1 1 The State of Utah challenges a court of appeals ruling on defendant Anthony A. Saddler's motion to suppress evidence of drug crimes that police detective Bill McCarthy seized from Saddler's residence pursuant to a search warrant. The court of appeals reversed the district court's denial of Saddler's motion and held that Detective MeCarthy's affidavit supporting the search warrant did not adequately support a probable cause determination. We reverse.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
1 2 On July 15, 2000, Detective Bill MeCar-thy of the West Valley City Police Department obtained a warrant to search the home of Anthony Saddler for marijuana, cocaine, and items related to the distribution of drugs. In requesting the warrant, McCarthy presented an affidavit to the district court that contained information McCarthy had obtained from a confidential informant. It also included details of McCarthy's efforts to corroborate that informant's information. In executing the warrant, the police found Saddler in possession of marijuana, cocaine, and other materials related to drug distribution. Saddler was subsequently charged with cocaine possession and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.
T3 Saddler filed a motion to suppress the evidence found in his home, arguing that the evidence was obtained with an unlawful search warrant. The district court denied the motion, and Saddler entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving the right to appeal the district court's ruling. On appeal, the court of appeals reversed the district court's ruling on the motion to suppress. State v. Saddler,
14 To determine whether Detective McCarthy's affidavit supported a determination of probable cause, the court of appeals invoked the totality-of-the-cireumstances test from the United States Supreme Court's decision in Illinois v. Gates,
15 In its analysis, the court of appeals determined that the affidavit failed to satisfy any of the three Mulcahy factors. In reviewing the first factor, the court of appeals *1267 concluded that although MeCarthy's confidential informant had a sufficient "basis of knowledge" that Saddler was involved in criminal activity because the informant had personally observed Saddler's criminal acts, id. at 1112, the informant was unreliable in light of the fact that he had participated in unlawful activities with Saddler and was unknown to the police. Id. at Furthermore, the court of appeals determined that the second element of the three-factor test was not satisfied because McCarthy did not provide a detailed description of the informant's statement in his affidavit, but merely made conclhisory statements about what the informant allegedly said. Id. at 121. Finally, the court held that the third factor, the officer's corroboration of the informant's statements, was not met, again determining that McCarthy's statements in the affidavit about his corroborative efforts were conclusory in nature and lacked sufficient detail to justify credibility.
6 The State now brings the matter before this court through a petition for writ of cer-tiorari, arguing that McCarthy's affidavit is sufficient to support a finding of probable cause under the Gates test because the confidential informant is more reliable than the anonymous informant in Gates, and the police were able to corroborate not only innocent details, as in Gates, but also instances of specific criminal activity. In addition, the State contends that the court of appeals misapplied the Gates totality-of-the-cireum-stances standard, arguing that the court of appeals' three-factor test from Mulcahy is too technical and compartmentalized.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
{17 We review the court of appeals' assessment of the magistrate's probable cause determination for correctness and ask whether the court of appeals erred in concluding that the magistrate did not have a substantial basis for his probable cause determination. State v. Norris,
ANALYSIS
I. THE COURT OF APPEALS THREE-FACTOR TEST
T8 First, we turn to the court of appeals' use of the three-factor test in its probable cause analysis. The three-factor test originated in Kaysville City v. Mulcahy,
9 Subsequently, the court of appeals interpreted Mulcahy as mandating the three-factor analysis in other Fourth Amendment contexts. See, e.g., State v. Valenzuela,
1 10 We note that the court of appeals has developed this three-factor analysis in the absence of any direction from us. Nonetheless, we find that such an exacting analysis is ill-suited to conducting a commonsense probable cause determination for at least two reasons. First, "affidavits 'are normally drafted by nonlawyers in the midst and haste of a criminal investigation. Technical requirements of elaborate specificity ... have no proper place in this area'" (Gates,
II DETECTIVE MceCARTHY'S AFFIDAVIT UNDER A TOTALITY-OF-THE-CIRCUMSTANCES ANALYSIS
[ 11 In our probable cause cases, we have consistently employed Gates' flexible totality-of-the-cireumstances standard. See State v. Norris,
an informant's "reliability" and "basis of knowledge" are but two relevant considerations, among others, in determining the existence of probable cause under "a totality-of-the-cireumstances." They are not strict, independent requirements to be "rigidly exacted" in every case. A weak *1269 ness in one or the other is not fatal to the warrant so long as in the totality there is substantial basis to find probable cause. The indicia of veracity, reliability, and basis of knowledge are nonexclusive elements to be evaluated in reaching the practical, common-sense decision whether, given all the cireumstances, there is a fair probability that the contraband will be found in the place described.
