This case requires us to decide whether the good faith exception announced in
United States v. Leon,
BACKGROUND
The United States Customs Service suspected that the J.B. Manning Corporation was undervaluing imported items to reduce the amount of customs duties owed to the United States. After receiving an affidavit from a federal agent, a magistrate judge issued a search warrant permitting Customs Service agents to seize the following items from the Manning property:
all debit notes and memos, general ledgers and subsidiary ledgers, invoices, purchase orders, bills of lading, carrier records, correspondence, telexes, bank records, financial records, computer records and facilities for storage and retrieval of electronic data and information, letters of credit, consumption entry forms, packing slips, purchase orders, contracts, importation log books, and merchandise samples.
Customs Service agents presented the search warrant to Joyce Manning, executed the search, and seized various items. Following the search, agents returned to Ms. Manning a laptop computer. The agents also informed Manning’s lawyer that any documents identified as essential to the operation of J.B. Manning Corporation would be returned or photocopied.
Manning then filed a motion under Fed. R.Crim.P. 41(e) for a return of seized property. Rule 41(e) allows a person “aggrieved by an unlawful search and seizure” to move “for the return of the property on the ground such person is entitled to lawful possession of the property.” The district court found that the search warrant was invalid because it failed to describe the items subject to seizure with particularity. The court also found, however, that the agents conducted the search in “good faith” as that term is defined in
United States v. Leon,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A district court’s interpretation of Rule 41(e) is reviewed de novo.
Ramsden v. United States,
DISCUSSION
Under the good faith exception announced in
Leon,
the exclusionary rule does not extend to evidence obtained by officers acting in objectively reasonable reliance on a subsequently invalidated search warrant.
A month after
Center Art Galleries-Hawaii
was decided, however, Rule 41(e) was amended. Under the new rule, property returned to the owners can still be admitted as evidence at any hearing or trial. The court can order the government to return property to the owner, and yet still permit the government to introduce the property-or copies of it, in the case of doeuments-at trial. “Under the rule as it now exists, suppression
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and return of property are separate and distinct inquiries.”
Kitty’s East v. United States,
In
Leon,
the Supreme Court weighed the costs and benefits of excluding “inherently trustworthy tangible evidence obtained in reliance on a search warrant issued by a detached and neutral magistrate.”
Leon,
If a district court determines that property has been illegally seized, the proper question in deciding the merits of a 41(e) motion is not whether the officers acted in good faith, but whether returning the illegally seized documents would be “reasonable!] under all of the circumstances.” See Ramsden v. United States, 2 F.3d at 326-27. If the government’s investigatory and prosecutorial interests can be served by retaining copies of the documents, it is unreasonable for the government to refuse to return original documents to the owner. Id. at 327.
Manning seeks return of documents. The record indicates that the government informed the Mannings’ attorney that the Mannings can have copies of documents essential to her business. That is insufficient. Unless it is unreasonable to do so, the government should return all original documents to the Mannings, while copying for itself documents necessary for investigation or prosecution.
The government concedes that the search warrant was overbroad and that Manning’s documents were therefore illegally seized. We REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND to the district court with instructions to grant Manning’s 41(e) motion unless the government demonstrates that returning the original documents to Manning would be unreasonable under all the circumstances.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Since the government did not challenge the district court’s jurisdiction, we decline to consider the government's argument that good faith is relevant in determining whether the government displayed "callous disregard” for the movant's constitutional rights.
See Ramsden,
