[requirement to "knock and announce" was held inapplicable]). There may, of course, be
questions of defendants knowledge and possession, as when the defendant is not the sole
occupant (see e.g. People v Law, 31 AD2d 554 [3d Dept 1968]).
7. SEARCHING PAROLEES
Courts have held that parolees do not have the same Fourth Amendment rights as
others and may be searched under conditions that do not meet probable cause standards
applicable to ordinary citizens. What is reasonable for search of parolee differs from what
is reasonable for an ordinary citizen (see United States v Lewis, 400 F Supp 1046 [SDNY
1975]; see also Pennsylvania Bd of Probation and Parole v Scott, 524 US 357 [1988]); or
probationers (see People v Hale, 93 NY2d 454 [1999]; see also People v Santos, 31 AD2d
508 [1st Dept 1969], affd, 25 NY 976 [1969], and United States ex rel. Santos v New York
State Bd of Parole, 441 F2d 1216 [2 Cir 1971], cert. denied 404 US 1025 [1972]). The
search of a parolee or probationer as a condition of release was held constitutionally valid
(see People v Hale, 93 NY2d 454 [1999]; People v Fortunato, 50 AD2d 38 [4th Dept
1975]). Parolees' due process rights are subject to limitations by the State (see Morrissey
v Brewer, 408 US 471, 482 [1972]). However, the search of a parolee must be conducted
as part of the supervising authority's routine supervision or with probable cause; thus police
officers who lack a probable cause basis for searching a parolee were unable to
circumvent Fourth Amendment standards by merely calling in a parole officer to conduct
a search as their agent (seePeople v Candelaria, 63 AD2d 85 [4th Dept 1978]; cf. Diaz v
Ward, 437 F Supp 678 [SDNY 1977] for a detailed discussion of the limitations governing
search of parolees; see Annotation, Validity, Under Fourth Amendment, of Warrantless
99
Search of Parolee or his Property by Parole Office, 32 ALR Fed 155; Annotation, Validity
of Requirement That, As Condition of Probation, Defendant Submit to Warrantless
Searches, 79 ALR3d 1083).
8. MOTIONS TO SUPPRESS
In New York, a motion to suppress must be made in the court having jurisdiction of
the crime for which the defendant was indicted, as opposed to the court that issued the
warrant (CPL 710.50; People v Turpin, 22 NY2d 740 [1968]; People v Kelly, 40 AD2d 624
[4th Dept 1972]).
If an information is pending in a local criminal court, a motion to suppress evidence
must be made in that Court (CPL 710.50 [1] [c]) even though the search warrant was
issued by a Supreme Court justice (see People v P.J. Video, 65 NY2d 566 [1985]). On
a motion to suppress, the judge who issued the search warrant may, but need not, sit in
review of its validity on a motion to suppress (see People v McCann, 85 NY2d 951 [1995];
People v Liberatore, 79 NY2d 208, 217 [1992]; People v Tambe, 71 NY2d 492, 506
[1988]). Any suggestion to the contrary (see People v Romney, 77 AD2d 482 [4th Dept
1980]) is incorrect (see People v Guerra, 65 NY2d 60, 63 [1985]). The Supreme Court
has held that the question of proof necessary to sustain issuance of a warrant need not
measure up to guilt beyond a reasonable doubt but whether the information provided a
magistrate was "reliable or truthful" (see United States v Harris, 403 US 573, 582 [1971]).
The reasonableness in granting a warrant is determined by a consideration of the totality
of observations and information brought before a magistrate (see People v Maldonado,
80 AD2d 563 [2d Dept 1981].
100
A motion to suppress that lacks sworn allegations of fact is ineffective (see People
v Mendoza, 82 NY2d 415 [1993]). The Court found the allegations sufficient in People v
Bennett (240 AD2d 292 [1st Dept 1997]), but an attorney's affidavit was inadequate in
People v Lucente, 39 AD2d 1003 (3d Dept 1972). Where the defendant did not controvert
any of the facts alleged in the search warrant application, the court properly denied the
defendants request for a hearing (People v Cusumano, 108 AD2d 752, 753 [2d Dept
1985], citing People v Glen, 30 NY2d 252 [1972]).
Having failed to make a written motion challenging the warrant within 45 days after
arraignment, defendant waived his claim that the search warrant was deficient (see People
v Knowles, 112 AD2d 321 [2d Dept 1985]), citing CPL 255.20 (3); absent a waiver, the
defendant must be present at the hearing or the proceedings be nullified (see People v
Restifo, 44 AD2d 870 [3d Dept 1974]).
Upon a motion controverting a search warrant, notes used by the applicant-officer
in preparing the application are not necessarily discoverable (see People v Rossi, 30 NY2d
936 [1972] [court examined notes in camera, owing to claimed confidentiality]; but see
People v Malinsky, 15 NY2d 86 [1965]). As to disclosure of informants on motions to
suppress, see Disclosure of Informant, supra, Discussion Item # 3.
A successful motion to suppress did not give rise to an action for damages (see
Martinez v City of Schenectady, 97 NY2d 78 [2001]).
See generally Jennifer L. McDonough, Recent Decisions: Media Participation in the
Execution of a Search Warrant Inside a Home Violates the Fourth Amendment to the
United States Constitution: Wilson v. Layne, 38 Duq L Rev 1119 (2000).
