PHYLLIS J. HAMILTON, District Judge.
On March 5, 2014, this matter came before the court on the motions of defendant Antonio Gomez to dismiss the indictment and to suppress evidence. Having carefully considered the relevant legal authority, the arguments of counsel, the motion papers and the record, the court DENIES Gomez's motions for the reasons set forth below.
On March 12, 2009, Hayward Police Department officers arrested Gomez following a raid on a residence in Hayward, where they recovered firearms, ammunition, methamphetamine, and other evidence. Declaration of Ethan A. Balogh in Support of Motions Filed January 28, 2014 ("Balogh Decl."), Ex. A. State authorities charged Gomez with offenses related to the contraband recovered on March 12, 2009, but those charges were dismissed in April 2009 for insufficient cause. Balogh Decl. ¶ 5. Gomez represents that in the summer of 2009, Hayward Police Inspector R. Coffey told Gomez that the United States planned to indict him for the contraband recovered on March 12, 2009. Balogh Decl. ¶ 9.
Following the March 2009 arrest, Gomez was also charged in Alameda Co. Superior Court with drug and firearm offenses dating from 2007, for which Gomez had outstanding arrest warrants that led, in part, to the March 2009 raid. On May 29, 2009, Gomez pled no contest to the 2007 charges, and received a sentence of 8 years and 8 months, to be served at half time. Gomez served about three and a half years in Alameda County Jail, then was transferred to state prison for the balance of his sentence. About two weeks before his scheduled parole date, the government filed the indictment in this case.
On May 2, 2013, the government indicted Gomez for possessing methamphetamine with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1); possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 924(c); and being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). These charges are based on allegations concerning Gomez's possession of narcotics and firearms in March 2009.
Counsel for Gomez represents that on December 11, 2013, he visited the Hayward property where Gomez was arrested in March 2009. The house and other structures have been razed, and the property only consists of bare land with no structures or improvements. Balogh Decl. ¶ 7 and Ex. C.
Gomez moves for dismissal for preindictment delay pursuant to the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment and Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 48.
Delay between commission of the crime and indictment is generally limited by the statute of limitations, but in some circumstances the Due Process Clause requires dismissal of an indictment brought within the limitations period.
Rule 48 provides that the court "may dismiss an indictment, information, or complaint if unnecessary delay occurs in: (1) presenting a charge to a grand jury; (2) filing an information against a defendant; or (3) bringing a defendant to trial." Fed. R. Crim. P. 48(b). "A Rule 48(b) dismissal should be imposed only in extreme circumstances, upon prosecutorial misconduct and demonstrable prejudice or substantial threat thereof."
Each of the three counts against Gomez has a five-year statute of limitations. Although the government indicted Gomez within the five-year limitations period, Gomez contends that his right to due process was violated by the delay of four years and two months in returning an indictment based on conduct at the time of his arrest in March 2009.
Where the claim is that evidence has been lost due to the delay, the defendant must demonstrate by definite proof that the loss is prejudicial to him. This means that a defendant must at least show that the loss of the witness or documentation `has actually impaired his ability meaningfully to defend himself.'"
To establish actual prejudice due to preindictment delay, Gomez argues that the crime scene has been destroyed, and that Gomez has no way to reconstruct the events of the March 12, 2009 raid without access to the crime scene in its condition as of March 2009. In particular, Gomez argues that he cannot recreate each officer's line of sight behind the cyclone fence surrounding the property, so as to meaningfully cross-examine each officer on his account of what he saw. Defense counsel initially argued that none of the photos taken on the day of the raid even showed the fence, but conceded at the hearing that the photos did, in fact, show the fence, but not each officer's line of sight. The court's review of the photo CD confirms that the surrounding fence is visible in many photos taken on the day of the raid. Balogh Decl., Ex. D.
This record does not support a showing of prejudice on two grounds. First, the timing of the destruction of the house does not establish prejudice. The indictment was filed May 2, 2013, when the structures were presumably still standing on the property. During oral argument, defense counsel proffered that the property was demolished sometime between his appointment in October 2013, when he saw the property still intact, and December 11, 2013, when he returned to the property and saw it had been razed. Gomez has not shown that the destruction of the house was related to the government's delay in bringing the indictment.
