Stephen Brewer entered a conditional guilty plea to three counts of production of child pornography and one count of possession of child pornography, reserving the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
On November 22, 2005, S.B. reported to Kansas City police that Stephen Brewer had raped her over a two-year period when she was thirteen and fourteen years old and had taken photographs of her during these incidents. These photographs included images of S.B. performing oral sex on Brewer and other nude images of her. S.B., then 18 years old, reported that Brewer had recently suggested to her that these pictures still existed, in an effort to keep her from reporting what happened. Officer Damon Hawley informed S.B. about the possibility of getting an ex parte order of protection against Brewer, since S.B. wanted to spend an upcoming holiday at the Brewer residence, where she grew up. Officer Hawley then took S.B. to a shelter. The next day, S.B. returned to the police station and told Officer Hawley that she had obtained an ex parte order.
After S.B.’s initial report, Officer Hawley attempted to obtain a search warrant *1168 for the Brewer residence, but he could not get department authorization. He then contacted the FBI to ask whether the FBI could obtain a search warrant. FBI Special Agent Todd Gentry did not think that there was probable cause to justify a search warrant. However, after some discussion, Officer Hawley decided instead to seek Mrs. Brewer’s consent to search the residence.
After Officer Hawley learned that S.B. had obtained the ex parte order, he contacted Mrs. Brewer about searching the home. Mrs. Brewer was concerned that their son was with Mr. Brewer and said that she wanted her son back. She told Officer Hawley when Mr. Brewer would likely return, but she did not consent to a search at that time.
Officer Hawley went to the Brewer house with his partner and Special Agent Gentry shortly before Brewer was supposed to arrive, parking their vehicles a few blocks away. Because there were guns in the home, the officers intended to serve the ex parte order on Mr. Brewer while he was still outside. When Brewer returned home, the Brewers’ son jumped from the car and ran inside. At that point, Officer Hawley’s partner read the ex parte order to Brewer and explained that he needed to leave immediately. Officer Hawley denied Brewer’s request to retrieve items from inside the home. After Mr. Brewer left, Mrs. Brewer consented to a search of the residence.
The officers seized various computers and computer media from the home. Three members of the juvenile section of the police department assisted in the search. FBI Special Agent Gentry was also present and answered the officers’ computer-related questions. While the search was ongoing, Brewer returned to the residence and parked in the driveway. Officer Hawley again denied Brewer’s request to retrieve items from the home and informed him that he needed to leave because of the ex parte order of protection.
Detectives obtained three additional search warrants during the course of their investigation. On January 17, 2006, they successfully applied for warrant to search the computers and media seized during the November 23, 2005 consent search. A forensic analysis of these items, performed several months later, revealed thousands of images of nude and semi-nude children, including pictures of Brewer engaged in sexual acts with S.B. On September 27, 2006, the detectives applied for a warrant to search the Brewer house again for camera equipment and other evidence of child pornography. They seized camera equipment and computer media during the search. On October 5, 2006, the detectives then successfully applied for a warrant to search the additional computer media. This forensic analysis, also performed several months later, revealed additional images of nude children.
A federal grand jury indicted Brewer on four counts of using a minor in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing child pornography, 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a), and three counts of possession of child pornography, 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4). Brewer filed a motion to suppress the evidence from the various searches on numerous grounds. The district court 1 adopted the report and recommendation of the magistrate judge 2 and denied the motion. Brewer then entered a conditional guilty plea to three counts of production of child pornography and one *1169 count of possession of child pornography, reserving the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. The district court sentenced Brewer to 600 months’ imprisonment.
II. DISCUSSION
Brewer appeals the denial of his motion to suppress on four grounds. First, he argues that the November 23 search of his residence was invalid because the officers inappropriately used the ex parte order of protection as a means to keep him from objecting to the search. Second, he argues that the three subsequent search warrant applications contained insufficient information to establish probable cause. Third, Brewer argues that because there was significant involvement of federal officers in the investigation, federal, rather than state, judges were required to issue the search warrants. Finally, he argues that the forensic analyses of the seized computer media violated the Fourth Amendment because they were conducted more than ten days after the January 17 and October 5 warrants authorizing the forensic analyses were issued. In addressing these issues, “we review a district court’s findings of fact for clear error and its legal conclusions — including its probable cause determination — de novo.”
United States v. El
— Alamin,
A. The November 23 consent search
“[A] warrantless entry and search by law enforcement officers does not violate the Fourth Amendment’s proscription of ‘unreasonable searches and seizures’ if the officers have obtained the consent of a third party who possesses common authority over the premises.”
Illinois v. Rodriguez,
Brewer argues that the officers’ use of the ex parte order reveals an intent to remove him from the scene in order to avoid his possible objection to the search in violation of Randolph. 3 As evidence of such an intent, he notes that the officers parked their cars away from his house, served the ex parte order before he could enter the house, delayed asking Mrs. Brewer for consent until after the ex parte order was served, and never advised him of their intent to search the residence.
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that the officers did not use the ex parte order to remove Brewer “for the sake of avoiding a possible objection.”
See id.
