Friedrich Peter Artez (“Defendant”) was indicted for possession of an unregistered short barrel shotgun, in violation of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5861(d) and 5871. Defendant moved to suppress the shotgun as the fruit of an unlawful search of his home. The district court granted Defendant’s motion to suppress, concluding that the search warrant was invalid because not supported by probable cause and that the good faith exception of
United States v. Leon,
BACKGROUND
In December 2000, Deputy Sheriff Scott Van Wagoner of the Salt Lake County Sheriffs Office was contacted by a confidential informant (“Cl”) who claimed to have information regarding an alleged methamphetamine dealer named Fred Ar-tez (“Defendant”). The Cl drove with Van Wagoner and identified a home located at 1127 East 9430 South in Sandy City, Utah as the home of Defendant. The Cl explained to Van Wagoner that he could not purchase methamphetamine directly from Defendant but that he could purchase it from Defendant through an unwitting informant (“UI”).
Van Wagoner verified that Defendant owned the home located at 1127 East 9430 South in Sandy City, Utah and that Defendant owned two of the vehicles parked in front of the home. Van Wagoner also contacted the Sandy City Neighborhood Narcotics Unit and learned that they had received a call within the last two months from an unidentified male claiming that his wife was purchasing methamphetamine from the residence at 1127 East 9430 South. Van Wagoner also discovered through the Sandy City records that several other people, all of whom had narcotics-related criminal histories, lived at or frequented the residence. One of these individuals had an active arrest warrant *1110 for possession of drug paraphernalia. Van Wagoner also discovered that Artez had been arrested twice, once for larceny and once for driving under the influence of alcohol.
With the Cl’s assistance, Van Wagoner executed two controlled purchases of methamphetamine. The two purchases were conducted within approximately two weeks of each other and were accomplished in essentially the same manner. Van Wagoner (either himself or with the assistance of another agent) searched the Cl and his or her vehicle for money and contraband. Finding none, Van Wagoner gave the Cl county funds, accompanied the Cl to the residence of the UI, and watched as the Cl knocked on the front door and made contact with the UI. Van Wagoner watched the UI exit the residence and get into the Cl’s car, and he followed the UI to 1127 East 9430 South. 1 Van Wagoner watched the UI exit the vehicle, initiate contact with an occupant of the residence, and enter the residence. After approximately twenty minutes, Van Wagoner watched the UI exit the suspect residence and get into the vehicle, followed the UI back to his or her home, and watched the UI enter Ms or her home. Van Wagoner then watched the Cl exit the UI’s home. Van Wagoner followed the Cl to a prearranged location, where the Cl handed Van Wagoner a quantity of suspected methamphetamine and said that he or she had “purchased it from [Defendant] through the unwitting.” Van Wagoner again searched the Cl for money and contraband and found nothing. Van Wagoner later field tested the substance to verify that it was, in fact, methamphetamine.
Following the two controlled purchases, Van Wagoner conducted several brief sur-veillances of the suspect residence, each of which lasted for approximately thirty minutes. He noticed during these surveil-lances that several people arrived and stayed for a short period of time. During his surveillance, he stayed a distance away from the residence because the Cl had informed him that Defendant kept surveillance cameras outside his residence. Based on his training and experience, Van Wagoner found the activity he observed indicative of narcotics distribution.
Van Wagoner prepared an affidavit for a search warrant which relayed all of this information. Van Wagoner also indicated in the affidavit that the Cl was an admitted narcotics user and that the Cl had given Van Wagoner some details about the pricing, packaging, and effects of methamphetamine, which convinced Van Wagoner that the Cl was knowledgeable about such things. Van Wagoner stated in the affidavit that he considered the Cl to be reliable because the Cl had never been in custody and came forward out of his or her concern for the safety of the community.
