ROBERT S. LASNIK, District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on "Defendant Salazar-Rojas' Motion To Suppress Evidence Obtained By Unlawful Interception Of Telephonic Communications," Dkt. #487, in which defendants Cruz-Cruz, Gutierrez and Cruz-Olivero join, Dkt. #491; Dkt. #492; Dkt. #247 (CR13-49RSL); and defendant Salazar-Rojas' "Motion To Compel Supplemental Discovery In Support Of Request For Franks Hearing," Dkt. #515.
This case arises out of a 10-month investigation into the Salazar drug trafficking organization ("Salazar DTO"), which culminated on or about February 6, 2013 with the execution of several arrest warrants and yielded indictments against multiple defendants. Dkt. #476 (Order Denying Motion to Suppress) at 1-2. Several wiretaps targeting defendant and intercepting his calls were authorized by the Honorable Richard A. Jones of this District; the government has stated that the only wiretaps it intends to use as evidence in this case are those authorized by Judge Jones. Dkt. #522 at 3. Defendant was also targeted and intercepted by wiretaps authorized by the Honorable Lawrence J. O'Neill of the Eastern District of California; the contents of several calls intercepted by wiretaps authorized by Judge O'Neill were included in affidavits for wiretaps authorized by Judge Jones. Dkt. #513 at 46-51. Defendant claims standing to directly challenge ten total wiretap orders issued by these two judges. Dkt. #519 at 8.
Defendant claims to have identified 80 separate wiretap orders relating to eight cases (including his own) spanning six years (2007-2013) targeting the same or related DTOs in four states, and argues that the validity of these wiretap orders and the fruits of these investigations have bearing on whether evidence may be suppressed in this case. Dkt. #487 at 2-3; Dkt. #523 (Def. Reply Compel) at 1. Defendant seeks to compel discovery relating to these other investigations and to suppress the evidence obtained from the wiretaps in this case. Dkt. #523.
Defendant argues that the government's applications for the wiretaps that defendant has standing to challenge ("defendant's wiretaps") did not comply with Title III of the Omnibus Safe Streets and Crime Control Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510
Defendant also advances a "fruit of the poisonous tree" argument for compelling discovery and suppressing the fruits of the wiretaps in this case. Defendant argues that if a given wiretap (regardless of its target) was invalid, then its fruits should not have been used to support the applications for the wiretaps (authorized by Judge Jones and Judge O'Neill) that defendant has standing to challenge. Dkt. #519 at 4; Dkt. #534 at 5. Thus, defendant argues that he must be allowed to scrutinize the application (and evidence supporting said application) for every wiretap that produced evidence later included in the applications for defendant's wiretaps.
Moreover, defendant argues that the wiretap applications that he has reviewed failed to satisfy the "particularity" requirements of the Fourth Amendment and Title III, in that they did not provide details about the structure and hierarchy of the targeted DTOs to confirm that they actually were the type of organizations that Title III was written to target (or establish that a wiretap was necessary to investigate a given organization). Dkt. #487 at 22, 31. Defendant contends that the applications and resulting orders were "unconstitutionally overbroad" because they never provided "a particularized description of the alleged Drug Trafficking Organization[.]"
Finally, defendant argues that the breadth and length of the government's investigation into the Salazar DTO and other DTOs, and the sheer number of separate wiretap authorizations, reaches beyond the scope of what Title III intended and violates the Fourth Amendment. Defendant Salazar-Rojas and co-defendant Cruz-Cruz contend that the government has not been investigating "organized crime," which Title III was meant to target, but a loosely-affiliated, amorphous network of drug distributors (or an "open black market," as Cruz-Cruz characterizes it). Dkt. #487 at 31; Dkt. #248 at 5 (CR13-49RSL). Defendants assert that the government may not invoke Title III to secure wiretaps targeting this type of network.