101
establish probable cause, the warrant must be voided and the evidence suppressed. In
Franks, defendant had alleged that the officer affiant had lied when he swore that he had
talked to defendant's employer and that they had told him that defendant habitually
dressed in the same clothes that the complainant had described her assailant as wearing.
Under Franks, a defendant who claims that the search warrant applicant supplied
the judge with statements he or she knew to be false or made with reckless disregard for
truth has the burden to establish this (see Annotation, Disputation of Truth of Matters
Stated in Affidavit in Support of Search WarrantModern Cases, 24 ALR4th 1266; see
also People v Cohen, 90 NY2d 632, 638 [1997]; People v Ingram, 79 AD2d 1088 [4th Dept
1981]; People v Cotroneo, 199 AD2d 670 [3d Dept 1993]; People v Reilly, 195 AD2d 95
[3d Dept 1994] [slight deviation between suppression motion testimony and application
insufficient to establish Franks violation]; People v Ortiz, 234 AD2d 74 [1st Dept 1996];
People v Rayner, 171 AD2d 820 [2d Dept 1991]; People v Nunziato, __ AD3d __ [2nd Dept
2004]). In People v Fonville (247 AD2d 115 [4th Dept 1998]), a wiretap case, the court
held that the Franks rule pertains not only to affirmative misrepresentations, but misleading
omissions of material fact citing People v Seybold (216 AD2d 935 [4th Dept 1995]).
In People v Tambe (71 NY2d 492 [1988]) the defendant failed to meet the burden.
Moreover, even if the statement was knowingly false the remedy is to delete the statement
and review the adequacy of what is left (id. at 505; see also People v Bartolomeo, 53 NY2d
225 [1981]; Annotation, Propriety in Federal Prosecution of Severance of Partially Valid
Search Warrant and Limitation of Suppression to Items Seized Under Iinvalid Portions of
Warrant, 69 ALR Fed 522; Annotation, Propriety in State Prosecution of Severance of
Partially Valid Search Warrant and Limitation of Suppression to Items Seized Under Invalid
103
denied sub nom Jacek v United States, 434 US 1070, citing Franks v Delaware, 438 US
154 [1978]). In People v Windrum (128 Misc 2d 1043 [Monroe County Court 1985])
however, the court suppressed the evidence where the search warrant was based on an
informants statement, while police deliberately excluded a prior contradictory one (see also
United States v Morales (568 F Supp 646 [1983]).
The principle of collateral estoppel precludes the People from offering suppressed
evidence against a defendant who was not a party to the successful motion to controvert
the warrant (see People v Nieves, 106 Misc 2d 395 [Sup Ct, Bronx County 1980]; People
v McGriff, 130 AD2d 141 [1st Dept 1987]; see also People v Plevy, 52 NY2d 58 [1980]).
See generally Annotation, Disputation of Truth of Matters Stated in Affidavit in
Support of Search Warrant Modern Cases, 24 ALR4th 1266.
and Seizure, 4.13 [West Pub Co 1978]). See also David Horan, Breaking the Seal on
White Collar Criminal Search Warrant Materials, 28 Pepp L Rev 317 [2001]; Annotation,
Supreme Court's Views as to Application of Fourth Amendment Prohibition Against
Unreasonable Searches and Seizures to Compulsory Production of Documents, 48 L Ed
2d 884.
12.
present they may secure the object or premises while applying for a search warrant.
Because the police had probable cause as to contraband in defendants house, defendant
was prevented from entering his home while the police secured a search warrant; this was
upheld in Illinois v McArthur, (531 US 326 [2001]). In Matter of Marrhonda G. (81 NY2d
942 [1983]), the officer had handled the outside of the defendants bag and it felt like it had
the outline of a gun. The Court held that he should not have searched the bag, but could
have secured it and obtained a search warrant (see also People v Farmer, 198 AD2d 805
[4th Dept 1993]). In appropriate cases police may secure the object or the scene and post
a guard while acquiring a search warrant (see People v Rodriguez, 69 NY2d 159 [1987];
People v Clements, 37 NY2d 675 [1975]; People v Harris, 62 NY2d 706 [1984]; People v
Arnau, 58 NY2d 27 [1982]) [or perhaps even a telephonic search warrant]; see also United
States v Johnson, 22 F3d 674 [6th Cir 1994]; Segura v United States, 468 US 796 [1984];
United States v Wilson, 36 F3d 1298 [5th Cir 1994]; United States v Hoyos, 892 F2d 1387
[9th Cir 1989]; United States v Padin, 787 F2d 1071 [6th Cir 1986]; see also California v
Acevedo, 500 US 565 [1991]).
107
13.
for swiftness and the requirements must be followed strictly. There are a number of
conditions and steps entailed:
1. The applicant may communicate with the judge by telephone, radio, or other
means of electronic communication (CPL 690.36). No New York case deals with fax
transmissions. A fax transmission was upheld in People v Snyder (181 Mich App 768, 449
NW2d 703 [1989]; see also United States v Hessman, 369 F3d 1016 [8th Cir 2004]; United
States v Allard, 47 F3d 1170 [6th Cir 1995]).
2.
stenography or verbatim longhand notes. Electronic recording is obviously the most exact.
Everything should be recorded, including the oaths (CPL 690.36 [3]). The failure to have
an adequate record of what transpired will void the warrant (see People v Taylor, 73 NY2d
683 [1989]).
