OPINION
Defendant pled guilty to possession of a controlled substance in violation of Salt Lake City, Utah, Code § 11.24.020 (1987), a class B misdemeanor, but retained her right to appeal the trial court’s denial of her motion to suppress.
See State v. Sery,
FACTS
On March 5, 1991, a magistrate issued a no-knock search warrant pursuant to an affidavit alleging that defendant’s residence, located on Salt Lake City’s Goltz Avenue, was the locus of ongoing cocaine distribution activities. The warrant specifically authorized permission to search for cocaine, packaging material, drug paraphernalia, currency, records of narcotics sales, and residency papers for alleged illegal aliens living at the premises. The search warrant also authorized police to search the persons of the three residents, one of whom is the defendant in this case. The following day officers executed the warrant by breaking down the door. The search was accomplished during daylight hours, even though the warrant also contained authorization to search at night. Police discovered a small quantity of marijuana, but none of the items described in the warrant.
Because defendant’s chief arguments on appeal involve the adequacy of the information supporting the warrant, we recite the information contained in the underlying affidavit in some detail. The investigating officer, Detective Gardiner, supplied the affidavit and based his request for a search warrant upon information obtained through three confidential informants. However, Detective Gardiner personally knew only the first confidential informant (Informant One). He received information from two other informants, Informant Two and Informant Three, through other detectives.
According to the affidavit, Informant One told Detective Gardiner that he had seen two residents of the Goltz Avenue premises, Mario and Garfield, engage in narcotics sales. 1 The affidavit recounted several instances when Informant One participated in controlled drug buys at the Goltz Avenue residence under Detective Gardiner’s supervision. One such instance occurred within seventy-two hours of seeking the search warrant. According to Detective Gardiner’s sworn statement, each time Informant One executed a controlled purchase at the residence, the informant was searched, provided with cash, and observed entering. After approximately five minutes, Informant One would exit, provide a quantity of cocaine to Detective Gardiner, and undergo another search. The substance purchased tested positive for cocaine each time. According to the affidavit, Informant One told Detective Gardiner that the cocaine was purchased from defendant’s roommates, Mario and Garfield, and that defendant was present during some of the transactions.
In addition to the intelligence he received from Informant One, Detective Gardiner detailed information provided by Informants Two and Three, which he received entirely through interviews with other detectives conducting narcotics investigations. Detective Stephens, a Metro Narcotics Strike Force officer who had been conducting a separate investigation of the *605 Goltz Avenue premises and its residents for about one year, provided information gained from Informant Two. Informant Two told Detective Stephens that Mario and Garfield were illegal aliens who had been dealing large quantities of cocaine from a secluded trailer located in a neighborhood some distance from Goltz Avenue. According to Detective Stephens, Informant Two purchased cocaine from Mario and Garfield. Detective Stephens personally noticed numerous short stay visitors at the trailer. In March 1990, Detective Stephens executed a search warrant in a west-side neighborhood. Incident to that search, he interviewed defendant at her residence and noticed narcotics inside.
Finally, Detective Gardiner possessed information from Informant Three, which he received through Sgt. Suarez. According to the affidavit, Informant Three had told Sgt. Suarez that in September of 1990, defendant was distributing cocaine from the Goltz Avenue residence, which the informant described accurately as being a basement apartment located on the east side of a four-plex.' Informant Three also told Sgt. Suarez that two illegal aliens lived with defendant, one of whom was named Garfield.
Detective Gardiner also recited several actions taken, in addition to the controlled buys, by which he corroborated information provided by Informant One. Included among these efforts were: (1) a computer and police record search that verified Garfield and defendant lived at the Goltz Avenue residence, (2) an interview with the apartment owner to verify that defendant in fact rented the apartment, (3) a police record check to verify that Garfield was defendant’s boyfriend, and (4) a police record search to verify that Informant One’s description of defendant matched photographs on file.
