Tracy Carson is a bank robber who, in April 2007, held up and robbed an Indianapolis branch of Chase Bank. Following a tip from an informant and an independent investigation, the police obtained a search warrant and arrested Carson at a local hotel. In the face of the damning evidence seized at the hotel, including more than $100,000 in cash wrapped in Chase Bank straps and stamped with information particular to the robbed facility, latex gloves, a firearm, cocaine, and marijuana, Carson immediately confessed to the robbery. He was later charged with, and convicted of, armed bank robbery, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) & (d), brandishing a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(l)(A)(n), and being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g) & 924(e).
On appeal, Carson’s primary argument is that evidence critical to his conviction should have been suppressed because probable cause did not support the issuance of the search warrant. In the alternative, he asserts that the affidavit supporting the application for the warrant contained material false statements. Finally, he argues that his confession should have been suppressed because the large quantities of drugs and alcohol that he ingested prior to his arrest and confession invalidated his waiver of his Miranda rights. We conclude that the district court correctly refused to suppress both the evidence and the confession, and we thus affirm its judgment.
I
At a little after one o'clock in the afternoon of April 25, 2007, a robber, later identified as Carson, entered a Chase Bank branch at 7001 South Madison Avenue in Indianapolis. Carson was wearing a mask over his face and latex gloves on his hands, and was carrying a firearm. He made away with more than $120,000. Indiana State Police learned of the robbery later that evening when, at around 11:15, an informant gave Sergeant Dean Wildauer and Detective Ronnie Shoemaker extensive information about the robbery. The informant’s report included the following details: a bank robbery had occurred on the south side of Indianapolis; the robber’s name was Tracy; Tracy was a white male between the ages of 35 and 38 and was approximately six feet tall; Tracy was at a hotel that had a swimming pool in the guest room; the room went for $500 per night; Tracy was accompanied by a woman named Amanda; he possessed money that the informant estimated as at least $100,000 (based on the informant’s observation of Tracy’s counting the money); Tracy also had a handgun, narcotics, and cocaine; Tracy and Amanda had been *830 dropped off at the hotel; and the hotel was located at 21st and Post Streets, on the east side of Indianapolis. While Sergeant Wildauer was aware that the Sybaris Hotel in Indianapolis had swimming pools in the rooms, he did not know of any such hotel located at 21st and Post. Sergeant Wildauer asked the informant to check his information, and the informant promptly confirmed that the hotel was indeed the Sybaris.
With this information in hand, Sergeant Wildauer contacted the FBI bank robbery detail and spoke with Agent Bervin White, who confirmed that a Chase Bank located at Southport Road and Madison Avenue in Indianapolis had been robbed on April 25, 2007, by a white male meeting the description Sergeant Wildauer had been given. Agent White also told Sergeant Wildauer that the robber was carrying a gun and had stolen approximately $125,000 from the bank. Sergeant Wildauer and Detective Shoemaker then went to the Sybaris Hotel and learned that a woman named Charlotte Ruby had rented Suite 12 for two people, Tracy Carson and Amanda Johnson, and that Carson and Johnson had both signed a waiver and release form. The officers also learned that the room was paid for in cash and had been rented for two nights.
After returning to the police station, Sergeant Wildauer ran a background check on Carson and learned that he had prior convictions for bank robbery, two handgun violations, and grand larceny and escape convictions. Sergeant Wildauer also discovered that Carson had an outstanding warrant from Marion County for possession of a controlled substance and public intoxication. Detective Shoemaker again contacted FBI Agent White, who advised him that the FBI had identified Carson as a suspect in a bank robbery within the previous twelve months. Sergeant Wildauer then memorialized all this information in an affidavit, and, at 3:34 a.m. on April 26, 2007, obtained a state search warrant for Suite 12 of the Sybaris Hotel; the warrant authorized the police to look for and seize Carson, the fruits of the bank robbery, and narcotics.
Warrant in hand, the police arrived at the Sybaris about an hour later. In Suite 12, they found Carson, Johnson, approximately $106,000 wrapped in straps with stampings from the victimized Chase Bank branch dated April 24, 2007, along with latex gloves, a firearm, cocaine, and marijuana. Officers also noted that a tall, gallon-sized bottle of vodka was in the room and had been opened, though very little appeared to have been consumed. After the room was secured, Sergeant Wildauer read Carson his Miranda rights. Carson immediately responded, “This is mine. It’s all mine. She’s [meaning Johnson] got nothing to do with it.” Approximately 30 minutes later, Agent Eric Jensen of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives again advised Carson of his Miranda rights. This time Carson said, “Yeah, been there.” Carson did not sign the waiver form, purportedly because by that time he had been handcuffed.
But Carson then admitted that he had robbed the Chase Bank in question of $130,000, that he knew that his possession of the firearm made him an armed career criminal for the purposes of the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”), 18 U.S.C. § 924(e), and that he was facing a virtual life sentence. Carson described the clothes he wore during the robbery, mentioning his jeans, Nike tennis shoes, gloves, and mask. Carson confessed that he carried a .45 caliber handgun in the bank. He said that he bought the gun on the street and that it was not stolen (this was later confirmed). Carson recounted that he had driven to the target bank in a red Chrysler LeBaron that he had bought *831 for $250. Carson also revealed that on two prior occasions he had robbed the Chase Bank branch at Hanna and Keystone Avenues, obtaining $23,000 and $29,000, and also had attempted to rob a particular credit union. Carson recalled that the credit union attempt was unsuccessful because the employees shut him out using an automatic door system when they saw him approaching wearing a mask. Agent Jensen later corroborated this information.