Second, Gomez has not shown that the preindictment delay resulted in loss of evidence that would actually impair Gomez's ability to defend himself. Gomez contends that none of the photos from the crime scene "shows any sight lines, the fences at issue, or anything remotely capturing the crime scene." Reply at 6. On the contrary, the photos clearly show the cyclone fence surrounding the property, and would support Gomez's argument that the officers on the other side of the fence would have had obstructed view of the yard while Gomez and other suspects were running from police. The availability of photos taken on the day of the raid to support the defense distinguishes this case from
Furthermore, Gomez does not contend that any witnesses have become unavailable due to the delay. Gomez can interview other witnesses who were present at the raid, and can call witnesses who were living in the house or detached garage to recreate the setting, including obstructed views.
The loss of evidence here does not impair Gomez's ability meaningfully to defend himself, and does not amount to a due process violation.
Gomez also contends that the preindictment delay resulted in sentencing prejudice because he has lost the ability to serve any sentence imposed in this case concurrently with his 2009 state court sentence. Gomez conceded at oral argument that he is not entitled to a concurrent sentence, but he argues that the delay in indicting him has deprived him of the ability to ask the court to run any part of his federal sentence, should he be convicted, concurrently with his state court sentence, particularly because he is subject to mandatory minimum sentences under counts one (possession with intent to distribute meth) and two (possession of firearm in furtherance of drug trafficking).
Despite the non-speculative effect of the delay on sentencing, the prejudicial effect of delay on Gomez's sentence is "too speculative to implicate his right to due process."
Not only has Gomez failed to establish the prerequisite of actual prejudice caused by the delay to establish a due process violation warranting dismissal of the indictment, but the government's 4-year delay does not offend "fundamental conceptions of justice," under the second prong of the
Under the second prong, the court balances the length of the delay against the reasons for it to determine whether a pre-indictment delay has violated due process. Intent or reckless behavior by the government is not an essential ingredient; if mere negligent conduct by the prosecutors is asserted, then obviously the delay and/or prejudice suffered by the defendant will have to be greater than that in cases where recklessness or intentional governmental conduct is alleged.
In the absence of actual prejudice, it is unnecessary to probe into the government's reasons for delay to make a balancing determination in this case. Gomez represents that Hayward Police Inspector Coffey told him in 2009 that the United States planned to indict him, though defense counsel conceded at the hearing that Inspector Coffey could not determine when the federal government would prosecute Gomez. Even accepting as true Gomez's assertions that Inspector Coffey told him that the federal government would bring charges and that the government deliberately withheld filing the indictment until Gomez's state sentence was almost complete, to deprive Gomez of the benefit of a concurrent sentence, the Ninth Circuit has recognized that the decision when to prosecute is a matter within the government's discretion: "The federal decision not to prosecute during the state proceedings was a policy decision, more properly seen as the explanation of the delay, than as prejudice caused by the delay."
On the record before the court, the timing of the lab results counters the inference raised by Gomez that the filing of the indictment was timed solely to maximize his state imprisonment. During oral argument, the government represented, without objection, that the indictment was filed about two months after forensics results became available in March 2013, with an analysis of the suspected methamphetamine that was seized during the raid. But even if the indictment was delayed for the purpose of waiting for the defendant to serve a state court sentence, as Gomez contends, such purpose for delay in commencing prosecution, in itself, does not amount to an "intentional device to gain tactical advantage over the accused,"
At the outset of the court's criminal calendar, the court was notified that a custodian of records for the Santa Rita Jail, Alameda County Sheriff's Office, had appeared with documents pursuant to a subpoena issued by defense counsel, which required the custodian to appear at the motion hearing set in this matter. The court received the documents and excused the custodian prior to hearing argument on the motions. When the matter was called, the court questioned defense counsel about his issuance of the subpoena. Defense counsel responded that he served the subpoena on the custodian of records for the Santa Rita Jail pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 17(c), which provides that "[a] subpoena may order the witness to produce any books, papers, documents, data or other objects the subpoena designates," and Criminal Local Rule 17-1, which requires "a party seeking to compel the appearance of a witness to testify and bring documents to a criminal proceedings pursuant to Rule 17(c)" to utilize the court's subpoena form CAND 89A, which does not require an order of the court. The government objected to the subpoena as unauthorized use of a Rule 17 subpoena as a means of obtaining discovery in violation of Rule 16.
