This case involves the question whether an anticipatory search warrant that may be executed only after certain conditions are met but that fails to specify the conditions in the warrant violates the Fourth Amendment. John David Hotal was convicted of two counts of receiving and possessing child pornography. He appeals his conviction, contending, inter alia, that the district court erred by not suppressing evidence that the government obtained in its search of his residence. We conclude that the search was invalid and, therefore, reverse Hotal’s conviction. 1
I. Background
On January 23, 1996, United States Postal Inspector Rhonda Bowie applied for a search warrant for Hotal’s residence. In her affidavit in support of the application, Bowie stated that on January 24, 1996, at approximately 1:00 p.m., a package containing two videotapes of child pornography would be delivered to Hotal at his residence. 2 The affidavit further stated that the
*1225 package will be kept under surveillance by [Bowie] and/or other law enforcement officers until it is received at the resi-dence____ Once received by an individual at the residence described and only when brought into the residence, this search warrant will be executed by Inspectors of the United States Postal Inspection Service, with appropriate assistance from other law enforcement officers in accordance with this warrant’s commands.
A magistrate issued a search warrant that directed any special agent of the United States Postal Inspection Service or other authorized representative to “search forthwith” the premises described in the warrant. The warrant, which stated that Bowie’s affidavit was attached and incorporated by reference, did not state that it was an anticipatory search warrant nor did it refer to the event necessary to trigger its execution. It authorized the seizure of two tapes to be delivered; records relating to the purchase of the videotapes; and other “videotape cassettes containing visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct.”
On January 24, 1996, Bowie delivered the videotapes to Hotal, who signed for them and brought them inside his residence. Several minutes later, Bowie and five other law enforcement officers entered with the warrant. There is no evidence in the record that they brought the affidavit with them or that the affidavit in any manner accompanied the warrant. The officers seized items specified in the warrant and, upon finding what they believed to be child pornography not specified in the warrant, asked Hotal to sign a general “consent to search” form, which he did. Ultimately, the officers seized numerous magazines, videotapes, and polaroid pictures from Hotal’s residence.
Hotal was charged with the receipt of the two videotapes, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2), and with the possession of three magazines and two polaroid pictures, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4)(B). Prior to trial, he moved to suppress the evidence obtained in the search on a number of grounds, including that the warrant failed to specify that it was not to be executed until after the delivery of the videotapes. The district judge denied the motion, and the jury found Hotal guilty on both counts. This appeal followed.
II. Analysis
Hotal contends that the search warrant was unconstitutional because it did not specify the condition on which the execution of the warrant depended, namely, the delivery of the videotapes to Hotal at his residence. The government, however, contends that the search warrant was constitutionally sufficient because it incorporated Bowie’s affidavit, which described the triggering event.
At the outset we must emphasize that there is simply no evidence in the record that Bowie’s affidavit actually accompanied or was attached to the warrant at the time of the search. At the district court and on appeal Hotal has argued that the warrant was invalid because it did not specify the triggering event; however, at no time has the government offered any evidence to show — or even made the argument — that the Bowie affidavit accompanied or was attached to the warrant at the time the warrant was executed.
3
Absent any such evidence, the fact that the warrant states that the affidavit is both attached and incorporated by reference is insufficient to permit us to conclude that the affidavit accompanied the warrant at the time of the search. In
United States v. McGrew,
we decided this precise question, and held that an affidavit could not “cure” a warrant that both incorporated it and referred to it as “attached,” when the government had offered no evidence that the affidavit had accompanied the warrant at the time of the search.
We now address the constitutionality of the warrant. We have consistently required search warrants to be sufficiently particular in order to safeguard “the right to be free from unbounded, general searches.”
McGrew,
Other circuits have directly addressed this issue. The First Circuit rule is that anticipatory search warrants must set forth the conditions to be met and that those conditions must be “ ‘explicit, clear, and narrowly drawn.’ ”
See United States v. Gendron,
On the other hand, the Second Circuit has held that
an anticipatory warrant is valid even though it does not state on its face the conditions precedent for its execution when 1) clear, explicit, and narrowly drawn conditions for the execution of the warrant are contained in the affidavit that applies for the warrant application, and 2) those conditions are actually satisfied before the warrant is executed.
