ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
Larry E. Jaggers was convicted of possession of more than thirty grams of marijuana, a Class D felony. 1 The trial court sentenced Jaggers to six months imprisonment and two years supervised probation. We grant transfer to address the interplay between the “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule and the warrant statute, Indiana Code § 35-33-5-2. Because we hold that the evidence used to convict Jaggers was inadmissible, we reverse the conviction and remand for further proceedings.
Factual and Procedural History
On July 12, 1993, an Indiana state trooper received an anonymous telephone call asserting that a Lawrence Jaggers was' cultivating and trafficking marijuana in his house in Mitchell, Indiana. The caller made two claims: (1) he had personally seen marijuana in and around Jaggers’s house on numerous occasions over the coursé of several years, most recently in the prior week; and (2) Jaggers was growing marijuana on two plots of land away from his residence. The caller described the house and the location of the off-site plots, including approximately how many marijuana plants would be found there. Armed with this information, within the next two days the officer went to Jaggers’s house and found that the caller’s description of the house was accurate. A truck in the driveway was registered to Lawrence E. Jaggers of Lawrence County. On July 15, the officer drove to each of the described plots and found marijuana growing there. Both plots were on land easily accessible to the public, one approximately two miles and the other six miles from Jaggers’s house. Based on the officer’s testimony at a probable cause hearing later that day (described in Part II
infra),
a magistrate immediately issued a warrant authorizing a search of the described house for “[mjarijuana, ‘grow
1
lights, and records and other similar written material recording or otherwise reflecting illegal trafficking in marijuana.” The officer executed the warrant at Jaggers’s home that afternoon. The search uncovered a substantial quantity of marijuana and related paraphernalia. Jaggers was convicted in a bench trial and he appealed. With one judge dissenting, the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Jaggers v. State,
Standard of Review
In deciding whether to issue a search warrant, “[t]he task of the issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical, commonsense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit ... there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.”
Illinois v. Gates,
I. Use of Hearsay to Establish Probable Cause
Jaggers moved unsuccessfully before trial to suppress the evidence seized as a result of the search. He now challenges the denial of that motion and the admission of the evidence over his objection at trial. Jaggers argues that the warrant did not issue upon probable cause because the informant’s claim that Jaggers was cultivating and trafficking marijuana inside his home was entirely uncorroborated. The State responds that the officer corroborated the anonymous caller’s statements sufficiently to establish probable cause. Jaggers’s argument is based on both the Fourth Amendment and Indiana Code § 35-33-5-2. He does not assert any claim under Article I, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution.
A. Fourth Amendment requirements for probable cause
Gates
instructed reviewing courts to accord magistrates greater flexibility and deference in determining the existence of probable cause based on hearsay: “Informants’ tips doubtless come in many shapes and sizes from many different types of persons.... Rigid legal rules are ill-suited to an area of such diversity.”
Gates,
Even under Gates’s deferential standard of review, the determination of probable cause in this case lacked a substantial basis. The independent police investigation corroborated the informant’s assertion that marijuana was being grown on two plots of land miles from Jaggers’s residence and that Jaggers appeared to live where the informant said he lived — nothing more. These facts did not establish any corroboration of the anonymous claim that Jaggers’s house contained evidence of crime. Nor did they confirm that the off-site marijuana plants belonged to Jaggers.
Cf. Kail v. State,
Equally critically, the informant’s credibility was entirely unknown. Use of anonymous informants to establish probable cause often presents heightened reliability concerns. Because there is no possibility of criminal liability for filing a false police report, the informant has no incentive to be truthful.
See Gates,
At the same time, anonymous tips can provide important information enabling police to apprehend suspects who otherwise might escape detection. A balance must be struck between these considerations. As
Gates
put it: “While a conscientious assessment of the basis for crediting [anonymous] tips is required by the Fourth Amendment, a standard- that leaves virtually no place for anonymous citizen informants is not.”
Gates,
The reason for the prohibition on searches based on uncorroborated hearsay goes to the root of the Fourth Amendment aiid Indiana statutory' and constitutional protection against unreasonable searches and warrants without probable cause. If any anonymous caller’s allegation, uncorroborated by anything beyond public knowledge, could justify a 'search, every citizen’s home would be fair game for a variety-of innocent and not so innocent intrusions.
B. Indiana Code § 35-33-5-2
Jaggers contends the caller’s information also does not satisfy the Indiana statute regulating the issuance of search warrants based on hearsay. That statute provides:
(b) When based on hearsay, the [probable cause] affidavit must either:
(1) contain reliable information establishing the credibility of the source and of each of the declarants of the hearsay and establishing that there is a factual basis for the information furnished; or
(2) contain information that establishes that the totality of the circumstances corroborates the hearsay.
Ind.Code § 35-33-5-2(b) (1993). Amendments to the statute have in effect codified changes in Fourth Amendment doctrine on the use of informants to establish probable cause.
2
Accordingly, we have held that “[w]hen seeking either a search or an arrest warrant, the police must follow the warrant statute, which specifies the minimum information necessary to establish probable cause.”
