OPINION
Defendant-Appellant Christopher Frazier appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence obtained during a search of his residence at 115 South Jeffries Street, Morganfield, Kentucky. Alternatively, Frazier argues that we should remand this case to the district court, with instructions to hold an eviden-tiary hearing to determine whether the affidavit supporting the search warrant for his home contained knowing and reckless falsehoods, and that we should grant him a new trial because his counsel was constitutionally ineffective. Because we conclude that the district court did not err in applying the good faith exception set out in
United States v. Leon,
I.
In late 1999, numerous police agencies, including the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (“ATF”), began receiving information that an informal organization of about 25 people, led by Frazier, was dealing drugs in the Dunbar Heights Apartments, a federal housing project in Morganfield. In October of 2002, a confidential informant, “CI-178,” volunteered to provide the authorities with information on Frazier’s organization and began making “controlled buys” of drugs under the supervision of ATF Special Agent Kirk Steward. Because CI-178 wore a “wire” during some of the buys, the ATF was able to record what was said during two of the transactions. On one such occasion, CI-178 met with Czaja McGuire, who is alleged to be a member of Frazier’s conspiracy, to purchase crack cocaine. CI-178 accompanied McGuire to Frazier’s residence, which at that point was at 759 Culver Court in the housing project, where McGuire obtained a quanti *530 ty of crack cocaine. After they left Frazier’s residence, CI-178 purchased 3.7 grams of crack cocaine from McGuire. The second recorded transaction occurred on December 12, 2002, when CI-178 went to Frazier’s Culver Court residence to purchase crack cocaine. Once inside, Frazier arranged for CI-178 to buy drugs from James Harris, another member of Frazier’s organization.
On July 10, 2003, seeking six search warrants relating to Frazier’s drug conspiracy, Agent Steward presented to United States Magistrate Judge Robert Goebel six warrant affidavits, the last of which was in support of a warrant to search Frazier’s current home on Jeffries Street. This affidavit describes the details of Frazier’s criminal enterprise and recounts the report of an anonymous cooperating witness, “CW-1,” who had seen Frazier selling drugs out of the housing project in Morganfield. The Frazier affidavit also described the McGuire and Harris transactions, but did not specify that these were controlled buys that were caught on tape. The affidavit further states that CI-178 had acted as a “middle man” during a drug transaction between Frazier and an unidentified Hispanic male 1 at Frazier’s Cul-ver Court residence. Paragraph nine of the Frazier affidavit says that Frazier was evicted from the Culver Court residence in May 2003, and that shortly thereafter, housing authorities found drugs in that residence while cleaning it. The affidavit also states that Sheriffs Deputy Jason Corbitt relayed to Agent Steward the statement of Patrick Black, a Frazier associate arrested in a seemingly unrelated investigation, that Black had been regularly purchasing about two pounds of marijuana each week from Frazier in the neighboring town of Owensboro, Kentucky. The affidavit also reports that Agent Steward had obtained Frazier’s telephone records, which revealed that he was in “constant contact with known drug dealers” and that officers doing surveillance of Frazier’s Jeffries Street residence saw him coming and going in an expensive vehicle.
After reviewing the five affidavits submitted before the Frazier affidavit, the magistrate judge advised Agent Steward that the affidavits should be revised to include the information that CI-178 had taped two of the controlled buys. Agent Steward made that revision to each of the first five affidavits but inexplicably — and unintentionally — did not supplement the Frazier affidavit. On reviewing the Frazier affidavit, the magistrate, who did not realize that it did not contain the information about the taped buys, instructed Agent Steward to “strengthen” paragraph 17, which cited Sixth Circuit eases in support of the proposition that “a search warrant may be properly issued against a suspected drug dealer’s residence despite the lack of direct evidence of criminal activity at the residence.” Agent Steward added a citation to
United States v. Jones,
Reserving his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence pursuant to FED R. CRIM. P.