United States v. Moetamedi,
We conclude that the First Circuit’s view that, when a warrant’s execution is dependent on the occurrence of one or more conditions, the warrant itself must state the conditions precedent to its execution and these conditions must be clear, explicit, and narrow, is more consistent with our prior precedent than the law of some of the other circuits. We agree with the First Circuit that
a warrant conditioned on a future event presents a potential for abuse above and beyond that which exists in more traditional settings: inevitably, the executing agents are called upon to determine when and whether the triggering event specified in the warrant has actually occurred. Consequently, magistrates who are asked *1227 to issue such warrants must be particularly vigilant in ensuring that the opportunities for exercising unfettered discretion are eliminated.
Ricciardelli,
Our holding is consistent with our long line of cases requiring that warrants be drafted with particularity.
See, e.g., United States v. McGrew,
The rule adopted by the Second Circuit and some of the other circuits fails to meet any of the concerns set forth in our past cases. The first requirement, that the application but not the warrant itself identify the triggering event, does little if anything to limit the discretion of the agents executing the warrant or to inform the subject of the search whether it is authorized, if the affidavit does not accompany the warrant. Indeed, that the applicant and the magistrate may understand the parameters of the search has no bearing on whether the officers executing the warrant do, or whether the person to be searched is properly advised of their authority.
Similarly, the second — and after-the-fact — requirement, that the triggering event actually have occurred, does nothing to validate the warrant. Whether a search warrant is constitutional does not depend on the accidental possibility that the search may ultimately be conducted in a manner consistent with the application. If a warrant fails for lack of particularity or specificity, it is simply unconstitutional — without regard to what actually occurred. Indeed, our past holdings on particularity have always turned on the language contained in the warrant— not on what was actually seized. See id. at 850 n. 5 (noting that “good faith exception” is not available, even when “the agents' confine their search to the scope of the affidavit” submitted in support of application). For these reasons, we hold that, in order to comply with the Fourth Amendment, an anticipatory search warrant must either on its face or on the face of the accompanying affidavit, 'clearly, expressly, and narrowly specify the triggering event. The warrant used to search Hotal’s residence failed to do so — in fact, it failed even to identify that it was an anticipatory search warrant. 5 Accordingly, the evidence seized pursuant to the warrant must be suppressed. 6
*1228
Because we conclude that the initial entry was impermissible and that the evidence seized pursuant to the warrant must be suppressed,
all
of the other evidence seized must also be suppressed. Consent to search that is given after an illegal entry is tainted and invalid under the Fourth Amendment.
United States v. Suarez,
The government has not argued, nor does the record indicate, that introduction of the seized evidence was harmless error. Accordingly, we reverse Hotal’s conviction.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Because we reverse the conviction on the ground of the erroneously admitted evidence, we do not reach Hotal's claims of improper jury instruction and sentencing error.
. Hotal had requested the videotapes in response to a mailed offer that was part of a government sting operation.
. The government had ample opportunity to elicit this testimony during the suppression hearing.
Although the original search warrant is not part of the district court record, Hotal included a copy of the warrant, with no attachments, as an exhibit to his motion to suppress and in the excerpts of record on appeal. At no time has the government contended that the warrants submitted by Hotal are missing an attachment or otherwise incomplete.
. In
United States v. Ruddell,
we upheld the validity of an anticipatory search warrant that expressly conditioned its execution upon the controlled delivery of a videotape.
. We do not reach the question whether the warrant was also defective for other reasons.
. The government does not contend that a "good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule applies.
*1228
See United States v. Leon,
. In
United States v. Van Damme,
we concluded that the search warrant at issue was insufficiently particular because it failed to identify what items were to be seized.
The vice in the warrant in this case is different in nature from the Van Damme warrant’s failure to identify the items to be seized. The warrant in this case failed to set forth the necessary conditions that permitted entry into Hotal's residence in the first place. Because the officers’ entry into Hotal’s residence pursuant to the unconstitutional search warrant was not lawful, the "plain'view” doctrine does not apply to any of the evidence seized.
