*315 Opinion
After a trial by the court, defendant was convicted of one count of possession of cocaine for the purpose of sale. (Health & Saf. Code, § 11351.) Defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction, claiming certain pretrial rulings by the magistrate and the trial court operated to deny him his right to challenge the accuracy of an affidavit which was used to obtain a search warrant for his residence. We conclude that defendant was denied a reasonable opportunity to challenge the affidavit.
Procedural History
After being arrested and charged, defendant made a motion for pre-preliminary examination discovery. The motion sought various documents, allegedly held by the prosecution, which defendant believed might undermine certain statements contained in the search warrant affidavit; specifically, the statements alleging a particular confidential informant had been a reliable source of information to the police in other cases. The motion was granted for numerous items, but was denied for many others.
Defendant unsuccessfully petitioned the superior court for a writ оf mandate to compel discovery of the remaining items. Defendant then unsuccessfully petitioned this court for the same writ of mandate. We denied the petition, exercising “our discretion in original proceedings to deny review of the difficult issues raised by the petition” at that early stage of the proceedings.
A preliminary examination was held, during which defendant was restricted in his cross-examination of the search warrant affiant concerning the reliability of the confidential informant. Defendant was held to answer on the charge.
Later, in superior cоurt, defendant filed a motion to set aside the information (Pen. Code, § 995), 1 challenging the magistrate’s partial denial of his discovery motion, as well as the magistrate’s restriction of defendant’s inquiry at the preliminary examination into the reliability of the confidential informant. This motion likewise was denied.
Next, defendant filed a petition for a writ of prohibition with this court, challenging the denial of his section 995 motion. The same day, however, defendant waived his right to a jury trial and submitted the question of his guilt to the superior court based upon the transcript of his preliminary ex- *316 animation. Defendant was found guilty of the charge and, ultimately, was sentenced to state prison for the middle term of three years. This court subsequently denied defendant’s petition for a writ of prohibition when it learned that defendant’s trial had already taken place. Defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction.
The Facts
Police officers searched defendant’s residence, pursuant to a search warrant, and found a quantity of cocaine in his bedroom. The affidavit which was used to obtain the search warrant for defendant’s residence relied heavily upоn information supplied to the police by a confidential informant. The affidavit included the following statement to establish the reliability of the informant: “In the past six months, the informant has furnished your affiant with information which, through investigation, has led to the arrest of at least two persons for narcotic and dangerous drug violations. Further, that during the past six months, this informant has furnished your affiant with information which, through investigation, has led to the seizure of dangerous drugs and narcotics.” The affidavit further alleged that the informant had been paid a sum of money by the police in exchange fоr his information and that the informant was familiar with narcotics and dangerous drugs based upon his prior use and experience with them.
At the hearing on defendant’s discovery motion, the prosecutor stipulated that discovery should be granted for several items 2 but contested the request for numerous others. The contested items included:
“9. All reports and notes regarding the information furnished by the informant in the six months prior to the affidavit which has led to the arrest of persons and the seizure of drugs . . .;
“10. All reports regarding the arrest of the two persons which resulted from informant’s information . . .;
“11. All rеports regarding the seizure of dangerous drugs and narcotics which resulted from informant’s information . . .;
“12. Any search warrants, together with their affidavits and returns, which resulted from informant’s information . . .;
“13. Rap sheets showing all felony convictions as to the informant who is referred to in the search warrant affidavit;
*317 “14. Police reports of any cases pending against the informant at the time when the information about defendant Rivas was given;
“15. All pay vouchers of payments made for compensation or expenses to the informant for information supplied herein;
“16. All promises, representations or assurances, whether or not reduced to writing, given in exchange for information supplied by the informant herein.”
Defense counsel prefaced his arguments in favor of permitting discovery of these items by stating that the motion was not an attempt to discover the identity of the confidential informant and that defense counsel would be willing to have any references to the identity of the informant deleted from the requested materials before they were turned over to him. The prosecutor objected to permitting discovery of the disputed itеms, claiming the defense requests were simply a veiled attempt to obtain information which would allow the defense to discover the identity of the informant. In response, defense counsel suggested the court could examine the disputed materials in an in camera hearing in order to prevent documents which might permit discovery of the informant’s identity from being turned over to the defense. The magistrate denied discovery of the disputed items on the ground that the motion was no more than an attempt to learn the informant’s identity.
