MEMORANDUM
Plaintiffs sued the defendant officers, claiming violations of the Fourth, Fifth,
I. Officers Other Than Phillips
Defendant Percy Alexander was never served in this case. Accordingly, he was not entitled to summary judgment. On remand, the court shall dismiss the claims against Alexander without prejudice. See Johnson v. Meltzer,
As to the properly served defendants, except for Phillips, there is no evidence in the record indicating that any of the officers played any role in the events at issue other than helping to execute the search warrant. The uncontradicted declarations of these “line officers” demonstrate that they fulfilled their constitutional responsibility to inquire “as to the nature and scope of the warrant” before executing it. See Ramirez v. Butte-Silver Bow County,
II. Detective Phillips
The plaintiffs first assert that Detective Phillips is collaterally estopped, by the state court’s grant of Thanh’s motion to set aside the information, from asserting that the affidavit that he submitted with his application for a search warrant provided probable cause for the search. Applying California law, we find no estoppel here. Detective Phillips is not for these purposes in privity with the district attorney, whose incentive to concede rather than litigate a probable cause motion in foregoing prosecution of a minor case is very different from the incentive that faces Phillips as a defendant in a civil rights suit.
The plaintiffs next contend that Phillips’s affidavit lacked probable cause. We hold that the facts in Phillips’s affidavit gave the magistrate a substantial basis for concluding that, “under the totality of the circumstances, [there would be] a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime” would be found in Nguyen’s home.
The plaintiffs also claim that Phillips’s statement that the canine alert on the package “indicates that the currency was packaged or shipped to Nguyen by someone who had handled” drugs, or his failure to provide additional information regarding the general prevalence of contaminated currency, amounts to a Franks violation. See Franks v. Delaware,
For the reasons stated, we affirm as to Detective Phillips as well.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
Notes
This disposition is not appropriate for publication and may not be cited to or by the courts of this circuit except as provided by Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3.
. The plaintiffs have abandoned their Fifth Amendment claims on appeal.
. Because the parties are acquainted with the facts and procedural history of this case, we do not repeat them here.
. The defendants allege that, under the Rook-er-Feldman doctrine, we have no jurisdiction to consider any claim amounting to a collateral attack on the default judgment of the state forfeiture proceeding. See D.C. Court of Appeals v. Feldman,
The Rooker-Feldman doctrine "applies only when the federal plaintiff was a party to the state suit.” Bennett v. Yoshina,
. An anticipatory warrant conditioned on the delivery of a package is valid if there is a fair probability that evidence of a crime will be found at the location to which the package is successfully delivered, whether or not the package itself contains contraband. We therefore reject the plaintiffs’ challenge that the use of such a warrant is inappropriate in this case.