It appears to the court that the primary goal of the subpoena was to obtain the documents described therein rather than the custodian's testimony about those documents. And because the documents were presumably sought in aid of the motion to dismiss, they should probably have been sought in advance of the hearing so that they could be incorporated into or referenced by the briefs. Instead of proceeding pursuant to Criminal Local Rule 17-2, which would have resulted in the production of the documents in advance of the hearing, defense counsel utilized the form subpoena permitted by Criminal Local Rule 17-1 which contemplates the appearance of a witness to testify at a criminal proceeding. But the court did not authorize an evidentiary hearing or give approval for calling witnesses at the motion hearing that was set in this matter. Under Civil Local Rule 7-6, which is applicable to criminal actions and proceedings by operation of Criminal Local Rule 2-1, "No oral testimony will be received in connection with any motion, unless otherwise ordered by the assigned Judge." Defense counsel's use of the subpoena form pursuant to Criminal Local Rule 17-1 was therefore improper in this case, where no witness was scheduled to testify. And it was also a wasted effort as the documents the witness was requested to bring, were produced at the hearing — too late to be reviewed by all parties and the court for use in resolving the motion being heard.
Where a party seeks the production of books, papers, documents or other objects in advance of trial or other evidentiary proceeding, to allow time to review the items that are to be offered in evidence, Criminal Local Rule 17-2 requires an order of the court pursuant to Rule 17(c). Here, the court set a hearing on the motions to hear oral argument, and did not order an evidentiary proceeding or production of documents in advance of the proceeding. Gomez's request to allow the custodian of records to testify was and is therefore denied.
Furthermore, the court determines that an evidentiary hearing is not necessary to resolve the issues raised in the motion to dismiss. The court has reviewed the subpoena and the documents that were lodged by the custodian of records. To the extent that Gomez relies on the improperly subpoenaed documents to show that Hayward Police Inspector Coffey visited him in jail in 2009 and told him that the United States planned to indict him, the court has assumed that fact as true for purposes of the motion to dismiss, obviating the need to introduce the documents into evidence. The disposition of the documents will be discussed at the next status conference.
Gomez argues, in the alternative, that even if the court does not find a constitutional violation, the indictment should be dismissed for unnecessary delay pursuant to Rule 48. A district court may dismiss even when the prosecutorial delay does not amount to a violation of the Sixth Amendment.
Because of the severity of the sanction of dismissal, the Ninth Circuit has held that a district court abuses its discretion if it imposes the sanction of dismissal under Rule 48(b) without first satisfying the requirements of "caution" and "forewarning."
Gomez contends that there was no opportunity for the court to give the government forewarning that delay would subject it to the sanction of dismissal, because this case was not pending before the court before indictment, such as by way of criminal complaint, to give the court an opportunity to warn the government of the consequences of delay. In support of his contention that the forewarning requirement is therefore not required, Gomez cites a decision from the District of Arizona, where the district court "never obtained supervisory control of this matter through the filing of a complaint prior to indictment," and held that the government would be attributed with "constructive knowledge of the Court's statutory authority pursuant to Rule 48(b) and that this is warning enough" to satisfy the forewarning requirement to dismiss an indictment that "languished unattended" in the prosecutor's office, resulting in 4-year and 7-month preindictment delay.
The government argues that the "forewarning" requirement could be satisfied, in cases where the court has no supervisory control prior to the filing of the indictment, by the court's promulgation of a local rule that is applied uniformly. This argument is supported by Seventh Circuit authority, and is more persuasive than the "constructive knowledge" reasoning of
The Ninth Circuit has held, "In addition to a forewarning, this court requires that a district court exercise `caution' in dismissing a case under Rule 48(b). The caution requirement is satisfied where the reason for dismissal is `prosecutorial misconduct and demonstrable prejudice or substantial [threat] thereof.'"