3. The applicant introduces himself or herself and tells the judge the purpose of the
communication (CPL 690.36 [2]). The judge should identify himself or herself and the
name of the court.
4.
The judge swears in the applicant. The judge must also, then or at the
appropriate time, swear in anyone else providing information (CPL 690.36 [2]).
5.
108
The applicant must then present allegations of the fact supporting the above
statement. Such allegations of fact may be based upon personal knowledge of the
applicant or upon information and belief, but the source of such information and the
grounds of such belief must be stated.
depositions of other persons containing allegations of fact (CPL 690.35 [3] [c]).
The allegations may be supplied to the judge by someone, properly identified, other
than the applicant (CPL 690.36 [2]; People v Farmer, 198 AD2d 805 [4th Dept 1993]).
6. The applicant may ask for and receive a nighttime/no-knock warrant of the kind
described in CPL 690.35 (4) (a) and (b).
7.
In accordance with CPL 690.40 (2), the judge must be satisfied that there is
When the judge determines to issue a search warrant the applicant must
prepare a warrant with all the formalities of CPL 690.45 and must read the warrant
verbatim to the judge (CPL 690.40[3]; People v Crandall, 108 AD2d 413 [3d Dept 1985]).
This is essential because the judge is not signing the search warrant (CPL 690.45 [1];
Crandall, 108 AD2d at 417). Without this step, the warrant was held to have failed in
People v Farmer, (188 AD2d 1063 [4th Dept 1992]), inasmuch as the court had no way of
determining whether the warrant comported with what the court was authorizing (see also
People v Price, 204 AD2d 753 [3d Dept 1994], opinion after remand 211 AD2d 943). It is
conceivable that notwithstanding an invalid telephonic warrant a seizure may be based on
109
warrantless exigencies (see People v Hughes, 124 AD2d 344 [3d Dept 1986]; People v
Crandall, 69 NY2d 459 [1987]).
9.
must have the record transcribed, certify to the accuracy of the transcription and file the
original record and transcription with the court, within twenty-four hours following the
issuance of the warrant. If longhand notes are taken, the judge must subscribe a copy and
file it with the court within twenty-four hours after the issuance of the warrant.
In People v Brinson, (177 AD2d 1019 [4th Dept 1991]), the issuing magistrate failed
to have the application transcribed or to certify the accuracy of the transcription (CPL
690.36 [3]), but the appellate division held the seizure valid, considering that the magistrate
had filed the original audiotape within twenty-four hours after issuing the search warrant
(see also People v Camarre, 171 AD2d 1003 [4thDept 1991]).
See generally Geoffrey P. Alpert, Special Topic: Telecommunications in the
Courtroom: Telephonic Search Warrants, 38 U Miami L Rev 625 [1984].
16. DOGS
See United States v Place (462 US 696 [1983]), which holds that under federal law
there is no Fourth Amendment violation when dogs are used to sniff drugs; Timmons, Reexamining the Use of Drug-Detecting Dogs Without Probable Cause, 71 Geo LJ 1233
(April 1983); Honsinger, Katz and Dogs, Canine Sniff Inspections and the Fourth
Amendment, 44 La L Rev 1093 (March 1984); Hall, Sniffing Out the Fourth Amendment:
United States v. PlaceDogs SniffsTen Years Later, 46 Me L Rev 151 (1994);
Annotation, The Use of Trained Dog to Detect Narcotics or Drugs as Unreasonable Search
in Violation of Fourth Amendment, 150 ALR Fed 399; Annotation, Use of Trained Dog to
Detect Narcotics or Drugs as Unreasonable Search in Violation of State Constitutions, 117
ALR5th 407.
112
Although it does not constitute a search under federal law (see People v Price, 54
NY2d 557 [1981]), in New York, a canine sniff constitutes a search under state
constitutional law, but because it is less intrusive than a full-blown search, a dog may be
used, without a warrant and without probable cause, provided there is reasonable
suspicion (People v Dunn, 77 NY2d 19 [1990]; People v Offen, 78 NY2d 1089 [1991]).
18.
blood (Matter of Abe A., 56 NY2d 288 [1982]), fingernail scrapings (People v Rhoads, 126
AD2d 774 [3d Dept 1987]), chemical blood test (People v Goodell, 79 NY2d 869 [1992];
People v Casadei, 66 NY2d 846 [1985]), blood, hair, and dental impressions (People v
Koberstein, 204 AD2d 1016 [4th Dept 1994]), hair samples (Matter of Barber v Rubin, 72
AD2d 347 [2d Dept 1980]; People v Pierce, 150 AD2d 948 [3d Dept 1989]), dental
impressions (People v Smith, 110 Misc2d 118 [Dutchess County Court 1981]; People v
Randt, 142 AD2d 611 [2d Dept 1988]).
There are limits, of course, and the extent of the intrusion may turn on the degree
of danger to which the defendant is put, as with invasive surgery (see e.g. People v Smith,
80 Misc2d 210 [Sup Ct, Queens County 1974], affd 110 AD2d 669, revd on other grounds
68 NY2d737, cert. denied 479 US 953; Bloom v Starkey, 65 AD2d 763 [2d Dept 1978];
Rochin v California, 342 US 165 [1952]; Winston v Lee, 470 US 753 [1985]); Annotation,
Propriety of Search Involving Removal of Natural Substance or Foreign Object from Body
by Actual or Threatened Force, 66 ALR Fed 119.
