In this appeal, we review a criminal defendant’s conviction for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). For the following reasons, we affirm.
I
On September 8, 1999, the DEA received a tip from a confidential informant indicating that an undetermined amount of cocaine had been transported to a residence at 501 San Pedro Street in Laredo, Texas. Later that day, the agency began conducting surveillance of the residence, during which law enforcement officers witnessed approximately twenty to twenty-five cars arrive and depart from the residence in a two and one-half hour span. According to the agents, such quick arrivals and departures were common among narcotics traffickers. Further, the agents beheved that a Cadillac parked in front of the residence belonged to one Pedro Gay-tan-Elias, a reputed drug dealer with prior arrests.
At approximately 10 p.m., the DEA submitted an affidavit containing the above information to a federal magistrate and requested a search warrant for the residence. The magistrate issued the warrant after midnight on September 9, and at approximately 1 a.m. federal agents and local law enforcement officers executed the warrant on 501 San Pedro Street.
It was ultimately discovered that the warrant affidavit contained erroneous or false information. Namely, the Cadillac parked in front of the residence actually belonged to Pedro Gaytan, Jr., a computer manager for the local schools with no prior arrests.
Prior to the execution of the warrant, Defendant Jose Alberto Cavazos and two others left the residence in a truck. The truck approached a vehicle containing two of the officers who were surveilling the residence. According to the officers, the truck pulled up closely to the officers’ vehicle, and its occupants peered at the officers inside. When the truck pulled away, the officers performed a U-turn to follow. The defendant’s truck then made is own U-turn and the two vehicles were approaching each other. The truck then crossed over into the officers’ lane, creating a sort of stand off. Both vehicles stopped, and the officers exited their vehicle with their guns drawn. When Cavazos got out of the truck, the officers patted him down. Neither he nor his companions in the truck had a firearm on his person. Cavazos was then taken back to 501 San Pedro Street, where agents and officers executed the search warrant.
Once at the residence, officers handcuffed Cavazos and informed him of the search warrant and his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
Cavazos moved to suppress the firearms and the inculpatory statements that he made during the search. After several hearings, the district court denied this motion. Following a bench trial on stipulated facts, the district court found Cavazos guilty of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). Cavazos then filed a post-verdict motion for judgment of acquittal, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to prove that his possession of the firearm had affected interstate commerce. The district court denied this motion as well.
II
When reviewing a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we review its findings of fact for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo.
See United States v. Davis,
“The bulwark of Fourth Amendment protection” is its requirement that “police obtain a warrant from a neutral and disinterested magistrate before embarking upon a search.”
Franks v. Delaware,
Where a search warrant is involved, this Court employs a two-step process for reviewing a district court’s denial of a motion to suppress.
See United States v. Cherna,
The good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule does not apply if the warrant affidavit contains a false statement that was made intentionally or with
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reckless disregard for its truth.
See Franks v. Delaware,
In the instant case, the false information was the identity of the Cadillac’s true owner. After several hearings on the matter, the district court found no evidence to suggest that the officers had deliberately or recklessly provided the false information. Having made these findings, the good-faith exception would have allowed the court to consider the entire affidavit, and the analysis should have ended there. The district court, however, went on to conclude that, had the false information been excised, the remaining portion of the affidavit would have established probable cause. Therefore, it would be prudent for us to review this conclusion as well.
A probable cause determination is a “practical, common-sense decision as to whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.”
United States v. Byrd,
Cavazos argues that the confidential informant’s tip should also be excised from the warrant affidavit because the facts conveyed by the informant’s tip were contrary to the facts set forth in the affidavit. The affidavit stated that the informant witnessed approximately ten illegal aliens transport several bundles of cocaine by hand into the United States and then load the cocaine into a cream colored Chevrolet Suburban. The affidavit also states that the informant witnessed the Suburban transport the cocaine to the residence located at 501 San Pedro Street. Cavazos argues that these statements are false because the informant never actually saw the cocaine in the house or in the car. This argument misrepresents the affidavit and is therefore unpersuasive. Nowhere in the affidavit is there a claim that the informant actually saw the cocaine. Rather, the informant’s belief that the substance he saw was cocaine was based in the informant’s years of experience in the area of drug trafficking.
The district court properly considered the confidential informant’s tip when de *711 termining whether the warrant affidavit established probable cause. Furthermore, the district court did not err when in found that the informant’s tip and the suspicious behavior observed at the residence, taken together, established probable cause sufficient to justify the search warrant.
Cavazos next challenges the admission of the inculpatory statements he made during his detention at 501 San Pedro Street. He does not challenge the initial stop and frisk. ' Rather, he contends that once the agents had determined that Cavazos had no weapons, they no longer had a justification to detain him. Therefore, Cavazos argues that this continued detention violated his Fourth Amendment rights and that the inculpatory statements he made during that detention should have been excluded as fruit of the poisonous tree.
The rule that warrantless detentions must be based on probable cause is not without exceptions. In
Michigan v. Summers,
In the instant case, federal agents and local law enforcement officers were executing a valid warrant to search 501 San Pedro Street. The officers did not know that Cavazos was a resident of the premises until after the search began, but they did know that he was an occupant, and it is the connection of an occupant to the home being searched that gives the officers an “easily identifiable and certain basis for determining that suspicion of criminal activity justifies a detention of that occupant.”
Id.
at 703-04,
Cavazos attempts to distinguish the instant case from
Summers
on the basis of geographic proximity. Whereas the defendant in
Summers
had just exited the house and was on the front steps when the police detained him,
id.
at 693,
Cavazos points to several cases from other jurisdictions to argue that the two
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blocks between him and his residence should foreclose the application of
Summers.
Nevertheless, the courts’ refusals to apply
Summers
in the cases cited by Cavazos did not turn on the defendants’ distance from the scenes of the searches. Each required something more.
See e.g., United States v. Edwards,
The critical distinction between the instant case and those cited by Cavazos is Cavazos’s behavior immediately prior to his seizure. The police in Edwards and Sherrill had no reason to believe that the defendants in those cases presented any risk of flight. They offered no risk compromising the searches by warning the remaining occupants of the places to be searched. The defendants in Edwards and Sherrill did drive not closely to a surveilling police car in an apparent attempt to conduct counter-surveillance, nor did they did drive vehicles toward law enforcement officers in a threatening manner.
The proximity between an occupant of a residence and the residence itself may be relevant in deciding whether to apply
Summers,
but it is by no means controlling. As one court has flatly stated,
“Summers
does not impose upon police a duty based on geographic proximity (i.e., defendant must be detained while still on his premises).”
United States v. Cochran,
Ill
Cavazos also argues that 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) is unconstitutional in that evidence of intrastate possession of a firearm manufactured in another state, standing alone, is insufficient to establish a sufficient interstate commerce nexus under the Commerce Clause. This Court has repeatedly held that evidence that a firearm has traveled interstate at some point in the past is sufficient to support a conviction under § 922(g), even if the defendant possessed the firearm entirely intrastate.
See e.g., United States v. Daugherty,
Cavazos contends that two recent Supreme Court decisions warrant a different result, namely
United States v. Morrison,
IV
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court also found that these in-culpatory statements were preceded by warnings under
Miranda v. Arizona,
