Motion to Suppress Firearm Granted Due to Defective Search Warrant

Philadelphia Criminal Defense Lawyer Zak T. Goldstein, Esquire

Philadelphia criminal defense attorney Zak T. Goldstein, Esquire, recently won the suppression of a firearm in the Philadelphia Municipal Court. In the case of Commonwealth v. J.K., the client was charged with possessing a firearm as a prohibited person for allegedly refusing to relinquish two firearms after Family Court issued a final protection from abuse order against him. Fortunately, J.K. retained Attorney Goldstein, and Attorney Goldstein obtained suppression of the gun that police recovered when they searched J.K.’s apartment.

In this case, J.K.’s relative obtained a protection from abuse order against him. The final order contained a condition which required J.K. to surrender any firearms. After nearly a year went by, the Philadelphia Police conducted a background check on J.K. and concluded that he had not surrendered any firearms to the Sheriff’s Department as directed by the order. According to police records, J.K. had allegedly purchased two firearms legally about four or five years ago. A detective called J.K., and he told them that he did not have any firearms to surrender. Similarly, sheriffs deputies went to J.K.’s apartment and left notices on his door that he was required to surrender any firearms according to the terms of the PFA.

J.K. never surrendered any firearms, leading police to then obtain a search warrant for the apartment. When they executed the search warrant, they found one gun in the apartment. They arrested J.K., and the District Attorney’s Office charged him with possessing a firearm as a prohibited person in violation of 18 Pa.C.S. § 6105 (VUFA § 6105). Under the statute, it is illegal for a person to possess a firearm while they have an active PFA order against them.

J.K. retained Attorney Goldstein, and Attorney Goldstein litigated a motion to suppress on his behalf. Attorney Goldstein moved that the Municipal Court judge suppress the firearm because the warrant that the police relied upon did not actually contain probable cause. Specifically, the warrant provided only that J.K. had purchased firearms about four or five years prior to the date on which the Family Court issued the PFA and that he had not relinquished those firearms to the sheriff. The problem with the warrant, however, was that the police had no evidence that J.K. still had the firearm.

Does Pennsylvania Maintain a Registry of Firearms?

The simple answer to this question is no. Pennsylvania does not maintain a registry of firearm possession. Pennsylvania and federal law require a person who wishes to purchase a firearm from a dealer to undergo a background check and fill out certain paperwork at the time of the sale. The dealers generally keep that paperwork, and they provide copies of that paperwork to the police or federal agents when someone fails the background check so that the police can investigate whether the person attempted to purchase the gun illegally. This paperwork, however, does not go into any kind of central registry that can tell the police or other law enforcement where a particular gun is at any time. Additionally, there are many firearms transfers which do not require the completion of any paperwork at all. For example, a person may give a firearm to a parent, spouse, child, grandparent, or grandchild without completing any of the background check paperwork. Additionally, if someone left the state and sold the firearm in another state, the Pennsylvania State Police would not have any information on that transaction. Finally, if a gun were lost, stolen, or destroyed, the local police also may not have any information on the whereabouts of the gun.

So, although it is common for people to believe that a gun is “registered” to them after they have purchased it from a gun store, the reality is that Pennsylvania does not maintain a registry of firearms. Instead, the police tried to find out if J.K. still had a gun by checking various databases for whether or not the gun had ever been reported stolen. They did not know whether J.K. had gifted it to a close relative as allowed by law, had it stolen, sold the gun legally, or lost or destroyed it. When the police called, J.K. calmly told them that he did not have any firearms to surrender, and the purchase of the firearms had been four or five years earlier. The police, however, had obtained the search warrant based on this mistaken idea that guns are registered and that if J.K. had legally disposed of or transferred the guns, the police would somehow know about it. This idea, however, is not correct. Accordingly, Attorney Goldstein successfully argued that just because J.K. had a gun four or five years earlier did not mean he would still have a gun that he would need to surrender at the time that the PFA order was issued by the Family Court judge. The Municipal Court agreed, found that the warrant did not contain probable cause, and granted the motion to suppress.

It is also important to note that Pennsylvania does not have a good faith requirement for invalid search warrants. In the federal system, prosecutors often may move forward even if the search warrant was defective in some way or even if it had already been executed. In the state court system, evidence obtained in reliance on a defective warrant must be suppressed. Once evidence has been suppressed, it cannot be used in court, and prosecutors will generally be unable to move forward with the case.

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Goldstein Mehta LLC Criminal Defense Attorneys

If you are facing criminal charges or under investigation by the police, we can help. We have successfully defended thousands of clients against criminal charges in courts throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey. We have successfully obtained full acquittals in cases involving charges such as Conspiracy, Aggravated Assault, Rape, and Murder. We have also won criminal appeals and PCRAs in state and federal court. Our award-winning Philadelphia criminal defense lawyers offer a free criminal defense strategy session to any potential client. Call 267-225-2545 to speak with an experienced and understanding defense attorney today.

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