Notwithstanding Gomez's arguments that the government engaged in purposeful, bad faith delay by waiting for him to serve his state sentence before filing the indictment here, the government's delay does not rise to the level of misconduct.
The following summary of facts is taken primarily from Officer Deplitch's police report ("Police Rpt."), submitted as Exhibit A to the Balogh Declaration.
During the first week of March 2009, the Hayward Police Department Street Narcotic Team ("SNT") and Special Duty Unit ("SDU") conducted surveillance on the property located on S____ Road in Hayward ("the property"), on at least two occasions. On at least two occasions, Officer Deplitch saw multiple people come and go from the residence, including Pam Malone, whom Officer Deplitch recognized from previous arrests and contacts, and Renee Yarbrough. Officers observed Malone arriving and leaving the property in various vehicles, and saw the subjects walking along the north side of the house, near the attached garage, when they came and went. Officer Deplitch viewed an aerial photo of the property and discovered a detached garage, or outbuilding, located behind the main residence ("the outbuilding" or "the detached garage"). Photos taken on the day of the raid show that there was a gate to a walkway along the north side of the house, which led to the outbuilding at the rear of the property. Balogh Decl., Ex. D. A six-foot high cyclone fence with wooden slats ran around the entire property.
During one surveillance operation, the door to the attached garage (at the front of the house) was open and it appeared empty and no indication that anyone lived in the attached garage. Officer Deplitch believed that Malone was staying in the detached garage behind the residence. Officer Deplitch checked Malone's criminal record and learned that she was a convicted felon, on felony probation with a 4-way search clause. Officer Deplitch also received credible information during prior investigations that Malone was an associate of Gomez.
On March 6, 2009, members of SNT/SDU were conducting surveillance on the property to locate Gomez. At 1900 hours, a car arrived and parked on the street in front of the residence. Two men exited the car and walked towards the north side of the house. One of male subjects appeared to be Gomez but officers could not positively identify him because of the dim lighting.
On March 12, 2009, Officer Deplitch conducted surveillance and saw multiple subjects come and go from the north side of the property, including Pam Malone and Renee Yarbrough, but not Gomez.
On March 12, 2009, officers of the Hayward Police Department ("HPD") began surveillance and then conducted a warrantless raid at the property, including searches of the primary residence ("the house"), the curtilage (or "the grounds"), and the detached garage at the rear of the property.
The officers reported two goals in conducting the March 12, 2009 raid: (1) if Gomez was located at the property, to arrest Gomez, who was subject to two active arrest warrants; and (2) upon securing his arrest, to search "the location" per probation search conditions for Pam Malone (a.k.a. Pam Souza, Pam Sosa). Police Rpt. at 9.
At about 11:30 am on the day of the raid, Officer Deplitch was entering the gate to the property next-door, when he heard the metal cyclone fence gate at the property under surveillance being opened. Officer Deplitch saw someone exit through the gate and Deplitch ducked down to avoid being seen, but heard a male voice say, "Oh shit the police!" Deplitch recognized Gomez's voice, having talked to him several times. Gomez ran back through the gate along the north side of the house, toward the back of the property.
Sgt. Torres and Officer Runolfson were observing the property from an unmarked vehicle parked on S____ Road, south of the house. They saw two subjects exit the property on the north side of the house and walk toward the sidewalk, then look down S____, and, seeing police units, turn back toward the rear of the property. Sgt. Torres and Officer Runolfson later identified the subjects as Gomez and Medellin.
Officers surrounded the property. Officer Butler, who was assigned to the south side of the property, from behind a fence, saw Gomez, Medellin and Moran run from the detached garage. Butler saw Gomez run to the rear sliding door of the main house (to the west of the detached garage), and saw Medellin and Moran run east from the detached garage towards the back of the property. Butler saw Gomez pounding on the rear sliding door to get inside the house, and Gomez made eye contact with Officer Butler. An unknown subject let Gomez inside the house through the sliding door.
SDU personnel drove through the cyclone fence on the south side of the property, and an officer announced two subjects (Medellin and Moran) were running eastbound away from the house. Medellin and Moran jumped over a fence into the next door neighbor's yard, where they were captured and placed under arrest.