Hansen,
{12 In this case, after detailing McCarthy's experience and training in the investigation of nareotics-related offenses, the affidavit includes the following information:
[MeCarthy] is investigating Anthony A. Saddler for usage and distribution of controlled substances, specifically marijuana and cocaine. [McCarthy] received information from a confidential informant, hereinafter referred to as CI. [McCarthy] ask[s] the courts not to require [McCarthy] to publish the CI's name. [McCarthy] believes that the CI may be harmed if CI's name were published. [McCarthy] was told the following by the CI:
1. CI has known the suspect, Saddler for over 1 year,
2. CI has observed the suspect use cocaine and marijuana on numerous occasions during the last year,
3. CI has used marijuana with the suspect on several occasions,
4. CI has been to the premises numerous times, the most recent being within the last week to ten days, and observed approx. 3 to 4 pounds of marijuana,
5. CI has observed three scales inside the home, that the suspect uses to weigh out repackaged marijuana for resale,
6. CI has observed cocaine inside the premises, along with packaging material, 7. CI has observed the suspect carry marijuana and cocaine on his person,
8. The suspect has told the CI that the suspect sells marijuana and cocaine,
9. CI has observed the suspect sell and use controlled substances, inside the named premises,
10. CI has been told by the suspect that the suspect recently purchased the listed premises,
11. CI states that the suspect's only legitimate source of income is from a part time waiter's job at a Salt Lake City restaurant, BACCI's,
12. CI states that the suspect sells controlled substances to be able to afford his own usage and as a separate source of income,
13. CI provided a description of the home, a vehicle frequently used by the suspect (female companion of suspect), and hours of operation of the suspect,
14. CI states that the suspect is home infrequently and usually during the late evening hours.
13 In the affidavit, McCarthy stated that he believed that
the observations of the CI are first hand, accurate and truth full [sic], for the following reasons. CCI's observations are first hand and from a person that has used marijuana and would recognize[ ] the substance when observed. CI has not been promised nor paid for any of the information provided. CI has provided the information out of a sense of guilt and desire to stop the sales and usage of controlled substances into the community. CI's observations were over a long period of time, even though the suspect has only recently occupied the listed premises, within the last couple of months. CI states that the illicit sales and operation is ongoing and has been long term.
T14 The affidavit further describes McCarthy's efforts to corroborate the information he received from the confidential informant:
[McCarthy] was performing surveillance on [Saddler] at his home address in West Valley on 6/14/00. During the initial sur *1270 veillance [MeCarthy] did not observe anyone at the residence, the surveillance was intermittent from 2000 hours until 0600 6/15/00. During the surveillance on 6/15/00 [MeCarthy] observed some short term traffic which [he] believes was drug related. [McCarthy] had West Valley City Police Patrol perform a traffic stop on one of the vehicles leaving the listed premises. During the aforementioned traffic stop the driver was arrested for outstanding warrants and later found to be in possession of marijuana, approximately one half ounce. During the search of the vehicle, a small section of plastic bag was found, by [MeCarthy], and appears to have residue of cocaine inside the twist section of the bag. [MeCarthy] assisted in the search of the vehicle and would like to inform the courts that no drug paraphernalia, used in the ingestion of marijuana or cocaine, was located....
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... [McCarthy] believed this evidence shows that the marijuana was purchased from the listed premises [Saddler's home].
4 15 Other corroborated details in the affidavit include the following: "[MeCarthy] observed vehicles described by CI at the named premises and the registered owner was als] described by CI." McCarthy's observations also confirmed that Saddler "was only at home during the late evening hours." In addition, to verify Saddler's employment at the restaurant, "[MeCarthy] checked on 6/15/00 and [Saddler] was not at work and it was unknown when he was scheduled to return."
116 We agree with the magistrate that, viewed in its entirety and in a common sense fashion, McCarthy's affidavit sets forth sufficient underlying cireumstances to support the reliability and credibility of the confidential informant and MeCarthy's corroborative efforts. However, the court of appeals and Saddler have excessively parsed several statements in the affidavit in order to reach the opposite conclusion. While McCarthy's affidavit may not be a paragon of clarity, this court has held that reviewing courts should rely on a magistrate's "reasonable construction" of ambiguity in an affidavit. Babbell,
T 17 In at least three specific instances, the court of appeals construed passages in the affidavit against the issuing court's reasonable construction, proving fatal to the warrant. The first instance concerned MceCar-thy's request to conceal the informant's name. In the affidavit, he stated: "Your affiant [MeCarthy] received information from a confidential informant, hereinafter referred to as CI. Your affiant ask{s] the courts not to require your affiant to publish the CI's name. Your affiant believes that the CI may be harmed if the CI's name were published."
