We deal with a claim, raised under the Constitutions of the Commonwealth and of the United States, and G. L. c. 276 § 2 (1988 ed.), that a search of the defendant’s residence pursuant to a search warrant was unlawful.
On November 21, 1985, a State trooper assigned to the office of the district attorney for the Plymouth district presented an affidavit in support of an application for a search warrant to an assistant clerk of the Brockton District Court. That affidavit presented probable cause to search the residence of the defendant for property believed to have been stolen: “Handguns, Jewelery [jzc] and Coins which are more specifically detailed in the attached list which is attached hereto and incorporated herein.” 2 Although the attached documents did not describe any coins, they contained precise sketches of five pieces of limited edition jewelry that had allegedly been taken from a residence in Brockton, and listed numerous guns by make and model number, some or all of which were also allegedly stolen from the Brockton residence.
Although the search warrant described the property to be seized as “[sjtolen handguns, jewelery
[sic]
and coins which are more specifically detailed in the supporting affidavit,” a copy of the affidavit and its descriptive attachments was not affixed to the warrant as it could have been.
3
It seems reasonable to infer, although there was no testimony on the point, that the search warrant was not prepared by the assis
That same day, the trooper, accompanied by other officers, executed the warrant at the defendant’s residence. The police found none of the items for which the search was conducted, but did find in “plain view,” behind a “hidden panel” in a coat closet, the allegedly stolen property (jewelry and a pellet gun) that became the subject of the indictments in this case.
The trooper who had obtained the search warrant showed a single sheet of paper to the defendant at his residence. A copy of the affidavit descriptive of the items for which the search was authorized was not affixed to the search warrant, nor was it ever shown to the defendant. In fact, there was no evidence as to whether the trooper even had a copy of the descriptive document with him. In these circumstances, the Commonwealth had the burden of coming forward with proof that the descriptive documents were present to guide the search, and available to inform the defendant of the limits of the search. See
Commonwealth
v.
Taylor,
The description in the warrant of the items to be seized lacked sufficient particularity to meet the requirements of G. L. c. 276, § 2, art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, and the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and thus the search warrant was an unlawful general warrant. See
Commonwealth
v.
Taylor, supra
at 275 (“antique jewelry”);
Namen
v.
State,
The more difficult issue in this case is whether the evidence, seized pursuant to the unlawful, general warrant, should have been suppressed.
6
The Commonwealth does not explicitly rely on
United States
v.
Leon,
Even if applicable here, these cases would only resolve questions raised under the Fourth Amendment. If the Fourth Amendment-related exclusionary rule does not require exclusion of the evidence seized in this case, it would mean that
We conclude that the evidence should have been suppressed in response to the principles underlying art. 14 of the Declaration of Rights and G. L. c. 276, § 2. The violation of law here was substantial and not technical. Contrast
Commonwealth
v.
Sheppard,
Evidence should be suppressed in order to deter future police misconduct when, pursuant to a general warrant, the police carry out a search without any document in hand adequately describing the items for which they purport to be searching. The absence from the defendant’s premises of a document which would have furnished detailed information to guide the scope of the search and to inform the defendant of that scope is not merely a technical omission. That omission contravenes the fundamental purpose of the statutory and constitutional prohibitions against the use of a general warrant.
So ordered.
Notes
The defendant was convicted on two indictments charging him with receiving stolen property, and we transferred his appeal here on our own motion.
The application also refers to the property as: “Handguns which are more specifically described in the attached Brockton Police Report and it’s [sic] attachment, Jewelery [sic] and Coins.”
Under G. L. c. 276, § 2B (1988 ed.), the clerk magistrate must retain the affidavit itself and the affidavit does not become a public document until the warrant is returned.
The typeface on the application and on the warrant appears to be the same except for the name of the assistant clerk, which appears in smaller type in a space left for a name. Moreover, the two documents consistently misspell the word “jewelry.”
The defendant’s brief proceeds on the unwarranted assumption that, once it is established that a search was pursuant to an unlawful, general warrant, suppression follows automatically. The Commonwealth appropriately argues that, even if a warrant is defective, suppression does not have to follow and, in this case, should not. The defendant did not file a reply brief.
