Opinion
We must decide in what way illegally obtained information in an affidavit supporting a search warrant affects the warrant’s validity. The Court of Appeal concluded that the illegally obtained information must be excised, but if the officers would have sought the warrant without it, and the
*1075
remaining information supplies probable cause, the warrant is valid. Defendant argues that the reviewing court must additionally find that the magistrate would have issued the warrant without the tainted information. Consistent with most courts that have considered the question, we disagree with defendant and agree with the Court of Appeal. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment and disapprove the contrary decision of
People
v.
Koch
(1989)
I. Factual And Procedural History 1
Officers serving a search warrant at a residence in Forestville discovered 83 marijuana plants growing under lights in the basement. The basement was accessible through two locked doors, one interior and one exterior. Bruce Nicolaisen, who lived on the property, was confined to a wheelchair and could not have used either door to the basement. He refused to tell who had the key or combination to the locks. Nicolaisen’s roommate, Lynnette Kester, arrived after the officers served the warrant. She told an officer that a friend of Nicolaisen’s named Carl came by daily to take care of the pool and a garden at the back of the property. While watching Nicolaisen’s residence during the previous week, officers had seen a visiting vehicle they identified as belonging to defendant Carl William Weiss. Department of Motor Vehicles records provided a description of defendant that matched Kester’s description of “Carl.”
The officers decided to question defendant about the marijuana-growing operation in Nicolaisen’s house. They arrived at defendant’s Forestville home late in the afternoon. Defendant answered the door, and an officer asked to come in and speak with him. Defendant asked if the officer had a search warrant. The officer said he did not. Defendant stepped outside, and the officer said he wanted to ask about defendant’s potential involvement in marijuana cultivation. The remainder of the search team, amounting to at least six officers, had arrived by this time. Defendant looked around nervously and said he did not want to talk. One officer walked around the house, which was built on a slope and rested on posts in the rear. In the area beneath the rear of the house, the officer observed a variety of materials used for indoor marijuana cultivation. Other officers who were in the driveway in front of the house observed several five-gallon plastic buckets painted with camouflage colors next to the driveway, a larger brown barrel wedged between trees with an irrigation line connected to its bottom, and a section of plastic pipe painted in camouflage colors running down the hill toward a vegetable garden.
The officers left about 10 minutes after their arrival, but 2 of them guarded the entrance to defendant’s driveway, which was not visible from *1076 the house. After about an hour, defendant drove away from his house, but the officers stopped and detained him. They recovered a key from him that was later found to fit a lock on a door to Nicolaisen’s basement. The officers entered and secured defendant’s house pending the issuance of a search warrant.
The affidavit supporting the search warrant application described the following: (1) the service of a warrant and the legal search at Nicolaisen’s house; (2) the information that Kester provided; (3) the identification of Weiss from Department of Motor Vehicles records; (4) the interview with Weiss at his home; (5) the observation of the water barrel and the pipeline in front of his house and the growing materials at the rear; and (6) Weiss’s detention as he was attempting to leave home. The magistrate issued a search warrant. Officers executing the warrant discovered evidence of marijuana cultivation.
Defendant was charged with marijuana cultivation and possession for sale. He moved to suppress evidence. The trial court ruled that the agent who observed the growing materials beneath the house had no justification for searching down the hillside, and it suppressed those observations. However, the court determined that the warrant application provided sufficient probable cause after the illegal observations were excised. Therefore, the court upheld the warrant. Defendant submitted supplemental points and authorities, arguing that the court additionally had to determine whether the search behind the house had affected either the officer’s decision to seek a warrant or the magistrate’s decision to grant the warrant. Based on defendant’s earlier concession, the court found that the officers would have sought the warrant without the information derived from the illegal search. It also found that the magistrate would have granted the warrant without this information. Defendant then pleaded no contest to the cultivation charge.
The Court of Appeal affirmed. We granted defendant’s petition to review whether the Court of Appeal correctly concluded that “a finding that the redacted affidavit is sufficient to establish probable cause is enough to meet the burden of showing the magistrate would have issued the warrant without the illegally obtained information; no further finding is necessary.”
II. Discussion
Defendant’s petition for, and our grant of, review presents a single narrow but important legal issue. Accordingly, we accept the lower courts’ conclusions that (1) part of the information presented in the affidavit supporting the search warrant application was obtained illegally; (2) when the illegally
*1077
obtained information is excised from the affidavit, probable cause remains to support the warrant; and (3) the officers would have sought the warrant without the illegally obtained information. None of these conclusions present an issue worthy of review. (Cal. Rules of Court, rules 28(e)(2), 29.2(a), (b); see
Southern Cal. Ch. of Associated Builders etc. Com.
v.
California Apprenticeship Council
(1992)
We decide only whether, for the warrant to be valid, the trial court must make some additional finding regarding the effect the illegally obtained information had on the magistrate who issued the warrant. Relying on
Murray
v.
United States
(1988)
It has long been established that even if a criminal investigation involved some illegal conduct, courts will admit evidence derived from an “independent source.”
(Silverthorne Lumber Co.
v.
