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Opinions of
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
and the Massachusetts
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To be used in conjunction
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Commonwealth v. Santoro, 406 Mass. 421 (1990)
Supreme Judicial
Court of Massachusetts, Middlesex.
Argued Nov. 8, 1989.
Decided Jan. 11, 1990.
William R. Marino, Boston,
for defendant.
Michael Fabbri,
Asst. Dist. Atty., for the Com.
Before LIACOS,
C.J., and WILKINS, ABRAMS, O'CONNOR and GREANEY, JJ.
WILKINS, Justice.
Convicted
of being present where betting apparatus was found (G.L.
c. 271, § 17 [1988 ed.] ), the defendant challenges
the denial of his motion to suppress evidence seized in his home pursuant to a
search warrant. He asserts that
information on which the application for the search warrant was based was
obtained as a result of (1) an [406
Mass. 422] earlier unconstitutional
search of other premises and (2) illegal recordings of telephone conversations
(G.L. c. 272,§ 99 [1988 ed.] ). The motion to suppress was properly
denied. We affirm the conviction.
The police
searched the premises of one Zarba in Revere
pursuant to a search warrant that was later determined in another proceeding to
have been issued without probable cause.
The defendant argues that information unlawfully seized at the Zarba premises could not properly be used to support a
finding of probable cause to search the defendant's premises in Medford. He also claims that telephone conversations
in which he participated were unlawfully recorded at the Zarba
premises and should have been suppressed because he did not know of or assent
to the recordings. We shall assume in
the defendant's favor that, had the allegedly unlawfully obtained evidence not
appeared in the affidavit in support of the warrant to search his premises,
that affidavit would have failed to show probable cause. The defendant makes no argument, however,
that, taken in its entirety, the affidavit failed to show probable cause.
[1] The
defendant was not present when the Revere
search was conducted, and he had no interest in the premises or in the items
seized in the Revere search. He lacks standing under both the Constitution
of the United States
and the Constitution of the Commonwealth to challenge that search because he
had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the Revere
premises. See Rakas v. Illinois, 439 U.S.
128, 140‑150, 99 S.Ct. 421, 428‑434, 58
L.Ed.2d 387 (1978); Commonwealth v. Glowacki,
398 Mass. 507, 512, 499 N.E.2d
290 (1986); Commonwealth v. Simmons, 383 Mass.
46, 53‑56, 417 N.E.2d 1193 (1981).
The fact that the Revere
search was held to have been unlawful in proceedings against others who had
standing to challenge the lawfulness of that search does not aid the
defendant. (FN1) The suppression order in the other
proceedings was not an in rem suppression of
evidence.
[406 Mass.
423] The defendant argues that, in
any event, telephone conversations between a person at the Revere
premises and him were recorded at the Revere
premises in violation of G.L. c. 272, § 99. Tape recordings of these conversations were
seized in the Revere search. Following the issuance of a second search
warrant, the police listened to and transcribed the tape recordings. The police were not involved in intercepting
those conversations. On the other hand,
§ 99 also forbids the interception of certain oral communications by private individuals
(see § 99 C 1), such as a secret recording (see § 99 B 4).
[2] The
defendant had explicit statutory standing to move to suppress the contents of
the unlawfully intercepted communications.
§ 99P
("Any person who is a defendant in a criminal trial in a court of the
commonwealth may move to suppress the contents of any intercepted wire ...
communication or evidence derived therefrom, for the
following reasons: 1. That the
communications was unlawfully intercepted"). Section 99 does not, however, require the
suppression of all communications intercepted in violation of its
provisions. (FN2) The Legislature has left it to the courts to
decide whether unlawfully intercepted communications must be suppressed.
[3]
Exclusionary rules generally are intended to deter future police conduct in
violation of constitutional or statutory rights. However, no police or governmental conduct
was involved in the recording of these telephone conversations. A private individual, apparently engaged in
unlawful activity himself, recorded the defendant's conversations in violation
of § 99. No deterrent purpose would be
served by suppressing the intercepted conversations. The exclusionary rule was not designed to
protect persons from the consequences of the unlawful seizure of evidence by
their associates in crime. See § 99 A
(preamble). Indeed, a contrary result
would aid criminals by assuring that, in many instances,
telephone calls [406 Mass.
424] they might unlawfully record
could not be used as incriminating evidence.
(FN3)
Judgment affirmed.
(FN1.) In
Commonwealth v. Manning, 406 Mass.
425, 548 N.E.2d 1223 (1990), we consider arguments, not made in this case,
concerning the right of a defendant to rely on a violation of the
constitutional rights of another.
(FN2.)
Section 99 O, on the other hand, does forbid introduction of evidence related
to intercepted communications at trial unless the Commonwealth gives certain
notices to the defendant.
(FN3.)
In Commonwealth v. Jackson, 370 Mass.
502, 349 N.E.2d 337 (1976), we considered the denial of a motion to suppress
recorded telephone conversations between the victim's brother, a private
citizen who made the recordings, and the defendant. We concluded that, because the defendant knew
the recordings were being made, there was no secret recording amounting to an
interception in violation of § 99. Id. at 507, 349 N.E.2d 337. We
did not have to consider whether suppression would have been required if there
had been a violation of § 99. Nothing we
decide here is inconsistent with our conclusion in the Jackson
case.