SDU officers surrounded the property, and several officers surrounded the main house. A female opened the door, and the officers, not knowing where Gomez had fled, requested the occupants to exit the house so they could conduct a protective sweep, for the safety of the officers and the occupants. Gomez was seen trying to blend in with the other occupants as they exited the house, but was recognized by Officer Hoyer who detained Gomez in handcuffs. After Officer Deplitch confirmed Gomez's warrants, he placed Gomez under arrest. At the time of his arrest, Gomez had currency, primarily in $20 bills, a small glass vial, and a cell phone.
During the protective sweep of the main residence, no occupants were found inside. Officers moved to the detached garage, where the roll-up door was open. No occupants were inside the detached garage. Sgt. Matthews saw an UZI assault rifle and sawed off shotgun in the detached garage in plain view.
The owner of the property was present, and Officer Deplitch told her that Gomez was wanted for outstanding warrants. The owner said Gomez had come into her house and said the police were outside. The owner said that Pam (Malone) lived in the detached garage, and moved in about 3 weeks ago but had not yet paid rent. The owner said there were multiple parties at Pam's since she moved in, and the owner was concerned about the high pedestrian traffic in and out of Pam's garage. Because there was no bathroom in the detached garage, Pam and her visitors used the bathrooms in the main house. The owner first noticed Gomez the day before, around 1700 hours when Pam was having a party. The morning of the raid, the owner saw Gomez in the house standing behind her and asked him what he was doing inside her house. Gomez appeared nervous and looked out the window toward the street. The owner told Gomez to get out of her house. She went to the rear sliding doors and saw two people running away, then saw the police crash through the fence.
Sgt. Torres asked for consent to search the main house, which the owner provided. Officer Runolfson, who was designated as the finder, located six Remington 12-gauge shotgun shells wrapped in a white sock, which was in a kitchen cabinet. In a bedroom closet, between the bedroom and bathroom, he found a bullet proof vest hanging in plain view.
The owner did not know how the sock filled with shotgun shells got into her kitchen. She did not know who the bullet proof vest belonged to, and stated that her grandchildren slept in the room where the vest was found, but that Pam and her visitors used the bathroom [presumably near or next to the bedroom]. The owner identified Pam Malone in a photo as the person who rented her garage, and identified Gomez as the person who was in the backyard with Malone the day before and then in her house the morning of the raid.
Another witness, the property owner's grandson who lived in the house, stated that Gomez had been staying with Pam Malone in the garage.
Another witness, a friend of the owner's family, had been staying with the owner for about two weeks, and said Gomez had been staying in the garage with Pam Malone for the past two weeks. This witness said there was a birthday party for Gomez the night before on the patio area of the detached garage; the witness had a few drinks at the party then went inside the main house. The witnesses were not aware of any guns, drugs, or gang activity.
Officers then searched the detached garage, where surveillance cameras were positioned outside to view the north walkway. In plain view, on the floor at the foot of one of the beds, Officer Deplitch found a 9mm UZI assault rifle with a 25-round magazine in the handle, and a high capacity 32-round magazine lying next to it. At the head of the bed, they found a 12-gauge sawed off shotgun. Officer Deplitch removed a round from the chamber and four rounds from the magazine. The officers also located an empty box of Remington 12-gauge ammunition in the kitchen area of the garage, and next to the box was a motel receipt signed "Pamela Sosa." The officers located a box containing 18 rounds of Winchester 5.56 mm, 55 grain, full metal jacket ammunition in the kitchen on a shelf. Among other things, officers also found two digital scales with crystalline residue which appeared to be methamphetamine, a black camera case containing five shotgun shells and a 9mm handgun magazine loaded with one round of ammunition, a black canvas bag containing small ziplock bags, one of which contained a small amount of suspected methamphetamine, and a black patent leather purse, containing indicia belonging to Pam Malone, with ziplock bags containing crystalline residue which appeared to be methamphetamine.
Officers searched the pathway along the north side of the main house, where Officer Deplitch first heard Gomez and where Officer Butler first saw Gomez, and searched the area between the house and the detached garage. On top of some plants near the stairs leading to the back of the house, they found two clear plastic bags, one containing marijuana and the other containing methamphetamine. The bags appeared to be in new condition, with no dust or dirt on them. They located a Glock 9mm handgun on the north side of the house, wedged between two large plastic garbage bags on the ground, about five feet from the gate where Gomez and Medellin exited the property.