A warrant for the search of Defendant’s home was issued based on Van Wagoner’s affidavit. 2 Officers conducted a search of Defendant’s home pursuant to that warrant. They discovered and seized drug paraphernalia and quantities of marijuana and methamphetamine. They also discovered and seized a short barrel shotgun and a variety of other firearms. Based on this evidence, Defendant was charged with possession of a short barrel shotgun in violation of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5861(d) and 5871. Defendant moved to suppress the evidence. The district court granted that *1111 motion, holding that the warrant was not supported by probable cause and that the Leon good faith exception did not apply. The government timely filed this appeal.
DISCUSSION
A. Probable Cause
1. Standards of Review
A magistrate judge’s task in determining whether probable cause exists to support a search warrant “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.”
Illinois v. Gates,
A magistrate judge’s decision to issue a warrant is entitled to “great deference.”
Id.
at 236,
We review
de novo
the district court’s determination of probable cause and review its findings of historical fact for clear error.
Tuter,
2. Analysis
In
Illinois v. Gates,
the Supreme Court adopted a “totality of the circumstances” test to determine when information from an anonymous or confidential informant can establish probable cause.
We conclude in this case that the information contained in the search warrant affidavit sufficiently corroborated the confidential informant’s tip. We address each of the corroborating items of evidence in turn.
a. The Controlled Purchases
A tip from an anonymous or confidential informant that narcotics are being distributed at a particular location may be corroborated through the arrangement of a controlled purchase at the suspect location. The common formalities observed by police officers when conducting such controlled purchases are as follows: the police search the informant (and his vehicle, if appropriate) for money and contraband prior to the buy; give the informant money with which to purchase the narcotics;
3
*1112
transport the informant to the suspect residence (or follow the informant to the residence); watch the informant enter the suspect residence, disappear while inside the suspect residence, and emerge from the suspect residence; search the informant upon exiting the suspect residence; and receive the narcotics from the informant.
See, e.g., Avery,
As these cases make clear, the absence of constant visual contact with the informant conducting the transaction does not render a controlled purchase insufficient, nor does the absence of an audio-recording of the transaction.
In this case, the controlled purchases orchestrated by Van Wagoner deviated from these common formalities only in the use of an unwitting informant as an intermediary between the confidential informant and the suspect residence. The use of an unwitting informant introduces an additional layer of uncertainty to the transaction because it leaves open the possibility that the narcotics were acquired not at the suspect residence but at the location where the confidential and unwitting informants met before and after the transaction.
Nonetheless, we have approved the use of an unwitting informant in a controlled purchase situation almost indistinguishable from the one at issue in this case. In
United States v. Richardson,
an officer arranged a controlled purchase using an unwitting informant as an intermediary between a known informant and the suspect residence.
*1113
Other courts have also approved the use of unwitting informants in controlled purchases of narcotics.
See, e.g., United States v. Jordan,
The two controlled purchases conducted in this case were conducted in a similar manner to the controlled purchases in
Richardson,
Defendant makes much of the fact that the controlled purchases that occurred in this case were not conducted pursuant to Mauriello’s Criminal Investigation Handbook. For example, Defendant claims that the informants were not in constant contact with Van Wagoner during the transactions, that Van Wagoner failed to videotape or audiotape the transactions, and that the money Van Wagoner gave the confidential informant was not marked. We have come across no authority for the proposition that controlled purchases not conducted precisely pursuant to that Handbook are therefore denied of corroborative value. To the contrary, the authority supports our conclusion that controlled purchases conducted as Van Wagoner conducted these controlled purchases corroborate a confidential informant’s tip that a particular location is being used to distribute narcotics.
Defendant also objects that the two controlled purchases did not corroborate the informant’s tip because they did not implicate Defendant personally but at most implicated one of the several other individuals residing at Defendant’s home. Defendant misunderstands the analysis governing the issuance of a warrant for the search of a place. “The test is whether the facts presented in the affidavit would warrant a man of reasonable caution to believe that evidence of a crime will be found at the
place to be searched.” United States v. Nolan,
In sum, we conclude that the two controlled purchases of methamphetamine from Defendant’s residence helped corroborate the confidential informant’s tip that the residence was utilized to distribute methamphetamine.
b. Tip from a Second Informant
A tip from a second informant can also help corroborate information from a confidential informant.
