Massage parlor footage of Patriots owner
suppressed in Florida case
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[May 14, 2019]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - Hidden-camera footage of New
England Patriots owner Robert Kraft at a Florida massage parlor cannot
be used as evidence in his trial on charges of soliciting prostitution,
a judge ruled on Monday in a victory for the billionaire.
Attorneys for the owner of the reigning Super Bowl champions had asked
the Florida judge to suppress the video, calling it governmental
overreach from an illegally obtained search warrant.
The Palm Beach County judge focused his ruling on what he deemed a lack
of "minimization" procedures to limit the invasion of privacy of the
massage parlor's clients.
"The court finds that the search warrant does not contain required
minimization guidelines, and that minimization techniques employed in
this case did not satisfy constitutional requirements," Judge Leonard
Hanser wrote in the 12-page ruling.
The video could have been key evidence against Kraft, who faces two
misdemeanor counts of soliciting prostitution on Jan. 19 and 20 at
Orchids of Asia Spa in Jupiter, Florida, along with some two dozen other
men.
The other defendants also could benefit from the suppression of the
video footage.
Michael Edmondson, a spokesman for the state attorney for Palm Beach
County, said in an email his office was reviewing the order. He did not
immediately say if an appeal was planned.
POLICE STOP
Hanser also suppressed evidence from a police stop of Kraft's
chauffeured car on Jan. 19, after he left the massage parlor. Police
stopped the car to confirm the identity of the person they captured on
video at the parlor minutes earlier, Hanser wrote.
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New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft gives a speech as he
celebrates with the Vince Lombardi Trophy after winning Super Bowl
LIII. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
"Defendant's identity was not known to law enforcement until he was
stopped," Hanser wrote. "Therefore, all information obtained through
the stop is suppressed as the fruit of an unlawful search."
Prosecutors at a hearing last month said Kraft, 77, could not have
expected privacy at the parlor because it was a business
establishment.
Also last month, Hanser temporarily blocked prosecutors from
releasing the video footage to media outlets, which had requested
copies under the state's open records law.
Kraft, owner of the New England Patriots since 1994, pleaded not
guilty to the misdemeanor criminal counts against him. He has issued
a public apology for his actions.
The warrant for the hidden cameras, Kraft's lawyers claimed, was
secured under false pretenses because police cited human trafficking
as a potential crime in their application. Prosecutors have since
acknowledged the investigation yielded no evidence of trafficking.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; editing by Bill Tarrant and Leslie
Adler)
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