For the first time since the decision of the United States Supreme Court in
Franks
v.
Delaware,
The party in interest, Michael S. Rutberg, the admitted owner of the defendant property, does not claim that the affiant lied in making any statement in the affidavit. He asserts that the affiant, a Gloucester policeman, made certain false statements in reckless disregard for the truth or at least negligently, and that, as a result of an adequate preliminary showing of the affiant’s misconduct, the judge should have granted Rutberg a Franks-type hearing on the failure of the affidavit to support the issuance of the search warrant. 3
*766 Rutberg appealed from a judgment ordering the Commonwealth’s possession of the defendant property, and we transferred that appeal here on our own motion. We affirm the judgment, concluding that Rutberg did not make a showing sufficient to require a hearing on his motion to suppress evidence resulting from the search pursuant to the challenged warrant.
In January, 1980, Rutberg was convicted in the District Court of Eastern Essex of certain drug possession charges. He did not appeal those convictions. The district attorney for the Eastern District had brought this forfeiture proceeding in the previous month. See G. L. c. 94C, § 47 (d). It is agreed that the money (G. L. c. 94C, § 47 [a] [5]) and the motor vehicle (G. L. c. 94G, § 47 [o] [3]) are proper subjects of forfeiture, assuming the validity of the warrant which led to the discovery of the information on which this forfeiture proceeding is based. 4
We start our analysis by considering
Franks
v.
Delaware,
1. The
Franks
opinion dealt with the question whether a defendant in a criminal proceeding ever has the right, under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, subsequent to the ex parte issuance of a search warrant, to challenge the truthfulness of factual statements made in an affidavit supporting the warrant. The Supreme Court of Delaware had answered the question in the negative.
Franks
v.
State,
*768
Specifically, the
Franks
opinion makes no distinction between the consequences that should flow from a showing of a deliberate falsehood or from a showing of reckless disregard for the truth. In each instance no hearing need be held unless the allegedly false statement is necessary for a finding of probable cause, and no suppression is required unless it subsequently appears that the affidavit, excised of false material, is insufficient to establish probable cause.
Id.
at 155-156, 171-172. Potentially, this approach permits serious and deliberate government wrongdoing to escape the deterrent sanction of the exclusionary rule. See
United States
v.
Carmichael,
*769
2. In its
Franks
opinion, the Supreme Court did not indicate what standard a judge should use in determining whether an affiant had made a false statement with reckless disregard for the truth. To obtain a hearing on the issue, we know that the .defendant must make “a substantial preliminary showing” that, with reckless disregard for the truth, the affiant made a false statement on a matter necessary to the finding of probable cause.
Franks
v.
Delaware,
*770
3. Generally, State courts have not been asked to consider challenges to the veracity of affidavits in support of a warrant under State constitutional provisions concerned with unlawful searches and seizures. The Supreme Court of New Jersey has been asked, and it declined to extend its State constitutional requirements beyond the limits expressed in the
Franks
opinion. See
State
v.
Howery,
Before us, Rutberg does not state his challenge to the warrant explicitly in terms of a violation of any provision of the Constitution of the Commonwealth. He cites our preFranks opinion in
Commonwealth
v.
Reynolds,
The principles underlying the suppression of evidence because of an unreasonable search in violation of constitutional rights rest in large degree on assuring proper police conduct. The Franks opinion in its effect declines to the police any reward for intentional or reckless material misstatements contained in their affidavit in support of a warrant. Misstatements of this character bespeak bad faith. One branch of the government should not be permitted to use the flagrant wrongdoing of another branch of government to punish a citizen. The cost to society of the suppression of relevant evidence concerning a defendant’s guilt is not insubstantial, but it is a cost which it has been concluded must be paid in such cases in order to assure greater adherence to constitutional requirements. Where, however, a police affiant’s misstatement is the product of good faith but negligent conduct, the motivation to temper and regulate police behavior is less and the arguments against the government’s using the product of that good faith but negligent conduct against a defendant are weakened.
*772
We recognize that there are valid arguments in support of a rule that strikes down a warrant based on an affidavit containing negligent, material misstatements. See
Theodor
v.
Superior Court,
*773
The portions of the affidavit in support of the search warrant that Rutberg asserted were false are set forth in the margin.* *****
9
The Commonwealth indicated that only the first, second, and fifth numbered statements were essential to a finding of probable cause, and the judge accepted this argument, thus regarding as immaterial any falsity in paragraphs numbered three, four, and six. See
Franks
v.
Dela
*774
ware,
In the course of the hearing below, Rutberg conceded that he was not claiming that the affiant did other than to state truthfully what informants had told him and other police officers. Rather, he claims that it was reckless to have included the informants’ statements in the affidavit because their falsity was or should have been apparent. We think it is clear that Rutberg has not made a preliminary showing of the affiant’s or other officers’ reckless disregard for the truth. Although, as we assume, Rutberg demonstrated that the informants were wrong in certain respects and possibly wrong in others, none of the informants’ misstatements was transparent. Since the decision in
Franks
v.
Delaware,
State courts have not accepted a preliminary showing of misstatements in an affidavit as alone sufficient to entitle a defendant to a hearing on the veracity of the
*775
affiant. See
State
v.