United States v. Sturmoski,
c. Police Surveillance
Police surveillance which “show[s] an unusually high volume of visitors briefly entering and leaving [a] residence, consistent with drug trafficking[,]” can also corroborate information from a confidential informant that the residence is being used to distribute narcotics.
United States v. Corral,
Defendant objects that Van Wagoner’s surveillances were not conducted in accordance with Mauriello’s Criminal Investigation Handbook. For example, he argues that Van Wagoner should have recorded the times of the visitors’ arrivals and departures and, if possible, their names and descriptions. We agree that more detailed information with respect to the number, identity, and description of persons entering and exiting Defendant’s residence would have been helpful. Nonetheless, we believe that Van Wagoner’s observation that a series of visitors entered the residence and stayed for only a short period of time did provide some additional corroboration of the confidential informant’s tip when interpreted in light of Officer Van Wagoner’s extensive experience.
d.Narcotics Histories of Other Residents
Criminal history alone is not enough to support a finding even of reasonable suspicion, much less probable cause.
United States v. Sandoval,
In this case, Van Wagoner reported in the search warrant affidavit that four other individuals who either lived at or frequented the suspect residence had prior convictions for narcotics-related offenses, including possession and possession with intent to distribute. He also reported that one of the residents had an active arrest warrant for possession of drug paraphernalia. This information further corroborated the confidential informant’s tip that Defendant’s residence was being used to distribute methamphetamine and that drugs or related contraband was likely to be found at that location.
3. Summary
In sum, Van Wagoner reported five pieces of information in his search warrant affidavit: (1) a tip from a confidential informant that methamphetamine was being distributed at Defendant’s residence; (2) the successful execution of two controlled buys of methamphetamine from the suspect residence; (3) a tip from an anonymous informant to a different police unit that methamphetamine was being distributed at Defendant’s residence; (4) the results of surveillance of the suspect residence indicating a series of visitors staying for short periods of time, consistent with drug trafficking activity; and (5) the narcotics-related criminal histories of four inhabitants or frequent visitors of the suspect residence, including an active arrest warrant against one of these individuals for possession of drug paraphernalia.
Certainly this information did not eliminate the risk that the confidential informant was lying or was in error. That risk, however, need not be wholly eliminated. Wayne R. LaFave,
Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment,
§ 3.3(f), at 168 (3d ed.1996). “Rather, what is needed is that the probability of a lying or inaccurate informer has been sufficiently reduced by corroborative facts and observations.”
Id.
(internal quotations omitted). Viewing the totality of the circumstances, we conclude that the information contained in the affidavit sufficiently reduced that probability. Accordingly, the affidavit was sufficient to give the magistrate a “substantial basis” for determining the existence of probable cause to search Defendant’s residence.
See Tuter,
*1116 B. Franks v. Delaware 7
Under
Franks v. Delaware,
a defendant may request an evidentiary hearing regarding the veracity of a search warrant affidavit.
In this case, Defendant accuses Van Wagoner of intentionally or recklessly mischaracterizing material facts in the search warrant affidavit and omitting material facts from that affidavit. His allegations are insufficient to warrant a Franks hearing. First, Defendant argues that Van Wagoner misrepresented that the unwitting informant had personally interacted with Defendant. Van Wagoner reported in the affidavit that “[t]he C.I. handed me a quantity of suspected methamphetamine and said that he/she purchased it from [Defendant] through the unwitting.” Defendant presented no evidence that this statement mischaracterized the information the Cl reported to Van Wagoner after the controlled purchase. Moreover, it is immaterial whether the unwitting interacted with Defendant or some other individual at the residence. See discussion supra Section A.2.a.
