Defendant Jeffrey P. Barnard was charged in a single-count indictment with being a felon-in-possession of firearms, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). He moved to suppress evidence of firearms seized in a warrant search, contending that the warrant lacked sufficiеnt information to support a finding of probable cause. The district court granted the motion on the papers without hearing.
United States v. Barnard,
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On December 1, 2000, Detective John Glidden of the Millinocket Police Department obtained a warrant to search defendant’s residence in Millinocket, Maine. The supporting affidavit provided the following information.
Detective Glidden received two reports from other law enforcement personnel. First, in a сonversation on July 27, 2000, Probation Officer Paul Kelly conveyed information from a “very reliable” source (“source”) that defendant owns a .22 caliber rifle and may also have another firearm at his 22 Kelly Lane residence and that if poliсe went to defendant’s residence there would be a shooting. Second, on November 30, 2000, Sergeant Donald Bolduc passed along information from a confidential informant (“Cl”) whom Bol-duc believed to be “reliable” and who was working with the Millinoсket Police Department for no consideration. The Cl reported having seen an SKS assault rifle and a .22 caliber rifle the last time he was at defendant’s home on November 13 or 14, 2000. The Cl stated that defendant had purchased the SKS approximately four months earlier from Jason Hartley, a resident of Millinocket. He further stated that defendant had threatened people, including him, with the SKS and that defendant kept the weapon beside his bed while he slept. Finally, the Cl stated that dеfendant was a felon.
The affidavit further stated that on November 30, 2000, Detective Glidden ran a criminal records check on defendant that showed four prior convictions for possessing a firearm after being convicted of a felony, all within five years preceding the search.
Finally, Detective Glidden stated that he had been a police officer for eleven years during which time he had written many search warrants and investigated several cases involving illegal possession of firearms. In his experience, people who own firearms usually kept them at their residence.
A justice of the peace (“issuing justice”) issued the search warrant, and police personnel executed it on Decembеr 3, 2000. The search apparently yielded three firearms in defendant’s possession, including a .22 caliber rifle and an SKS assault rifle.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review
de novo
the district court’s “ultimate determination of whether a given set of facts constituted ‘probable
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cause.’ ”
United States v. Zayas-Diaz,
B. Analysis
Where an affidavit relies on the reports of unnamed informants, it must provide some information upon which the issuing justice can assess the credibility of the infоrmant’s information. We have adopted a nonexhaustive list of factors that a reviewing court will consider in a probable cause determination based on information from an informant. These include:
whether an affidavit supports the probable veracity or basis of knowledge of persons supplying hearsay information; whether informant statements are self-authenticating; whether some or all of the informant’s factual statements were corroborated wherever reasonable and practicable ...; and whether a law enforcement affiant included a professional assessment of the probable significance of the facts related by the informant based on experience оr expertise.
Khounsavanh,
1. Law enforcement’s assertions of reliability
We turn first to Sergeant Bol-duc’s assertion that he believed the Cl to be “reliable.” A mere assertion of reliability without any information regarding the basis for the officer’s belief, such as past tips leading to arrests, is entitled to only “slight” weight.
Khounsavanh,
2. Informant’s basis of knowledge
The credibility of an informant is enhanced to the extent he has provided information that indicates first-hand knowledge.
See United States v. Taylor,
There is no indication of personal knowledge for the Cl’s further statements that (1) defendant had purchased the SKS from Jason Hartley four months previously, (2) defendant slept with the SKS by his bed, and (3) defendant was a felon. While these statements are double hearsay, they need not be disregarded because the information conforms to the Cl’s first-hаnd information, which was substantially corroborated.
See Gates,
3. Corroboration
The affidavit provided two sources of corroboration: Probation Officer Kelly’s source’s report and Detective Gliddеn’s investigation. We must determine whether the corroboration made it sufficiently likely that the issuing justice could have concluded that the crucial part of the Cl’s story-that defendant, a felon, was storing at least one firearm at his home-was true.
See Khounsavanh,
We first consider the cross-corroboration provided by Probation Officer Kelly’s source. The district court rejected the government’s contention that the information provided by Kelly’s source cross-corroborated the report of Bolduc’s CL The cоurt found that the affidavit provided so little information about either informant that it is impossible to determine whether the two are actually different people, meaning that the two reports could not corroborate each other. Barnard, 172 F.Supp.2d. at 211.
We disagree. First, the affidavit’s description shows that Detective Glidden understood that they were two people. He referred to the probation officer’s source as a “reliable source” and “[t]his subject,” whereas, he referred to the sergeant’s source as “confidential informant” or “Cl.” Second, the informants approached two different authorities, one a probation officer and the other a police officer, who perform different functiоns in the criminal justice system and are thus likely to have contact with different individuals. Third, the Cl provided information that the source did not supply, namely, that defendant was a felon, that he slept with an SKS assault rifle next to his bed, and that he had threatened рeople, including the Cl, with the SKS. This additional information suggests that the Cl was closer to
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defendant than the source. Fourth, both the government and the defense understood the affidavit to refer to two people as evidenced by their papers below.
1
For these reasons, we conclude that in examining the affidavit in a “practical, commonsense fashion” the issuing justice could reasonably infer the existence of two informants.
See Zayas-Diaz,
The source’s account corroborаtes the Cl’s allegation that defendant was in possession of a .22 caliber rifle and possibly another firearm at his residence. The source also warned that a shooting would occur if police went to defendant’s residence. This informаtion dovetails with the Cl’s statement that defendant had threatened him and others with the SKS. As with the Cl’s report, it is relevant that the source’s account identified criminal activity, i.e., defendant’s possession of the .22’ rifle.
■ Detective Glidden’s criminal background check provided further corroboration.
See Taylor,
4. Law enforcement’s professional assessment
Finally, the issuing justice could credit the law enforcement affiant’s experience and pertinent expertise in evaluating the authenticity of the informant’s description of the target’s modus operandi.
Taylor,
CONCLUSION
We concludе that' “[tjaken together, these facts were sufficient to give the [issuing justice] a ‘substantial basis’ upon which to conclude that there was a ‘fair probability’ ” that the firearms would be found at defendant’s home.
Khounsavanh,
Reversed.
Notes
. We note that this issue was raised by the court sua sponte, not having been raised in the briefing to the court.