Carson declined to answer any questions implicating anyone else or divulging his methodology. He explained that bank robbery methods are learned in prison and passed around confidentially, “sort of like a trade secret.” Remarkably, he commented that he did not want to “screw it up” for anyone else in the bank robbery trade. The interview lasted for somewhere between 30 and 60 minutes, during which time Carson had to excuse himself at least twice to go to the restroom to vomit. Agent Jensen later testified that Carson walked normally, that he did not sit or fall during the interview, and that his speech and memory appeared to be clear, given his ability to offer a coherent account of the events relating to the robberies and to provide responsive answers.
Following Carson’s arrest and indictment, he was provided with a supplemental case report. The supplemental report indicated that the information that Sergeant Wildauer and Detective Shoemaker had about Carson’s whereabouts had not actually come from the informant directly, but instead had come from an unknown third party who first had conveyed these details to the informant. In light of this revelation, Carson filed two motions to suppress. The motions took the position that the district court should suppress the evidence obtained through the search warrant because the warrant application failed to demonstrate the reliability of the person upon which the officers actually relied (that third party who was the original source), that the issuing magistrate judge was misled by material omissions in the warrant, and that Carson had been incapacitated while he was being questioned by officers and therefore had been incapable of knowingly waiving his Miranda rights.
Following a hearing, the district court denied both motions. The court found that the affidavit in support of the search warrant contained enough information to support probable cause, that Sergeant Wildauer had not deliberately omitted anything from his affidavit, and that Carson was not too impaired to give an effective waiver of his Miranda rights.
II
A
We consider first Carson’s argument that the district court erred by denying his motion to suppress the evidence seized in the search of Suite 12 at the Sybaris Hotel. When a search is executed pursuant to a facially valid warrant, we review a district court’s findings of historical fact for clear error and its legal conclusions
de novo. United States v. Garcia,
Probable cause is established when, based on the totality of the circumstances, the affidavit sets forth sufficient evidence to persuade a reasonably prudent person that a search will uncover evidence of a crime.
Illinois v. Gates,
Carson argues that the affidavit in his case did not establish probable cause, because it provided no way to assess the reliability of the underlying source and there was no indication that the informant’s report was based on first-hand observations. The conclusory statement in the affidavit to the effect that the informant was a “reliable source” was, Carson argues, insufficient. In our view, Carson has missed the forest for the trees. We assess the affidavit as a whole. While Carson is correct that it did not say that the informant’s information was the result of first-hand observations, the affidavit was ultimately sufficient to support the determination of probable cause.
In the first instance, the affidavit reported that the informant identified Carson by name, described his appearance, pinpointed where he was located, described the appearance of Carson’s hotel room, named the woman with whom Carson was sharing the room, specified that he had seen the amount of money Carson had in his possession, said that Carson was in possession of a gun and drugs, and stated that Carson was a convicted bank robber. In addition, the affidavit outlined the independent efforts the police took to corroborate the information provided by the informant, including the fact that a bank robbery had occurred at the location identified by the informant, the appearance of the robber, the amount of money the robber had stolen, that Suite 12 of the Sybaris Hotel was occupied by Carson and Johnson (just as the informant had said), that their room came equipped with a personal swimming pool, that Carson had a prior conviction for bank robbery, and that Carson had outstanding arrest warrants for possession of a controlled substance. Finally, the -time between the robbery (1:00 p.m. on April 25), the conversation with the informant (11:15 p.m. the same day), and the application for the warrant (3:34 a.m. on April 26) was minimal. The police also wasted no time executing the warrant: they arrived at Carson’s room at 4:30 a.m. on April 26.
Carson attempts to counter all of this evidence by claiming that his case is just like
Koerth supra,
in which we found probable cause to be lacking.
We have not overlooked the fact that the law also permits a challenge to an affidavit on the basis that material facts were omitted, where that omission was made intentionally or with reckless disregard for the truth.
Franks v. Delaware,
Nor was this omission material. Even if the informant’s original source had been disclosed, we do not see a reasonable probability that the results of the proceeding before the issuing judge would have been different.
Sims,
B
Carson also argues that his April 26 confession should have been suppressed pursuant to
Miranda v. Arizona,
Carson asserts that his confession was not voluntary because he had “overdosed on heroin ... [and] other mind-altering substances” when the officers administered his Miranda rights. According to Carson, he had imbibed an astonishing amount of liquor: since noon on the day of his arrest, he had drunk three-quarters of a fifth of whiskey, a fifth of vodka, and half a bottle of champagne. As if that were not bad enough, he had also been using heroin and cocaine in tandem throughout the day. Carson elaborates that he had overdosed during the night of his arrest; he was so high that at one point he was crawling on all fours in the hotel room; he was vomiting; he continuously nodded off and woke up; he could not remember when the police came into the hotel room; his state of mind was “like a retarded kid” when he was talking to police officers; and he did not remember receiving his Miranda warnings. Carson argues that the officers must have known about his incapacitated state because he vomited a couple of times during the interrogation and there was cocaine on the table in the hotel room where he was arrested.
Just as in
United States v. LeShore,
Based on these findings, the district court found that Carson’s testimony about the crippling degree of his intoxication was incredible. If Carson was not under any influence that would diminish his capacity, there is no circumstance that would lead us to question the validity of his Miranda waiver, under any standard of review.
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
