Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
It is well recognized that the Fourth Amendment “imposes substantive standards for searches and seizures; but with them one of the important safeguards it establishes is a procedure; and [that] central to this procedure is an independent control over the actions of officers effecting searches of private premises.” Abel v. United States,
In this case, a large quantity of marijuana was discovered in the trunk of petitioner’s automobile when it was searched pursuant to a warrant. Petitioner challenged the validity of the warrant at a pretrial suppression hearing, arguing that it was not supported by probable cause. The judge who granted the warrant testified at the hearing. With remarkable candor, he explained that he had relied principally on the fact that police officers had asked for the warrant, rather than on the underlying facts and circumstances set forth in the affidavit. The pertinent portion of the judge’s testimony on cross-examination follows:
“Q. You would have issued [the search warrant even if a certain statement in the affidavit either had not been included or the judge had known it not to be true]?
“A. Certainly, because the officer — you’ve got to have enough faith and confidence in the officer that’s asking for the search warrant to warrant it for him and then if it proves it’s invalid, well, or whatever, there’s nothing there what they’re hunting — that’s not the first time I ever made a Search Warrant.
“Q. So, you were relying on the fact that these officers were of the law—
“A. Of the law sworn—
“Q. —and they were in there — they were sworn officers —
“A. That’s right.
“Q. —they were in there telling you that this fellow was a drug dealer and they wanted to search his car—
“A. That’s exactly right.
“Q. —and you relied on that rather than any particulars of this thing?
“A. That’s right.
“Q. So, you really issued the Search Warrant because you were asked for it by two sworn officers of law rather than any particular thing they told you?
“A. Well, I based my decision not primarily on that, but because — if Sheriff Jones walked in there and said, ‘Judge,*986 I need a Search Warrant to search John Doe for Marijuana,’ drugs or whatever — liquor or whatever it might be, I’m going to go on his word because he’s — I take him to be an honest law enforcement officer and he needs help to get in to search these places and it’s my duty to help him to fulfill that.
“Q. Okay. And it’s really based on the request other than any particular thing he might tell you?
“A. That’s right. That’s right.
“Q. And that’s what the situation was here?
“A. Well, if I didn’t feel like it was warranted, now, then, naturally, I wouldn’t issue it.
“Q. Okay, but . . . the swaying fact was that this was two sworn officers of the law rather than anything they told you in these Underlying Facts and Circumstances?
“A. That’s right. They were officers of the Narcotics.”
The trial court rejected petitioner’s arguments and admitted the evidence. The Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed petitioner’s conviction, holding both that the warrant was supported by probable cause and that the conduct of the judge who signed the warrant, although not a model of judicial deportment, had satisfied the constitutional requirements of detachment and neutrality.
Respondent argues before this Court that even if the judge failed to evaluate the request for the warrant in a neutral and detached fashion, the warrant was nonetheless valid because it was, in fact, supported by probable cause.
As the transcript of the suppression hearing clearly demonstrates, the judge who issued the warrant to search petitioner’s automobile, although formally separate from law enforcement officials, viewed himself as a facilitator of police investigations and simply acquiesced in police requests,' without giving serious and independent consideration to the facts set forth in supporting affidavits. The Court’s failure to grant certiorari in this case suggests that our admonitions that probable cause must be determined by a neutral and detached magistrate are hollow pronouncements.
I find the Court’s refusal to take this case particularly disturbing in light of the good-faith exception to the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule created by United States v. Leon,
I would grant certiorari and summarily reverse, or at least set the case for oral argument.
Notes
Relying on Carroll v. United States,
Lead Opinion
Sup. Ct. Miss. Cer-tiorari denied.