*531
11(a)(2), Frazier pled guilty to possessing marijuana with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(D), and possessing firearms in furtherance of drug trafficking, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(a). Frazier moved to suppress the evidence seized from his house on the ground that the warrant was not supported by probable cause. The district court initially agreed and, relying exclusively on the information contained in the four corners of the warrant affidavit, held that the warrant could not be saved under the “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule that was announced in
United States v. Leon,
II.
The United States argues that we should affirm the district court because the affidavit established that there was probable cause to search Frazier’s home. In appeals from a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress evidence, we review the trial court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo.
United States v. Combs,
The Fourth Amendment states that “no warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation _” U.S. Const, amend. IV. To demonstrate probable cause to justify the issuance of a search warrant, an affidavit must contain facts that indicate “a fair probability that evidence of a crime will be located on the premises of the proposed search.”
United States v. Jenkins,
*532
The bulk of the information contained in the Frazier affidavit comes from confidential sources: CW-1 and CI-178. When confronted with hearsay information from a confidential informant, “a court must consider the veracity, reliability, and the basis of knowledge for that information as part of the totality of the circumstances for evaluating the impact of that information .... ”
United States v. Helton,
Nor does the affidavit contain evidence that Agent Steward corroborated the information that the informants provided. Agent Steward observed Frazier coming and going from his residence on Jeffries Street in a Lincoln Navigator and a subsequent search of his telephone records revealed that he was “in constant contact with known drug dealers.” Viewing the evidence in a light most likely to support the decision of the district court, this information is insufficient to corroborate the confidential informants’ statements.
What is more, neither CW-1, CI-178 nor Patrick Black witnessed Frazier dealing drugs from his Jeffries Street residence, the premises specified in the search warrant.
3
There must be “a nexus between the place to be searched and the evidence to be sought.”
United States v. Carpenter,
Though evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment is generally excluded, the Supreme Court has held that the exclusionary rule “should be modified so as not to bar the admission of evidence seized in reasonable, good-faith reliance on a search warrant that is subsequently held to be defective.”
United States v. Leon,
Leon’s
exception is predicated on the idea that the purpose of the exclusionary rule, which is to deter police misconduct, will not be served by excluding evidence seized by an officer acting in good faith.
Id.
at 916,
Frazier argues that the second and third exceptions to Leon’s good faith rule apply. We will consider in turn whether the affidavit is so lacking in probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable and whether the issuing magistrate wholly abandoned his judicial role.
A. Whether the affidavit is so lacking in probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.
At the outset we address Frazier’s reliance on United States v. Laughton, 409 *534 F.3d 744, 752 (6th Cir.2005) in support of his contention that a court’s analysis of whether an officer acted in good faith is confined to evidence contained within the four corners of the warrant affidavit. The defendant in Laughton sought to suppress evidence obtained from his home by officers acting pursuant to a search warrant. In denying Laughton’s motion to suppress on the ground that the executing officer relied in good faith on a defective search warrant, the district court looked to information known to the officer but not included in the affidavit. Id. at 751. We reversed and held that “the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule does not permit consideration of information known to a police officer, but not included in the affidavit, in determining whether an objectively reasonable officer would have relied on the warrant.” Id. at 752.
Because the Supreme Court has, in the past, looked beyond the four corners of the warrant affidavit in assessing an officer’s good faith, we do not read
Laughton
as prohibiting a court in
all
circumstances from considering evidence not included in the affidavit. The
Leon
Court itself held that a court may look beyond the four corners of the affidavit: “our good-faith inquiry is confined to the objectively ascertainable question whether a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the search was illegal despite the magistrate’s authorization. In making this determination,
all of
the circumstances — including whether the warrant application had previously been rejected by a different magistrate — may be considered.”
Leon,
In view of the foregoing precedents, we interpret
Laughton’s
holding as limited to
*535
answering the question that this court, sitting en banc, explicitly left open in
Carpenter:
“whether the search could have been saved under the ‘good faith exception’ on the basis that the officers had other information that was not presented to the issuing magistrate, but that would have established probable cause.”
