*745 OPINION
Thomas Edwin Toone was charged by indictment with the offense of possession of less than twenty-eight grams of cocaine. The trial court granted Toone’s motion to suppress which asserted that officers seized the cocaine in violation of state statutory laws as well as both the United States and the Texas Constitutions. The State of Texas appeals from the trial court’s order. Because we find that the federal officers acted under a valid federal search warrant, we reverse the trial court’s order and remand the cause for further proceedings.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Wayne W. Meyers, a federal postal inspector assigned to the Fort Worth Division of the United States Postal Inspection Service, investigated the mailing of material involving the sexual exploitation of minors and of obscene material. These offenses violate sections 1461, 2251, and 2252 of Title 18 of the United States Code. Meyers received several written requests from Toone for various illegal videotapes and publications. From these requests, Meyers planned a delivery of the contraband to Toone’s house while disguised as a U.S. postman. Meyers obtained a federal search warrant in anticipation of this delivery to prevent possible destruction of the evidence. Meyers’s lengthy search-warrant affidavit specified numerous fruits, in-strumentalities, and evidence of possession of child pornography that he, through his investigation, believed would be found in Toone’s home. Federal officers executed the search warrant on November 30, 1989.
During the search for the pornography, the officers discovered cocaine in a jewelry box. Subsequently, Toone was indicted in state court for cocaine possession and charged in federal court with receiving obscene materials through the mail.
TOONE’S MOTION TO SUPPRESS
Prior to the state court trial, Toone filed a motion to suppress the cocaine arguing that (1) the federal search warrant affidavit contained stale information, and (2) the search warrant was issued prior to the commission of any offense. The amount of delay that will make information stale for search warrant purposes depends upon the particular facts of a case, including the nature of criminal activity and the type of evidence sought.
Ellis v. State,
Specifically, Toone complained of the following language in the search warrant:
... there will be concealed a certain person or property, namely evidence, fruits, and instrumentalities of violations of Title 18, United States Code, Section 2251 and 2252....
(Emphasis added). Toone argued that the words “will be” made the warrant an “anticipatory search warrant” by indicating that probable cause would exist in the future. He contended that probable cause did not exist at the time the warrant issued because the contraband was not then on the premises. Therefore, he asserts, the warrant was invalid under article 18.01(b) and (c) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. 2 The trial court agreed and granted the motion to suppress.
*746 LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Anticipatory Search Warrant
Toone’s argument that anticipatory search warrants are invalid is based on the language in article 18.01(b) and (c) because, as he admits, there is no case law in Texas holding this type of warrant invalid. Other jurisdictions, both federal and state, have confronted this issue, and a majority have concluded that anticipatory warrants are constitutional. 3
OTHER STATES
For example, the following three cases are factually similar and they come from different states all of which have probable cause requirements comparable to those of Texas. 4 First, in Massachusetts, the applicable statute provides that
A court or justice authorized to issue warrants in criminal cases may, upon complaint on oath that the complainant believes that any of the property or articles hereinafter named are concealed in a house, place, vessel or vehicle or in the possession of a person anywhere within the commonwealth and territorial waters thereof, if satisfied that there is probable cause for such belief, issue a warrant identifying the property and naming or describing the person or place to be searched....
Mass.Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 276, § 1 (West 1990). The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in
Commonwealth v. Soares,
stated, “we read G.L. c. 276, § 1, to permit search warrants to issue on a showing that concealment or possession is probable at the time a warrant is to be executed, and not solely at the time of its issuance.”
Commonwealth v. Soares,
Second, in
McNeill v. Commonwealth,
a Virginia state police detective obtained a search warrant in anticipation of delivery of cocaine reported by UPS employees.
McNeill v. Commonwealth,
Third, in
Commonwealth v. Reviera,
the Superior Court of Pennsylvania upheld the legality of a search warrant for a package of controlled substances, which, at the moment the warrant issued, was not yet on the premises.