Babbitt,
Although our conclusions do not turn on this fact, this case is a civil one for the purposes of discovery. “Such proceeding shall be deemed a civil suit in equity.” G. L. c. 94C, § 47 (d), as appearing in St. 1977, c. 556, § 3. Indeed, Rut- *776 berg gave notice of the taking of the depositions of the affiant and others. He had the means of questioning the affiant and others under oath in order to obtain evidence in support of the necessary preliminary showing. While the Commonwealth no doubt would have resisted the disclosure of the informants’ identity (and information that might have led to their identity), other information might have been developed. 14 The need for a Franks-type hearing to demonstrate the affiant’s reckless misstatement of facts is especially uncompelling in the circumstances of this forfeiture case.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The Commonwealth grants that the exclusionary rule is applicable to a forfeiture proceeding, a “quasi-criminal” proceeding, in the same way it is applicable in a criminal proceeding. See
One 1958 Plymouth Sedan
v.
Pennsylvania,
The Commonwealth conceded that forfeiture of the defendant property could be established only through statements made by Rutberg to the police after his arrest and that those statements would have to be suppressed if the search warrant itself were invalid. Rutberg in turn has conceded that the forfeiture is proper if the warrant was valid. The result in this appeal turns, therefore, on whether Rutberg has made an adequate preliminary showing that he was entitled to a Franks-type hearing on the validity of the warrant that was issued on the basis of the affidavit.
The Commonwealth has not argued that Rutberg is barred from challenging this forfeiture proceeding either because of his convictions or because of his failure to challenge the validity of the search warrant in the criminal proceedings. Rutberg’s convictions of possession of controlled substances do not on their face suggest any prior determination that the subjects of this forfeiture proceeding were used in the commission of the crimes. We consider this case without deciding whether there may be circumstances in which the failure to challenge the validity of a search warrant in a criminal proceeding may have consequences in a subsequent forfeiture proceeding.
If there is an intentional misrepresentation of a fact that greatly strengthens an affidavit which is otherwise marginally sufficient, there are strong policy reasons for invalidating the warrant. See
United States
v.
Belculfine,
In
pre-Franks
opinions, various courts said that misrepresentations made with intent to deceive the magistrate, whether or not the error was material, required the invalidation of the warrant. See
United States
v.
Luna,
The hard case is one in which there are reasonable grounds to believe the truth of the statement, later shown to be false, as well as reasonable grounds for disbelief of that statement. In such a situation, a relevant factor in determining the recklessness of the affiant may be, as the Appeals Court recently suggested in Commonwealth v. Abdelnour, 11 Mass. App. *770 Ct. 532, 538 (1981), whether “the police had the means available to establish [the information’s] veracity without such delay as would defeat a legitimate law enforcement purpose.” We would not, however, sustain a warrant based on a material, false statement made with no reasonable ground for its belief simply because the defendant could not show that the police had some available means of checking its truthfulness.
It may be that a preliminary showing that there were obvious reasons for an affiant to doubt the truthfulness of the information reported in the affidavit would meet the threshold requisite to a hearing but that the ultimate determination of recklessness, after the hearing, would be based on whether the affiant in fact acted without reasonable grounds for believing the false statement set forth in the affidavit.
We do not limit our inquiry to the misstatements of the affiant where it appears that false information was relayed to the affiant from another law enforcement officer. The fact that the affiant reported truthfully what another law enforcement officer told him should not insulate that
*773
other officer’s statements from scrutiny as to their truthfulness or their recklessness. See
Franks
v.
Delaware,
“1. I have had conversation on several occasions over the past several weeks with a reliable informant who told me that they have observed in a house in Rockport at 237A Main Street quantities namly [sic] Marijuana, Thia Sticks (a form of marijuana), Cocaine, and assorted pharmacuticles [sic] which the informant was told was speed. This informant said that they observed these drugs on this past wekend [sic].
“2. This informant also said the Michael Rutberg who is the person in possession of these drugs went to New York to pick a large quantity of drugs this week and that he left on the first of the week. In conversation with this informant they told me that Michael Rutberg returned on this date 10-12-79.
“3. This informant also told me that the Rutbergs have parties on most every weekend and that that is when most of these drugs are dispensed.
“4. I had conversation with Insp. Edward Hardy of the Gloucester Police department who told me that he has been talking with a person who he believes to be a prudent and reliable person whom he has known for several years and that this person told him that they have observed on many occasions large amounts of cocaine and marijuana in the home of Michael Rutberg with the latest time being this past weekend and this person went on to discribe [sic] the house as having two upstaires [sic] bedrooms with another room used as a den and that in the room with the den is a chimaney [sic] and that against this chimaney [sic] is a steamer type trunk which is heavely [sic] pad locked [sic] and that this trunk is where Michael Rutberg is keeping a quantity of drugs.
“5. Officer Abell told me that he has not seen Michael Rutberg this week until early this morning he said that one of the Rutbergs two 1980 Saabs has also been missing this week.
“6. In further conversation with Insp. Edward Hardy of the Gloucester Police I found that his source of information also said that Jane Rutberg was upset at her husband and wanted him to stop being involved with drugs as he has been taking a great chance at being caught.”
As indicated above (see n.5 above, and associated text), we might not accept this approach if the matter to be excised and disregarded was an intentionally false (i.e., perjurious) statement.
Rutberg does not argue that the statements made to the affiant by Officer Abell were made with reckless disregard for the truth. These statements, which appear in par. 5 of the asserted misstatements (see n.9 above), were not shown to be false and were not necessary to a finding of probable cause.
Of course, in his discretion, a judge may decide to hold a hearing merely on a showing that an affidavit contained misstatements of fact, particularly material misstatements. Some jurisdictions may require a hearing in such a situation. In
United States
v.
Carmichael,
We stress that this case involves a claim that the affiant and other officers were reckless in accepting as true the statements of informants. It does not involve claims that the affiant or other officers misrepresented facts within their personal knowledge. See
Rugendorf
v.
United States,
We intimate no view on when the disclosure of an informant’s identity would be required as a matter of right or permissible in the discretion of the judge.