We refuse to confine our good faith inquiry to those facts that Agent Steward included in the Frazier affidavit because to do so would not serve the purposes of the exclusionary rule, and specifically, would have no deterrent effect on future police misconduct. The issue of whether evidence should be excluded is discrete from the question of whether the Fourth Amendment rights of the party seeking exclusion were violated.
Gates,
In fact, we are unable to envision
any
scenario in which a rule excluding from the
Leon
analysis information known to the officer and revealed to the magistrate would deter police misconduct.
Leon
only comes into play when an officer has a warrant, albeit a defective one. Because a judge’s initial probable cause determination is limited to the four corners of the affidavit,
Hatcher,
Considering that CI-178 recorded Frazier’s participation in two drug transactions, we conclude that the affidavit was not so lacking in probable cause as to render official belief in its existence unreasonable. The question of whether Agent Steward’s reliance on the warrant was objectively reasonable turns on “whether a reasonably well-trained officer would have known that the search was illegal despite the magistrate’s authorization.”
Weaver,
We think as well that the affidavit establishes a sufficiently strong nexus between Frazier’s alleged drug dealing and his home. An officer’s belief that there is a sufficient nexus between the suspected crime and the place to be searched is unreasonable when evidence in the affidavit connecting the crime to the residence is “so vague as to be conclusory or meaningless.”
See Carpenter,
The Frazier affidavit creates at least as strong a connection between the place to be searched and the evidence to be sought as the affidavits at issue in the foregoing cases. Paragraph nine of the Frazier affidavit states that the Morganfield Heights Housing Authority found drugs in Frazier’s former residence on Culver Court shortly after he moved out. A reasonably well-trained officer could infer that a drug dealer who kept drugs in his former home would also keep drugs in his current home. Indeed, Agent Steward averred, based on his training and experience, that drug dealers usually continue their trade after moving to a new residence (paragraph 18), and that people who sell drugs often keep drugs and guns in their homes (paragraph 19). The inference that drugs would be found in Frazier’s new residence is all the more reasonable when considered in light of the Sixth Circuit cases cited in the affidavit, which stand for the proposition that, “in the case of drug dealers, evidence is likely to be found where dealers reside.” And we think that Agent Steward’s reliance on this proposition was particularly reasonable because the issuing magistrate returned the affidavit with instructions to add citations to additional authority supporting it. We hold that the Frazier affidavit was not so lacking in probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.
B. Whether Leon’s good faith exception is inapplicable because the issuing magistrate wholly abandoned his judicial role.
Frazier also argues that Agent Steward could not have relied in good faith on the warrant because the issuing magistrate wholly abandoned his judicial role “by not reading the warrant application and basing issuance of the warrant on unsworn testimony.” A “neutral and detached magistrate must review a search warrant before it can be executed.”
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
Though the issuing magistrate did not notice that Agent Steward failed to comply with his request to specify that CI-178 had recorded two drug transactions, the record does not support Frazier’s claim that the magistrate issued the warrant without reading the affidavit. In fact, we know that the issuing magistrate read the affidavit at least twice. After Agent Steward resubmitted the affidavit (without including information about CI-178’s role in the case), the magistrate reviewed it and returned it with instructions to “strengthen” paragraph 17, which cited Sixth Circuit case law in support of the proposition that a warrant may issue to search a drug dealer’s residence despite a lack of direct evidence connecting the drug enterprise to the residence. Based on his *538 conversation with Agent Steward, the magistrate also asked him to add what became paragraph 18, in which Agent Steward avers that, based on his training, drug dealers continue their trade after moving to a new residence. Agent Steward testified that after he supplemented paragraphs 17 and 18 and resubmitted the affidavit, the magistrate “looked it over again” and affixed his name to the search warrant. This evidence demonstrates that the magistrate not only reviewed the affidavit, but did so with a critical eye.
