United States v. Mancini, 1st Cir. (1993)
United States v. Mancini, 1st Cir. (1993)
United States v. Mancini, 1st Cir. (1993)
_______________
__
J. Gale, United States Attorney, Ira Belkin, Assistant United Sta
________
___________
Attorney, and Margaret E. Curran, Assistant United States Attorn
___________________
were on brief for appellant.
John A. MacFadyen, with whom Richard M. Egbert and Peter DiBia
_________________
_________________
____________
were on brief for appellee.
____________________
November 4, 1993
____________________
_____________________
*Of the District of Puerto Rico, sitting by designation.
STAHL,
must
decide whether
Island,
standing1
and
Circuit Judge.
_____________
defendant
calendar.
the Mayor
of
Salvatore
Mancini
to challenge a
subsequent
The
seizure
North Providence,
Rhode
("Mancini"),
has
the
district court
Mayor's
ruled
1987
appointment
in Mancini's
favor.2
We
__
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
__________________
We recount
the issue
on appeal.
On November
indicted
Mancini on one
color of
official right, in
relevant to resolving
20, 1992,
count of attempted
a grand
jury
extortion under
violation of 18 U.S.C.
1951.
____________________
1. The inquiry turns, in this case, on whether the defendant
demonstrated a legitimate expectation of privacy, see Rakas
___ _____
v. Illinois, 439 U.S. 128 (1978), and we use the term
________
`standing' in the present context as shorthand for that
inquiry.
United States v. Sanchez, 943 F.2d 110, 113 n.1
_____________
_______
(1st Cir. 1991).
2. After finding that Mancini had standing to contest the
search and seizure, the district court went on to grant
Mancini's motion to suppress the appointment calendar on the
ground that the affidavit used to acquire the search warrant
omitted certain facts which, if disclosed to the Magistrate,
would have demonstrated a lack of probable cause. On appeal,
the government does not contest this finding. Therefore, the
only issue before us is the standing question.
3. In relevant part, 18 U.S.C.
3731 provides: "An appeal
by the United States shall lie to a court of appeals from a
decision or order of the district court suppressing or
excluding evidence . . . ."
-22
According
to
accepted
the
indictment,
a $2,000
exchange
for
in
payment from
the
issuance
November
real
of
1987,
Mancini
estate developers
certain
certificates
in
of
to
the
the
allegations
p.m.
Timothy O'Keefe
in
against
the
course
of
Mancini,
the
FBI
approximately 4:30
agents,
indictment,
subpoenas
on October
and Charles
29,
Prunier,
DiPetrillo, and
calling
production of
the eleven
occupancy.
The
for
1992, two
FBI
went to
the
town's building
to serve
his
of occupancy.
him with
testimony
and
grand
for
subpoenas
required
production
of
the
of
the
in a room
maintenance
At
known as the
direction,
another town
Both the
DiPetrillo's
worker
archive attic.
records
the two
employee,
Robert
through two
locked
of records and
-33
When
the
Hennessey suggested
three
men
first
to the agents
entered
the
of the other
town records.
hearing,
boxes.
in
direction.
testimony
the agents
Agent Prunier,
only records
the boxes
Hennessey's
he directed
After a cursory
According
An initial
for
find the
records located
attic,
to a
at
in this
the
room.
suppression
particular stack
however, "wandered
off" in
of
another
"Mayor's Appointment
turned down to
Books."
The
flaps
on the
box
were
were not
interlocked.
Prunier
it in the box.
and replaced
after certificates
of occupancy in
in the
____________________
4. The appointment book here at issue is a rather typical
red-covered office calendar, with one page devoted to each
day of 1987.
The hard cover reads "Appointments," with
"1987" appearing underneath.
The inside front cover is
denoted "1987 Half Hourly Standard Appointment Diary."
-44
area
originally suggested.
This search
calendar.
A Magistrate Judge
executed
the
According
because of
before
the
same
to the
day.
the
calendar
was
calendar is
on November
alleged illegal
1987 appointment
government,
an entry made
payoff and
retrieved.
significant
24, 1987, a
one day
few days
before the
certificates
had a
were issued.
Kenneth Stoll,
arranged the
meeting
according to
where Stoll
allegedly
to
trial,
Mancini moved
to
suppress
the
calendar
search,
and 2)
was the
the
result of
later search,
a warrantless,
executed
illegal
pursuant to
____________________
5. The calendar entry took on greater importance in the face
of Stoll's credibility problems.
