A “no knock” search warrant permitted a search for any controlled substances and related materials in premises at 59 Weller Avenue, Pittsfield, occupied by James Benlien. Search pursuant to the warrant uncovered quantities of cocaine and marihuana and characteristic paraphernalia, and, upon trial, jury-waived, of the ensuing indictments, Benlien was found guilty of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and
1. The defendant contends that probable cause was not shown to justify the “no knock” feature of the warrant and of the search. Detective Owen Boyington, the Pittsfield police officer who made the affidavit supporting the warrant, had substantial information about the likely conditions of the forthcoming search. Accordingly he was well advised to ask the magistrate for a no knock authorization if the police intended to proceed in that way. This is the prophylactic proposition of
Commonwealth
v.
Scalise,
The following information relevant to the no knock appeared from Boyington’s affidavit. It combined observations by the affiant and by an informer (unnamed). No. 59 Weller Avenue is a three-family apartment house. Benlien’s apartment is on the first level. It consists of a living room, two bedrooms, kitchen, and bathroom. One wishing to enter the apartment from the front, i.e., from Weller Avenue, mounts a porch and immediately faces the entrance door of the apartment which opens directly into the living room. This door is made of heavy wood with an upper panel of glass. It is always kept locked and is secured with a large dead bolt. The rear door of the apartment also is kept locked. All three apartments of the building have access to the cellar. A person in the living room has a view of anyone coming on the porch, and also a view beyond to Weller Avenue. The affiant noted that Pittsfield has a small police force and the officers are generally known by residents, if not by name, then by sight. He added that cocaine is kept in small units for retail trade, as was envisioned here, and can be quickly destroyed.
“[o]ther exceptions to the knock and announce rule have been recognized where the person inside the dwelling to be entered has knowledge of the officers’ purpose and presence, see Ker v. California,374 U.S. 23 , 47 (1963) (Brennan, J., dissenting); Commonwealth v. McDougal, 2 Mass. App. Ct. 820 (1974), and cases cited, and where making an announcement would facilitate a suspect’s escape or the destruction of evidence, see Miller v. United States,357 U.S. 301 , 309 (1958) (dictum) (citing People v. Maddox,46 Cal. 2d 301 [1956]); Ker v. California, supra at 47 (Brennan, J., dissenting); United States v. Cisneros,448 F.2d 298 , 304 (9th Cir. 1971) (possibility of escape).”
Our present case falls within a combination of the stated exceptions: the setup of building and apartment permitted the suspect to maintain a virtual lookout for the appearance of police, cf.
Commonwealth
v.
Houghtlin,
Where a no knock provision of a warrant is justified by the situation anticipated in the submission to the magistrate, the carrying out of the procedure may yet be illegal if what is actually encountered turns out to be materially less exigent than the forecast. See
Commonwealth
v.
Scalise,
2. The judge dealt summarily with the defendant’s further contention that probable cause had not been shown for the issuance of a warrant (with or without a no knock feature). The affiant Boyington stated that in the last two weeks
3
the informer told him that Benlien was selling cocaine from his apartment and that he, the informer, had bought cocaine from, and used it with, Benlien.
4
Within the past ten days the affiant
The affidavit so far as it bore on the “reliability” of the informer — one of the two elements of the Aguilar-Spinelli canon 6 — might be thought less than solid, were it not for the account of the controlled buy. 7 This repaired any weakness in the showing of reliability and lent strength generally to the submission to the magistrate. Professor LaFave writes:
“Yet another situation in which the corroboration will suffice to show veracity is that in which the informanthas not been working independently, but rather has cooperated closely with the police, as is true when the informant makes a controlled purchase of narcotics. That is, where there is ‘physical proximity and active participation in the informant’s intrigue’ by the police, so that it is not ‘independent police work’ which corroborates, but rather ‘the police corroboration is a co-ordinate and intrinsic part of the informer’s operation,’ [quoting from State v. Gamage, 340 A.2d 1 , 16 (Me. 1975)] the risk of falsehood has been sufficiently diminished. As explained in State v. Barrett [132 Vt. 369 , 374 (1974)]: ‘The purpose of the search of the informer and his being escorted to the place of purchase was to eliminate both as much as possible of the hearsay aspects of the search warrant request and to reduce the reliance on “veracity” to a minimum. The magistrate had enough facts to support a finding of probable cause, and had them in a form which rendered extended evaluation of the informant’s credibility unnecessary.’” 1 LaFave, supra § 3.3(f), at 686-687 (footnotes omitted).
Controlled buys appear as grounds supporting the issuance of search warrants in numerous cases, among these, the following cited by LaFave:
Watt
v.
State,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
In fact the back door was guarded on the outside by police.
One of the items found was an instrument enabling the user to hear police broadcasts.
To help avoid undue damage by a search of the apartment and contents, the defendant told the police where some of the drugs were located.
The affidavit was made, the warrant issued, and the search occurred on April 1, 1987.
Here was a declaration against penal interest which — especially as the informer was known to the police, whether or not by name — may be held
The postmaster confirmed to Boyington that Benlien received his mail at the apartment.
Aguilar
v.
Texas,
That the controlled buy took place on a date (unspecified) as much as ten days before the date of the affidavit may be explained by the need not to pinpoint the encounter and thus impair the anonymity of the informer. See
State
v.
Cavegn,
