1. Where the affidavit on which a search warrant is based shows that the information therein has been received from a third person, it must either state how the informer obtained the information or must describe the criminal activity in such detail that the magistrate can determine it is more than a casual rumor or accusation based on the individual’s reputation.
Cain v. State,
2. As to one informant the affiant swore "that he has given reliable information in the past 11/2 years.” This is a sufficient fact upon which to base reliability.
Davis v. State,
3. The statement that the drugs had been seen in the trailer in the past week coupled with the assertion that a drug party was being planned for the same date on which the warrant was procured is a sufficient showing that the information was not stale. The test is that "the occurrence should be so near in point of time to the making of the affidavit and the execution of the search warrant as to create a reasonable belief that the same conditions . described in the affidavit still prevailed at the time of the issuance of the warrant.”
Fowler v. State,
4. As to the remaining objections, the statement in the affidavit that it was sworn to by the affiant is prima facie sufficient proof of this fact. Examination of the written portion of the affidavit reveals that the description of the location of the trailer to be searched is adequate and specific; it is further described as issuing against "Randy Jackson and Glen Jones,” the evidence "being concealed on the person of the named accused and on the premises,” etc. The drugs found were in fact in the trailer and on the ground adjacent thereto, none being on the persons of Jackson or Jones. We note this because Jones was a visitor on the premises, and the name "Jackson” had in three places been changed by marking over the original word which appears to have been "Johnson.” The defendants contend that when they saw the search warrant the name read "Johnson.” This was contradicted by the affiant who said the name was corrected before he swore to it although he could not remember by whom. Noting that (a) this appears to be a palpable formal error; (b) the person of Randy Jackson was not in fact searched; at least no *8 drugs were recovered from his person, and (c) the name was not essential in the description and location of the premises, we hold that interlineation, although bad practice, did not vitiate the warrant. The general rule is that "where the place to be searched is otherwise properly described, the description or name of the owner or occupant is not essential, although it is the better practice to set out such matter in the warrant.” 79 CJS 892, Searches and Seizures, § 81 (3).
5. There was some evidence that permission was sought and granted to search the automobile on the premises for which the warrant issued. This being so, we will not consider the question of whether the terms of the warrant were broad enough to cover the search of an automobile found on the described premises.
Judgment affirmed.