Second, Defendant suggests that Van Wagoner misrepresented that Defendant maintained surveillance cameras outside his home. Van Wagoner reported in the affidavit that “the C.I. indicates that [Defendant’s] home has surveillance cameras.” Defendant presented no evidence that this statement mischaracterized the information the Cl reported to Van Wagoner.
Third, Defendant accuses Van Wagoner of misrepresenting that the Cl’s decision to come forward was a genuine act of humanitarian concern. Van Wagoner reported in the affidavit that “the confidential informant came forward on his/her own out of concern for the safety and well being of the community.” Defendant argues that the Cl had “undoubtedly” been arrested and charged with various narcotics-related crimes. Defendant presented no evidence to support this allegation.
Fourth, Defendant argues that Van Wagoner omitted information that Defendant operated an in-home business that caused the frequent traffic outside his home and that Defendant rented the basement to an individual with a narcotics-related criminal history.
Franks,
however, applies only to intentional or reckless omissions from the affidavit.
See Avery,
Fifth, Defendant argues that Van Wagoner omitted details about Defendant’s two prior arrests and omitted the fact that Defendant had recently received a concealed weapons permit after an extensive background check. It is true that Van Wagoner stated only that Defendant had been arrested twice before, once for larceny and once for driving under the influence, but did not state that the arrests occurred many years ago and did not result in convictions. It is also true that Van Wagoner did not mention Defendant’s background check in the affidavit. However, Defendant has not demonstrated that these omissions were intentional or reckless, nor has he demonstrated that the affidavit, with this information, would have been insufficient to support a finding of probable cause.
Finally, Defendant argues that Van Wagoner omitted the fact that Defendant had no narcotics-related criminal history and that all other adult residents of Defendant’s home did have narcotics-related criminal histories. These allegations are gross mischaracterizations of the record. The affidavit expressly listed all other persons whom Van Wagoner had identified as residents of the home and listed their narcotics-related criminal histories. He particularly noted that “[a]ll four persons have arrest histories for possession of, possession with intent to distribute or possession of narcotics paraphernalia.” Van Wagoner separately listed Defendant’s criminal history, which involved no mention of narcotics. In any event, it must again be emphasized that the warrant at issue was to search the residence and it was not limited just to a search of this Defendant.
In sum, each of Defendant’s numerous allegations are either wholly unsubstantiated by the record, flatly contrary to the record, or insufficient to satisfy the Franks standard.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the warrant authorizing a search of Defendant’s home was supported by probable cause. Accordingly, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court granting Defendant’s motion to suppress the shotgun and REMAND for further proceedings.
Notes
. The Cl apparently waited at the UI’s home while Van Wagoner followed the UI to the suspect residence.
. The warrant also authorized a search of Defendant's person, but only the search of the home is at issue in this appeal.
. Some courts note that the money is marked,
see, e.g., United States v. Avery,
. The only distinction between
Richardson
and this case is that in
Richardson,
the meeting between the informants occurred in the unwitting informant’s truck, see
. Defendant also argued before the district court that the warrant was unconstitutionally vague because, in addition to naming specific items to be seized, the warrant also authorized seizure of the "fruits and/or instrumen-talities of the crimes of manufacturing a controlled substance and or distribution of a controlled substance, and or possession of a controlled substance.” Although it is not clear that Defendant continues that argument here because he discusses it in only one sentence buried in his other argument, we conclude that this argument is without merit.
See Andresen v. Maryland,
.
United States v. Tuter
and
United States v. Danhauer,
relied upon by the district court below to support his order of suppression, are clearly distinguishable.
Tuter
involved a search of defendant’s garage for bomb-making materials.
. Defendant raises a Franks argument only in conjunction with his discussion of United States v. Leon. Given our previous discussion, we do not address the Leon issue. We briefly discuss the Franks issue, however, because it does potentially impact our Illinois v. Gates analysis.