114
22.
Pursuant to CPL 690.25(1), a search warrant must be addressed to a police officer whose
geographical area of employment:
(1) embraces the county of issuance , or
115
116
Also, if, for example, an Erie County Court judge issues a search warrant directing
the search of a Westchester County premises (such a court may do so under CPL 690.20
[1]), the warrant may be executed only by
(1) a state police officer, or
(2) an Erie County deputy sheriff, or
(3) a Buffalo City police officer.
It cannot be executed by a town or village officer of Erie County. It may not be
executed by a Westchester County deputy or a police officer of any department within
Westchester County (see Preiser, Practice Commentaries, McKinneys Cons Laws of NY,
Book 11A, CPL 690.25, p. 439). See also footnotes 1 and 33, supra.
117
courts lack authority to issue search warrants in other states, see State v Intercontinental,
Ltd, 302 Md 132, 486 A2d 174 [1985]; State v Szepanski, 198 Conn Super LEXIS 3779
[1998].
24. REISSUANCE
A Court may reconsider a previously issued but unexecuted search warrant when
additional information is discovered and may reissue the warrant without a new application
provided the proof is not stale (see People v Moon, 168 AD2d 110 [3d Dept 1991]; see
also Sgro v United States, 287 US 206 [1932]; People v DeJesus, 125 Misc 2d 963 [Sup
Ct, Kings County 1984], as to the reissuance or renewal of search warrants. See footnote
18 of this work.
25. STANDING
Because these cases turn on their facts, it is useful only to catalogue several (see
generally People v Kramer, 92 NY2d 529 [1998]; see also People v Wesley, 73 NY2d 351
[1989]; People v Millan, 69 NY2d 514 [1987]; People v Ponder, 54 NY2d 160 [1981]
[automatic standing rule rejected]).
Held, no standing, in People v Wright, 5 AD3d 873 [3d Dept 2004]; People v
Chaney, 298 AD2d 617 [3d Dept 2002]; People v Williams (275 AD2d 753 [2d Dept 2000];
see also People v Ladson, 298 AD2d 314 [1st Dept 2002]; People v Desir, 285 AD2d 655
[2d Dept 2001]; People v Sapp, 280 AD2d 906 [4th Dept 2001]; People v Prodromidis, 276
118
AD2d 912 [3d Dept 2000]; People v Williams, 275 AD2d 753 [2d Dept 2000]; People v
Vaccaro, 272 AD2d 871 [4th Dept 2000]; People v Christian, 248 AD2d 960 [4th Dept
1998]; People v Abreu, 239 AD2d 434 [2d Dept 1997]; People v McMahon, 238 AD2d 834
[3d Dept 1997]).
Standing satisfied in People v Rodriguez (303 AD2d 783 [3d Dept 2003]) and
People v Fonville (247 AD2d 115 [4th Dept 1998]).
See generally Annotation, Interest in Property as Basis for Accused's Standing to
Raise Question of Constitutionality of Search or Seizure Supreme Court Cases, 123 L Ed
2d 733; Annotation, Interest in Property as Requisite of Accused's Standing to Raise
Question of Constitutionality of Search and Seizure, 4 L Ed 2d 1999.
119
not need a search warrant to search a container in a vehicle that probably contains
contraband, when the reasonable cause was established before the container was placed
in the vehicle. There is no greater expectation of privacy in the container then in the
vehicle itself. See also People v Langen, 60 NY2d 170 [1983]; B. Kamins, New York
Search and Seizure, 14th 3d 2004, 292, 445 n375; People v Avery, 129 AD2d 852 [3d
Dept 1987]; United States v Atwell, 289 F Supp 2d 629 [WD Pa 2003]; but see State v
Lunati, 665 SW2d 739 [Tenn 1983].
This is not to say that an executing officer may open containers under any
circumstances. If the officers are authorized to search only for an abducted circus
elephant, police would have no right to rummage through containers, desk drawers, or the
like.
120
arisen in another jurisdiction. See Michael John James Kuzmich, Review of Selected 1998
California Legislation: Criminal Procedure: www.warrant.com: Arrest and Search Warrants
by E-mail, 30 McGeorge L Rev 590 [1999].
29. SEALING SEARCH WARRANTS
CPL article 690 does not address sealing warrants.
recognized the sealing of search warrant materials for such purposes as protecting the
confidentiality of informants. See, e.g., People v Serrano, 93 NY2d 73 [1999]; People v
Castillo, 80 NY2d 578 [1992]; People v Lee, 205 AD2d 708 [2d Dept 1994]. See generally
2 LaFave, Search and Seizure, 4.3(g); Michael D. Johnson and Anne E. Gardner, Access
to Search Warrant Materials: Balancing Competing Interests Pre-Indictment, 25 U Ark Little
Rock L Rev 771 [2003]; David Horan, Breaking the Seal on White Collar Criminal Search
Warrant Materials, 28 Pepp L Rev 317 [2001]; James E. Phillips, David F. Axelrod, & Kevin
G. Matthews, Feature: Litigating Sealed Search Warrants: Recent Cases Limit Indefinite
Seal in Pre-Indictment Investigations, 20 Champion 7 [March 1996]; Annotation, Right of
Press, in Criminal Proceeding, To Have Access to Exhibits, Transcripts, Testimony, and
Communications Not Admitted in Evidence or Made Part of Public Record, 39 ALR Fed
871.
