Fabia BLUE and Theresa Blue, Appellants,
v.
The STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*166 Frank A. Rubino, Coconut Grove, for appellants.
Jim Smith, Atty. Gen. and Penny Hershoff Brill, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
Before BARKDULL, BASKIN and DANIEL S. PEARSON, JJ.
DANIEL S. PEARSON, Judge.
The Blues were convicted of possession with intent to sell or deliver cannabis upon their pleas of nolo contendere, specifically reserving the right to appeal the denial of their motions to suppress. They contend that the sole evidence against them was seized from their premises (a wholesale plant nursery open to the public) pursuant to a warrant issued without probable cause. We agree and reverse.
The affidavit for search warrant executed by a narcotics detective asserts as probable cause for believing that marijuana was on the premises that:
"On 07-27-82, affiant was contacted by a U.S. Customs Agent (Glen Sandino) that he had been contacted by a confidential informant who had information on the premises. The confidential informant contacted affiant and stated a large quantity of marijuana was being grown and cultivated on the premises, in various locations on the premises. Confidential informant stated that a sample of the marijuana from the premises was obtained by confidential informant. The sample was then given to affiant. A field test of sample was positive indicating the sample was marijuana. The remainder of sample was impounded and sent to Metro Dade Police Dept. Laboratory for analysis. Affiant requested confidential informant obtain a second sample from the premises on 07-28-82. Confidential informant was then sent to the premises where a second sample was obtained on 07-28-82. At 6:00 p.m. on 07-28-82, confidential informant turned the second sample of marijuana from the premises over to affiant, second sample was given a field test which was positive, with remainder being sent to Metro Dade Police Dept. Laboratory for analysis. Confidential informant states several hundred marijuana plants are being cultivated on the premises and that the marijuana plants will soon be harvested and sold. *167 Confidential informant also states the marijuana plants are approximately six feet tall. All information given by confidential informant has been accurate and true. Affiant wishes to search all buildings and rooms on premises as confidential informant states plants are scattered about at different locations on premises where marijuana is being cultivated and readied for harvest."
Simply stated, the affidavit says (1) an informant told the detective that several hundred marijuana plants approximately six feet in height were being grown in the nursery and would soon be harvested; (2) the informant gave the detective a "sample" which he said came from the nursery and, at the later request of the detective, gave him another "sample" which the informant again said he obtained from the nursery; and (3) the samples proved to be marijuana.[1]
Even accepting the State's argument that the affidavit must be analyzed under the totality of circumstances test revived in Illinois v. Gates, ___ U.S. ___,
Clearly the affidavit tells us nothing of the informant's credibility or of the reliability of his information. While it is certainly arguable that when, as the affidavit states, the "confidential informant turned the second sample of marijuana from the premises over to affiant," the police could have reasonably inferred that the informant himself observed that about which he spoke,[3]compare Rutherford v. Cupp,
Moreover, there is not the slightest detail of innocuous activity in the affidavit which, even if corroborated, would lead one to believe that the informant's assertions of criminal activity on the defendants' premises were true.[4] As the court recognized in Illinois v. Gates, "[o]ur decisions applying the totality of circumstances analysis ... have consistently recognized the value of corroboration of details of an informant's tip by independent police work." ___ U.S. at ___,
The critical inquiry, then, is not whether the substance was probably marijuana, but whether there is a demonstrated probability that this marijuana came from the defendants' nursery as the informant alleged. Quite obviously, this inquiry could have been, but was not, answered, for example, by an undercover agent of the police going on the open-to-the-public premises to see for himself or, alternatively, by corroborating the fact that the informant, when he obtained the second sample, entered the premises empty-handed and came out with the marijuana, see, e.g., Mills v. State,
Nor does the fact that the informant brought marijuana to the detective prove anything about the informant's reliability. This act is not one which we consider to be against the informant's penal interest so as to allow a magistrate to find trustworthy the informant's further statement that the marijuana came from the defendants' premises. State v. Adams,
Therefore, we are left with an informant of no demonstrated reliability who gives to a detective some marijuana and tells him he obtained it from the defendants' premises. While Illinois v. Gates permits an informant's veracity or the reliability of his information to be established by a totality of circumstances, it was not so established in the present case. To place our imprimatur on the warrant in the present case would be to sanction a search in every instance where a person of unknown reliability brings contraband to the police, tells them that he obtained it in a particular place, and that there is more where it came from. This is not the meaning of Illinois v. Gates. See Milete v. State,
Reversed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The defendants correctly contend, and the State acknowledges, that the trial court erred when it considered the detective's testimony concerning facts not set forth in the affidavit in determining the validity of the search warrant. See Orr v. State,
[2] But see State v. Lavazzoli,
[3] In contrast, the informant's basis of knowledge is not shown in respect to the first sample about which the informant said, "a sample of the marijuana from the premises was obtained by [him]." Had the statement been that "a sample was obtained from the premises by him," one could conclude that his basis of knowledge was first-hand. But the mere fact that the informant states that he has marijuana which came from the premises leaves open the question whether the marijuana was obtained by him from the premises or obtained by another person and given to him.
[4] To the very limited extent information related by the informant described the premises, such information was readily obtainable by any member of the public.
