Lawyer charged with obstruction had REP in his telephone calls with client in jail

A criminal defense lawyer charged with obstruction of justice had a reasonable expectation of privacy in phone calls with his client, Holyoke, from the jail, so the recordings were suppressed. United States v. Novak, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71281 (D. Mass. September 26, 2006):

In apparent recognition of the traditional sanctity of conversations between attorney and client and the requirements of state regulations, in this case, the Jail attempted to exempt attorney-client calls from its general monitoring procedure. The attempt, however, was poorly executed. First, as noted above, Securus, using a database of Massachusetts attorneys, created a list of telephone numbers that were to be exempt from monitoring. The list was flawed because it did not include Novak’s telephone number, despite the fact that Novak’s number was listed in the Lawyers’ Diary. Second, the evidence establishes that there was essentially no communication, either to inmates or to attorneys, of the Jail’s policy regarding the exemption from monitoring of attorney-client calls, or the procedure that the Jail used to identify attorney phone numbers so as to exempt them from monitoring. Because the calls to Novak’s office were answered by his secretary, and routed to Novak after the warning message was received, Novak did not hear the warning of potential monitoring played at the beginning of the phone call. He therefore was not placed on notice that his normal expectation of confidentiality might be different with respect to the call from Holyoke.

Drug arrest seven months earlier was too stale for reasonable suspicion for a probation violation search. People v. Ward, 2006 Ill. App. LEXIS 891 (5th Dist. September 29, 2006).

Affidavit for search warrant was specific because it sufficiently alleged that there was evidence of a crime at the place to be seached (Zurcher) and not just that the defendant was the holder. United States v. Allen, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71189 (N.D. Okla. September 29, 2006).* Similar is United States v. Flynn, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70942 (W.D. Pa. September 27, 2006)* (“although the affidavit must set forth the nexus between the items to be sought and seized and the place to be searched, direct evidence linking the place to be searched with a crime is not required for a warrant to issue.”).

Plaintiff’s claim he was choked to retrieve a cocaine baggie that he attempted to swallow was not a constitutional violation, but his allegation of a second choking was. Stokes v. Porretto, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71060 (S.D. Tex. September 29, 2006).*

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.