Police Sergeant Spencer appeals from the district court’s denial of his motioii for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. Ortiz sued Spencer and others under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that the police illegally searched his home on the basis of a search warrant unsupported by probable cause. Spencer contends that even if the search was illegal, his conduct in consulting and securing the approval of a deputy district attorney as well as a neutral detached magistrate was objectively reasonable, and thus he is entitled to qualified immunity. We have jurisdiction of this interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
I
Spencer is a sergeant in the Burglary and Narcotics Division of the Visalia, California, police department. On July 16, 1985, he received a telephone call at the Visalia Police Department from a man whose voice had no distinguishing accent. Vadnais, another officer, listened to part of the call. The caller did not identify himself, although Spencer insisted he do so. He told Spencer that nine days ago, he had personally observed cocaine, AR 16 rifles, hand grenades, machine guns, Uzi-brand weapons, and high explosives at 412 North Demaree, Visalia. The caller stated he believed that this material was still at the address at which he had seen it but that it would be moved within 24 hours to an unknown location.
Fifteen minutes later, Spencer received a telephone call from Captain Garay of the Visalia office of the California Highway Patrol, reporting that he had received a similar anonymous telephone call. About that time, officer Rodriguez of the Visalia Police Department was advised by telephone that the Fresno Police Department received a similar call. Spencer discussed the call with Vadnais, who was experienced with high explosives. Vadnais and Spencer considered and rejected the idea of simply calling Ortiz who they had determined was the occupant of 412 North Demaree. They concluded that Ortiz would likely deny having the explosives and try to move them hurriedly. Vadnais expressed great concern about explosives being located in a residential area and the danger that would be created by moving them. Spencer and Vadnais learned that Ortiz was a former Los Angeles law enforcement officer and presently a private investigator. They concluded that he would probably detect any surveillance and might then hurriedly move the explosives with attendant risk. Vad-nais ■ advised Spencer to call the federal office in Fresno and then to consult Witt. Spencer called Special Agent Dunkel of the Fresno Office of the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacéo, and Firearms. Dunkel, too, had just received a similar call. Spencer concluded that the same anonymous person had made all four calls.
Spencer then consulted Witt, a deputy district attorney in the Tulare County District Attorney’s office. Spencer described the various telephone calls and advised Witt that the house was located in a residential neighborhood. Spencer and Witt arranged to meet later, allowing time for Witt to conduct the necessary legal research to determine whether probable cause existed. Meanwhile, Spencer drove by the house to confirm its location. When Spencer and Witt met later, Witt advised Spencer that probable cause did exist. The two then prepared a document entitled “Statement of Probable Cause,” and a *1368 form “Affidavit for Search Warrant.” The affidavit recited facts that Spencer believed to be true: that at 412 North Demaree, Visalia, there were cocaine, high explosives, hand grenades, a machine gun, Uzis, and military issue AR 16 rifles, which had been stolen or embezzled, had been used to commit a felony, were possessed by a person intending to use them to commit a public offense, or possessed by another to whom they had been delivered to be concealed, or constituted evidence tending to show that a felony had been committed or that a particular person had committed a felony.
Witt’s declaration, filed in the district court, states that Spencer consulted him as to whether the facts provided probable cause. After performing “research and analysis,” Witt advised Spencer that probable cause existed to search the residence. Witt confirms that he reviewed Spencer’s affidavit and Statement of Probable Cause before Spencer went to the judge to obtain the warrant.
According to Judge Van Auken's declaration, Spencer arrived at his residence on July 16, 1985, with an “unsigned search warrant, an affidavit for the search warrant and a statement of probable cause.” Judge Van Auken had at the time 13 years’ legal experience predominantly in criminal law, including five years as a municipal court judge with 90% of his docket devoted to criminal matters. The judge “carefully reviewed and analyzed those documents,” concluded probable cause existed, and issued the warrant.
The search was then conducted. According to Vadnais’s declaration, Spencer and Vadnais found two semiautomatic machine guns, three inactive hand grenades, several rifles and hand guns, and some ammunition. None of the items were illegally possessed.
In due course this suit followed.
II
We review independently the district court's denial of a motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity.
Todd v. United States,
Spencer suggests that this case is controlled by
United States v. Freitas,
Freitas
held that the approval of the illegal provisions by the prosecutor and the ratification of the warrant by a neutral detached magistrate were sufficient to establish objectively reasonable behavior.
Id.
We likened the situation to that before the Supreme Court in
Massachusetts v. Sheppard,
An error of constitutional dimensions may have been committed with respect to the issuance of the warrant, but it was the judge, not police officers, who made the critical mistake. “[T]he exclusionary rule was adopted to deter unlawful searches by police, not to punish the errors of magistrates and judges.” Illinois v. Gates,462 U.S. 213 , 263,103 S.Ct. 2317 , 2346,76 L.Ed.2d 527 (1983) (White, J., concurring in judgment).
Id.
at 990,
We therefore stated in Freitas that:
Like the police detective in Sheppard, the agents involved in the instant case consulted and secured the approval of a government attorney. They then fully informed the magistrate of the contents of the warrant, including the controversial deletion of the notice provisions, and obtained his approval as well. These acts were sufficient to establish objectively reasonable behavior under Sheppard.
We reached a similar result in
Arnsberg v. United States,
It would be plainly unreasonable to rule that the arresting officers ... must take issue with the considered judgment of an assistant United States Attorney and the federal magistrate. Not only would such a rule cause an undesirable delay in the execution of warrants, but it would also mean that lay officers must at their own risk second-guess the legal assessment of trained lawyers. The Constitution does not require that allocation of law enforcement duties.
Id. at 981.
Recently, in
United States v. Luk,
Ortiz correctly points out that the “good faith” exception to the warrant requirement does not apply where the warrant is “ ‘so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.’ ”
Leon,
United States v. Stubbs,
Unlike the warrants in
Center Art Galleries
and
Stubbs,
the warrant to search Ortiz’s home was not facially overbroad. Rather, Ortiz complains that the warrant lacked probable cause — the very situation confronted by the Supreme Court in
Leon. Leon,
Spencer followed
Leon’s
advice. Confronted with uncertainty, Spencer secured legal counsel from Witt, a deputy district attorney. He then went to a judge and obtained a warrant. As a general matter, we will not require officers to “second-guess the legal assessments of trained lawyers.” Arn
sberg,
We reverse the district court’s denial of Spencer’s motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity, and remand for dismissal of the action.
REVERSED AND REMANDED FOR DISMISSAL.