United States
(1920)
“By contrast, the derivative evidence analysis ensures that the prosecution is not put in a
worse
position simply because of some earlier police error or misconduct. The independent source doctrine allows admission of evidence that has been discovered by means wholly independent of any constitutional violation. . . . The independent source doctrine teaches us that the interest of society in deterring unlawful police conduct and the public interest in having juries receive all probative evidence of a crime are properly balanced by putting the police in the same, not a
worse,
position that they would have
*1078
been in if no police error or misconduct had occurred. [Citations.] When the challenged evidence has an independent source, exclusion of such evidence would put the police in a worse position than they would have been in absent any error or violation.”
(Nix
v.
Williams
(1984)
The independent source doctrine applies in California.
(People
v.
Bennett
(1998)
In 1988, the high court decided
Murray, supra,
The
Murray
court concluded, “The ultimate question, therefore, is whether the search pursuant to warrant was in fact a genuinely independent source of the information and tangible evidence at issue here. This would not have been the case if the agents’ decision to seek the warrant was prompted by what they had seen during the initial entry, or
if information obtained during that entry was presented to the Magistrate and affected his decision to issue the warrant.” (Murray, supra,
The question is whether
Murray,
and particularly the language italicized above, changed the law at issue here. It certainly seems to require a finding that the police subjectively would have sought the warrant even without the illegal conduct, a finding made in this case. If information from a tainted source is included in the warrant application, does
Murray
also require the reviewing court to make some finding regarding its effect on the issuing magistrate beyond excising that information and determining whether what remains supplies probable cause? A California case decided shortly after
Murray
thought so.
(People
v.
Koch, supra,
Koch
concluded, “it is no longer sufficient for the prosecution to simply establish that the warrant affidavit still contained probable cause after the
*1080
illegally obtained observations have been excised. . . . The court must also explicitly find that the magistrate would have issued the warrant even if the information derived from the illegal entry had not been included in the affidavit.”
(People
v.
Koch, supra,
Most later courts that have considered the question disagree with this reading of
Murray.
The Court of Appeal in this case concluded that “a finding that the redacted affidavit is sufficient to establish probable cause is enough to meet the burden of showing the magistrate would have issued the warrant without the illegally obtained information; no further finding is necessary.” It collected many of the cases supporting this conclusion and compared them to the few reaching different results. “See, e.g.,
U.S.
v.
Ford
(1st Cir. 1994)
“Compare
State
v.
Lewis
(Alaska Ct.App. 1991)
*1081 “See generally, 5 LaFave, Search and Seizure (3d ed. 1996) section 11.4(f), pages 287-292.”
We agree with the conclusion of the Court of Appeal here and the majority of courts that have considered this issue. As explained in
U.S.
v.
Markling
(7th Cir. 1993)
“This approach is a logical application of the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
Franks v. Delaware,
“There is language in
Murray,
however, that could be read as casting doubt on this Franks-based approach to determining whether a search pursuant to a tainted warrant will support admission of evidence under the independent source doctrine. In
Murray,
the Court stated that a search pursuant to a tainted warrant is not an independent source ‘if information obtained during [the illegal search] was presented to the Magistrate and affected his decision to issue the warrant.’
“[T]he Fifth and Third Circuits in
[U.S.
v.
Restrepo
(5th Cir. 1992)
“Given all these factors, we agree that ‘the Court’s use of “affect” in
Murray
must be understood to signify affect in a substantive manner. Thus, the fact that an application for a warrant contains information obtained through an unlawful entry does not perforce indicate that the improper information “affected” [the magistrate’s] decision to issue the warrant and thereby vitiate the applicability of the independent source doctrine. Rather, if the application contains probable cause apart from the improper information, then the warrant is lawful and the independent source doctrine applies, provided that the officers were not prompted to obtain the warrant by what they observed during the initial entry.’
Restrepo,
Defendant argues, and the Court of Appeal here was concerned, that the excise and retest rule “is not entirely consistent” with Murray's language. “There is some force,” the Court of Appeal said, “in the argument that under our approach, an officer with probable cause sufficient for a search warrant has nothing to lose by verifying the presence of contraband through an unconstitutional search, and even by using the information gained in the search to bolster a subsequent warrant application. If the defendant moves to suppress in such a case, given the preexistence of probable cause (and the discovery of contraband in the defendant’s possession) it may not be difficult to convince a judge that the warrant would have been requested anyway, and the redacted affidavit will pass muster.”
Despite this concern, the court believed, as we do, that “the
Franks
test is fully consistent with the independent source doctrine as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court, other federal courts, and most state courts.” Moreover, it is not true that law enforcement agents would have nothing to lose by including illegally obtained information in a warrant application. Reviewing courts normally give great deference to a warrant. “ ‘Although in a particular case it may not be easy to determine when an affidavit demonstrates the existence of probable cause, the resolution of doubtful or marginal
*1083
cases in this area should be largely determined by the preference to be accorded to warrants.’ ”
(People
v.
Superior Court (Corona)
(1981)
III. Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal and disapprove
People
v.
Koch, supra,
George, C. J., Mosk, L, Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Werdegar, J., and Brown, J., concurred.
Notes
This factual summary is drawn from the Court of Appeal’s summary.
