Edwin A. Hаmel appeals from the judgments entered on his conditional guilty pleas to charges of trafficking in marijuana and possession of hashish. 17-A M.R.S.A. § 1103, 1107 (1983). Hamel challenges the trial court’s refusal to hold an evidentiary hearing on Hamel’s allegation that the affidavit submitted by a police officer to obtаin the warrant to search Hamel’s home relied on knowing misstatements by a fellow officer, and claims that the officer’s affidavit on its face laсked probable cause to justify a warrant. We vacate the judgments.
Agent Robert Hutchings of the Bureau of Intergovernmental Drug Enforcement (“BIDE”) submitted to thе District Court (Bangor, Russell, J.) an affidavit in support of an application for a warrant to search the home of Edwin Hamel. The affidavit asserted that: (1) fоur years earlier Hamel had received four shipments from a source of marijuana cultivation equipment; (2) Hamel’s electrical powеr usage records during the past fifteen months showed relatively high residential use; and (3) Chris Melanson, a marijuana cultivator arrested by BIDE, had told Hutchings’s fellow BIDE аgent, Garold Cramp, that Hamel was a marijuana cultivator. The court issued a warrant; the agents searched Hamel’s home and found marijuana, hashish, money, guns, and drug paraphernalia.
Hamel requested a hearing and moved to suppress the fruits of the search, contending that the affidavit did not еstablish probable cause and that it contained misstatements made either intentionally and knowingly or in reckless disregard of the truth. In support of his contention that the affidavit contained knowing misstatements, Hamel submitted a sworn affidavit from Melanson, stating that Melanson had never spoken to Agent Cramр, that the only officer to whom he spoke was named Arno, and that Melanson did not make the statements attributed to him when he spoke to Officer Arno. The trial court (Penobscot County, Delahanty, C.J.) denied Hamel’s motion, refused to grant a hearing, and held that the affidavit was sufficient to support a finding of probable cause.
A criminal defendant is entitled to an evidentiary hearing when he makes a “substantial preliminary showing” that: (1) the affidavit to obtain a warrant inсluded intentional and knowing misstatements or misstatements made in reckless disregard for the truth, and (2) that the misstatements were necessary for a finding of probаble cause.
Franks v. Delaware,
The trial court found that Hamel had made the necessary showing to earn a
Franks
hearing in all respects except that Hamel did not challenge Hutchings’s veracity, he challenged Cramp’s. Because Hutch-ings was entitled to rely on statements by a fellow officer, the court ruled that Hamel had not generated an issue of known or reckless fаlsity by the affiant. This conclusion was incorrect.
Franks,
The State argues that the affidavit from Melanson is insufficient to qualify as a “substantial showing,” necessary to call Cramp’s truthfulness into question and warrant a
Franks
hearing. Citing a First Circuit decision, the State claims that Melan-son’s affidavit creates at best a “swearing contest” between Melanson and Cramp, and therеfore does not merit a
Franks
hearing.
United States v. Southard,
Melanson’s affidavit is more than a conclu-sory, unsupported denial. It not only denies the statеments attributed to Melanson by Cramp; it denies that Melanson ever spoke to Cramp at all. Most important, the affidavit is submitted by the alleged informant, and not by a third-party who has no way of knowing what the informant might have said.
The State suggests that “[t]he absence of S/A Cramp’s statement is most significant.” The State cites
United States v. Rios,
Finally, the State argues that “substantial showing” should be interpreted to
Although with Melanson’s statements, the affidavit is sufficient to support the сourt’s finding of probable cause; without Melan-son’s statements, the affidavit supporting the warrant to search Hamel’s home is insufficient to support рrobable cause.
See State v. Diamond,
The entry is:
Judgment vacated. Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
All concurring.
