[¶ 1] Kathy Thieling appeals from a district court order denying her motion to suppress evidence. We conclude the magistrate judge did not have a substantial basis to determine there was probable cause to believe drugs or contraband would be found in Thieling’s home. We thus hold the district court erred in denying Thieling’s motion to suppress evidence resulting from the illegal search. We reverse and remand.
I
[¶ 2] In September 1999, a special agent for the North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigations applied to a magistrate judge for a warrant to search the home of Kathy Thieling and her husband. In an affidavit supporting the application, the special agent emphasized several items associated with the possession and sale of methamphetamine and cocaine, such as baggies and small pieces of plastic and tin foil, had been discovered in garbage bags taken from the curb at Thieling’s home; persons who had recently visited Thieling’s home were associated with drug activities or associated with other persons who were involved in drug activities; in the two weeks since the trash bags were taken, garbage had not been placed on the curb *863 at Thieling’s home; and mail discovered in the garbage bags indicated the garbage items were from Thieling and her husband'. The special agent indicated he had approximately six years of law enforcement experience which included drug investigations and training.
[¶ 3] The magistrate judge granted the search warrant application. During the search, illegal drugs were found and Thiel-ing made incriminating statements. She was arrested. "During a search at the jail, drugs were found on Thieling.
[¶ 4] Thieling filed a motion to suppress the drug evidence found during the home and jail searches and to suppress her statements. She argued the special agent’s affidavit was insufficient to establish probable cause to issue the search warrant. •
[¶ 5] The district court 1 issued an order denying Thieling’s motion to suppress. The district court noted “[t]he tape recording made in chambers of the hearing on the question of probable cause was apparently erased. Thus the only question is whether the affidavit alone establishes probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant.” The district court concluded the affidavit established there was a fair probability contraband or evidence of a crime would be found in Thieling’s home. Thieling pled guilty to two drug charges on the condition she could appeal from the district court’s order. Thieling appealed from the order.
II
[¶ 6] Arguing the affidavit is insufficient to establish probable cause for the search warrant, Thieling asserts the search was illegal under the Fourth Amendment and the evidence stemming from the illegal search, including all the drugs and her statements, must be suppressed.
[¶ 7] Probable cause is required for a search warrant under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 8 of our state constitution. .
State v. Wamre,
[¶ 8] Whether probable cause exists to issue a search warrant is a question of law.
Id.
at ¶ 5 (citation omitted). We defer to the magistrate judge’s findings if there is a substantial basis for the determination probable cause exists.
Id.
at ¶ 6. “We resolve doubt about the sufficiency of an affidavit in, support of a request for a search warrant in favor of sustaining the search.”
Wamre,
at ¶7. We also recognize “courts must take into account inferences and deductions that a trained and experienced officer makes.”
State v. Mische,
[¶ 9] Thieling contends the evidence found in her garbage, the baggies, plastic, and tin foil, is not probative. Conduct which is “seemingly innocent” may give rise to probable cause.
Illinois v. Gates,
[¶ 10] Thieling argues her “pattern” of not putting garbage out on the curb is not probative. The affiant indicated Thieling’s failure to place garbage on the curb on two consecutive garbage days “may indicate Roger and Kathy Thieling know of the initial trash search” and “are discarding their trash in places other than where it is normally discarded.” However, there is nothing inherently suspicious in not putting garbage out on two consecutive garbage days. Thieling may not have known her garbage bags were searched. 3 If Thieling had discovered the garbage bags were taken, the “pattern” may simply indicate she enjoyed her privacy and did not want neighbors or others to sift through her garbage. If Thieling knew law enforcement had taken the garbage bags, one could assume she would try to reduce suspicion by simply placing nonincriminat-ing garbage on the curb and throwing incriminating garbage elsewhere. When combined with the other minimal evidence of drug activity, the “pattern” evidence does not raise a high degree of suspicion and accordingly is at most a very thin layer to be measured in the probable cause analysis.
[¶ 11] Thieling asserts some of the evidence of her associating with persons involved with drug activities is unreliable. “[Sufficient information, rather than ‘bare bones’ information must be presented to the magistrate”; “[a]n affidavit expressed in conclusions without detailing underlying information is insufficient for
*865
probable cause.”
State v. Rangeloff,
[¶ 12] Thieling argues other evidence of her associating .with persons involved with drug activities is not probative. “[M]ere suspicion 'that persons visiting the premises are connected with criminal activity will not suffice” for issuance of a warrant to search the premises. 2 Wayne R. LaFave,
Search and Seizure
§ 3.7(d), at 374 (3d ed.1996). “[A] person’s mere propinquity to others independently suspected of criminal activity does not, without more, give rise to probable cause.”
Ybarra v. Illinois,
[¶ 13] The foregoing shows the evidence suggesting drugs or contraband would be in Thieling’s home was tenuous. Construing the very few and very thin layers together, one could not conclude drugs or contraband would probably be found in Thieling’s home. The affidavit does not provide a substantial basis for the magistrate judge’s conclusion there was probable cause to issue the search warrant. The search of Thieling’s home was therefore illegal under the federal and state constitutions and the evidence stemming from the search, including the drugs found during the home and jail searches and Thieling’s statements, should have been suppressed.
Ill
[¶ 14] Because the magistrate judge did not have a substantial basis to determine there was probable cause to search Thiel-ing’s home, we reverse the district court’s order denying Thieling’s motion to suppress. The case is remanded to the district court and the district court is directed to allow Thieling to withdraw her guilty plea.
Notes
. The magistrate judge who issued the search warrant also presided at the district court proceedings. Neither party objected or raises that now as an issue.
. Where drug residue is discovered in garbage, some courts have noted "it is well established that affidavits based almost entirely on the evidence garnered from garbage may be sufficient to support a finding of probable cause.”
United States v. Sumpter,
. The affiant indicated, authorities took and searched four garbage bags from Thieling’s curb but only returned two bags because of problems with dirty cat litter in the other two bags.
. The State did not assert and no evidence suggests Gensburger had borrowed Pickerd's vehicle and was himself at Thieling’s home.