Even less does the record support Frazier’s claim that the magistrate abandoned his judicial role by relying on unsworn testimony. It is true that Agent Steward did not swear in the Frazier affidavit that CI-178 taped two of the drug buys. He did, however, swear to that fact in the five related affidavits contemporaneously presented to the magistrate judge. While it was technically improper for the magistrate judge to rely on that testimony for the Frazier warrant, that reliance does not preclude the application of
Leon’s,
good faith exception. “The exclusionary rule is designed to prevent police, not magistrate, misconduct.... ”
Rodriguez-Suazo,
III.
Alternatively, Frazier asks us to remand his case with instructions for the district court to hold an evidentiary hearing in order to prove that knowing or reckless falsities negating good faith are contained in the affidavit supporting the search of his home. Under
Franks v. Delaware,
Paragraph 9 says, in its entirety,
On May 1, 2003, ATF Special Agent Kirk Steward was contacted by Morgan-field Police Officer Jeff Hart concerning seizure of approximately 20.4 grams of cocaine from the apartment, 759 Culver Court located in the Morganfield Heights Housing Authority in Morgan-field, Kentucky, of Chris FRAZIER. On May 5, 2003 the Morganfield Height[s] Housing Authority evicted FRAZIER from his apartment. Sometime on the morning of May 6, 2003, employees of the Morganfield Heights Housing Authority were cleaning FRAZIER’S apartment in order to get it ready for another tenant when they discovered a white powder substance in a plastic baggie. Morganfield Police and Union County Sheriff Officer’s [sic] were dispatched to FRAZIER’S apartment. Upon seizing the white substance, Union County Sheriffs Deputy Jason Corbitt conducted a narcotic field test of the *539 cocaine. The test resulted in a positive indication for cocaine.
Frazier argues that he has made a substantial preliminary showing that paragraph 9 contains deliberately or recklessly false averments because it does not accurately state the date that he moved out of his apartment. Paragraph 9 certainly contains errors. Agent Steward could not have been told on May 1, 2003, about a May 6, 2003, cocaine seizure. But the record does not support the conclusion that the falsehoods contained in paragraph 9 are anything more than typographical errors. A defendant cannot demonstrate entitlement to a Franks hearing by merely identifying typographical errors in the affidavit. In any event, no prejudice ensued from any errors that Agent Steward made concerning the date of Frazier’s eviction because paragraph 9 makes it clear that he was not living in the Culver Court residence when the drugs were found.
Frazier also takes issue with paragraph 13 of the affidavit, which states that the Kentucky State Police were unable to muster enough officers to search Frazier’s home, despite their suspicion that he was a drug dealer. Frazier argues that he is entitled to a Franks hearing to explore the “unlikelihood that Kentucky State Police could not get a search warrant due to ‘man power issues and priorities to other investigations.’ ” Because Frazier’s argument merely speculates that the Kentucky State Police had the manpower to execute the warrant, he has failed to make a substantial preliminary showing that paragraph 13 contains a deliberately or recklessly false averment. Finding no basis upon which to remand his case with instructions to hold a Franks hearing, we deny the request for remand.
IV.
Finally, Frazier argues that his “trial counsel’s failure to investigate allegedly false statements in the affidavit in support of the search warrant and to reassert the motion for an evidentiary hearing constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.” We generally do not rule on ineffective assistance of counsel claims raised for the first time on direct review.
United States v. Garcia-Meza,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s order denying Frazier’s motion to suppress; we DENY his request for a remand; and we DISMISS without prejudice his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
Notes
. Because this was an impromptu transaction, CI-178 was not able to record it.
. The United States argues that paragraph two of the affidavit, which says ''[s]ince opening this investigation, February 22, 2002, ATF and Union County Sheriff's Department have used Confidential Informants to conduct numerous drug and firearm(s) transactions with *532 approximately 17 people which [sic] have been identified as prominent members of the FRAZIER SYNDICATE,” indicates that the CI-178 recorded the two transactions that Frazier was involved in. Because CI-178 actually recorded some of the transactions mentioned in the affidavit, but not others, we decline to draw this inference.
. We note that the information provided by Black is not particularly reliable inasmuch as it is based on multiple levels of hearsay.
. We note that this court’s decision in
United States v. Weaver,