Pursuant to the Title III, an application for a court-authorized wiretap must include "a full and complete statement as to whether or not other investigative procedures have been tried and failed or why they reasonably appear to be unlikely to succeed if tried or to be too dangerous." 18 U.S.C. § 2518(1)(c). The judge reviewing the application must determine whether the government has properly shown that "normal investigative procedures" have failed or should not be attempted.
To obtain an evidentiary hearing under
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16 states the following:
Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(E). To compel discovery in a criminal case, "[a] defendant must make a threshold showing of materiality, which requires a presentation of `facts which would tend to show that the Government is in possession of information helpful to the defense.'"
Defendant argues that any evidence obtained as a result of any invalid wiretap application must be "excised" from the applications for the wiretaps that defendant has standing to challenge, under the "fruit of the poisonous tree" doctrine as enshrined in 18 U.S.C. § 2515.
Under Title III, an "aggrieved person" has standing to move to suppress the contents of an unlawfully-intercepted communication, 18 U.S.C. § 2518(10); an "aggrieved person" is defined as "a person who was a party to any intercepted wire, oral, or electronic communication or a person against whom the interception was directed." 18 U.S.C. § 2510(11). The Supreme Court has interpreted these provisions as limiting standing to challenge wiretaps to persons whose Fourth Amendment rights were violated by an interception.
While defendant acknowledges that he only has standing to challenge a handful of the wiretaps that he claims may be invalid, he nevertheless claims that he may challenge the wiretaps intercepting and targeting him to the extent that their applications relied on evidence obtained from previous wiretaps that defendant has no standing to challenge. Dkt. #519 at 4. Defendant appears to rely on the fact that § 2515 does not mention Title III's standing requirement. However, this argument is unpersuasive. Defendant does not cite, and this Court has not found, any case holding that a defendant who otherwise lacks standing to challenge the fruits of a wiretap gains the power to do so when these fruits are later used to secure a wiretap that he does have standing to challenge.
Thus, defendant's only colorable "fruits" argument is that evidence that led to wiretaps that he can challenge (i.e., certain wiretaps authorized by Judge Jones) was the fruit of illegal wiretaps that he also has standing to challenge (i.e., certain wiretaps authorized by Judge O'Neill).
Defendant argues generally that the wiretap applications he has reviewed failed to satisfy the Fourth Amendment's particularity requirement, as well as Title III's particularity requirements,
Dkt. #487 at 31. For the reasons provided
Precedent and the existing record do not support defendant's argument. The Fourth Amendment states that warrants must "particularly describ[e] the place to be searched, and the person or things to be seized." U.S. Const. amend. IV. The Ninth Circuit has held that wiretap orders satisfy the Fourth Amendment's particularity requirement where they identify the phone line to be tapped and the nature of the conversations to be intercepted.
Furthermore, defendant's argument is not supported by Title III precedent. To be sure, there are cases where the Ninth Circuit has found the government's wiretap affidavits satisfactory where they "etched the nature and contours" of a criminal organization and detailed the "nature and extent" of an investigation.
While precedent clearly states that the government may not merely characterize a case as involving a "drug conspiracy" to justify a wiretap,
Defendant has not specifically identified a single wiretap application that failed to show necessity on its face. Defendant generally states that, in the wiretap applications he has reviewed,"no facts" were asserted as to "particulars" to assist judges in "identifying . . . necessity;" however, the Court can readily identify affidavits submitted to Judge Jones and Judge O'Neill that explained at length how traditional investigative methods had either failed or were likely to fail to expose targets' co-conspirators and help build effective cases against them, citing case-specific details.
