George Conrad and Joseph William Presnal were charged with violating the Georgia Controlled Substances Act
“In a ruling on a motion to suppress, a trial court’s findings as to disputed facts will be reviewed under a clearly erroneous standard and the trial court’s application of the
Construed to support the judgment,
The warrant was executed on July 9, 2010. The dwelling had an outward appearance of a single-family ranch-style house. There was a single mailbox out front, which displayed “53,” without any subunit delineation; a single driveway that led to the house; and a single set of adjacent double doors at the sole front entrance. The property was owned by Presnal’s mother, who lived there, as did Conrad and Presnal.
The inside of the dwelling was divided by a wall, except that a common area across the front of the house allowed access between the two sides without going outside. There were bedrooms on both sides; one side had a kitchen, and the other side had a kitchenette that appeared to be under renovation.
The common area across the front of the house was described by the special agent: “It was an interior area ... it appeared that it had been uncovered at one point. It looked like it was an addition, but it was completely enclosed from the exterior and it connected the two sides of the residence.” The common area had interior doors leading to either side of the house, and it had a set of adjacent exterior doors that opened to the front yard. Nonadjacent exterior doors were at the back of the residential structure.
Presnal also testified about those two interior doors of the common area: “[T] here’s a door on the left side, which if you enter there that’s my mother’s area. And then there’s a door on the right side. If you enter there, that was the area that I was staying in.” When asked how he would access his mother’s área from his area, Presnal answered, “I would either have to go outside the back and enter in her side of the door or I could go through the front door of mine, cross the [common area] and enter the front door over there on her side.”
The residential structure had been Presnal’s childhood home, and he confirmed that the enclosed common area “used to be an open porch”; that the two sides of the house had previously carried an address with subunit designations, “A” and “B”; and that there had once been two water meters for the residential structure. But his mother had since made changes, and the property no longer carried subunit designations; by (at least) the date of the search, the property had only one water meter, one mailbox, and even one common garbage can that was used by all the residents.
During the execution of the search warrant, methamphetamine and
In this appeal, Conrad and Presnal continue to challenge the validity of the search warrant, as well as its execution.
1. Conrad and Presnal maintain that the warrant was insufficient in that it failed to satisfy the particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment, which requires that the warrant “particularly describ[e] the place to be searched.” Conrad and Presnal characterize the residential structure as a “duplex,” thus comprised of subunits. Because the warrant did not specifically grant permission to search any particular subunit, but instead described the place to be searched as “the residence located at 53 West James Circle,” Conrad and Presnal argue that the warrant was not sufficiently particular.
The test for evaluating the particularity of a warrant’s premises description is “whether the description is sufficient to enable a prudent officer executing the warrant to locate [the place to be searched] definitely and with reasonable certainty.”
Under the particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment,
the general rule is that a search warrant for an apartment house or hotel or other multiple-occupancy building will usually be held invalid if it fails to describe the particular subunit to be searched with sufficient definiteness to preclude a search of one or more subunits indiscriminately. There are, however, exceptions to this general rule. “The warrant of a multi-unit structure will be valid where (1) there is probable cause to search each unit; (2) the targets of the investigation have access to the entire structure; or (3) the officers reasonably believed that the premises had only a single unit.”11
In this case, the first and second exceptions are applicable.
In determining if probable cause exists to issue a search warrant, a magistrate must evaluate all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit before him or her and make a practical, common-sense decision whether there is a fair probability that evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place. On review, this Court is limited to determining if the magistrate had a substantial basis for concluding that probable cause existed to issue the search warrant, and must afford substantial deference to the magistrate’s decision.12
“Even doubtful cases should be resolved in favor of upholding a magistrate’s determination that a warrant is proper.”