but not seize anything. See 18 USC 3103a; United States v Freitas, 800 F3d 1451 [9th
Cir 1986]; United States v Freitas, 856 F2d 1425 [9th Cir 1988]; United States v Villegas,
899 F2d 1324 [2d Cir 1990]; United States v Johns, 948 F2d 599 [9th Cir 1991]; United
States v Pangburn, 983 F2d 449 [2d Cir 1993]. See generally Note, United States v. Leon
and the Freezing of the Fourth Amendment, 68 NYUL Rev 1305 [1993]; Paul V. Konovalov,
Note, On a Quest for Reason: A New Look at Surreptitious Search Warrants, 48 Hastings
LJ 435 [1997]; Kevin Corr, Sneaky But Lawful: The Use of Sneak and Peek Search
Warrants, 43 Kan L Rev 1103 [1995]. See also 2 LaFave, Search and Seizure 4.12(b).
Many articles have been written on the subject, particularly in light of the new
practices being authorized under Sec. 213 of the USA PATRIOT Act, codified at 18 USC
3103a. See United States v Green, 2004 US Dist LEXIS 11292 [D Mass June 18, 2004]
at *147 n289; Jeremy C. Smith, Comment, The USA PATRIOT Act: Violating Reasonable
Expectations of Privacy Protected by the Fourth Amendment Without Advancing National
Security, 82 NCL Rev 412 [2003]; Note, Taking the Fear Out of Electronic Surveillance in
the New Age of Terror, 70 UMKCL Rev 751 [2002]; Patricia Mell, Big Brother at the Door:
Balancing National Security with Privacy Under the USA PATRIOT Act, 80 Denv UL Rev
375 [2002]; Kim Lane Scheppele, 22d Annual Edward V. Sparer Symposium: Terrorism
and the Constitution: Civil Liberties in a New America: Law in a Time of Emergency:
States of Exception and the Temptations of 9/11, 6 U Pa J Const L 1001, 1034-37 [2004]
[discussing sneak and peek warrants in the context of the USA PATRIOT Act].
122
On the Justice
Department's Regulations Governing Subpoenas to the Press, 1999 Ann Surv Am L 227,
236 [1999]; Note, What Big Eyes and Ears You Have!: A New Regime for Covert
Governmental Surveillance, 70 Fordham L Rev 1017 [2001]; Note, Watch What You Type:
As the FBI Records Your Keystrokes, the Fourth Amendment Develops Carpal Tunnel
Syndrome, 40 Am Crim L Rev 1271 [2003]). It remains, however, that property possessed
by an innocent person may be searched for and seized under a valid warrant (see, eg,
United States v Taketa, 923 F2d 665 [9th Cir 1991]; United States v Tehfe, 722 F2d 1114
[3d Cir 1983]; Mays v City of Dayton, 134 F3d 809 [6th Cir 1998]; United States v Myers,
No. 98-5767, 1999 US App LEXIS 30082 [6th Cir Nov 15, 1999 unpublished]). See also
Footnote 34, searching for the suspect in a third-person's premises; Discussion Item 9;
Footnote 7, involving the search of anyone at a described premises.
123
124
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
CASES
PAGE
37
56
32,45
37
114
98
82
107,119
91
87
45
85
115
99
56,62
90,102,105
43,82,89
35
Hart v Superior Court, 98 Cal. Rptr. 565 (Cal App 1st Dist 1971)
98
45
Hughes v Merchants Natl Bank of Mobile, 256 Ala 88, 53 SO2d 386 (1951)
80
106
106
56,61
107
93
125
In re Worksite Inspection of Quality Products, Inc., 592 F2d 611 (1st Cir 1979)
92,93
117
105
98
Kashiwabara v United States, 1994 US APP LEXIS 13169 (9th Cir 1994)
119
50
35
113
Malcolm v State, 70 Md App 426 (1987), aff'd in relevant part, 314 Md 221 (1988)
89
41
43
91
101
34
26
82,114
114
106
107
93
48,122
95
91,92
99
51
126
117
41
106
24,49
94
98
105
99
39
34
119
54
73
58,73,75
58
97
23
102
72
People v Allen, 298 AD2d 856 (4th Dept 2002) app denied 99 NY2d 579 (2003)
59
73,74
63
27,53,75
51,107
People v Arnow, 108 Misc 2d 128 (Sup Ct, New York County 1981)
74
70
104
43
43,48
120
66
49
67
68,103
104
127
54
59,73,75
101
32
115
37,57,62,89
22
People v Binns, 299 AD2d 651 (3d Dept 2002) app denied 99 NY2d 612 (2003)
59
69
27
72
38,67
People v Boyd, 123 Misc 2d 634 (Sup Ct, New York County 1984) aff'd 135 AD2d 1149
(1st Dept 1987)
81
68
People v Brancato, 101 Misc2d 264 (Sup Ct, Kings County 1979)
37
52,63
50
110
28
30
47,68,69,71
59,72
24, 32, 42,
43, 44, 45
59
96
84
41
52
128
51
56,59
36,77,80
67
23,48,115
94
59
104
110
99
72
50
37
65
19
97
114
97
35,89,96,
121
97
95
57,58,70,95
26
118
83
72
119
45,54,104
59
129
People v Chrysler, 287 AD2d 7 (2d Dept 2001) app denied 98 NY2d 673 (2002)
21
51
People v Clements, 37 NY2d 675 (1975) cert. denied sub nom. Metzger v New York,
425 US 911 (1976)
107
77
21
36
102,103
60,95
58
111,112
66
74
42
People v Contento, 105 AD2d 918 (3d Dept 1984) aff'd 66 NY2d 731 (1985).
