DENISE COTE, District Judge.
On October 25, 2010, the defendant filed a motion in limine to suppress statements he made to agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI") following his arrest on July 3, 2009. The defendant contends that his post-arrest statements were taken in violation of New York Rule of Professional Conduct 4.2(a) ("Rule 4.2(a)"). Defendant's motion to suppress his post-arrest statements was denied at a final pretrial conference on November 19, 2010, with an Opinion to follow. This is that Opinion.
On Friday, July 3, 2009, at 9:20 p.m., the defendant was arrested at Newark Airport upon his return from a meeting in Chicago with his new employer, Teza Technologies LLC. The defendant was then transported to the FBI office in New York City, where he waived his
On Saturday, July 4, the defendant was presented before Magistrate Judge Fox. Judge Fox determined that the defendant did not qualify for appointed counsel, but because the defendant had not yet retained counsel of his own, Judge Fox appointed Ms. Shroff counsel solely for the bail proceeding. The defendant subsequently retained counsel on May 4, 2010.
The defendant argues that the post-arrest statements made to FBI agents were taken in violation of Rule 4.2(a) because the AUSA refused to stop the questioning after receiving Ms. Shroff's request. The Government contends that the motion is untimely and without merit.
At an initial pretrial conference on February 17, 2010, the Court set a July 16 deadline for the filing of all pretrial motions. A conference was also held on May 4 for the purpose of substituting counsel; the Court reiterated the July 16 deadline at that time, and new counsel agreed to that date. Reference was also made to the July 16 deadline at a June 29 conference with the parties.
On July 16, the defendant moved to dismiss the Indictment, but did not move to suppress his post-arrest statements. Indeed, the defendant did not move to suppress the post-arrest statements until October 25, when the motions in limine were filed. Defendant's motion to suppress is therefore untimely.
"A party waives its ability to move to suppress evidence if it fails to do so by the pretrial deadline set by the court, except that the district court may grant relief from that waiver for `good cause.'"
Even assuming that the defendant's motion was timely, however, there is no basis for suppression here. Rule 4.2(a) governs a lawyer's communication with persons who are already represented by counsel. It also acknowledges that other bodies of law may authorize communications with represented parties that would otherwise be barred by the Rule. The Rule provides,
N.Y. Rule Prof. Conduct 4.2(a) (Emphasis supplied).
As the Third Circuit noted in
The Second Circuit has principally discussed Rule 4.2(a) and its predecessor in circumstances that are readily distinguished from that at issue here. Nonetheless, its teaching has implications for this motion. In
The prosecutorial misconduct at issue in
The defendant relies principally upon
While the
Rule 4.2(a) applies when the lawyer, here the AUSA, "knows" the defendant "to be represented by another lawyer." At the time Ms. Shroff sent her emails, she did not represent the defendant and the Government did not understand her to represent the defendant. And, given the defendant's wealth, it was entirely reasonable to expect that he would retain counsel, as he has.
But, even if the Government had expected that the defendant would need appointed counsel, Rule 4.2(a) would still not apply. Ms. Shroff had no attorney-client relationship with the defendant. Her email could have theoretically applied to anyone and everyone due to be presented on July 4. She would have had no knowledge of the person for whom she was purporting to act, or, if multiple defendants were to be presented to the court, no knowledge of which of all those persons she might be appointed to represent.
To place this in starker terms, at what point did Ms. Shroff begin to represent the defendant? Is her representation deemed to have begun at the time of the defendant's arrest? No one is suggesting, however, that the expectation of both a presentment and the appointment of counsel at the presentment (in the event the defendant qualifies for appointed counsel, and does not decide to retain counsel or proceed
And, if no attorney-client relationship was created between Ms. Shroff and the defendant by the fact of his arrest and the expectation of a presentment, there was no intervening event of any legal significance that occurred prior to the presentment to create that relationship. Ms. Shroff was not consulted by the defendant following his arrest or retained by the defendant's family to act on his behalf. Her relationship with the defendant was created when Magistrate Judge Fox appointed her to represent the defendant at the time of his presentment.
Historically, duty Magistrates, AUSAs, and Federal Defenders have assembled at their Foley Square offices on Saturday mornings or holiday mornings to be available to handle any presentments for defendants who may have been arrested overnight. The fact that, as a matter of courtesy, telephone calls are now made by the U.S. Attorney's Office to relieve the participants of the burden of such travel when no arrests have been made and to advise them that travel will be necessary because an arrest or arrests have been made, has no legal significance here. After all, if the U.S. Attorney's Office waited to make such courtesy calls until after the arresting ficers had finished interviewing an arrested defendant there would be no ground for any complaint. Thus because there is no basis to find that the fendant was "represented by" the Federal Defender at the time of the interview there can be no violation of Rule 4.2(a).
In sum there exists no basis to apply Rule 4.2(a) to the defendantts post-arrest interview by the FBI. Butt even if there was an arguable violation of the Rule, the Court would decline to suppress the statement in an exercise of its discretion.
For the foregoing reasons, the defendant's October 25, 2010 motion to suppress his post-arrest statements has been deni
SO ORDERED: