Yeary, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which Keller, P.J., and Keasler, Hervey, Richardson, Keel, Walker, and Slaughter, JJ., joined.
Appellant, Richard Hyland, while operating his motorcycle on which his wife was a passenger, was involved in an accident that injured him seriously and killed his wife. An investigating officer subsequently obtained a search warrant for and then obtained a sample of Appellant's blood, which demonstrated that he was intoxicated. Appellant was convicted of the intoxication manslaughter of his wife, but the Thirteenth Court of Appeals reversed Appellant's conviction. The court of appeals held that, after the trial court conducted a Franks
We granted the State's petition for discretionary review to determine: (1) whether a sustained Franks motion and the consequent purging of false statements from a search warrant affidavit trigger a heightened probable cause standard-namely, that the affidavit must "clearly " establish probable cause;
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Accident
Appellant and his wife, Jaime Doherty, left the Frontier Saloon in Corpus Christi shortly before 10:50 p.m. on May 30, 2014. Appellant drove his motorcycle while Doherty rode on the back. Shortly after leaving the bar, Appellant lost control of his motorcycle and careened off the road. When first responders arrived at the scene of the accident they found Doherty on the side of the road, deceased, and Appellant, who had sustained serious injuries and was unconscious, nearby.
Corpus Christi Police Officer Raymond Harrison arrived on the scene as Appellant was being transported to the hospital. Harrison conducted an investigation at the scene, which included speaking with eyewitnesses who indicated that Appellant was the driver of the motorcycle. Harrison left the accident scene and drove to the hospital to continue his investigation into whether Appellant committed an offense. At the hospital, Harrison detected a strong odor of alcohol emanating from Appellant's unconscious body. Believing that Appellant was under the influence of alcohol at the time of the accident and, therefore, may have committed at least the offense of driving while intoxicated, Harrison completed a pre-printed search warrant affidavit form that the Corpus Christi Police Department uses to obtain search warrants for blood or breath in driving while intoxicated investigations.
B. The Search Warrant Affidavit
The pre-printed affidavit form that Officer Harrison filled out contains introductory and concluding statements and nine numbered paragraphs, each of which contains brief statements, and some of which include blank lines for the affiant to use to conform the affidavit to the specific facts of a given case.
The first numbered paragraph (Paragraph 1) contains lines on which an affiant may provide identifying information about the suspect. On that line, Officer Harrison identified the suspect as Richard Hyland, a white male whose date of birth is January 5, 1984, who is six feet tall, weighs 170 pounds, and has brown hair. Paragraphs 2 and 3, which are entirely pre-printed and contain no additions by Harrison, then state that the suspect is in the custody of the Corpus Christi Police Department and that he has possession of and is concealing human blood, which constitutes evidence that he committed the offense described in Paragraph 4. The next paragraph, Paragraph 4, contains date and time blanks and the elements of the offense of driving while intoxicated. Harrison conformed the blank lines in this paragraph to reflect that on May 30, 2014, at 10:50 p.m., Hyland committed the offense of driving while intoxicated. Paragraph 5 contains three options to indicate how the affiant knows that the suspect was operating a motor vehicle in a public place (one of the elements of the offense of driving while intoxicated): (1) the affiant's personal observation; (2) the suspect's own admission; or (3) an eyewitness account. Officer Harrison put an "X" on the line next to the eyewitness account option to indicate its applicability to this case, and Harrison included the names and addresses of two eyewitnesses who observed Appellant operating a motor vehicle in a public place.
Paragraph 6 contains a list of potential observations that might lead a person to reach a conclusion about whether a suspect was intoxicated while driving. The list includes general appearance, odor of alcohol, condition of eyes, speech, attitude, and balance. Each of these options is followed by a line on which an affiant can elaborate about the specific observations. On the blank line following the option titled "general appearance," Officer Harrison wrote "bloody," and on the blank line following "odor of alcohol," Harrison wrote "strong."
Paragraph 8 begins with the following statement: "Additional facts leading me to believe that the suspect was intoxicated while operating a motor vehicle in a public place are as follows[.]" That statement is *909followed on the form by lines on which Officer Harrison wrote: "Involved in motorcycle crash (case # 1402159). Passenger DOA and suspect is in coma at Spohn Memorial Hospital."
Paragraphs 7 and 9 of the affidavit form are entirely pre-printed paragraphs with no space for the affiant to add additional information. Paragraph 7 reads:
I requested performance of field sobriety tests by the suspect and recorded the results and my observations of the suspect's performance of filed [sic] sobriety tests and signs of intoxication in the attached SFST SCORING SHEET, which is attached hereto and incorporated herein for all purposes.8
Paragraph 9 reads:
I have seen intoxicated persons on many occasions in the past. Based on all of the above and my experience and training, I determined that the suspect was intoxicated, and I placed the suspect under arrest for Driving While Intoxicated. I requested a sample of the suspect's breath and/or blood, which the suspect refused to provide.
Officer Harrison did not make any alterations to these pre-printed paragraphs in the affidavit. He signed the affidavit, dated it, marked it with the time ("1:18"), and submitted it to a magistrate, who issued a search warrant to extract Appellant's blood.
C. Statements Excised from the Affidavit
At trial, and before allowing the blood sample to be entered into evidence, the trial court conducted a hearing pursuant to Franks v. Delaware ,
After conducting a hearing at which Officer Harrison testified, the trial court excised Paragraph 7 in its entirety and excised the last sentence of Paragraph 9, leaving intact the rest of that paragraph. The trial court then determined that the *910remaining facts in the affidavit were sufficient to support a finding of probable cause, and it permitted the blood evidence to be submitted to the jury. At the conclusion of trial, the jury convicted Appellant of the offense of intoxication manslaughter and sentenced him to twenty-seven years in prison.
D. On Appeal
On appeal, Appellant argued, among other things, that after the false statements were excised from the search warrant affidavit, the remaining facts did not support a probable cause finding. The court of appeals agreed and concluded that the remaining facts-that Appellant was driving a motorcycle, that he was involved in a serious, single-vehicle accident, and that Officer Harrison smelled a strong odor of alcohol emanating from Appellant-did not "clearly " support a finding of probable cause. Hyland ,
E. Discretionary Review
In its petition for discretionary review, the State first argues that, when a Franks objection is sustained and certain statements are excised from a search warrant affidavit, the standard of review for determining whether the balance of the affidavit supports a finding of probable cause is not heightened. The State contends that this Court's use of the word "clearly " in McClintock I was not meant to convey that the probable cause standard is any higher after false statements have been excised from an affidavit. Second, the State argues that the facts remaining in Officer Harrison's search warrant affidavit are sufficient to support a finding of probable cause. We agree. A court reviewing a search warrant affidavit after false statements have been excised should not employ a heightened probable cause standard. In addition, the facts remaining in the affidavit in Appellant's case support the trial court's finding of probable cause to believe that evidence of driving while intoxicated would be found in Appellant's blood. Accordingly, we reverse the holding of the court of appeals.
II. APPLICABLE LAW
Under both the Texas and the United States constitutions, a search warrant for the extraction of blood from a person who the police believe to have committed an intoxication offense must be based on probable cause that evidence of that offense will be found through the execution of a blood-draw search warrant. U.S. CONST. amend. IV ; TEX. CONST. art. I, § 9 ; see also Sanchez v. State ,
Generally, a reviewing court applies a presumption of validity regarding a magistrate's determination that a search warrant affidavit supports a finding of probable cause. Franks ,
But the presumption of validity regarding the magistrate's probable cause determination may be overcome if the defendant can show the presence of false statements in the search warrant affidavit that were either made deliberately or with reckless disregard for truth. Franks ,
III. ANALYSIS
A. Probable Cause Review After Appellant's Franks Hearing
The court of appeals' opinion treated our use of the word "clearly " in McClintock I *912as evidence of a heightened probable cause standard for assessing whether probable cause exists from the facts remaining in a search warrant affidavit that has been partially excised pursuant to Franks . See Hyland ,
McClintock I was not, strictly speaking, a Franks case-that is, one in which the affidavit contained false statements that were deliberately or recklessly made. Instead, it involved the question of how to evaluate the existence of probable cause in an affidavit after information had been stricken from it because it had been acquired unlawfully. We have long held in that context that, before a search may be justified on the basis of such a partially-tainted warrant affidavit, it must be "clear" that what remains after the tainted material has been excised still satisfies the probable cause standard. See McClintock I ,
In our 1980 opinion in Brown v. State , we cited LaFave's treatise for the proposition that, "in cases where search warrants have been issued on the basis of an affidavit that included tainted information, ... the warrant is nonetheless valid if it clearly could have been issued on the basis of the untainted information in the affidavit. W. LaFave, 3 SEARCH & SEIZURE , Section 11.4(f) at 651 ( [1st ed.] 1978)."
*913We acknowledged in Le that the deference that reviewing courts ordinarily owe to a magistrate's conclusion regarding the adequacy of a warrant affidavit "is not called for when the question becomes whether an affidavit, stricken of its tainted information, meets the standard of probable cause."
B. Do the Remaining Facts in the Affidavit Establish Probable Cause?
Having concluded that there is no heightened probable cause requirement following a sustained Franks objection, we now turn to the State's second question: Do the facts remaining in Officer Harrison's affidavit-in this case-support a finding of probable cause that evidence of driving while intoxicated would be found through the execution of a blood-draw search warrant?
The court of appeals determined that these remaining facts did not support a finding of probable cause. In making this determination, the court of appeals relied on this Court's opinion in McClintock I , and also on an unpublished opinion from the Eleventh Court of Appeals called Lollar . McClintock ,
*914McClintock I was a search and seizure case in which we held that the statements remaining in a search warrant affidavit-after the court of appeals excised portions of the affidavit-did not support a finding of probable cause that illegal narcotics would be found inside a particular apartment. McClintock ,
The court of appeals found that the drug-dog sniff constituted an illegal search, and it excised the statements referring to the dog sniff from the affidavit.
The court of appeals in this case likened the facts presented here to those presented in McClintock I . It explained that "the redacted affidavit's theory of probable cause rest[ed] solely on smell and circumstances: the vaguely-described smell of alcohol and the circumstance of a fatal collision." Hyland,
Officer Harrison's description of the odor of alcohol separates this case from McClintock I . In McClintock I , the officer *915smelled the odor of marijuana outside of a two-story building. McClintock ,
In Pesina v. State ,
Appellant argues that additional facts existed in Pesina beyond the smell of alcohol and the circumstances of a serious collision that supported the Court's probable cause finding. Specifically, Appellant points to the evidence in Pesina that the defendant was muttering and stumbling. But, as we pointed out in our opinion in Pesina , it was not clear whether the muttering and stumbling occurred before or after the blood test. And we concluded that, in any event, "[o]ther evidence clearly established appellant was the driver of the pickup at the time of the collision."
The odor of alcohol that Officer Harrison detected on Appellant's person was an important piece of information in his probable cause affidavit, but the odor was not the only thing in the affidavit to suggest that Appellant's blood contained evidence of an intoxicated driving offense. Harrison arrived at what was no doubt a horrific scene: a motorcycle crashed, leaving its passenger deceased and the driver bloodied and in a coma. Harrison acquired eyewitness statements that Appellant was the driver of the motorcycle. Indeed, the facts in Harrison's affidavit-the strong odor of alcohol and the circumstances of the crash itself, including the fact that Appellant was the driver of the motorcycle, and the serious injuries that resulted-coalesced to support a probable cause finding that evidence of a driving while intoxicated offense *916would be found in Appellant's blood, just as the odor evidence and circumstance evidence in Pesina combined to support a probable cause finding.
When we consider the totality of the remaining facts in Officer Harrison's search warrant affidavit, giving no deference to the magistrate's initial reading of those facts, we conclude that it still demonstrated the existence of probable cause. Appellant was known to be the driver of a motorcycle that had recently been involved in a serious, single-vehicle accident that resulted in a fatality and serious injuries to himself. Also, Harrison detected the strong odor of alcohol emanating from Appellant's person. Taken together, these were "reasonably trustworthy facts and circumstances within the knowledge of" Harrison that "would lead a man of reasonable prudence to believe that ... evidence pertaining to a crime [would] be found" in a search of Appellant's blood. Washington ,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the cause to that court for disposition of Appellant's remaining points of error.
Hervey, J., filed a concurring opinion in which Richardson, Walker, and Slaughter, JJ., joined. Newell, J., concurred.
Hervey, J., filed a concurring opinion in which Richardson, Walker, and Slaughter, JJ., joined.