18 The court of appeals stated that, according to this language, it was unclear whether the confidential informant had revealed his name. Saddler,
119 The court of appeals, on the other hand, concluded that the confidential informant made no statement against his penal interest because he was unknown to the police. Saddler,
1 20 In contrast, the court of appeals here concluded that the confidential informant's participation in crime made him less reliable. Yet we have upheld the judgment of magistrates who have reasonably relied on informants involved in criminal activity. See, e.g., State v. Espinoza,
{21 Furthermore, even if the confidential informant's reliability were in question, this would not necessarily be fatal to the warrant under the totality-of-the-cireumstances standard. In Gates, information came to the police in an anonymous letter with no means of verifying the identity of the informant or his basis of knowledge. Gates,
{22 Here, McCarthy's corroborative effort was significant. Between 8:00 p.m. on June 14, 2000, and 6:00 am. on June 15, 2000, Detective McCarthy was watching the Saddler house. During his surveillance on the 15th, he observed short visits to the house that he considered consistent with the sale of drugs. He had local police stop one of the visitors who was leaving the house. While searching the individual, police officers found both marijuana and cocaine, but no paraphernalia normally required to use the drugs, leading McCarthy to believe the drugs had been recently acquired.
123 The court of appeals concluded that this information did not verify the informant's statement that Saddler sold drugs from his home nor that his "hours of operation" were in the late evening. It stated that in this part of the affidavit "MeCarthy provides only conclusory information about this corroborative effort." Saddler,
$24 In addition, McCarthy was able to verify other, more innocent details provided by the confidential informant, namely, that vehicles described by the confidential informant were at Saddler's home, that the registered owner of a vehicle at Saddler's home was as described by the confidential informant, and that Saddler worked at BACTS restaurant. This corroboration of innocent details further boosts the confidential informant's credibility. See Gates,
{25 Finally, while the court of appeals determined that the confidential informant had an adequate basis of knowledge, it failed to recognize the value of the confidential informant's first-hand observation of criminal activity. The court of appeals reasoned that "Iwlhile basis of knowledge tells us how CI acquired his information, it does not tell us whether he was qualified to assess the information, whether he relayed the information accurately, or whether he is trustworthy." Saddler,
T26 We have held just the opposite. In Hansen, we addressed the sufficiency of an affidavit based on statements from a confidential informant that he had seen large quantities of marijuana in the suspect's home five days previously.
'The reliability of the confidential disclosure was also enhanced by the informant's personal observation of the large quantity of marijuana that was being sold in smaller quantities. His information, relied upon by police, was not some remote hearsay or assumption based on cireumstantial events. The statement that the drug and its sale were personally observed, in defendant's apartment adequately sets forth the informant's basis of knowledge. The cireum-stances as a whole adequately indicate that the informant's report was truthful.
Id. at 180; see also Gates,
CONCLUSION
127 We acknowledge the efforts of the court of appeals to develop the jurisprudence of probable cause analysis in the absence of further guidance from us. However, we decline to adopt the detailed application of the Mulcahy three-factor test as it has come to be applied, and return to the more flexible, common sense test we have always applied. Under this standard, we conclude that because of the informant's inherent reliability and McCarthy's corroborative efforts, the affidavit was sufficient to provide a substantial basis to the magistrate for determining that probable cause existed.
1 28. The decision of the court of appeals is reversed, and the judgment of the district court affirmed.
Notes
. The rise of the three-factor test in the court of appeals is remarkably similar to how the two-pronged test came about in United States Supreme Court probable cause jurisprudence. In Illinois v. Gates, the Court addressed the two-pronged test that originated in Aguilar v. Texas,
In Gates, the Supreme Court rejected the notion that such an exacting analysis was required to determine probable cause:
[It is wiser to abandon the "two-pronged test" established by our decisions in Aguilar and Spinelli. In its place we reaffirm the totality of the circumstances analysis that traditionally has informed probable cause determinations. The task of the issuing magistrate 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.
Id. at 238,
. Although myriad other innocent details might have been given by the confidential informant and later verified by McCarthy, the handful cited here are sufficient to make the point to the magistrate.