At the preliminary examination, defense counsel аttempted to question the search warrant affiant, Detective Stanley Mosley, about his representations in the search warrant affidavit that the informant had proved himself to be a reliable source of information for the police. The prosecutor objected, challenging the relevance of the defense questioning. After some discussion between defense counsel and the magistrate, the magistrate refused to permit any questioning of the officer about the prior reliability of the informant or anything else that would go behind the face оf the search warrant affidavit. 3
*318
Later, defense counsel made a motion to dismiss the information in the superior court, challenging the magistrate’s denial of the defense discovery request as well as the restriction of cross-examination of Detective Mosley at the preliminary hearing. Defense counsel argued the pre-preliminary hearing discovery was essential to any subsequent defense attempts to bring a motion to traverse the search warrant affidavit. Counsel explained to the court that without the discovery, he would be unable to makе the preliminary showing, required by
Theodor
v.
Superior Court
(1972)
Here again, the prosecutor argued against permitting discovery by claiming the requested information would allow defendant to determine the identity of the confidential informant. The trial court inquired of the prosecution whether the requested information could be screened by the court in camera in order for the court to excise those portions of the materials which might possibly lead to the discovеry of the informant’s identity.
After extensive arguments between both counsel and the court, the matter was submitted for decision. The following day the motion was denied on the ground that defendant was not entitled to discovery concerning the facts alleged in the affidavit or to cross-examine the affiant regarding the reliability of the informant without first satisfying the Theodor requirement to show that the affidavit contained inaccuracies.
I.
Denial of Defendant’s Discovery Requests
On appeal defendant renews his claim that discovery of items 9-16 was necessary for him to exercise his right to controvert the facts contained in
*319
thе search warrant affidavit. Defendant claims he needed items 9-12 in order to confirm whether the informant in fact provided the police with information within the six-month period prior to his arrest resulting in the arrest of two suspects and the seizure of dangerous drugs. Defendant claims he needed items 13-16 to determine whether the affidavit omitted any material information bearing negatively upon the informant’s credibility in the present case. Defendant again asserts that without this discovery, he has no way to obtain the information needed to make a prima facie showing that thе affidavit is inaccurate. Defendant points out that unless he can make such a preliminary showing, he is precluded by
Theodor
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The People argue the magistrate correctly refused the discovery requests because the disputed information would tend to reveal the informant’s identity. Additionally, the People claim that items 13, 14 and 15 would have been cumulative of negative information about the informant which was already included in the search warrant affidavit; specifically, those statements acknowledging that the informant was paid for his information and that he has “past experience” with drugs, suggesting prior criminal involvement on his part. 4
In
Theodor
v.
Superior Court, supra,
*320
In
Franks
v.
Delaware, supra,
The type of showing required to trigger the constitutional right to a hearing is clearly set forth in the
Franks
decision: “To mandate an evidentiary hearing, the challenger’s attack must be more than conclusory and must be supported by more than a mere desire to cross-examine. There must be allegations of deliberate falsehood or of reckless disregard for the truth, and those allegations must be accompanied by an offer of proof. They should point out specifically the portion of the warrant affidavit that is claimed to be false; and they should be accompanied by a statement of supporting reasons. Affidavits or sworn or otherwise reliable statements of witnesses should be furnished, or their absence satisfactorily explained. Allegations of negligence or innocent mistake are insufficient. . . . Finally, if these requirements are met, and if, when material that is the subject of the alleged falsity or reckless disregard is set to one side, there remains sufficient content in the warrant affidavit to support a finding of probable cause, no hearing is required. On the other hand, if the remaining content is insufficient, the defеndant is entitled, under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, to his hearing.”
(Id.,
at pp. 171-172 [
Here, the magistrate denied the discovery motion on the ground the discovery requests were nothing more than an attempt to learn the informant’s identity. The trial court deniеd the section 995 motion on the ground that defendant was not entitled to discovery unless he had made a preliminary showing that the warrant affidavit contained inaccuracies, citing Theodor v. Superior Court, supra. Neither ground was appropriate for denying either motion under the facts in this case.
The first ground is unfounded in light of defense counsel’s consistent call for the magistrate and for the trial court to view the requested materials in camera so that a neutral party could excise those portions of the materials which might enable defendant to discover the identity of the confidential informant. Defense counsel was willing to submit the documents for pre *321 screening by the courts. Neither lower court chose to review the disputed materials. Unless it reviewed the materials, the court could only speculate about whether any discovery would tend to identify the informer.
We need not engage in a lengthy discussion of the often competing and conflicting interests of the parties concerned. Courts have long approved the government’s contention that informants are necessary and would not remain an available source of assistance to law enforcement if not provided anonymity. Disclosure of the informant’s identity may be a necessary consequence of the informant’s being a potential witness. Disclosure of the informant’s identity is not required if the accused’s challenge only goes to the probable cause underlying the search warrant.
