147.
Sample Response to Defendant's Motion to Suppress
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Defendant's Motion to Suppress Tangible Evidence
Should be Denied, as the Evidence was Properly Seized Pursuant to a Valid
Search
Warrant and Incident to a Lawful Arrest.
Defendant conclusorily alleges, in his Motion to Suppress Evidence,
that
"certain items sought to be used as evidence by the prosecution against the
Defendant were seized from him without a warrant or probable cause" in
violation
of his Fourth Amendment rights. This contention has no merit.
The government intends to introduce at trial two groups of items
seized
from Defendant Sheldon. The first group, consisting of a Ku Klux Klan card
and
a card on which racial slogans and symbols were written, were seized from
the
Defendant upon his arrest for the Armstrong Lane cross burning on November
7,
1991. The second, consisting of copy of the film "Mississippi Burning,"
articles
of racist literature and target captioned "Official Runnin' NIGGER Target"
were
seized from Sheldon's truck pursuant to a valid search warrant. Both groups
of
evidence are plainly admissible under established Fourth Amendment law.
It is well-established that an arresting officer may, without a
warrant,
search a person validly arrested, regardless of whether there is any
indication
that the person possesses weapons or evidence; the fact of a lawful arrest,
alone, authorizes the search. United States v. Robinson, 414 U.S. 218
(1973).
An arrest is lawful so long as the arresting officer has probable cause to
believe a suspect has committed an offense under prevailing law. Michigan
v.
DeFillippo, 443 U.S. 31, 36 (1979) (citations omitted). A search incident
to a
lawful arrest remains valid, and the evidence recovered remains admissible,
even
if the law pursuant to which the officer made the arrest is subsequently
ruled
unconstitutional. Id. at 35-40.
Probable cause, in turn, exists where police have knowledge or
information
of facts and circumstances sufficient in themselves to warrant a belief by
a
person of reasonable caution that an offense has been or is being committed
by
the person to be arrested. Brinegar v. United States, 338 U.S. 160, 175-56
(1949). See also Spinelli v. United States, 393 U.S. 410, 419 ("only the
probability, and not a prima facie showing, of criminal activity is the
standard
of probable cause"). Where an arrest warrant is sought and issued, the
magistrate judge's determination of probable cause is entitled to great
deference
by the reviewing court. Spinelli, 393 U.S. at 419; see also Illinois v.
Gates,
462 U.S. 213, 236-39 (1983). The function of the reviewing court is merely
to
determine whether the magistrate had sufficient information to support his
or her
independent judgment that probable cause existed. Whitely v. Warden, Wyo.
State
Penitentiary, 401 U.S. 560, 564 (1971).
In this case, the application for Sheldon's arrest warrant states that
police had determined that a cross had been burned on land belonging to
Harry R.
Smith and family, and that these property owneres did not give anyone
permission
to burn a cross on the property. These facts supplied probable cause for
the
Judge Barbara Thurston, who issued the arrest warrant, to conclude that a
violation of Maryland Code Art. 27, § 10A, which had not yet been ruled
unconstitutional, had occurred. The affidavit further states that John Boyd
had
been arrested for this offense and had given a full written and oral
confession
admitting that he and Brandon Sheldon together had constructed the cross
and
placed it on the Smith property, targeting a black family as their victims,
and
that Sheldon had lit the cross. These additional facts provided ample basis
for
Judge Thurston's conlusion that a significant probability existed that
Sheldon
was responsible for the crime at issue. Because the war
rant for Sheldon's arrest was supported by probable cause, his arrest and
the
search of his person incident to that arrest were valid. Thus, the items
seized
in the course of that arrest are admissible.
The items seized from Sheldon's pick-up truck are equally admissible.
A
magistrate judge properly issues a search warrant for a particular place if
he
or she concludes that "all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit
before
him...[supply] a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime
will be
found in a particular place." Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 238 (1983).
