This is another case dealing with the issue of reliance on information provided by an anonymous informant to establish probable cause to obtain a warrant to search a residence believed being used as a drug outlet. The majority of the court of appeals held that the search warrant affidavit failed to support the issuance of the warrant.
State v. McCloskey,
The search warrant in this case was issued and executed on April 1, 1988. During the week preceding the issuance and execution of the search warrant a person walked into the Isanti County Sheriff’s office and asked to speak with Sheriff William Schultz. The person, referred to as “CRI” in the affidavit supporting the search warrant application, expressed a concern that defendant was selling drugs to juveniles. CRI did not want to identify himself or herself, explaining that he/she “had a very strong fear of retribution should [defendant] find out who [he/she] was.” CRI admitted having purchased marijuana from defendant but said he/she was upset with defendant because defendant was selling controlled substances to juveniles. CRI told the sheriff he/she had seen “crack” at the residence within the last week, that it was in chunk form, approximately 2V2 inches in diameter, and was light or white colored. CRI said defendant was talking about the substance in terms of its being cocaine. According to the sheriff, the description provided by CRI “accurately describe[d] the type of cocaine * * * discovered in recent times in the area, being in raw chunk form.”
Although CRI refused to give his/her name, he/she agreed to return the next day to help the sheriff in his investigation. CRI returned to the office the next day, as promised, and agreed to ride with the sheriff and show him where defendant’s residence was located. On the way, CRI commented that the residence had a detached garage. On arriving, the sheriff saw a small house with a detached garage down a long driveway. CRI gave the sheriff the phone number he/she had used to contact defendant. CRI said defendant had a number of guns, carried a 7-inch blade in his boot, and had a large iguana in the house.
The sheriff verified the phone number as that of defendant and checked with the assessor’s office and learned that defendant and his wife owned the house pointed out by CRI. The sheriff also checked police sources. The Isanti County Sheriff’s *702 Department contact card showed a DWI arrest in 1982, a probation violation warrant in 1983, a Ramsey County warrant in 1986 for expired plates, and a 1986 Henne-pin County warrant for speeding. The traffic records showed defendant’s license had been suspended several times for unpaid fines, a no-insurance conviction, a DWI and several speeding violations. Defendant’s criminal history showed a 1975 arrest in St. Paul for criminal damage to property, disposition unknown, and an un-prosecuted 1977 arrest in St. Paul for car theft.
The sheriff prepared an affidavit setting forth the above facts. A judge granted the application and issued the warrant on April 1, 1988.
Law enforcement officers executed the warrant at 6:40 p.m. that evening. While ordering defendant to open the door to the garage, where defendant was standing, a sheriff’s deputy saw a cohort of defendant, James Brandberg, running from one corner of the garage to another with a gram scale in his hands. The officer searched Brand-berg and found a tan colored powder substance in two small bags in his wallet and a small bottle containing a white substance in one of his pockets. The deputy saw traces of a light colored powder on the gram scale. Officers found a bag of marijuana in a motorcycle battery box in the garage. On a work bench they found a razor blade, a small knife, a coffee can with a tan powder in it, another coffee can with a white powder, and unused plastic bags. Nearby they found a marijuana pipe. Defendant had $459 on his person. In the master bedroom of the house the officers found $2,000 in cash, a bag of marijuana seeds, a “roach clip,” and other paraphernalia. They found more marijuana in the basement and a framed picture with the words “Member International Association of Marijuana Growers and Users.” In the living room they found more marijuana and marijuana paraphernalia. A green lizard-type animal apparently was seen at the house. The officers did not see any guns or cocaine. In addition to the controlled substances found on Brandberg’s person, the officers found 4.65 grams of methamphetamine in the garage and 24.7 grams of marijuana in the garage and the house. The white powder found in the garage did not contain controlled substances.
Defendant was charged with a number of counts of possessing controlled substances with intent to distribute. At the omnibus hearing the district court, relying on
Illinois v. Gates,
As we said earlier, the court of appeals reversed in a 2-1 decision, ruling that the trial court erred in denying the motion to suppress.
In
Illinois v. Gates,
Gates
adopted the so-called “totality of the circumstances” test. The Court said that in applying this standard the magistrate’s task is “simply to make a practical, common-sense 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.”
*703
Gates,
We conclude that when all of the significant facts set forth in the affidavit in this case are viewed together, the affidavit provided the magistrate with a sufficient basis for concluding that the sheriff had the requisite probable cause for believing a search of defendant’s house would result in the discovery of controlled substances.
We note at the outset that under the old two-pronged Aguilar analysis the basis-of-knowledge prong clearly would have been deemed to be satisfied, because the affidavit stated that the informant not only had bought marijuana from defendant at the house but had been present in the house, had seen what looked like cocaine, and had heard defendant refer to the substance as cocaine. The only real issue relates to the informant’s credibility, specifically, his/her veracity with respect to this matter.
But for the fact that the informant admitted buying marijuana from defendant and refused to give his/her name, the informant here would qualify as a so-called citizen informer of presumed honesty and there would not be any question as to the adequacy of the affidavit.
State v. Siegfried,
Similarly, not all anonymous informants are the same.
Massachusetts v. Upton,
Simply saying that the informant here would not give his/her name and leaving it at that ignores other relevant facts about the informant. Significantly, the informant was not like the typical “stool pigeon” who is arrested and who, at the suggestion of the police, agrees to cooperate and name names in order curry favor with the police. This informant was not a blame shifter but someone who simply came forward. Not only did the informant come forward but he/she met face-to-face with the sheriff. In
State v. Davis,
Not only did the informant come forward on his/her own and meet face-to-face with the sheriff, he/she did so a second time in response to the sheriffs request and rode with and directed the sheriff to the defendant’s house. Further, he/she not only had a good reason for wanting anonymity (fear of retribution) but he/she had a good reason for wanting to see his/her supplier prosecuted (a belief defendant was selling drugs to juveniles). Even the dissenting justices in
United States v. Harris,
Additionally, while the informant’s admission that he/she had bought marijuana from defendant perhaps is not technically a statement against penal interest since he/she did not give his/her name and therefore perhaps was not conscious that he/she could be prosecuted for making a statement against
interest
— see
United States v. Harris,
Also, there was some independent corroboration of some of the information provided by the informant. It is true, as the court of appeals said, that it was not corroboration of key details. But in
State v. Wiley,
In conclusion, following
Gates, Upton
and
Wiley
and bearing in mind that the resolution of doubtful or marginal cases should be “largely determined by the preference to be accorded to warrants,”
United States v. Ventresca,
Reversed and judgment of conviction reinstated.
Notes
. In view of our decision we do not address the issue of whether this court should follow
United States
v.
Leon,
