*829 ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
In this interlocutory appeal, defendants Teresa D. Figert and Byron Green challenge the trial court’s denial of their motions to suppress. With one judge dissenting, the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Figert v. State,
Factual and Procedural History
As part of an ongoing undercover investigation, a police officer made several controlled purchases of crack cocaine from different men residing in, or at least conducting drug sales from, two of three manufactured homes in a place in Marshall County known as “the Farm.” The homes were located in a rural area in close proximity to each other in a “U” shape. Figert and Green lived in the third home. The probable cause affidavit did not allege that any sales were observed from the third home or that Figert or Green, or anyone meeting their description, sold drugs, or that the third home was a base of operations for drug trafficking. Besides mere proximity to the general area of the drug sales, the only fact the affidavit detailed as to the third home or Figert and Green was that “[t]here are currently a large number of unidentified individuals living in and frequenting the three trailers.” The affidavit also made clear that in one of the controlled buys the seller insisted on consummating the transaction outdoors and away from the homes to conceal it from his parents who lived there. The police officer who made the controlled drug purchases nonetheless concluded in the affidavit that he had “probable cause to believe that additional crack cocaine, paraphernalia, and evidence of crack cocaine dealing will be found within the three trail-ers_” (emphasis added). Based on the information contained in the affidavit, the trial court issued a warrant authorizing a search of “the three residences at 20831 Upas Road” for, among other things, cocaine and “any and all property related to narcotics trafficking.” Because some of the controlled purchases were consummated in automobiles driven by the suspects, the warrant also authorized a search of “the vehicles located within the curtilage” of the homes.
Several police officers, including the affi-ant, executed the warrant during the early morning hours of May 25,1996. A search of Figert’s and Green’s home and Green’s car uncovered incriminating evidence that led to their prosecution for drug-related offenses. Figert and Green filed separate motions to suppress. With respect to the home search, they both contended that the warrant was issued without probable cause because the supporting affidavit provided no basis to conclude that cocaine or related paraphernalia would be found in their home. After denying their motions to suppress, the trial court certified the following questions for interlocutory appeal: (1) ‘Whether the finding of probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant for all dwellings' on the premises ... was proper when the information used to formulate probable cause and the issuance of a search warrant was based on the activities of two residences that did not involve the [defendants’] residence”; and (2) “Whether the Court’s finding that ‘the totality of the circumstances makes the entire ■ premises suspect’ and thus ‘[a] substantial basis existed for a finding of probable cause to search all dwellings located at the farm’ was correct.” The Court of Appeals held that there was no probable cause for the issuance of the-warrant as to Figert’s and Green’s home, but found that the “good faith” exception applied. On that basis, the trial court was affirmed. Judge Staton joined the majority on the first issue but dissented as to the good faith exception. Because the certified questions do not address the search of the car, the Court of Appeals did not deal with that issue. Nor do we. 1
Standard of Review
The parties appear to agree that the warrant was facially valid because it de
*830
scribed with sufficient particularity the places to be searched and the things to be seized.
Steele v. United States,
I. Probable Cause to Search the Defendants’ Home
In addressing the probable cause question, the Court of Appeals correctly stated and applied several principles of search and seizure law. As a general proposition, a search of multiple units at a single address must be supported by probable cause to search each unit and is no different from a search of two or more separate houses.
2
Accordingly, there must be a showing of probable cause to search Figert’s and Green’s home, not just the other homes. We agree with the Court of Appeals that the determination that probable cause existed for searching the third home lacked a substantial basis. “[T]he reasonable inferences drawn from the totality of the evidence,”
Houser,
As the Court of Appeals noted, an exception to the requirement of probable cause to search each unit at one address has been recognized where the units are under the common dominion or control of the target of the investigation or, as the State puts it, are used as a “collective dwelling.” In that
*831
situation, some decisions have held that probable cause to search one unit or part of the premises supports a search of the rest.
3
However, there is an insufficient showing here of collective occupation or control. The probable cause affidavit alleged that different persons lived in the first two homes and that the officer bought drugs from both occupants on separate occasions. The affidavit did not allege any connection between any of the controlled drug buys and the third home. Significantly, an effort was made to conceal the illegal activities from some of the occupants of the first two homes. Thus, the facts cut against the view that the Farm was a collective drug-dealing operation and indicate that some of the occupants may not have been aware of illegal activity. If the officer who sought the warrant had information tending to show involvement by the third home in the drug sales, that information should have been offered when the warrant was issued.
United States v. Simpson,
As a final matter, the same search warrant was used in this case to search three separate residences occupied by different persons. Courts in other jurisdictions have viewed the use of a single search warrant for this purpose with disfavor,
see, e.g., Williams v. State,
II. Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule
A majority in the Court of Appeals held that the evidence uncovered as a result of the search of Figert’s and Green’s home was admissible under the “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule announced in
United States v. Leon,
Leon
held that where police officers rely in objective good faith on a warrant later found to be defective, so that suppression would not further the exclusionary rule’s objective of deterring police misconduct, the Fourth Amendment does not require that the evidence be excluded. However, the Supreme Court cautioned in
Leon
that certain police conduct would not qualify for the exception, including where the warrant was based on an affidavit “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.”
Id.
at 923,
The good faith exception necessarily assumes that police reliance on a warrant can be objectively reasonable despite the lack of probable cause. Emphasizing this point, the Court of Appeals majority reasoned from the premise that “[w]e would ... emasculate the exception if, in practice, we equate the reasonableness of the officer’s belief with the establishment of probable cause in the affidavit.”
Figert,
We disagree. The first and the third of these factors apply to any multiunit rental facility. The second is irrelevant: Hoosiers who live in rural areas are entitled to no less protection against invasion of their homes. The fourth, assuming it applied to the third home, is in and of itself innocuous. Probable cause clearly existed with respect to the first two homes, and the totality of the circumstances established some suspicion or possibility of a joint drug-dealing enterprise at the Farm. But this is not enough. The affidavit did not allege any facts linking the third home to the surrounding criminal activity. The lack of any nexus is a critical point in assessing the reasonableness of the officer’s reliance on the warrant.
Cf. Stabenow v. State,
This is not a case involving the technical evidentiary questions that can arise in using hearsay to establish probable cause. Most Indiana appellate decisions upholding the admission of evidence under the good faith exception involved reliance on hearsay whose credibility was later found to be inadequately established.
See, e.g., State v. Johnson,
The good faith exception was created in large part because of the practical
*833
reality that once a neutral and detached magistrate has issued a search warrant, “there is literally nothing more the policeman can do in seeking to comply with the law.”
Leon,
Our decisions have repeatedly recognized the State’s substantial interest in combating the menace of the illegal drug trade.
See, e.g., Polk v. State,
Conclusion
This ease is remanded with instructions to grant defendant Figert’s motion to suppress in its entirety and defendant Green’s motion to suppress with respect to the home search, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In her motion to suppress, Figert did not specify the source of her claim and Green claimed only that his "constitutional right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure” was violated. Both now assert that the search in this case violated the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution; Article I, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution; and Indiana Code §§ 35-33-5-1 and 35-33-5-2. We treat the appeal as raising a valid claim under the state and federal constitutions, which both require probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant and the
*830
exclusion of evidence obtained due to an illegal search or seizure.
Compare Callender v. State,
.
See, e.g., Thompson v. State,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Butler,
.
See, e.g., Payton,
. The General Assembly has codified a version of lhe good faith exception at Indiana Code § 35-37-4-5. Because we conclude that the evidence seized in this case is not admissible under Leon, we need not decide whether the statute also requires exclusion of the evidence.