47
47,57
34
49,73
77,103
43
109,110
74,75
72
69
101
47
48
130
89,96
31
72
24,26,59,66
59,81,85,96
People v DeJesus, 125 Misc2d 963 (Sup Ct, Kings County 1984)
People v DeLago, 16 NY2d 289 (1965)
118
26,76
97
97
53,58
43
59
118
23,28
62
69,70,85
68
77
41
60
23,48
36,79
39,113
26,85
35
People v Ernest E., 38 AD2d 394 (2d Dept 1972) aff'd in part 30 NY2d 884 (1972)
72
59,62,96
63
26
People v Elwell, 66 AD2d 172 (3d Dept 1979), aff'd 50 NY2d 231(1980)
95
52
63,67,71
131
45,107,109
73
70
48
People v Fino, 29 AD2d 227 (4th Dept 1968), aff'd 24 NY2d 1020 (1969)
50
21
103,119
99
58
86
41
34
35
People v Gamble, 122 Misc2d 960 (Sup Ct, Bronx County 1984)
81
47
27,30,47
48,62,65
People v Giammarino, 53 AD2d 871 (2d Dept 1976), aff'd on opinion below
42 NY2d 1090 (1977)
38
54
68
42
38,52,84,
90,101
97
110
114
132
43
84
26
31
31
31
People v Green, 80 Misc 2d 626 (Sup Ct, New York County 1975)
31
56,61
100
49
44
99
26
52,62
24,32
45
27,74
50,51,107
66
89
59
73,75
People v Hendricks, 45 Misc 2d 7 (Sup Ct, Queens County 1965) aff'd 30 AD2d 640
(2d Dept 1968), rev'd 25 NY2d 129 (1969)
46,61,62
25
86
20
58,110
20
64,68,71
24,32
133
59
63,65
25,76,86
110
90,102,103
69
73,75,110
74
84
49
65
79
57,61
People v Johnson, 44 AD2d 451 (1st Dept 1974) aff'd 36 NY2d 864 (1975)
20
19
95
73
100
94
41
101
114
118
75
29,85
118
120
49,79
23,43
134
59
65
26
99
51
121
58,73,75
59
100
67
96
47
69
49,101
26
95
People v Mahoney, 89 AD2d 691 (3d Dept 1982), aff'd 58 NY2d 475 (1983)
People v Maldonado, 80 AD2d 563 (2d Dept 1981)
People v Malinsky, 15 NY2d 86 (1965)
39,77,86
66,100
60,71,95,
101
54
59
53
70,80
115
37
60
98
45
22,37,100
135
53,84
45
71
69
60,105
50
People v McLeod, 281 AD2d 746 (3d Dept) app. denied 96 NY2d 921 (2001)
35
119
62
66
77
101
68,96
73
118
People v Miller, 109 Misc2d 276 (Crim Ct, New York County 1981)
75
69
77
61
118
47,57
67,80
86
People v Morton, 288 AD2d 557 (3d Dept 2001) app. denied 97 NY2d 758
cert. denied 537 US 860 (2002)
59
62
27,59
85
27
136
24,32
People v Nieves, 106 Misc2d 395 (Sup Ct, Bronx County 1980)
People v Nieves, 36 NY2d 396 (1975)
People v Nunziato, _AD3d_ (2nd Dept. 2004)
People v Offen, 78 NY2d 1089 (1991)
105
32
103,104
39,113
98
People v Ortiz, 103 AD2d 303 (2d Dept 1984) aff'd 64 NY2d 997 (1985)
34
103
27
79
41,100
34
28,54
71,72,76
59
61,63
84
37
58
97
People v Pierce, 66 Cal2d 53, 56 Cal Rptr 817, 243 P2d 969 (1967)
80
114
86
27,37
51
22,80
51,105
39
51
People v Politano, 17 AD2d 503 (3d Dept 1962) aff'd 13 NY2d 852 (1963)
46
137
118
104
61
23, 28
59
50,90,113
42,109
77
118
94
114
25
30
103
72
103
101
23,49
77,114
People v Rhoades, 166 Misc2d 979 (Sup Ct, Monroe County 1995)
19
26
47,57
58
60
94
89
People v Robertson, 61 AD2d 600 (1st Dept 1978), aff'd 48 NY2d 993 (1980)
People v Robinson, __ AD3d__, 2004 NY APP DIV Lexis 8538 (1st Dept, June 14,
2004)
People v Robinson, 68 NY2d 541 (1986)
138
51,64,71
47
24,32,38,55
85
66
107
39
68,97
36,79,80
73
26
54,119
57
100
76
34,51
101
43
73,75
96
95
25,60,68
62
31
59
28
99
118
24,32,62,65
25
24,49,94
58
51
139
People v Serrano, 246 AD2d 430 (1st Dept 1998), affd in part 93 NY2d 73 (1999)
68,70,96,
121
103
59,67,83
73
56,69,72
43,54,66
People v Singer, 36 NY2d 1006 (1975), aff'd 44 AD2d 730 (3d Dept 1974)
38
75
47,72
102
58
95
34
114
People v Smith, 80 Misc2d 210, aff'd 110 AD2d 669 (2d Dept 1985),
rev'd on other grounds 68 NY2d 737, cert. denied 479 US 953 (1986)
People v Smythe, 172 AD2d 1028 (4th Dept 1991)
114
22,80
108
102
49,51
49
25
69
People v Stewart, 166 MICH APP 263, 420 NW2d 180 (Mich 1988)
People v Sturgis, 177 AD2d 991 (4th Dept 1991)
People v Sullivan, 101 Misc2d 526 (Albany County Ct. 1979),
aff'd 82 AD2d 997 (3d Dept 1981), aff'd 56 NY2d 378 (1982)
119
67
63,68, 69,
79,80
27
People v Talutis, 39 AD2d 815 modified 40 AD2d 592 (3d Dept 1972)
72
140
23,27,48,84,
100,103
45