During the suppression
hearing, F.B.I. Agent Joyce, who signed the search warrant
affidavit, conceded that Stoll, who was to be a prosecution
witness, had lied on several occasions to the F.B.I. and
United States Attorney's office. In fact, the government had
rescinded a non-prosecution agreement it had previously
reached with Stoll because it believed that Stoll had
breached his obligation to speak truthfully. None of Stoll's
credibility problems were divulged to the Magistrate, leading
to the portion of the district court's suppression order that
is not here appealed.
-55
the
product
of
misleading
affidavit.
Following
suppression
Mancini
had
Addressing
claim
was
hearing,6
the district
standing
to contest
the merits,
the
The
the
court then
court
government's
concluded,
search
failure
to suppress.
found that
and seizure.
rejected
Mancini's
the calendar
however,
that
the
conduct in discovering
court first
disclose
issued due
the
negative
As noted
the
earlier, the
granted
government
reviewing
order, we uphold
findings,
the
district
court's
unless they
are clearly
erroneous.
suppression
mixed fact/law
See
___
United
______
States v. Carty, 993 F.2d 1005, 1008 (1st Cir. 1993) (factual
______
_____
____________________
6. At the suppression hearing, Prunier, Joyce, and Mayoral
Chief of Staff Leo J. Perrotta were called to testify by the
government.
Hennessey was the only witness called by the
defense. Mancini did not testify, but submitted an affidavit
stating that in 1987 he kept a daily calendar diary which was
"maintained as a personal rather than a public document,"
that the diary was "kept in a closed box marked Mayor's
Appointment Books" located in the locked archive room, and
that he instructed his Chief of Staff that "no one was to
have access to any of my boxes, including the box containing
the calendars, without permission." Mancini further stated
that "[a]t all times, I believed that my boxes, including the
one containing the calendars, were my private property, were
persons,
-66
We
is well settled
demonstrate a legitimate
that a defendant
who fails to
expectation of privacy in
the area
seizure occurred.
expectation
of
expectation
as
privacy
and
objectively
society
reasonable.
a subjective
accepts
California
__________
that
v.
concurring).
reasonable expectation
Sanchez, 943
_______
of privacy
F.2d at 113.
The
The burden
of
lies with
the
defendant must
by asking not
merely whether
whether he
had an
searched.")(internal
expectation of
items seized,
privacy in
quotations omitted);
the area
United States
_____________
v.
-77
Aguirre,
_______
upon
the merits
defendant must
privacy in
of
suppression
the area
challenge,
criminal
reasonable expectation of
searched and in
relation to
the items
seized.").
III.
III.
____
DISCUSSION
DISCUSSION
__________
In determining that Mancini had standing to contest
the
search,
the
district
court
into a
files."
of the
the
document from
court
stated
Mayor's
the
United States v.
_____________
Id. Finally,
__
that
box "does
ruled
first
office.
the mayor's
that it
found in the
It
was
the book
is
not
physical
where it
could
Id.
___
at
the
4-5.
On this
appeal,
the government
argues that
district court erroneously found that the calendar was a nonpublic document, and
and
could
not,
archive attic.
demonstrate a
privacy
expectation
did not,
in the
record,"
the
district
court
analogized
the
-88
Ortega,
______
the
Supreme
Court
ruled
that
the
Id. at 718.7
___
personal nature of
"which
included
correspondence
Hospital,
notes, and
The Court
from
personal
financial
personal gifts
correspondence,
private
were located in
patients
medical
unconnected
records,
teaching
and mementos."
Id.
___
files,
to
the
aids
and
The papers
of
one
of
the investigators
who
tried
non-State, it
to
Id.
___
was too
intermingled.
In
many
it
is
entries are
impossible
to
Names of public
day, do
not
reveal the
context
of the
intended
meeting.
Even if
the ratio
be one of
composite nature,
not
in the calendar.
number.
A perusal
of the
calendar
reveals
that many
remind
him
of
christenings,
weddings;
We are
of
of the
such
clearly
bachelor
dinners,
personal
doctor
activities
appointments
as
and
the
intended to
calendar
sufficiently
non-public
to
justify
appointment calendar,8
not
prevent
protection in that
U.S.
364, 369
one
shared access
from
document.
claiming
Fourth
See Mancusi
___ _______
(1968)(exclusive access
to a
to
document
Amendment
v. DeForte,
_______
an office
392
or to
____________________
8. By all accounts, Mancini's
appointment calendar is
typical of the kind of calendar maintained by business and
professional people. The daily log appeared to be maintained
by secretaries who worked for the Mayor, the same way
business
calendars are
often
maintained by
personal
assistants.