As
with the determination of probable cause to arrest, a magistrate's
determination
of probable cause to search is entitled to "great deference"; the duty of a
reviewing court is limited to ensuring that the magistrate had a
"substantial
basis" for his or her decision. Id. at 236-39 (citations omitted); see
also
United States v. Lalor, 996 F.2d 1578 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 114 S.Ct.
485
(1993).
A review of the affidavit in support of the warrant to search
Sheldon's
truck shows that police had ample cause to believe that the truck contained
evidence of criminal activity. Affiant Thomas Allinger, of the Prince
George's
County Fire Investigations Division, states that two pick-up trucks were
observed
leaving the scene of an investigation of a January 28, 1992 cross-burning
near
Branch Avenue, in Clinton, Maryland. He reports that a witness described
one of
these trucks as a blue pick-up truck occupied by two white males and bearing
a
partial Maryland license registration number 215. Allinger further declares
that
Defendant Sheldon, a white male, is the registered owner of a 1987 blue
Chevrolet
pick-up truck bearing Maryland registration 215-546. The affidavit also
states
that Sheldon was arrested for the Armstrong Lane cross-burning in November,
1991;
that Sheldon is a known member of the Ku Klux Klan, an organization which
burns
crosses as part of their ritualistic pra
ctices; and that Sheldon is known to be a close friend and associate of two
other
Klan members who were arrested in connection the Branch Avenue
cross-burning.[FN1]
FN1. The Prince George's County officials who investigated the
incident
cannot now recall how they obtained the information that one of the trucks
leaving the scene of the cross burning was blue. Grand jury testimony
regarding
the Branch Avenue incident does suggest, however, that two pickup trucks
were
seen in the vicinity at the time of the cross burning. One witness
testified
that as he was driving southbound on Branch Avenue, just before coming upon
the
burning cross, he noticed a full-size pickup truck with a Confederate flag
across
the back window parked off the right side of Branch Avenue. He previously
told
investigators that he also observed two white males running across Branch
Avenue
toward the parked truck. At the time of the grand jury session, he could
not
recall the color of the truck. Another witness testified that while the
cross
was burning, he saw a red Dodge pickup truck with the partial license number
215
and a Confederate flag in the back window parked
in a different location, near a construction site beneath Branch Avenue, off
Fox
Run Drive; the truck drove off quickly with its lights off after the witness
saw
it. Both Brandon Sheldon and David Paul Black, who was also arrested in
connection with the cross burning, owned pickup trucks with the partial
Maryland
license number 215. Sheldon's truck was a blue Cheverolet with a
Confederate
flag across the back window; Black's truck was a red Dodge. When
investigators
located Black's truck on the night of January 28, 1992, it did not have a
flag
in the window, although investigators found a Confederate flag in Black's
bedroom.
These facts supplied substantial basis for Judge Nichols' conclusion
that
a fair probability existed that Sheldon's truck would contain evidence of
the
Branch Avenue cross-burning; accordingly, this Court should uphold the
validity
of the warrant. Additionally, where, as here, law enforcement officers rely
in
good faith upon a search warrant issued by a neutral judicial officer based
upon
a finding of probable cause, the search warrant is generally immune from
judicial
scrutiny, even if a reviewing court later determines that probable cause did
not
exist. United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 922-23 (1984).[FN2]
FN2. Leon's good faith exception to the warrant requirement does not
apply
where the magistrate relies on an affidavit that the affiant prepared with
deliberate or reckless disregard of the truth; or where the magistrate
wholly
abandoned his neutral and detached judicial function; or where the officers
could
not harbor a reasonable belief in either the existence of probable cause or
the
facial validity of the warrant. 468 U.S. at 922-23.
Therefore, the evidence seized pursuant to the search warrant for
Defendant's truck, as well as the evidence seized incident to his arrest,
should
not be suppressed.
[cited in
Civil Rights Resource Manual 60]
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