Detective Gardiner was the only witness at the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress. Although defense counsel’s questioning initially uncovered apparent inconsistencies between the affidavit and the facts as Detective Gardiner knew them to be at the time he prepared the affidavit, his testimony eventually resolved the inconsistencies. In particular, counsel asked about the statement in the affidavit that Informant One “told your affiant that [Informant One] has observed Garfield and Mario engage in the sales of narcotics.” Detective Gardiner acknowledged that sentence did not make specific reference to the Goltz Avenue residence. Upon further questioning, however, Detective Gardiner recounted specific details concerning controlled buys Informant One in fact accomplished at the residence, which buys were described in the affidavit. According to Informant One’s statements to Detective Gardiner, which were recited in the affidavit, the controlled buys were made from Garfield and Mario, with defendant present in some instances. In context, then, Informant One’s observations of narcotics sales by Garfield and Mario might fairly be read as pertaining to the Goltz Avenue residence. But even if other off-site sales are alluded to in the general reference, the key recitation is with respect to recent controlled buys at the Goltz Avenue residence from Garfield and Mario.
Defendant’s claims on appeal distill into the following arguments: (1) the affidavit was insufficient to establish probable cause, (2) the circumstances as described in the affidavit failed to justify no-knock or nighttime authorization, and (3) the evidence should be suppressed because the police used false statements to secure the warrant. 2 Because we conclude, in our discussion of the first argument, that the affidavit contained no false statements,' we do not separately address the third argument.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Defendant argues that we should apply a standard affording no special deference to the magistrate, along the lines sug
*606
gested in
State v. Weaver,
Establishing the appropriate standard of review normally constitutes a policy decision aimed at allocating power to determine an issue between trial and appellate courts.
3
State v. Thurman,
The United States Supreme Court has opined that “[a] magistrate’s ‘determination of probable cause should be paid great deference by reviewing courts.’ ”
Illinois v. Gates,
Having determined that the deferential standard applies to defendant’s claim insofar as premised on the Fourth Amendment, we could adopt the nondeferential
Weaver
standard only under Utah constitutional analysis, and would do so only if adoption of such a standard appeared to be countenanced by the Utah Supreme Court. In
State v. Thurman,
*607 SUFFICIENCY OF AFFIDAVIT FOR ESTABLISHING PROBABLE CAUSE
A. Analysis Under Federal Constitution
The threshold issue before us is whether the affidavit, when read in a common sense manner, establishes probable cause for issuing a search warrant for the Goltz Avenue residence. Because the police relied almost exclusively on information received from confidential informants, we must determine whether the information they provided forms a substantial basis for the magistrate’s determination that probable cause existed.
See Illinois v. Gates,
Prior to
Gates,
the
Aguilar-Spinelli
two-pronged analysis required that an affidavit relying on information received from an informant provide the magistrate with (1) the basis upon which the informant concludes that contraband is to be found at the site to be searched and (2) the basis upon which the affiant believes the informant is credible or that the informant’s information is reliable.
Aguilar v. Texas,
The task of the issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical, commonsense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit before him, including the “veracity” and “basis of knowledge” of persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.
Id.
at 238,
a showing of the basis of knowledge and veracity or reliability of the person providing the information for a warrant may well be necessary to establish with a “fair probability” that the evidence sought actually exists and can be found where the informant states.
Id.
at 1205. In other circumstances, however, “a less strong showing of the basis of the affiant’s knowledge, veracity and reliability may be required, if the circumstances as a whole indicate that the informant’s report is truthful.”
Id.
at 1205-06.
See also State v. Anderson,
In the case before us, Detective Gardiner relied upon information from three informants, but he knew the identity and had personal contact solely with Informant One. 4 The information provided by Informant One therefore becomes most pertinent in our analysis. Initially, Informant One told Detective Gardiner that he had observed Mario and Garfield engage in narcotics distribution in the past, albeit apparently at other locations. 5 Most important *608 ly, however, Informant One purchased cocaine on several occasions from the Goltz Avenue residence under supervision and observation, to the extent practicable, by Detective Gardiner. According to the affidavit, Informant One told Detective Gard-iner that the cocaine was purchased on those occasions from Mario and Garfield and that defendant was present during some of the transactions. One of these buys occurred within seventy-two hours of the affidavit’s submission to the magistrate.