Eight days after briefing was submitted on the motion to suppress, the government submitted an ex parte document, for filing under seal, in support of its opposition to the motion to suppress. The court granted the motion to file the document under seal, having determined that the government made a sufficient showing about concerns for witness safety to support the request for filing the document under seal. At the motion hearing, Gomez objected to the filing under seal as prejudicial, giving no opportunity to respond, and requested that the document be made available for attorneys' eyes only. The government objected to the request for limited disclosure on the grounds of witness safety, citing Magistrate Judge Ryu's ruling denying Gomez's motion to unseal documents related to the discovery disputes. Doc. no. 60.
In
Following
In the discovery disputes referred to Magistrate Judge Ryu, the parties litigated the issues related to disclosure of the identity of a confidential informant and other witnesses, including witness safety. Magistrate Judge Ryu carefully considered factual information contained in ex parte sealed declarations to determine that early disclosure of certain witness information was not warranted due to the existence of significant witness safety concerns. Magistrate Judge Ryu noted that "[o]ne declaration explores the role of a confidential informant in Defendant's arrest." Doc. no. 60 at 7. In denying Gomez's motion to unseal the ex parte submissions, Magistrate Judge Ryu emphasized that witness discovery will not be withheld altogether, and ordered that delayed witness material be produced approximately two weeks before trial, subject to a protective order.
Magistrate Judge Ryu also denied Gomez's request for disclosure of the confidential source regarding Pam Malone's use of the S_____ Road residence, recognizing Gomez's argument that the government must demonstrate that the police had probable cause to believe that she resided there to conduct a probation search. Magistrate Judge Ryu balanced the competing concerns under
Doc. no. 60 at 12. No objections to Magistrate Judge Ryu's discovery rulings were filed, and, as noted in her discovery order, the ex parte affidavits are preserved for appellate review.
In opposition to the instant motion to suppress, the government provided the court with a copy of a sealed ex parte affidavit previously filed before Magistrate Judge Ryu, as well as an ex parte filing in support of the government's opposition to the suppression motion. The court adopts Magistrate Judge Ryu's findings about concerns for witness safety and her conclusion that, at this juncture, these concerns outweigh defendant's need for the information related to any confidential witness's role in Gomez's arrest and the probation search of Pam Malone's residence. The information contained in the sealed affidavits set forth sufficient facts to support the reliability of the information given by the informant, including the basis for how the informant came to know the information.
The United States Constitution protects "the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures." U.S. Const. Amend. IV. Warrantless searches and seizures by law enforcement are presumptively unreasonable.
As a threshold matter, the government challenges Gomez's standing to bring a motion to suppress. A defendant has standing to challenge the legality of a search on Fourth Amendment grounds only if he has a "legitimate expectation of privacy" in the place searched.
Based on the evidence in the record, Gomez has demonstrated his standing to assert a reasonable expectation of privacy as an overnight guest of Pam Malone in the detached garage.
Even if Gomez had standing to bring a motion to suppress with respect to the entire property, including the house, his motion fails on the grounds that the police conducted a valid protective sweep and found evidence of criminal activity in plain view, conducted a valid probation search of Pam Malone's residence in the detached garage, and obtained the property owner's consent to search her home.
Gomez contends that the officers' purported protective sweep was not justified, and that the unlawful protective sweep taints the other bases for conducting a search. The government argues that entry into the house and the detached garage were necessary to protect the officers and to assess the safety of others.
Officers who have effected an arrest at a residence may conduct a limited search for persons who may destroy evidence or pose a threat to the officers' safety, if the officers can point to articulable facts that support their belief that others may be on the premises.
The court in
Here, the officers provided "specific and articulable facts supporting their belief that other dangerous persons may be in the building or elsewhere on the premises."