Esquerdo v. State,
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For many of the same reasons discussed in Part IA
supra,
the requirements of the statute were not satisfied here. Subsection (b)(1) was not met because the officer did not offer any information to the issuing magistrate, and apparently had none, establishing the credibility of the anonymous source. Subsection (b)(2) was also not met because the totality of the circumstances did not corroborate the hearsay.. The informant’s claim that Jaggers was cultivating and trafficking marijuana in his house was entirely uncorroborated. The facts that were verified were unremarkable; anyone who knew the location of Jaggers’s house and the two marijuana patches could have placed the anonymous phone call.
Bradley v. State,
II. Good Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule
The Supreme Court of the United States held in
United States v. Leon,
Jaggers argues that the investigating officer misled the magistrate when he testi
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fied at the probable cause hearing that the two marijuana plots were “near” State Road 60 (Jaggers’s house was located just north of State Road 60 on Lawrence County Road). The State responds that the
Leon
exception applies here because the officer did not testify falsely about the location of the plots. We disagree. The marijuana patches were at least two and six miles from the house respectively. The officer personally visited the plots just a few hours before testifying as to their location. Although he agreed with the prosecutor’s statement at the probable cause hearing that the plots were “separate from the place we are seeking to search,” the officer subsequently stated that the marijuana patches were “near” Jaggers’s residence. Although perhaps an innocent miseharacteri-zation, this representation was critical when viewed in the factual context. Placing the plots “near” Jaggers’s residence implied a link between Jaggers and the plots that was not supported by the evidence. This, in turn, implied involvement by Jaggers in marijuana trafficking that was otherwise not reasonably inferable from the officer’s testimony. In applying
Leon,
our cases have stressed the importance of accurately presenting all relevant information to the magistrate.
See, e.g., Dolliver,
This certainly approaches misleading the magistrate to a degree that prevents invocation of
Leon.
In any event, we agree with Judge Najam that the information on which the warrant was based was so lacking in indicia of probable cause that no well-trained officer would reasonably have relied on the warrant. Law enforcement officers are trained to distinguish the incriminating from the innocuous. Federal constitutional cases such as
Gates
and Indiana’s warrant statute make at least two things abundantly clear to law enforcement officers who seek a warrant based on hearsay: (1) the informant must be shown to be credible; or (2) the information must be shown to be reliable through corroboration or some other means. Because the informant in this case was anonymous, it would have been clear at the outset to a reasonable police officer that some corroboration of the- caller’s allegations would be critical if a warrant was to be obtained. Indeed, our decisions have emphasized that corroboration of inculpating information can sometimes be crucial to determining the existence of good faith.
Cf. Bradley,
The State’s contention that the officer corroborated the anonymous tip “to the extent practicable” does not comport with the facts. The caller stated that Jaggers had “an ongoing operation for several years at that location” and that “something is pretty much always growing in there.” This should have signaled time and opportunity to develop independent data showing the allegations to be rehable. Yet the police investigation was limited to confirming factual allegations that shed absolutely no light on whether Jag-gers’s house might contain evidence of crime. The location of the house and of the off-site plots were “easily obtained facts and conditions existing at the time of the tip.... ”
Gates,
Since 1969, the General Assembly has required some showing of credibility of the informant or of the hearsay for a warrant to issue on the informant’s statements.
See, e.g.,
1969 Ind. Acts, ch. 99, § 1. Although the warrant statute has been amended from time to time, this legislative policy has remained
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consistent for nearly thirty years.
See also
note 2
supra.
Police officers are reasonably charged with knowing the statute’s basic requirements: “The goal is that warrants be issued only upon probable cause, shown preferably by facts but in any event by information that is believed to be reliable.”
Madden v. State,
Conclusion
Transfer is granted. Larry E. Jaggers’s conviction for possession of marijuana is reversed. This cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Ind.Code§ 35-48-4-11 (1993).
. The current subsection (b)(1) was enacted in substantively the same form in an amendment to the predecessor statute in 1977.
See
1977 Ind. Acts, P.L. 333, § 1. As the Supreme Court explained in
Gates,
many lower courts understood
Spinelli v. United States,
. The warrant in this case was issued pursuant to a hearing before the issuing magistrate rather than a probable cause affidavit. The requirements for affidavits based on hearsay also apply in this setting. ■ Ind.Code § 35-33-5-8(a) (1993).
. In reaching this conclusion, Judge Robertson noted that the officer gave deposition testimony specifying the distances of at least two and six miles between Jaggers’s house and the off-site plots. The officer’s deposition was taken after the warrant was issued. Accordingly, this testimony is relevant to the
Leon
analysis only to the extent that it sheds light on whether the officer may have possessed information not transmitted to the magistrate. The deposition plays no part in determining what information was presented to the magistrate to obtain the warrant.
Leon,
. The parties make no contention based on the Indiana version of the good faith exception codified at Indiana Code § 35-37-4-5 (1993).