-1010
had
a sufficiently
justify
Fourth Amendment
whether
Mancini had a
the
place
searched.
appointment
files,"
"expected
book
but rather
to be
protection,
the question
reasonable expectation of
The
was
personal character
district
"not
in
where
a 1987
remains
that
the
the
mayor's
file could
the archives."
to
privacy in
said
remove[d]...from
was found
[found],
court
the
We do
be
not,
As we have stated:
omitted).
the question
Accordingly,
we turn our
attention to
of Mancini's privacy
interest in a box
appeal,
rely
in the
archive attic.
On
searches
both
sides
of business premises.9
In the
on
cases involving
government's view,
____________________
9. We agree, for purposes of this appeal, that cases
involving
business premises
searches are
sufficiently
analogous to provide guidance.
-1111
these
cases
establish
that
an
employee
can
have
takes
the opposite
view, i.e.,
an
Not
that
corporate
officer
or employee
expectation of privacy
shared with
searches
of
others, and
corporate
may
assert
a reasonable
even if
with respect
records.
to
See, e.g.,
___ ____
has standing
to object to a search of
his home.").
environments
in the public
whether an
employee
has a
reasonable expectation
of
privacy must
be
especially
-1212
See
___
Sanchez,
_______
943 F.2d
at
113
(quoting
United States
_____________
of
asserting
the
position
of
authority
held
v.
We also take
by
the party
United States v.
_____________
In
two individual
search of
used
defendants
a warehouse which
to store marijuana
before transport.
court's
standing
portion
reasoning
of
it
standing
was owned by a
district
any
for
that
the
to contest
the
corporation and
We rejected the
defendants
personal matters.
Id.
___
lacked
nor used
at
601.
money to buy
in which
the warehouse in
they held
the stock.
This,
a
we
defendants
and one of
all
the name of
had access
to it,
warehouse search.
and that
the defendants
-1313
keys to the
Id.
___
had standing to
did, in
We therefore
contest the
In
(1st Cir.
1983), on the
the district
them
in
the basement
building owned by a
that several
and
that
factors militated
We found
against defendant
having an
of privacy,
Id. at 624.
___
possible
three-tenant apartment
Id. at 624-25.
___
including the
sidewall.
close friend.
objective expectation
the storage
of
facts that
through
an
old hole
in
not only to
Id. at 625.
___
that
at 624-25.
area.
Id.
___
who used it as
a play
fact that
the defendant was not a tenant of the building and lacked any
evidence
compelled
to
support
us to
his
conclude
expectation
that
the
of
privacy
defendant
claim,
"could
not
insulate
himself
material by
had
no
against
the
. . . hiding it
legal
interest
discovery
of
in a place . .
or
even
incriminating
. in which [he]
access
rights."
Id.
___
(quotations omitted).
Finally, in Brien, we affirmed the district court's
_____
finding of an expectation of privacy on the part of corporate
-1414
employees
in business
records
seized
at
306.
In so
position
in the
firm;
responsibilities; 4)
his power
Id.
___
Id. at n.9.10
of
the
Brien,
_____
district
1) each defendant's
ownership
interest; 3)
his
to exclude
others from
the
in question was
security measures.
approved the
factors:
2) his
areas
doing, we
from
We also
his presence
found it relevant
extreme
___
Although we
with matters of
us that the
reasonable
Mancini
nineteen
expectation
of
mayor of
the
was
privacy in
city
of
the
North
an objectively
archive
attic.
Providence
for
was upstairs in
the very
throughout his
tenure in
record shows
building in
which Mancini
political office.
previously,
worked
Moreover,
the
no one
____________________
10. Some standing decisions turn on the applicability of
certain business regulations that may reduce one's reasonable
expectation of privacy. See, e.g. United States v. Leary,
___
____ _____________
_____
846 F.2d 592, 596-98 (10th Cir. 1988) (exporting); United
______
States v. Chuang, 897 F.2d 646, 649-51 (2d Cir. 1990)
______
______
(banking), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 824 (1990).
No such
_____ ______
regulations apply to this case.
-1515
would
have
access
authorization.11
belongings were
to
his
files
Finally,
clearly
we
without
note
labeled and
were
his
that
prior
Mancini's
segregated
from
only
members
of the
instructions
maintenance
not to disturb
or
personnel
staff,
who
had
could enter
the attic, and that his personal records would not be touched
except with
Cf.
___
his permission
Mancusi, 392
_______
actions
or that of
U.S. at 369.
In our
his Chief
of Staff.
opinion, Mancini's
issue.
Q.
Mayor's
A.
Q.
A.
Did
into
any of
the
No.
Who, if you know, was the only person authorized to
permit entry into those boxes?
I would say the Mayor or Leo Perrotta [the Mayor's
Chief of Staff].
-1616