Detective Gardiner verified some of the information he received from Informant One through independent sources, namely his interviews with other detectives. These detectives stated that their own informants told them that Mario and Garfield had been distributing narcotics at a different location, but were now living at the Goltz Avenue residence, and that someone at the Goltz Avenue premises was trafficking narcotics. Furthermore, Detective Stephens personally observed the presence of narcotics while talking to defendant at her residence in March 1990. In addition to independent verification he received from other detectives, Detective Gardiner specifically noted in the affidavit other means he pursued to verify the information provided by Informant One, including computer checks of police records to verify defendant’s identification and an interview with defendant’s landlord to verify her status as a tenant of the Goltz Avenue residence.
Even if we accept defendant’s argument that Informant One’s reliability was tainted by payments received for controlled buys and search warrants,
6
it appears that Detective Gardiner corroborated Informant One’s information to the extent possible, short of accompanying Informant One on the controlled buys. Moreover, repeated controlled buys, carried out under a narcotic officer’s supervision and adequately described in an affidavit, ordinarily suffice to establish probable cause for a search of the place where the buys were accomplished.
See, e.g., United States v. Cook,
B. Analysis Under Utah Constitution
Defendant, acknowledging that
Gates
reflects the current federal view, urges this court to adopt, as a requirement of article I, § 14 of the Utah Constitution, the former federal standard for determining whether information obtained from a confidential informant is sufficient to establish probable cause. Defendant argues that
Gates,
which abandoned the rigid
Aguilar-Spinel-li
framework and replaced it with a “totality-of-the-circumstances analysis,”
Moreover, as explained in Bailey, the factors of informant knowledge, veracity, and reliability, which were the linchpin of Aguilar-Spinelli, continue to play an important role in disciplined Gates analysis, albeit a role which will vary depending on the circumstances of the particular case. Thus, defendant’s claim that the Gates approach is overly subjective is without merit.
Accordingly, we decline to hold that the
Aguilar-Spinelli
doctrine is required under the Utah Constitution.
7
See State v. Rosenbaum,
PROPRIETY OF NO-KNOCK AND NIGHTTIME AUTHORIZATION
Defendant argues that even if probable cause existed for a search of the Goltz premises, the affidavit lacked a sufficient basis for the magistrate to authorize a nighttime, no-knock warrant. No-knock and nighttime authorizations are two separate matters, involving different considerations, and claims of error based on each are assessed independently.
See, e.g., State v. White,
We can easily dispose of defendant’s contention that the magistrate improperly authorized a nighttime warrant. The search in question occurred during
daylight
hours. Accordingly, defendant was not prejudiced by the nighttime authorization.
White,
Defendant bases her claim that the magistrate improperly authorized a no-knock search upon Utah Code Ann. § 77-23-10 (1990), which reads in pertinent part, with our emphasis, as follows:
When a search warrant has been issued authorizing entry into any building ... the officer executing the warrant may use such force as is reasonably necessary to enter:
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(2) Without notice of his authority and purpose, if the magistrate issuing the *610 warrant directs in the warrant that the officer need not give notice. The magistrate shall so direct only upon proof, under oath, that the object of the search may be quickly destroyed, disposed of, or secreted, or that physical harm may result to any person if notice were given.
Defendant places undue emphasis on the requirement of “proof” that the object of the search may be destroyed if notice is provided. In doing so, defendant ignores the use of “may” with reference to the probability that quick destruction will occur. Under defendant’s interpretation, the statute would require “proof, under oath, that the object of the search will be quickly destroyed.” Such an interpretation would produce an insurmountable burden on police to prove the occurrence of a future event. We accordingly reject defendant’s interpretation.
