¶ 1 Thе State appeals from an order of the district court suppressing evidence obtained pursuant to a search warrant. The issue raised on appeal is whether the district court erred in granting the motion to suppress. We reverse.
¶ 2 Defendants were chargеd with trafficking by possession with intent to distribute heroin, conspiracy to commit trafficking by distribution of heroin, and possession of marijuana. Defendant Jimmy Lujan was charged with the additional counts of tampering with evidence and possession of drug paraphernalia. Defendants mоved to suppress the evidence obtained by police during a search pursuant to a search warrant. Defendants’ motion to suppress attacked the sufficiency of the affidavit submitted to obtain the search warrant on the ground that the facts in the affidavit did not establish probable cause. The affidavit stated in pertinent part as follows:
In Affiant’s capacity as a narcotics agent with the New Mexico State Police, Affiant met with a confidential informant, who in the past, has provided information to law enforcement оfficials. The information that the confidential informant provided to law enforcement officials has been true and correct. The confidential source in question has provided information to the New Mexico State Police which has resulted in the seizures of quantities of illegal narcotics which have resulted in the convictions of numerous individuals involved in drug trafficking. Affiant has never found or known this informant’s information to be untrue. The confidential informant knows that supplying false or misleading information could be a criminal act and will void all agrеements made with police officials. The informant is not “working off” any criminal charges, but is seeking a monetary reward for assistance to law enforcement officials.
Affiant states that within the last 72 hours, Affiant met with the confidential informant for the purposes of arranging a controlled purchase of heroin. The confidential source told Affiant that an individual known to it by the name of Sam Lujan, was trafficking in heroin from the above described premises.
Prior to the controlled purchase, Affiant searched the confidential informant for drugs and mоnies, none of which were found. The confidential source was then provided with a sum of money and told to proceed to the area of where the drug purchase was to be made. At that location, the confidential informant was observed as it walked up to thе above described premises. The informant spent approximately five minutes at the location at which time, it left and met with Affiant at a prearranged location, and it was under constant [surveillance] the entire time, until it met with [A]ffiant, and it went nowhereelse prior to meeting [Ajffiant. Affiant was given a packet of suspected heroin which the informant said it purchased from the individual it knows as Sam Lujan. The informant stated that it purchased the suspected heroin directly from Sam Lujan inside 1001 Fairhaven, S.W. The informant stated that Sam Lujan had a substantial amоunt of heroin. The informant has told Affiant that Sam Lujan will not sell to individuals who he does not know to be heroin addicts. Informant was again searched for monies or .drugs, none of which were found.
¶ 3 Constitutionally, magistrates and judges must make an informed, deliberate, and independent determination of probable cause based upon sufficient details contained in the affidavit. State v. Cordova,
¶4 The first prong of the test requires that the affidavit include a factual basis for the information furnished, so that the judge may make an independent determination of probable cause. Cordova,
¶ 5 In the case on appeal, the trial court found that the search warrant was defective upon its face because the “affidavit standing alone did not adequately state the informant’s basis of knowlеdge of the allegations,” thus failing to meet the first prong of the Cordova (Aguilar-Spinelli) test. The trial court also stated that the controlled buy failed to corroborate the evidence.
• ¶ 6 We review on appeal whether the affidavit supports the issuance of the search warrant when given a common sense reading. State v. Lovato,
¶ 7 The trial court found similarities to the Cordova case which Defendants argue controls in this instance. Defendants state that “the affidavit in the instant ease fails in the same way that the affidavit failed in Cordova; that is, the affidavit fails to state the basis of the informant’s knowledge and the deficiency was not cured by independent corroboration.” In Cordova, our Supreme Court held that independent police investigation failed to establish the reliability of the informant’s report. Id. it 217-18,
¶ 8 In Barker, this Court held that first-hand observations by an informant met
¶ 9 In the case on appeal, without the controlled buy, the issuing judge would have been correct to deny the issue of the search warrant (and the trial court correct to suppress evidence seized as a result) because the affidavit would not have provided sufficient probable cause. The controlled buy established the informant’s “basis of knowledge” through the informant’s first-hand knowledge of the presence of heroin. The controlled buy supplied the informant with additional knowledge which the informant reported to the affiant police officer. It was not necessary to corroborate or establish the cоnfidential informant’s veracity for as we later discuss, the affidavit independently demonstrates the inherent credibility of the informant.
¶ 10 The controlled buy also bears on the confidential informant’s credibility and thereby addresses both prongs of the Cordova (Aguilar-Spinelli) test. When the judgе issuing the warrant looks at the affidavit as a whole, Cordova,
¶ 11 Defendants argue that sinсe the affidavit is void of the word “observed” or the phrase “personally observed,” the informant did not make a first-hand observation as in Barker. A magistrate or judge looks at the affidavit as a whole, however, and may make reasonable inferences in determining the еxistence of probable cause. Cordova,
“(1) only a probability of criminal conduct need be shown; (2) there need be less vigоrous proof than the rules of evidence require to determine guilt of an offense; (3) common sense should control; [and] (4) great deference should be shown by courts to a magistrate’s determination of probable cause.”
¶ 12 In this case, while the search warrant does not contain the words “firsthand observation,” the affidavit describes a controlled buy in which the informant entered the residence with some money and no drugs and came out of the residence a few minutes later with drugs and no money. The informant stated that he had purchased the packet of suspected heroin from Defendant Sam Lujan. The informant then turned over the packet of suspected heroin to the police. The informant saw or perceived the facts asserted. The affiant police officer stated the details of his own and the informant’s observations during the controlled buy in his affidavit. When we view the affidavit as a whole, the officer’s observations about the informant round out those of the informant, and the judge can infer sufficient first-hand knowledge. The first-hand observation of
¶ 13 We now focus on whether the information in the affidavit satisfies the second prong of the Cordova (Aguilar-Spinelli) test. The State argues on appeal that the affidаvit provided enough detail to establish the credibility of the confidential informant. We agree.
¶ 14 The affidavit contains a statement establishing the confidential informant’s proven track record. Defendants do not challenge the confidential informant’s credibility. In Cordovа, our Supreme Court found a confidential informant to be inherently credible based upon the statement “ ‘[t]hat Said Informant has furnished information to Affiant in the past which Affiant did find to be true and correct through personal knowledge and investigation.’ ”
¶ 15 The affidavit in the case on appeal provided substantially more information than the affidavit in Cordova. The affidavit stated that the confidential informant has provided information in the past “which has resulted in the seizures of quantities of illegal narcotics which have resulted in the convictions.” See State v. Cervantes,
¶ 16 Defendants also claim that Lovato controls because the affidavit here is very similar to the affidavit in Lovato. Lovar to does not control the outcome of this case. In Lovato, this Court found that the “affidavit fail[ed] to permit a reasonable inference” that defendants rеsided at the premises and was stale because of the nature of rapid turnover of motel rooms. Id. at 158,
¶ 17 For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the affidavit provided the issuing judge with sufficient information to meet both the “basis of knowledge” and the “credibility” prongs of the Cordova (.Aguilar-Spinelli) test and that the issuing judge had probable cause to issue the warrant. Therefore, we reverse the district court’s order suppressing the evidence and remand for further proceedings.
¶ 18 IT IS SO ORDERED.