74
58
95
68,69,108
98
People v Teicher, 90 Misc2d 638 (Sup Ct, New York County 1977)
aff'd, 73 AD2d 136 (1st Dept 1980), aff'd, 52 NY2d 638 (1981)
People v Telesco, 207 AD2d 920 (2d Dept 1994)
25,71,114
47,53
53
45
63
51
110
26
97
53,66
100
59
119
98
69
23,34
People v Van Luven, 96 AD2d 805 (1st Dept 1983) aff'd 64 NY2d 625 (1984)
51
74
73
117
60,95
141
51
27
54
56,62,67
59,68
45,56
26
50
43
118
57
58
62
57,67,68
34
People v White, 16 NY2d 270 (1965), cert denied 386 US 1008 (1967)
95
People v Williams, 284 AD2d 564 (3d Dept) app denied 96 NY2d 909 (2001)
59
People v Williams, 275 AD2d 753 (2d Dept 2000) app denied 96 NY2d 764 (2001)
77,86,118,
119
72
105
53
62,64,73
74
67
51
118
61,64
People v Wyatt, 60 AD2d 958 (3d Dept 1978) aff'd 46 NY2d 926 (1979)
38
64
142
110
42
36,80
22
98
111
76
114
95,97
42
91
107
48
52,118
94
56,61
123
87
118
98
120
24
119
119
118
79,105
33
Town of East Hampton v Omabuild USA, 215 AD2d 746 (2d Dept 1995)
54
United States ex rel Maxey v Morris, 591 F2d 386 (7th Cir 1979)
35
143
United States ex rel Pugh v Pate, 401 F2d 6 (7th Cir 1968)
35
United States ex rel Santos v New York State Bd. of Parole, 441 F2d 1216
(2d Cir 1971), cert.denied 404 US 1025 (1972)
99
48
108
120
46
112
76,77
United States v Biasucci, 786 F2d 504 (2d Cir) cert. denied 479 US 827 (1986)
114
115
43
104
111,112
54
97
United States v Combs, 468 F2d 1390 (6th Cir 1972), cert. denied 411 US 948 (1973)
23
101
34
106
98
66
24
United States v Dunnings, 425 F2d 836 (2d Cir), cert.denied 397 US 1002 (1970)
84
24
30
30
29
56
144
113
24
122
122
29
84
84
39
104
United States v Green, 2004 US Dist LEXIS 11292 (D Mass June 18, 2004)
122
24
39
84
57,66,72,
100
115
39
108
United States v Hoyos, 892 F2d 1387 (9th Cir 1989), cert. denied 488 US 825 (1990)
107
122
107
90
111
24
111,112
115
48
115
54
54
145
57,61
99
40
United States v McClard, 333 F. Supp. 158 (ED Ark. 1971) aff'd 462 F2d 488
(8th Cir 1972)
United States v McCoy, 478 F2d 176 (10th Cir 1973)
United States v Martin, 157 F3d 46 (2d Cir 1988)
United States v Moore, 562 F2d 106 (1st Cir 1977)
United States v Morales, 568 F. Supp. 646 (EDNY 1983)
United States v Myers, No. 98-5767, 1999 US App LEXIS 30082 (6th Cir Nov 15, 1999
unpublished)
United States v Nepstead, 424 F2d 269 (9th Cir 1970)
84
35,56,61
40
111,112
105
123
84
United States v Padin, 787 F2d 1071 (6th Cir), cert. denied 479 US 823 (1986)
107
122
54
112
104
84
76
23, 28
115
50
United States v Searp, 586 F2d 1117, 1125 (6th Cir 1978), cert.denied
440 US 921 (1978)
United States v Simpson, 152 F3d 1241 (10th Cir 1998)
74
115
39
United States v Smith, 462 F2d 456, 459 (8th Cir 1972)
61
89
35
United States v Spach, 518 F2d 866, 869 (7th Cir 1975)
61
146
United States v Strother, 188 US APP DC 155, 578 F2d 397 (1978)
22
114
123
123
35
United States v Thomas, 263 F3d 805 (8th Cir 2001) cert. denied 534 US 1146 (2002)
48
114
47,58,89
48
122
40
97
107
84
48
54
98
106
80
45
89
119
76
114
49
33
147
148
40
76
110
75
90
90
27,41
122
28
40
76
76
111
112
112
107,121
119
121
84-85
76
122
123
40
40
101
122
40
117
149
Nash and Graham, "The Importance of Being Honest"; Exploring the Need for Tribal
Court Approval for Search Warrants Executed in Indian Country after State v Mathews,
38 Idaho L Rev 581 (2002)
Note, What Big Eyes and Ears You Have!: A New Regime for Covert Governmental
Surveillance, 70 Fordham L Rev 1017 (2001)
Note, The Constitutionality of the Use of Unrecorded Oral Testimony to Establish
Probable Cause for Search Warrants, 70 Va L Rev 1603 (1984)
Note, Recent Cases: Criminal Procedure -- Search and Seizure -- Tenth Circuit Finds
That Thermal Imaging Scan of a Home Constitutes a Search -- United States V
Cusumano, 67 F3d 1497 (10th Cir 1995), 109 Harv L Rev 1445 (1996)
117
123
70
113
Note, The Undisclosed Informant and the Fourth Amendment: A Search for Meaningful
