OPINION
The State appeals the trial court's grant of a motion to suppress the evidence obtained as a result of the search of the apartment of Heath Spillers' girlfriend. The State presents one issue for our review, whether the warrant upon which the search was executed was based upon probable cause.
We reverse.
On February 5, 2008, Detective Jake Brooks of the Anderson Police Department was involved in the drug related arrest of Aaron Craib. From information gathered from Craib, Detective Brooks sought a warrant to search for drugs at the apartment in which Spillers had been staying with his girlfriend. After a hearing in which Detective Brooks relayed the information acquired from Craib about drug transactions occurring at the apartment and the presence of cocaine therein, Judge Fredrick Spencer issued the search warrant. Upon execution of the warrant, officers found between thirteen and fourteen grams of cocaine and a digital scale in a gym bag. Spillers admitted that the bag belonged to him. Consequently, he was arrested.
Spillers was subsequently charged with dealing in cocaine as a Class A felony. Prior to trial, Spillers filed a motion to suppress the evidence which was granted by Judge Thomas Newman, Jr., on August 25, 2008. The State sought permission to file a belated motion to certify the matter for an interlocutory appeal, which was granted by the trial court on September 30, 2003. However, it does not appear that the trial court ever certified the issue for interlocutory appeal.
In deciding whether to issue a search warrant, the task of the issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical, commonsense decision whether, given all of the cireumstances set forth in the affidavit, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place. Allen v. State,
The standard which we apply in reviewing the trial court's decision to grant a motion to suppress based upon the claim of an invalid search warrant is not well-settled. In Houser, our Supreme Court noted that de novo appellate review of a trial court's "substantial basis" determination had been followed by that Court without explicitly discussing the point.
Both the federal and state constitutions guarantee that a search warrant will not be issued without probable cause. Leicht v. State,
"(1) Contain reliable information establishing the credibility of the source and of each of the declarants of the hearsay and establishing that there is a factual basis for the information furnished; or
*70 (2) Contain information that establishes that the totality of the circumstances corroborates the hearsay.2
In asserting to the trial court that the motion to suppress should have been granted, Spillers relied upon this court's decision in Newby v. State,
The Newby court determined that the statements made by Calloway, in which he implicated himself in criminal activity with Newby, could not be statements against penal interest for several reasons. Id. at 599. The first was that the issuing magistrate could not have reasonably inferred from the affidavit that Calloway had implicated himself in criminal activity.
The Newby court then went further and held that even if the statements would have been against penal interest, the hearsay was not reliable because the case was distinguishable from other Indiana cases in which such statements had been considered to establish informant credibility. Id. Specifically, it held that in those other cases, there was independent corroboration of facts relayed by the informant. Id. In Newby, the facts which were corroborated were facts which could have been
An arguably contrary result was reached by this court in Leicht, supra. In that case, a different panel of this court concluded that the statements made by the owner of a home in which drugs were found were reliable and rendered her a credible source so that probable cause existed to issue a search warrant for Leicht's residence.
The Leickht court concluded that the statements made by Bonnie were against her penal interest in that she implicated herself in the commission of dealing marijuana as well as conspiracy to deal marijuana. Id. The court then determined that Bonnie was a credible source. Id. Judge Baker, writing in dissent, disagreed with the conclusion that the statements were against penal interest. In his view, Newby compelled a different result. Similar to the conclusion reached in Newby, Judge Baker opined that because Bonnie's statements were made after marijuana was found in her home, her decision to divulge her source did not subject her to enhanced criminal liability inasmuch as she was already under arrest for possession of marijuana. Id. at 210.
A result similar to that in Leicht was reached in Creekmore, supra. In Creekmore, the informant told a Morgan County Sheriff's Department Detective that the source of the marijuana and psilocybin mushrooms found in the informant's car was a dealer named "Dirty Dave." Based upon the information that the Detective learned from the informant and knowledge of other officers, he was able to acquire a search warrant. The subsequent search resulted in the finding of marijuana and psilocybin mushrooms. Creek more sought to suppress the evidence, and this court held that the warrant was based upon probable cause.
To the extent that the holdings in Leicht and Creekmore conflict with the holding in Newby, we decline to follow Newby. In the case before us, the evidence clearly reveals that Craib was found to be in possession of a small amount of cocaine. Craib informed police that over a period of several months, he had made over ten purchases of cocaine from Spil-lers. Thus, Craib implicated himself for more crimes than just the one upon which he was being arrested. Additionally, were Craib to have given false information in an effort to deflect attention from his own criminal acts, he could have been prosecuted for false informing.
We also do not agree with the implication in Newby that separate facts relayed by the informant must be corroborated in addition to the statement being against the penal interest of the informant. Houser, supro, does not compel such a result, While it is true that the Houser Court concluded that it was important that the informant's statement was corroborated by the police,
Because the statements made by Craib were against his penal interest, the statements were reliable. Furthermore, given the information contained within the statements, a substantial basis existed upon which the judge who issued the warrant could conclude that probable cause existed.
The trial court's grant of the motion to suppress is reversed. The cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this decision.
Notes
. The order permitting the State to file the belated motion to certify did just that, it did not purport to certify the issue. The entries in the Chronological Case Summary also support the notion that the trial court never certified the issue for interlocutory appeal. It appears that the confusion arises from the State's filing of the motion to file a belated motion and a motion for interlocutory appeal at the same time.
. In the case before us, the request for a warrant was made in a hearing before Judge Spencer. Indiana Code § 35-33-5-8 (Burns Code Ed. Repl.1998) authorizes a judge to issue a warrant without the affidavit required under LC. § 35-33-5-2 if the judge receives sworn testimony of the same facts as required in the affidavit One manner in which the judge may receive the information is through a nonadversarial, recorded hearing. LC. § 35-33-5-8(a)(1).
. The statement in the affidavit to which the Newby court referred stated, "he believed the confidential informant to be a credible and reliable witness because the informant had advised him where drugs were located, and that drugs had been located in that location." Id. at 598 (emphasis in original).
. Indiana Code § 35-44-2-2 (Burns Code Ed. Supp.2004) makes it a crime to give a false