The affidavit further apprised the magistrate that in May 2010, the special agent found inside a trash can, which he determined had been left for pickup by a professional sanitation company and thus abandoned by its owner(s): “a clear ziploc baggie containing methamphetamine residue; a mango flavored blunt wrapper; an empty clear green ziploc baggie; a torn plastic corner; and a tied plastic sandwich baggie which was torn open.” Later that month, the special agent again found inside the similarly abandoned trash can: “three small baggies containing methamphetamine residue, a ‘FW’ digital scale, a partially smoked marijuana cigarette, marijuana stems, a plastic sandwich baggie with a torn corner, a torn plastic corner, and two small empty ziploc baggies.” In June 2010, the special agent found in the similarly abandoned trash can: “a clear green ziploc baggie containing methamphetamine; a torn plastic corner with white residue; ten small plastic ziploc baggies with methamphetamine residue; five pieces of paper with names and dollar amounts listed (drug ledgers)....” In early July 2010, the special agent found in a similarly abandoned trash can:
thirteen small ziploc-style baggies containing methamphetamine residue; three torn plastic baggie corners containing methamphetamine residue; ... a tied piece of plastic containing marijuana; an open piece of plastic containing a marijuana bud; two empty “Glass Rose” boxes, which are commonly used to smoke methamphetamine; and nu merous empty blunt wrappers, which are commonly used to smoke marijuana.
The affidavit also described the residential structure as “a ranch style home,” with a single mailbox and a single driveway. The affidavit informed the magistrate that, because the county tax assessors’ records had designated the structure upon the property as a “duplex,” the special agent had followed up with additional research. He had spoken to a representative from the county water and sewage authority, who reported that only one water meter was installed at the property. Additionally, the special agent had spoken with a representative from the tax assessors’ office, who reported that the property owner had recently submitted a petition requesting that “the two property lots she owns be combined into one.” The affidavit stated that, in June 2010, the property owner had informed the office that her residence was a single-family residence, and not a duplex as described in the tax assessors’ records. Further, the affidavit stated:
While describing the interior of the residence to the Tax Assessors Office, [the property owner] advised there is a mother-in-law suite inside the residence, but there are no interior separation walls and it is accessible from the main living area. Finally, [the property owner] advised that all areas of the residence are accessible from anywhere else in the residence.14
We conclude that the affidavit provided the magistrate with enough information to come to the “practical, common-sense” conclusion that illicit drugs were being used in and/or sold from the residence located at 53 West James Circle; that Presnal was a target of the drug investigation and lived at that location with at least one of his parents; that the residence located at 53 West James Circle contained a mother-in-law suite that was accessible from a common area; that Presnal (and other residents) had access to the entire residential premises; and that there was a fair probability that evidence of drug crimes could be found in either the mother-in-law suite or the main part of the residential structure. “Because the application for the
2. Conrad and Presnal contend that execution of the warrant was unlawful, citing Jones v. State
Conrad and Presnal have misplaced their reliance on Jones and Miller, the supporting affidavit, detailed in pertinent part above, did not contain material inaccuracies, but adequately took into account the inner partitioning of the residential structure.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
OCGA § 16-13-20 et seq.
OCGA § 5-6-44 (a) (allowing for joint appeals).
Canty v. State,
See Tate v. State,
See White v. State,
The special agent explained that a “trash pull” is retrieving trash after it has been abandoned by the resident(s) — e.g., the trash has been “put... out for a professional sanitation company to pick up” — and then searching through the trash for signs of narcotics or sales of narcotics.
The record does not disclose the relationship between Conrad and either Presnal or Presnal’s mother.
Fair v. State,
Fair, supra (citation and punctuation omitted).
2 LaFave, Search and Seizure, § 4.5 (a) at p. 578 (4th ed. 2004); see Maryland v. Garrison,
Fletcher v. State,
Fletcher, supra at 655-656 (3) (punctuation and footnotes omitted).
Sullivan v. State,
(Emphasis supplied.)
Fletcher, supra at 656 (3); State v. Capps,
See Miller, supra at 849 (2) (“The total of the inaccuracies between the affidavit and the true state of affairs [was] so material as to go to the integrity of the affidavit and warrant, destroying the probable cause for the search.”); Jones, supra at 843 (recognizing that, where search warrant was issued based on information that proved to be materially unreliable and inaccurate, “the probable cause for issuance of the warrant disappeared]”).
See Division 1, supra.
See Teal v. State,