Commonwealth v. Reviera,
FEDERAL
We turn now to an example under federal law of a legal anticipatory search warrant. In
United States v. Wylie,
the Fifth Circuit approved a magistrate’s issuance of an anticipatory search warrant that authorized the search of premises when it was known that the contraband was on a sure course to its destination there.
United States v. Wylie,
In the present case, there are even stronger facts supporting probable cause than in Garcia. In his affidavit, Meyers states that he received the requests from Toone, packaged the videotapes and magazines, and would personally deliver the items. No third parties were necessary to the completion of the delivery. This delivery was under the total control of the government.
Accordingly, we conclude that the federal search warrant based on the postal inspector’s affidavit was valid. Because the federal officers were properly on the premises, the seizure of the cocaine was legal.
B. Reverse Silver-Platter Doctrine
Alternatively, assuming arguendo, that the cocaine seizure did violate Texas law, we hold that because the federal search warrant was valid, the cocaine may be used in a state proceeding. To reach this conclusion, we review the “silver-platter” doctrine and illustrate how, in Toone’s case, the reverse applies.
Historically, federal standards for lawful searches and seizures were usually more protective than the standards followed by the states. Because state officers were not
*748
subject to the Fourth Amendment and the exclusionary rule, the Supreme Court in
Lustig v. United States,
The essence of the silver-platter doctrine is still pertinent today. Recently, in
United States v. McKeever,
the Fifth Circuit held that evidence seized under a state warrant obtained by state agents is admissible in a federal court even if the state warrant fails to satisfy federal statutory requirements.
McKeever,
In Toone’s case we have the reverse scenario and, apparently, a case of first impression in Texas. Here, we have federal agents legally obtaining evidence under federal law but in assumed violation of state law. We proceed with this analysis with the recent case of
Heitman v. State,
In
Mollica,
the New Jersey Supreme Court stated, “[w]e endorse the principle that federal officers acting lawfully and in conformity to federal authority are unconstrained by the State Constitution, and may turn over to state law enforcement officers incriminating evidence, the seizure of which would have violated state constitutional standards.”
Mollica,
Because our state constitution has inherent jurisdictional limitations and can provide broader protections than those found in the United States Constitution, the application of our state constitution to the officers of another jurisdiction would disserve the principles of federalism and comity without properly advancing legitimate state interests. No deterrence of a state official’s conduct is frustrated, because only the conduct of federal officials is involved. Further, Toone’s individual constitutional rights were not violated because no state official or person acting under color of state law violated the state constitution. Consequently, we hold that evidence lawfully obtained by federal officers acting under a valid federal search warrant is admissible in state criminal proceedings. Accordingly, we sustain the State’s point of error. The trial court erred in granting Toone’s motion to suppress. We reverse the trial court’s February 6, 1991, suppression order and remand this cause to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Article 18.01(b) states in part:
No search warrant shall issue for any purpose in this state unless sufficient facts are first presented to satisfy the issuing magistrate that probable cause does in fact exist for its issuance. A sworn affidavit setting forth substantial facts establishing probable cause shall be filed in every instance in which a search warrant is requested.
Article 18.01(c) provides in pertinent part that the search warrant affidavit must set forth sufficient facts to establish probable cause:
(3) that the property or items constituting evidence to be searched for or seized are located at or on the particular person, place, or thing to be searched.
Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 18.01(b) and (c) (Vernon Supp.1991).
.United States v. Garcia,
. See supra note 2.
. Section 19.2-52 of the Virginia Code provides in pertinent part:
[S]earch warrants, based upon complaint on oath supported by an affidavit ... may be issued by any judge, magistrate or other person having authority to issue criminal warrants, if he be satisfied from such complaint and affidavit that there is reasonable and probable cause for the issuance of such search warrant.
Va.Code Ann. § 19.2-52 (1990).
. Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure require that:
No search warrant shall issue but upon probable cause supported by one or more affidavits sworn to before the issuing authority.
Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. Rule 2003 (1989).