Defendant argues that the government's wiretap applications did not provide a "full and complete statement of the facts and circumstances relied upon by the applicant, to justify his belief that an order should be issued[.]" 18 U.S.C. § 2518(1)(b). Specifically, defendant argues that, by omitting information about the related investigations and the evidence gathered from various wiretaps from these applications, the government deprived judges of information material to their necessity determinations. Defendant suggests that this entitles him to relief on several different bases. First, the wiretap evidence against defendant should be suppressed because the government failed to make full and complete statements about the course of its investigation. Second, because a related investigation may have rendered defendant's wiretaps unnecessary, defendant must be allowed to review the evidentiary records from these investigations, so that he may prove that he is entitled to a
The Court first addresses defendant's suggestion that the fruits of his wiretaps may be suppressed due to the government's failure to make "full and complete statements" in its wiretap applications. Defendant incorrectly suggests that, under the statute, the government's alleged omissions require suppression regardless of their materiality or the motive behind the omissions. Dkt. #519 at 5-6.
This Circuit analyzes misstatements and omissions from wiretap applications under the framework articulated in
Therefore, the question presented is whether defendant is entitled to a
Defendant conceded at oral argument that he cannot yet make the requisite preliminary showing under
Defendant seeks supplemental discovery in order to show that some investigation had acquired evidence rendering the wiretaps targeting or intercepting defendant's communications unnecessary. This would, the Court presumes, be evidence showing that the scope and operations of the Salazar DTO had been completely revealed and/or that the DTO could be thoroughly investigated without an additional wiretap.
Defendant's central evidence that the government may have omitted material information is (a) the fact that different investigations had certain overlapping targets; (b) the fact that government agents in different investigations provided evidence to each other due to these overlaps; and (c) the fact that certain wiretap applications did not mention certain past or ongoing investigations. Dkt. #523 at 3-4. The Court finds no clear indication from defendant's proffer that any other investigation in any other jurisdiction would have acquired sufficient evidence as to the scope of the Salazar DTO to render defendant's wiretaps unnecessary to investigate its scope and its members. Notably, the government has no intention to use evidence obtained from any wiretap not authorized by Judge Jones in its case in chief. Also, defendant has not identified any evidence in his case (aside from the wiretap orders in question) that was the fruit of an investigation in some other District. While certainly not conclusive evidence that defendant's wiretaps were not redundant, the Court finds this suggestive that these other investigations did not reveal anything material to investigating the Salazar DTO that the government did not share in its applications to Judge Jones.
As it stands, there is too little here to justify the fishing expedition that defendant asks the Court to permit; specific facts do not sufficiently establish the materiality of the evidence he seeks to discover.
Defendant argues that the government violated his Fourth Amendment rights by choosing to conduct a sprawling and fragmented investigation and prosecution.
Defendants have not cited, and this Court has not found, any case law suggesting that using multiple wiretaps to assist multiple lengthy investigations into multiple interlocking criminal groups in multiple jurisdictions violates a given target's Fourth Amendment rights due to the "overbreadth" of the "overall investigation." Nor have defendants cited any case in which wiretap interceptions were suppressed because the targeted organization was found to be insufficiently "organized" to fall under Title III. The Court declines to set such precedent, here. Criminal organizations may work in tandem or have common members, operating either as autonomous units of a larger syndicate or entirely independently. The number of wiretaps and length of time necessary to expose and unravel any one such organization can be substantial, especially in the era of disposable cell phones. While defendant Salazar-Rojas suggests that the government "carved" an overarching investigation of one syndicate into numerous pieces, Dkt. #523 at 2, the existing record can just as easily suggest separate, tangentially-related investigations where local DEA offices had to secure wiretap authorizations from federal judges in their Districts. Either way, the Court is convinced that, in pursuing multiple wiretaps in support of multiple investigations into the various alleged DTOs, the government stayed within the legal scope and purpose of Title III.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the Court DENIES defendant Salazar-Rojas' motion to suppress, Dkt. #487, which defendants Cruz-Cruz, Gutierrez and Cruz-Olivero join, Dkt. #491; Dkt. #492; Dkt. #247 (CR13-49RSL); and DENIES defendant Salazar-Rojas' motion to compel discovery, Dkt. #515.
18 U.S.C. § 2515.