As in
Gomez contends however that it was unreasonable for the officers to conduct a protective sweep of the detached garage after taking Gomez into custody and deploying a flash-bang grenade in the detached garage, to which no one responded. The fact that the officers used a flash-bang device is not determinative of whether they believed that others may have been in the detached garage. The fact that during surveillance, officers had observed multiple subjects come and go through the gate leading to the detached garage, and the fact that officers had just seen two other suspects, who were taken in custody after fleeing from the property, support the officers' belief that other dangerous persons might have remained in the detached garage. Furthermore, the sealed, ex parte affidavit submitted by the government in opposition to the motion to suppress provides strong factual support to justify the protective sweep. The specific facts articulated by the officers, to support their belief that other dangerous persons may have been on the premises, establish the presence of exigent circumstances to justify the protective sweep here.
Because the protective sweep was justified, the firearms found in the detached garage in plain view were properly seized. "`[T]he police may seize any evidence that is in plain view during the course of their legitimate emergency activities.'"
To satisfy the requirements for the plain view exception to a warrantless search, the government has shown (1) the officers were lawfully searching the house and the detached garage during a protective sweep, and (2) the incriminating nature of the evidence was apparent because both firearms (UZI assault rifle and sawed off shotgun) were dangerous weapons, giving rise to probable cause to believe the weapons were associated with criminal activity.
The government contends that Pam Malone's probation search condition authorized suspicionless searches to validate the subsequent search of her residence in the detached garage. The record demonstrates that (a) there was reasonable suspicion to believe that a crime was being committed by Pam Malone based on either (i) the officers' observation of the weapons in plain view supported reasonable, or (ii) the information contained in the sealed ex parte affidavit; and (b) the officers had probable cause to believe that Pam Malone, who was subject to a probation search condition, lived in the detached garage.
Pam Malone was sentenced to five years probation by the Alameda County Superior Court, subject to the standard condition that she must "submit to search and seizure by any Probation Officer or any other law enforcement officer at any time of the day or night with or without a search warrant, including: vehicle, residence, person or any other property under your control." Opp., Ex. B (Malone probation terms).
A probation search condition permits law enforcement to perform a search with less than probable cause or reasonable suspicion "only if the police had advance knowledge that the search condition applied before they conducted the search."
Gomez argues that Pam Malone's probation conditions, which forego a warrant requirement, did not forfeit the constitutional requirement of probable cause, or at least reasonable suspicion. Reply at 13 (citing
Here, there is no evidence that Pam Malone's search condition includes similar suspicionless-search language as found in
Based on the weapons found in plain view during the protective sweep, the government has demonstrated that the officers had a sufficiently reasonable suspicion that Pam Malone was engaged in criminal activity to justify the probation search of the detached garage.
As an alternative ground for conducting the probation search, independent of the evidence found in plain view, the information contained in the sealed, ex parte affidavit supports reasonable suspicion, and even probable cause, to believe that Pam Malone was engaged in criminal activity, establishing a legitimate basis for conducting a probation search of her residence in the detached garage.
Ninth Circuit authority requires that "before conducting a warrantless search of a residence pursuant to a parolee's parole condition, law enforcement officers must have probable cause to believe that the parolee is a resident of the house to be searched."
To demonstrate that Officer Deplitch had probable cause to believe that Pam Malone was living in the detached garage, the government argues that he had seen her enter and exit the detached garage several times during his surveillance, and the property owner told him that Malone was renting the garage prior to conducting the search. Deplitch Decl. ¶¶ 3, 6. Gomez argues that the officers lacked probable cause to believe that Pam Malone lived at the property because Officer Deplitch saw Malone at the property with "multiple other people," and Deplitch had to rely on an aerial photograph to determine that the detached garage existed. Gomez points out that Deplitch could not see the detached garage behind the house during surveillance, and questions whether Deplitch could have personally observed Malone enter and exit the garage. Reply at 15 n.6. Gomez also argues that the government failed to satisfy three of the indicia of residence set forth in
Despite the weakness of the first three
The totality of the circumstances supports the government's assertion that the officers had probable cause to believe Malone resided in the detached garage, and that they had reasonable suspicion to search her residence pursuant to her probation search condition, based on the firearms found in plain view during the protective sweep.
