NEW YORK — A search
warrant snafu could mean the case against a Brooklyn man charged with
possessing child pornography could be dismissed. And it’s not the first time
the agent who led the search has lost a challenge in court.
The child porn case against 30-year-old Yuri Bershchansky is
collapsing after a federal judge threw out evidence the Department of Homeland
Security seized from his Brooklyn home, CBS 2’s Tony Aiello reported Tuesday.
Agents had a warrant to search Apartment 2, based in part on
a Cablevision bill that listed Bershchansky at that apartment.
When agents raided the house they found Bershchansky living in Apartment 1, which was not listed on the warrant They searched it anyway, Aiello reported.
When agents raided the house they found Bershchansky living in Apartment 1, which was not listed on the warrant They searched it anyway, Aiello reported.
A judge ruled “the agents could have read the warrant
carefully. Instead they searched an apartment they were not authorized to
search.”
Neighbor Colleen Kiernan said she’s not happy.
“Technicality — they should still take him out!” she said.
But attorney Norman Siegel said the constitution clearly
mandates cops be specific about where they want to search.
“I know people will say ‘this creep is gonna be let go,’ but
there’s a larger issue. We must follow our constitutional dictates,” Siegel
said.
It turns out the search warrant problems that damaged this
case in Brooklyn also turned up in a child pornography case in the Bronx — a
case that was handled by the very same agent from the Department of Homeland
Security, Aiello reported.
A conviction was overturned because Agent Robert Raab
searched an upstairs apartment in Belmont — when the warrant specified only the
ground floor unit.
“It raises questions about his training and supervision, but
it also raises questions it could be that it’s not isolated to this one agent,”
Siegel said.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement later issued a
statement, saying: “Allegations involving potential investigative errors and/or
misconduct are treated with the utmost seriousness and routed for appropriate
investigation.
As public servants working for a law enforcement agency, ICE
employees are held to the highest standard of professional and ethical
conduct.”
Bershchansky could learn next month if the charges against
him will be dropped.
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