Likewise, defense discovery is important for many reasons. When the challenge is to the accuracy of the affiant’s statements concerning the informant, the competing interests of the government and defendant can be accommodatеd to avoid disclosure of identity. The customary solution is an
in camera
review by the court. (See
People
v.
Kurland, supra,
It is true that defendant must make some showing of the potential infirmities he proposes to demonstrate before he can be permitted to engage in a hearing on the accuracy of the affidavit which otherwise would be no more than a fishing expedition.
(Theodor
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Information from “tipsters” is viewed with caution. The magistrate is to distrust such information.
(People
v.
Kurland, supra,
*322 “The in camera hearing need not be conducted as a matter of routine in each and every case in which the police claim to have had probable cause for a challenged аrrest or search because of information they received from an informant. But because the protection-of-informer-anonymity interest and protection-against-police-perjury interest do not collide head on as they do when the question is whether full disclosure of the informant’s identity should be made, it should not take much to prompt the suppression hearing judge to order such a hearing. If the defendant ‘has fairly put in issue’ the existence of the informant, whether the officer’s report of the informer’s prior reliability is truthful, or whether the officer’s recitation of what the informant told him is correct, then an in camera hearing should be held. Nothing less will ensure that the protections of the Fourth Amendment have not been circumvented.” (1 LaFave, Search and Seizure (1978) § 3.3, pp. 585-586, fn. omitted.)
The People do not argue that discovery was prohibited by Theodor, or its progeny. Instead, they claim that discovery of the requested information was properly denied because it would tend to reveal the informant’s identity. Since none of these materials was ever produced for examination by a neutral party, the record will not support such a conclusion.
For these reasons, we conclude defendant was entitled to discovery of the disputed items, provided that the documents are prescreened
in camera
by the lower court so as to protect the confidentiality of the informant’s identity. We add the further qualification that not all of informant’s background may be material. The magistrate would determine the materiality under the guidelines set forth in
Kurland. (People
v.
Kurland, supra,
The order denying defendant’s motion to dismiss and the judgment after trial must be reversed.
II.
Refusal to Allow Questioning of the Search Warrant Affiant About the Facts Bearing Upon the Informant’s Reliability
Next, defendant claims the trial court erred in refusing to dismiss the information on the ground that the magistrate’s refusal to allow questioning of the search warrant affiant about facts bearing upon the informant’s credibility denied defendant his right to test the search warrant affidavit. Additionally, defendant claims the restriction denied him his substantial right to cross-examination.
*323 The People concede that cross-examination of the affiant should have been permitted; however, they claim the error only requires a limited remand of the case to permit defendant an opportunity to cross-examine the officer about the informant’s reliability, rather than an order from this court directing the trial court to grant defendant’s motion to dismiss.
The cases indicate that the information should be set aside. In
Jennings
v.
Superior Court
(1967)
In
Parsley
v.
Superior Court
(1973)
During the course of the hearing on the matter, the judge restricted defendant’s attempts to cross-examine the search warrant affiant concerning these communications with the police. The Supreme Court ultimately held the judge had erred in failing to allow cross-examination on the issue of the reliability of the informant, ruling that “[f]ull cross-examination of prosecution witnesses concerning informant reliability . . . appears to be a constitutional prerequisite to invoking the informant privilege.”
(Parsley, supra,
at p. 942; see also
McCray
v.
Illinois
(1967)
Most recently, in
Tharp
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
Defendant then sought a writ of mandate from the Court of Appeal to direct the superior court to set aside the information. The Court of Appeal granted the writ, agreeing with the superior court’s reasoning in finding the restriction of cross-examination had unfairly prevented the defendant from testing the search warrant. (Tharp, supra, at p. 218.)
The Court of Appeal also held that the superior court had erred in remanding the case to the magistrate for correction under section 995a, subdivision (b)(1). The court reasoned that the magistrate’s evidentiary ruling to prohibit the defendant from testing the search warrant was the result of “volitional decisions, unequivocal in nature” and, consequently, it could not qualify for simple remand under section 995a, subdivision (b)(1), since it was not merely an error of “omission, ambiguity, or technical defeсt.” (§ 995a, subd. (b)(1); Tharp, supra, at p. 220.)