The government contends that the property owner gave valid consent to search both the main house and the detached garage that was rented out to Pam Malone. The court has determined that Gomez lacks standing to challenge the search of the main house on the property where the property owner resided, but proceeds to determine the validity of the search of the house, as well as the detached garage.
There does not appear to be any dispute whether the property owner could consent to the search of her own house, but Gomez argues that the evidence found as a result of the consent was tainted by the invalid protective sweep and that the landlord's consent was not given voluntarily. Because the court finds that the protective sweep was valid, it is not necessary to reach the issue whether the landlord's consent was tainted. The court proceeds to the disputed issues of voluntariness and scope of the landlord's consent.
Gomez suggests that the property owner did not give voluntary consent because it came on the heals of a dramatic and frightening police raid involving at least 13 officers swarming her property and driving through a fence. Reply at 17. The court may consider five factors, none of which is individually dispositive, to determine if a consent to search was voluntarily given: (1) whether [the consenting person] was in custody; (2) whether the arresting officers had their guns drawn; (3) whether Miranda warnings were given; (4) whether the [consenting person] was notified that she had a right not to consent; and (5) whether the [consenting person] had been told a search warrant could be obtained.
Here, the government has shown that the property owner was not in custody, that the officers did not have their guns drawn when she consented, and that she was never arrested, making Miranda warnings irrelevant. Opp. at 9. The property owner signed a Consent to Search form, which states on its face that she was informed that she had a right to refuse consent, and Officer Deplitch states that she was advised of her right to refuse a warrantless search of her premises and her right to refuse to consent to the search. Deplitch Decl. ¶ 6. Thus, the government has demonstrated that the property owner's search was voluntary.
The landlord gave valid consent with respect to searching the main house, but the landlord did not have actual or apparent authority to consent to the search of the detached garage rented by Pam Malone. The Ninth Circuit has articulated the following standard for determining whether consent by the property owner justifies a warrantless search of a property:
Here, after conducting the protective sweep of the house and the garage, the officers interviewed the property owner before conducting the search of the house and the garage. The owner rented the garage to Pam Malone about three weeks before the raid, but Malone had not yet paid any rent. The owner noticed that Malone had multiple parties at the garage and high pedestrian traffic in and out of the garage since she moved in. Malone and her guests used the bathroom in the house because there was no bathroom in the garage.
The facts on this record do not show that the landlord had a sufficient relationship with, or common authority over, the detached garage to give her actual authority to consent to a search, and the police report does not indicate that the landlord used her key to let the officers into the detached garage, as the officers entered through an open door. Given that the owner told the police that Pam Malone was renting the detached garage from her, the officers could not have reasonably believed that the landlord had apparent authority to consent to a search of Pam Malone's residence. The government emphasizes that Pam Malone had not yet paid rent, but there is no record that the landlord had initiated eviction proceedings. The government cites no authority recognizing a "deadbeat renter" exception to the rule that only the occupier or renter can waive the right to object to a search.
Thus, the landlord's consent does not validate the search of the detached garage, but that search was authorized by Pam Malone's probation search condition, as discussed above.
Gomez argues that the property owner did not consent to search of the curtilage of her home, because she only authorized the search of her residence/vehicle/person located at her address "and any other buildings/structures located on my property." Opp., Ex. C. Gomez contends that this consent, on its face, does not extend to the curtilage of her home, and that the search of the curtilage exceeded the scope of her consent. Reply at 19. This argument has no merit.
The curtilage concept originated at common law to extend to the area immediately surrounding a dwelling house the same protection under the law of burglary as was afforded the house itself.
Here, the property owner's consent encompassed her residence and "any other buildings/structures located on my property," and Gomez cites no authority holding that a homeowner's consent to search her property, including her home, would exclude the curtilage outside her home. In light of the property owner's express consent, there is no basis to exclude evidence seized from the area surrounding her house.
For the foregoing reasons, Gomez's motion to dismiss the indictment (doc. no. 61) and motion to suppress evidence (doc. no. 62) are DENIED.
Given that the pendency of this motion was the basis for a Speedy Trial Act exclusion, and that now that it has been decided, the Speedy Trial clock begins again, this matter is calendared for trial setting on the court's calendar for March 19, 2014, at 2:30 p.m.