delivered the opinion of the Court.
This сase involves the application of the rules articulated today in
United States
v.
Leon, ante,
p. 897, to a situation in
I
The badly burned body of Sandra Boulware was discovered in a vacant lоt in the Roxbury section of Boston at approximately 5 a. m., Saturday, May 5,1979. An autopsy revealed that Boulware had died of multiple compound skull fractures caused by blows to the head. After a brief investigation, the police decided to question one of the victim’s boyfriends, Osborne Sheppard. Sheppard told the police that he had last seen the victim on Tuesday night and that he had been at a local gaming house (where card games were played) from 9 p. m. Friday until 5 a. m. Saturday. He identified several people who would be willing to substantiate the latter claim.
By interviewing the peoрle Sheppard had said were at the gaming house on Friday night, the police learned that although Sheppard was at the gaming house that night, he had borrowed an automobile at about 3 o’clock Saturday morning in order to give two men a ride home. Even though the trip normally took only 15 minutes, Shepрard did not return with the car until nearly 5 a. m.
On Sunday morning, police officers visited the owner of the car Sheppard had borrowed. He consented to an inspection of the vehicle. Bloodstains and pieces of hair were found on the rear bumper and within the trunk compartment. In addition, the offiсers noticed strands of wire in the trunk similar to wire strands found on and near the body of the victim. The owner of the car told the officers that when he last used the car on Friday night, shortly before Sheppard borrowed it, he had placed articles in the trunk and had not noticed any stains on the bumper or in the trunk.
On the bаsis of the evidence gathered thus far in the investigation, Detective Peter O’Malley drafted an affidavit designed to support an application for an arrest warrant and a search warrant authorizing a search of Sheppard’s residence.
“[a] fifth bottle of amaretto liquor, 2 nickel bags of marijuana, a woman’s jacket that has been described as black-grey (charcoal) possessions of Sandra D. Boulware, similar type wire and rope that match those on the body of Sandra D. Boulware, or in the above [TJhunderbird. Blunt instrument that might have been used on the victim. Men’s or women’s clothing that may have blood, gasoline, burns on them. Items that may have fingerprints of the victim.” 1
Detective O’Malley showed the affidavit to the District Attorney, the District Attorney’s first assistant, and a sergeant, who all concluded that it set forth probable cause for the search and the arrest.
Because it was Sunday, the local court was closed, and the police had a difficult time finding a warrant application form. Detective O’Malley finally found a warrant form previously in use in the Dorchester District. The form was entitled “Search Warrant — Controlled Substance G. L. c. 276 §§1 through 3A.” Realizing that some changes had to be made before the form could be used to authorize the search requested in the affidavit, Detective O’Malley deleted the subtitle “controlled substance” with a typewriter. He also substituted “Roxbury” for the printed “Dorchester” and typed Sheppard’s name and address into blank spaces provided for that information. However, the reference to “controlled substance” was not deleted in the portion of the form that constituted the warrant application and that, when signed, would constitute the warrant itself.
At a pretrial suppression hearing, the trial judge concluded that the warrant failed to conform to the commands of the Fourth Amendment because it did not particularly describe the items to be seized. The judge ruled, however, that the evidence could be admitted notwithstanding the defect in the warrant because the police had acted in good faith in executing what they reasonably thought was a valid warrant. App. 35a. At the subsequеnt trial, Sheppard was convicted.
On appeal, Sheppard argued that the evidence obtained pursuant to the defective warrant should have been suppressed. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts agreed. A plurality of the justices concluded that although “the police conducted the search in a good faith belief, reasonably held, that the search was lawful and authorized by the warrant issued by the judge,”
II
Having already decided that the exclusionary rule should not be applied when the officer conducting the search acted in
Sheppard contends that since O’Malley knew the warrant form was defective, he should have examined it to make sure that the necessary changes had been made. However, that argument is based on the premise that O’Malley had a duty to disregard the judge’s assurances that the requested search would be authorized and the necessary changes would be made. Whatevеr an officer may be required to do when he executes a warrant without knowing beforehand what items are to be seized,
6
we refuse to rule that an officer is required
In sum, the police conduct in this case clearly was objectively reasonable and largely error-free. An error of constitutional dimensions may have beеn committed with respect to the issuance of the warrant, but it was the judge, not the police officers, who made the critical mistake. “[T]he exclusionary rule was adopted to deter unlawful searches by police, not to punish the errors of magistrates and judges.”
Illinois
v.
Gates,
It is so ordered.
[For opinion of Justice Stevens concurring in the judgment, see ante, p. 960.]
[For dissenting opinion of Justice Brennan, see ante, p. 928.]
Notes
The liquor and marihuana were included in the request because Sheppard had told the officers thаt when he was last with the victim, the two had purchased two bags of marihuana and a fifth of amaretto before going to his residence.
The warrant directed the officers to “search for any controlled substance, article, implement or other paraphernalia used in, for, or in conneсtion with the unlawful possession or use of any controlled substance, and to seize and securely keep the same until final action . . . .”
Sheppard contends that there is no evidence in the record that the judge spoke to O’Malley after he made the changes. Brief for Respondent 11, n. 4. Howеver, the trial judge expressly found that the judge “informed Detective O’Malley that the warrant as delivered over was sufficient authority in form and content to carry out the search as requested,” App. 27a, and a plurality of the Supreme Judicial Court noted that finding without any apparent disapproval.
The police found a pair of bloodstained boots, bloodstains on the concrete floor, a woman’s earring with bloodstains on it, a bloodstained envelope, a pair of men’s jockey shorts and women’s leotards with blood on them, three types of wire, and a woman’s hairpiece, subsequently identified as the victim’s.
Both the trial court, App. 32a, and a mаjority of the Supreme Judicial Court,
Petitioner does argue, however, that even though the warrant was invalid, the search was constitutional because it was reasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Brief for Petitioner 28-32. The uniformly applied rule is that a search conducted pursuаnt to a warrant that fails to conform to the particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment is unconstitutional.
Stanford
v.
Texas,
Normally, when an officer who has not beеn involved in the application stage receives a warrant, he will read it in order to determine the object of the search. In this case, Detective O’Malley, the officer who directed the search, knew what items were listed in the affidavit presented to the judge, and he had good reason to believe that the warrant authorized the seizure of those items. Whether an officer who is less familiar with the warrant application or who has unalleviated concerns about the proper scope of the search would be justified in failing to notice a defect like the one in the warrant in this case is an issue we need not decide. We hold only that it was not unreasonable for the police in this case to rely on the judge’s assurances that the warrant authorized the search they had requested.
This is not an instance in which “it is plainly evident that a magistrate or judge had no business issuing a warrant.”
Illinois
v.
Gates,