Section 77-23-10 allows no-knock authorization if targeted evidence can be easily destroyed or if notice poses danger to anyone.
8
Utah courts recognize a magistrate can reasonably infer, even absent detailed elaboration in the affidavit, that small quantities of narcotics in a residential setting can be easily destroyed.
State v. Rowe,
In addition to checking a box on the affidavit which read “the property sought may be quickly destroyed, disposed of, or secreted,” Detective Gardiner specifically stated in his affidavit that Informant One told him: (1) the residents always check to see who is at the door before opening it, (2) a bathroom is easily accessible from anywhere in the small apartment, and (3) the suspects store cocaine close to the toilet. Cocaine, even in quantities large enough to provide inventory for distribution, is much more easily disposed of than the full marijuana plants which were held to support no-knock warrants in
Spisak
and
Miller. Spisak,
CONCLUSION
The affidavit in question provided a sufficient basis for the magistrate’s determination of probable cause. Even if the nighttime search authority was not proper, defendant was not prejudiced since the search was accomplished during the day. The nature of the contraband and the specific facts delineated in the affidavit justified a no-knock search. We accordingly affirm the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress.
GARFF and GREENWOOD, JJ., concur.
Notes
. The affidavit did not say where these sales occurred. Testimony elicited at the hearing on the motion to suppress suggested at least some of the sales referred to in this portion of the narrative might have occurred somewhere else. Any such confusion is not fatal in view of the affidavit’s detailed description of Informant One’s controlled buys at the Goltz Avenue residence.
. Defendant also argues that the warrant was overbroad. We find this contention without merit and any elaboration unnecessary.
See State v. Carter,
. While determining the level of deference that trial or appellate courts should afford a magistrate’s conclusion concerning the adequacy of probable cause affidavits does not neatly fit within the framework of allocating power between appellate and trial courts, it does constitute an analogous allocation of decision making power, between magistrates on the one hand and judges at both the trial and appellate level on the other.
. Standing alone, the circumstances surrounding the information received from Informants Two and Three could not possibly support a determination that a fair probability existed that contraband would be found at the Goltz Avenue residence. The fact that Detective Gardiner did not even know the identity of these informants presents circumstances that cry out, as per Bailey, for particularized showings regarding basis for knowledge and veracity or reliability. This conclusion does not preclude the use of their information, absent such a showing, to bolster Informant One’s veracity and reliability.
. Defendant contends that Detective Gardiner made a false statement in his affidavit because at the hearing on the motion to suppress he testified that Informant One had not observed Mario and Garfield distributing narcotics at the Goltz Avenue residence. The alleged false statement reads as follows:
[Informant One] told your affiant that [Informant One] has observed Garfield and Mario engage in the sales of narcotics. [Informant One] also told your affiant that [Informant One] has observed suspect Garfield and Mario use cocaine. [Informant One] further stated *608 that [Informant One] has observed cocaine being weighed and packaged inside the [Goltz Avenue] premises.
During the hearing on the motion to suppress, Detective Gardiner testified that Informant One had not seen Mario and Garfield sell drugs from Goltz Avenue. On the other hand, he testified in some detail about the controlled purchases that occurred at the Goltz Avenue premises and how Informant One observed cocaine being weighed and packaged at that location during the time of the controlled purchases at that site. Apparently, when Detective Gardiner testified about Informant One not observing narcotics being sold at the Goltz Avenue residence, he was referring to Informant One’s observation
prior to
his effecting controlled buys at Goltz Avenue from Mario and Garfield. Under
Franks v. Delaware,
. Detective Gardiner revealed at the hearing that he paid $50 to Informant One for each controlled buy and $100 for each search warrant executed.
. In so stating, we acknowledge some state appellate courts have held otherwise in construing provisions of their respective state constitutions.
See, e.g., State v. Jacumin,
. Because we believe the no-knock warrant was justified under the destruction of evidence prong, we need not address whether no-knock authorization was also justified by a reasonable anticipation of physical harm.