Standards, 81 Yale LJ 703 (1972)
61
61
Note, Watch What You Type: As the FBI Records Your Keystrokes, the Fourth
Amendment Develops Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, 40 Am Crim L Rev 1271 (2003)
123
Note, United States v. Leon and the Freezing of the Fourth Amendment, 68 NYUL Rev
1305 (1993)
122
Note, Taking the Fear Out of Electronic Surveillance in the New Age of Terror, 70
UMKCL Rev 751 (2002)
122
O'Mara, Thermal Surveillance and the Fourth Amendment: Heating up the War on
Drugs, 100 Dick L Rev 415 (1996)
113
35
121
Poyer, Note & Comment, United States v. Miggins: A Survey of Anticipatory Search
Warrants and the Need for Uniformity Among the Circuits, 58 U Miami L Rev 701 (2004)
40
61
Scheppele, 22d Annual Edward V. Sparer Symposium: Terrorism and the Constitution:
Civil Liberties in a New America: Law in a Time of Emergency: States of Exception and
the Temptations of 9/11, 6 U Pa J Const L 1001, 1034-37 (2004)
122
122
112
150
Tomkovicz, Beyond Secrecy for Secrecy's Sake: Toward an expanded Vision of the
Fourth Amendment Privacy Province, 36 Hastings L J 645 (1985)
111
113
ALR ARTICLES
Annotation, Aerial Observation or Surveillance as Violative of Fourth Amendment
Guaranty Against Unreasonable Search and Seizure, 56 ALR Fed 772
50
78
Annotation, Applicability of Plain View Doctrine and Its Relation to Fourth Amendment
Prohibition Against Unreasonable Searches and Seizures Supreme Court Cases, 110
L Ed 2d 704
46
112
85
103,105
28
70
119
119
38
39
Annotation, Propriety and Legality of Issuing Only One Search Warrant to Search More
Than One Place or Premises Occupied by Same Person, 31 ALR2d 864
23
151
24,103
75,77
114
38,56
25,44,103
Annotation, Requirement, Under Federal Constitution, That Person Issuing Warrant for
Arrest or Search Be Neutral and Detached Magistrate-Supreme Court Cases, 32 L Ed
2d 970 (2004)
22
79
121
46
53,55
28
24,27,44
Annotation, Seizure of Books, Documents, or Other Papers Under Search Warrant Not
Describing Such Items, 54 ALR4th 391
44,45
27,30,44
27,30
152
77
Annotation, Sufficiency of Affidavit for Search Warrant Based on Affiants Belief, Based
in Turn on Information, Investigation, Etc., By One Whose Name Is Not Disclosed, 14
ALR2d 605
61
44
29
76
50
107
112
85
112
111
100
99
Annotation, What Constitutes Compliance with Knock and Announce Rule in Search of
Private Premises-State Cases, 85 ALR5th 1
77
28
77
77
153
Annotation, When Are Facts Relating to Drug Other Than Cocaine or Marijuana So
Untimely as to be Stale When Offered in Support of Search Warrant for Evidence of
Sale or Possession of Controlled Substance State Cases, 113 ALR5th 517
55
Annotation, When Are Facts Offered in Support of Search Warrant for Evidence of
Federal Nondrug Offense So Untimely as to be Stale, 187 ALR Fed. 415
55
Annotation, When Are Facts Offered In Support of Search Warrant for Evidence of Sale
or Possession of Cocaine So Untimely as to be Stale-State Cases, 109 ALR5th 99
55
Annotation, When Are Facts Relating to Marijuana, Provided By Police or Other Law
Enforcement Officer, So Untimely as to be Stale When Offered in Support of Search
Warrant for Evidence of Sale or Possession of Controlled Substance State Cases,
114 ALR5th 235
54
Annotation, When Are Facts Offered In Support of Search Warrant for Evidence of
Sexual Offense so Untimely as to be Stale State Cases, 111 ALR5th 239
55
Annotation, When Are Facts Relating to Marijuana, Provided By One Other Than Police
or Other Law Enforcement Officer, So Untimely as to be Stale When Offered in Support
of Search Warrant for Evidence of Sale or Possession of Controlled Substance State
Cases, 112 ALR5th 429
55
Comment Note, Fruit of the Poisonous Tree Doctrine Excluding Evidence Derived
From Information Gained in Illegal Search, 43 ALR3d 385
51
154