The officers were tasked with serving the valid ex parte order. The officers testified that there was no plan to use the ex parte order in the manner Brewer describes. Rather, two concerns
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motivated the manner in which they served the order: Mrs. Brewer’s concern about the safety of her son and the officers’ concerns about the presence of guns in the house. Officer Hawley testified that they parked their cars away from the home because they were worried that Mr. Brewer would not return home if he knew the police were there. If that happened, Mrs. Brewer would not have been able to retrieve her son and the officers would not have been able to serve the ex parte order. Officer Hawley also testified that the officers served Mr. Brewer outside the residence to avoid the potential danger that the guns in the house presented. Additionally, Officer Hawley had already asked Mrs. Brewer for consent to search the residence during their earlier conversation. Because she had expressed concern about her son in response, Officer Hawley reasonably declined to inquire again about her consent to search until after her son was returned. Finally, officers have no affirmative duty to advise a potentially objecting defendant of their intent to search.
Randolph, 547
U.S. at 121,
B. Probable cause in the three search warrant applications
“An affidavit establishes probable cause for a warrant if it ‘sets forth sufficient facts to establish that there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of criminal activity will be found in the particular place to be searched.’ ”
United States v. Snyder,
Brewer argues that because none of the search warrant applications contained copies or detailed descriptions of any of the images sought or already obtained, the warrants were insufficient to establish probable cause to believe that the images actually met the definition of child pornography. In support of this argument, Brewer relies on cases where defendants challenged whether particular images sought were “obscene” or “lascivious.”
See, e.g., United States v. Chrobak,
In this case, the search warrants were issued under Missouri law, which provides two definitions of child pornography: images where the “production of such visual depiction involves the use of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct” and “[a]ny obscene material or performance depicting sexual conduct, sexual contact, or a sexual performance” involving a minor. Mo.Rev.Stat. § 573.010(2). The search warrant applications stated that Brewer photographed S.B. while she performed *1171 oral sex on him, which qualifies as “sexually explicit conduct.” Thus, the images described in the warrant application met the statute’s first definition. As a result, the cases Brewer cites are inapposite; whether the images were also “obscene material” is irrelevant.
Additional information in the warrant applications supported the belief that child pornography would be found. S.B. provided the officers with a detailed description of the other pictures Brewer took while he sexually abused her when she was thirteen or fourteen years old. Allegations of sexual abuse of a minor are part of the totality of circumstances that courts may consider in evaluating whether probable cause existed.
United States v. McCoy,
C. Federal involvement in a state investigation
“A search conducted with significant involvement of federal officers must comply with federal law. Federal agents may not circumvent more restrictive federal requirements by arranging for state officers to search under state law.”
United States v. Moore,
The district court did not err in finding that the federal involvement in the investigation was not so significant as to render the investigation federal in nature, and therefore state search warrants were sufficient. Local police officers filed the affidavits and applications for each warrant. Only local officials were present during the second search of the residence. Special Agent Gentry was the only federal officer present during the initial consent search, and he testified that he merely answered technical questions about whether particular items constituted computer media. A federal official’s limited provision of technical guidance, without more, is insufficient to render the investigation federal in nature. 4 Schroeder, 129 F.3d at *1172 443. As a result, we affirm the district court’s denial of Brewer’s motion to suppress on this ground.
D. Timely execution of the forensic analysis search warrants
Under Missouri law, a search warrant “shall expire if it is not executed and the return made within ten days after the date of the making of the application.” Mo.Rev.Stat. § 542.276(8). Brewer argues this provision renders void the warrants that authorized the forensic analyses of the seized computer media. However, “evidence seized by state officers in conformity with the Fourth Amendment will not be suppressed in a federal prosecution because
state
law was violated.”
United States v. Hornbeck,
We find the First Circuit’s approach to this issue in
United States v. Syphers,
A warrant becomes stale if the information supporting the warrant is not “sufficiently close in time to the issuance of the warrant and the subsequent search conducted so that probable cause can be said to exist as of the time of the search.”
United States v. Palega,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of Brewer’s motion to suppress.
Notes
. The Honorable Ortrie D. Smith, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. The Honorable Sarah W. Hays, United States Magistrate Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Brewer testified that he objected to the search of his home after being served with the ex parte order. The officers on the scene, however, testified that Brewer made no such objection. The district court found the officers’s testimony more credible, and Brewer does not challenge that finding.
. On appeal, Brewer asks us to look outside the district court record to note that the forensic lab that conducted the analysis of his computers “is one of a network of laboratories operated by the Federal Bureau of Invesligation with the cooperation of local police agencies.” As a result, he argues, federal involvement went beyond Special Agent Gentry’s presence during the consent search.
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The Government responds that the actual forensic examiner was a state police officer, and, also using information outside the record, that the forensic lab has mostly non-federal employees. "An appellate court can properly consider only the record and facts before the district court and thus only those papers and exhibits filed in the district court can constitute the record on appeal.”
Bath Junkie Branson, L.L.C. v. Bath Junkie, Inc.,
. This approach is consistent with that taken in our previous cases.
See Hornbeck,