CONCURRING OPINION
I agree with the majority's conclusion that neither federal law nor state law currently calls for applying a heightened probable-cause standard after sustaining a Franks motion. Franks v. Delaware ,
I also write separately to address Officer Harrison's incorrect use of a preprinted, boilerplate search-warrant affidavit. Such documents are undoubtedly helpful, especially when dealing with unfortunately common crimes like DWI, and promote efficiency when used properly, but that was not the case here. In failing to cross out inapplicable paragraphs with a few strokes of a pen, litigation has ensued that has reached all the way to this Court, the court of last resort for criminal matters in Texas. A preprinted form that was supposed to make the process easier has instead drawn it out, depleting limited governmental resources. This case underscores the need for training.
With these comments, I join the majority.
Franks v. Delaware ,
Our Court has two opinions relating to the same McClintock case: one opinion that was issued in 2014 (
McClintock ,
These facts surrounding the accident came to light during Appellant's trial and are provided here strictly for background information. Not all of these facts are part of our probable cause analysis, which is confined only to the information contained within the four corners of the search warrant affidavit, as discussed later in this opinion. See Massey v. State ,
Officer Harrison completed an affidavit for the offense of driving while intoxicated-not intoxication manslaughter. Appellant was ultimately prosecuted for and convicted of the offense of intoxication manslaughter because his wife died in the crash. Nevertheless, driving while intoxicated is a lesser-included offense of intoxication manslaughter. Compare Tex. Penal Code § 49.08(a) ("A person commits an offense if the person: (1) operates a motor vehicle in a public place ...; and (2) is intoxicated and by reason of that intoxication causes the death of another by accident or mistake."), with Tex. Penal Code § 49.04(a) ("A person commits an offense if the person is intoxicated while operating a motor vehicle in a public place.").
Nowhere on the form is there any way for the affiant to indicate that certain paragraphs do not apply in a particular case, short of striking out such a paragraph entirely, which Officer Harrison did not do.
Paragraph 8 of the pre-printed affidavit form also incorporates by reference a "Probable Cause Statement" that the affiant can complete and attach to the affidavit. Officer Harrison purported to attach a Probable Cause Statement to his affidavit. But based on the content of the Probable Cause Statement in the record, it is clear that Harrison completed this statement after he had already obtained the search warrant from the magistrate. As a result, the magistrate could not have relied on the Probable Cause Statement in making his probable cause determination. The court of appeals correctly refused to rely on the Probable Cause Statement, pointing out that the trial judge himself did not appear to rely on the Probable Cause Statement in evaluating probable cause after sustaining Appellant's Franks objection. Hyland ,
Unsurprisingly, given Appellant's unconscious condition following the crash, there was no SFST Scoring Sheet attached to Officer Harrison's affidavit.
Officer Harrison testified at the Franks hearing that, even though Appellant was unconscious and in a coma in the hospital, he still read Appellant the statutory admonishments before obtaining the search warrant. Obviously, Appellant did not expressly refuse at that time to provide a blood specimen.
The case before us does not squarely present the question of what the proper appellate standard of review should be with respect to the trial court's determination that the remaining information in the warrant affidavit provided probable cause. Should the appellate courts review such a determination deferentially or de novo ? We need not resolve the standard-of-review issue today. In this case, the trial court held that the redacted affidavit still sufficed to provide probable cause. Like the trial court, we conclude that the information remaining in the warrant affidavit is sufficient to supply probable cause. Because our resolution of the probable cause question would be the same regardless of whether we applied a deferential or de novo standard of review to the trial court's historical fact or credibility determinations, we may leave that question for another day.
The officer in Lollar claimed in the affidavit that the appellee admitted to the officer that she "had been operating a motor vehicle in a public place in Jones County, Texas ... just 7 minutes prior" to the officer's arrival. This fact in the affidavit was proven to instead be an inference the officer drew based on a conversation with the appellee. In addition, the odor of alcohol the arresting officer detected in Lollar was not described as "strong," as it was in this case. Finally, in reaching its conclusion, the Lollar court did not rely on the McClintock I "clearly established probable cause" language that the court of appeals relied on in this case. Even if Lollar were a published opinion with precedential value, it would not control our decision, and these important differences make Lollar distinguishable.
Harrison testified that he intentionally did not cross out the paragraphs, although not in bad faith. According to him, "it's just a standard form. I've never been instructed to take it out. I've never taken them off."
