Eric Hinkel and Craig Hinkel appeal from a district court order denying their petition for a writ of certiorari. We affirm.
Eric Hinkel and Craig Hinkel were charged with manufacturing or possessing with intent to manufacture or deliver a controlled substance. During a search of an apartment, police found marijuana-growing paraphernalia and several marijuana plants. Only one witness, one of the investigating officers, Gordon Olson, testified at the preliminary examination. Olson testified that the officers also “found several items of indi-cia in there, their mail, statements and so on, that bore the names of the Hinkels” and “several items [of clothing] that were consistent with male adults[,] ... no children’s clothing, no female clothing.”
Following the preliminary examination, see NDRCrimP 5.1, the magistrate found probable cause that the alleged offense had been committed and that Eric Hinkel and Craig Hinkel had committed it. The Hinkels petitioned the district court for a writ of certiora-ri, arguing that the magistrate had exceeded his jurisdiction by finding probable cause without sufficient evidence. The district court denied the petition and the Hinkels appealed.
For purposes of this appeal, the Hinkels concede that there is probable cause to believe that the alleged offense has been committed, and argue only that the evidence linking the Hinkels to the apartment is insufficient to support a finding of probable cause that the Hinkels committed the alleged offense.
Our review of a district court’s denial of a petition for a writ of certiorari is limited to the question of whether the magistrate exceeded his or her jurisdiction.
E.g., Schiermeister v. Riskedahl,
The Hinkels argue that no relevant evidence existed for the magistrate to find probable cause that they committed the alleged offense and, alternatively, urge us to change our standard of review from whether “some relevant evidence” existed to whether “substantial relevant evidence” existed to find probable cause.
The Hinkels contend that the officer’s testimony about finding “their mail,” bearing the Hinkels’ names, was irrelevant to whether the Hinkels occupied the apartment and thus committed the alleged offense. They point out that the officer did not testify about the dates on the mail, the mailing addresses, the location of the mail in the apartment, or the identities of the senders or their return addresses. They also ask us to consider the possibility that the mail was stolen. The Hinkels ask us to infer not the ordinary— that mail found in an apartment may indicate the apartment’s occupants, but the extraordinary. Although we might agree that the officer’s testimony was skinny evidence that the Hinkels occupied the apartment, we conclude that it was “some relevant evidence” on which the magistrate could base his finding of probable cause.
See Sivertson v. McLees,
We decline the Hinkels’ request that we change our standard of review to whether
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“substantial relevant evidence existed to support a finding of probable cause. Rule 5.1, NDRCrimP, governs preliminary examinations. The explanatory note to that rule explains the reasons for the deliberate omission of a provision that would have required that a finding of probable cause be based on substantial evidence: “[T]he Rules Committee found this provision to be unnecessary and undesirable. The language of the Rule tracks existing case law on the- subject.” We note that the drafters of the federal rule, which is substantively identical to the North Dakota rule, also considered and rejected a “substantial evidence” provision.
Compare
Fed.R.Crim.P. 5.1 [excluding “substantial evidence” provision]
with Preliminary Draft of Proposed Amendments to the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure for the United States District Courts,
Affirmed.