Applying these principles to the facts in this case, the trial court should have set aside the information on the ground that defendant had been unfairly prevented from questioning the search warrant affiant about the reliability of the informant. Here, the magistrate refused to permit any questioning about the reliability of the informant or anything else that would go behind the face of the warrant. Notably, information regarding an informant’s reliability in previous cases is information which is solely within the knowledge and control of those in law enforcement. Thus, a significant way of testing thе veracity of such statements in an affidavit is through questioning the search warrant affiant about them. Any rule which totally forecloses a defendant from questioning an affiant about the reliability of an informant until he has made a preliminary showing that the statements are inaccurate, *325 would greatly diminish the possibility that the accuracy of such statements could ever be challenged. Accordingly, we find that the magistrate erred in restricting defendant’s right to cross-examine the search warrant affiant about the confidential informant.
Although conceding the magistrate’s error, the People assert this court should simply remand the case to the superior court under the general powers provision of section 1260, 6 so that defendant may be provided an opportunity to cross-examine the officer regarding the informant’s reliability. However, defendant was denied the right to test the warrant affidavit at the preliminary hearing, not in the superior court. The sole question in superior court was whether the information should be set aside because of the magistrate’s error. Thus, the question properly before this court is whether the superiоr court erred in refusing to set aside the information based upon the magistrate’s actions. Here, too, the failure to allow cross-examination may have prevented defendant from challenging the accuracy of the affidavit in the superior court.
Furthermore, it may be inappropriate to order the superior court to hold proceedings to correct the underlying error which it did not commit. All the cases cited by the People as examples where limited remand has been used in the past involved underlying errors which were committed in the superior court. An error by the preliminary hearing magistrate of this magnitude requires that the original information must be set aside.
(Tharp
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Accordingly, this court orders the trial court to set aside the information. The order denying defendant’s motion to dismiss and the judgment after trial are reversed.
Hamlin, J., and Best, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 23, 1985.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
The prosecutor stipulated that discovery should be permitted for items 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 as modified, and 8.
The entire discussion proceeded as follows:
“Mr. Rose [Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, I am going to аttempt to develop by questioning whether or not the information provided by the informant was reliable and the factors under which it was reliable.
“The Court: It would be my understanding of the law if you wish to go behind the search warrant, that you have to make a prima facie showing of some inaccuracy or omission in the search warrant; and to this point, there has been none, and so I would think that these questions aren’t properly posed at this time. I think you have to go forward with your prima facie showing first.
“Mr. Rose: My position is as reflected by the transcript of the hearing, the disсovery hearing, and—and my points and authorities, that the items which I was denied by Judge Condley were the predicate items I needed to make my prima facie showing here. As I *318 understand the Court, the Court is preventing me from questioning on the contact that this officer had with the affiant, with the informant prior to the date of the execution of the affidavit.
“The Court: I may go further. I think I would prevent your attack on this warrant other than anything—or preventing any questioning concerning the warrant that goes to the propriety of the warrant other than the alleged insufficiency of the affidavit in and of itself.
“Mr. Rose: On its face.
“The Court: On its face.
“Mr. Rose: The Court is not allowing me to question in any regard concerning prior reliability of the informant or any contact or anything that would go behind the search warrant face?
“The Court: That’s correct, no permission to question any witness. You can make any arguments based on lack of credibility of the informant contained—only based on what’s contained in the affidavit that was presented to the magistrate that issued the warrant.
“Mr. Rose: Fine.
“The Court: I take it when you say ‘fine,’ you don’t mean you are accepting that ruling and agreeing with it, but that you are ready to move on to the next area of questioning.
“Mr. Rose: That’s correct.”
Defendant failed to renew his discovery motion in the superior court following the denial of his motion to dismiss. Defendant’s failure to renew the discovery motion in the superior court raises the question whether he can now challenge the magistrate’s ruling, absent some showing how the ruling prejudiced him at trial.
(People
v.
Pompa-Ortiz
(1980)
Section 995a, subdivision (b)(1), provides: “Without setting aside the information, the court may, upon motion of the prosecuting attorney, order further proceedings to correct errors alleged by the defendant if the court finds that such errors are minor errors of omission, ambiguity, or technical defect which can be expeditiously cured or corrected without a rehearing of a substantial portion of the evidence. The court may remand the cause to the committing magistrate for farther proceedings, or if the parties and the court agree, the court may itself sit as a magistrate and conduct farther proceedings. When remanding the cause to the committing magistrate, the court shall state in its remand order which minor errors it finds could be expeditiously cured or corrected.” (Italics added.)
Section 1260 provides in pertinent part: “The court may . . ., if proper, remand the cause to the trial court for such further proceedings as may be just under the circumstances.”
