DECISION AND ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO SUPPRESS
The defendant’s motion to suppress is Granted part and Denied in part.
There were two searches, each conducted pursuant to warrant. Their purpose was to discover evidence of illegal, ie. unregistered, firearms and explosives under 26 U.S.C. § 5861(d).
There are three categories of dispute.
1. Probable Cause.
The defendant attacks the first warrant because the probable cause determination depends upon a confidential informant’s (“Cl’s”) statements and upon hearsay concerning the Cl’s previous reliability. The attack fails. I apply the totality of the circumstances analysis of
Illinois v. Gates,
“[T]he duty of a reviewing court is simply to ensure that the magistrate had a ‘substantial basis for ... concluding]’ that probable cause existed.”
2. Specificity of the Warrant.
(a) The Residential Search Warrant. The defendant attacks the first warrant for authorizing the seizure of:
I. Receipts and other documentation, both paper and electronic, regarding the purchase, manufacture or sale of illegal firearms or explosive devices
J. Books, sketches or diagrams regarding the construction of illegal firearms or explosive devices
Search warrant of 9/20/02 at 1 (Docket No. 25, ex. 3). The defendant complains that the warrant does not give a statutory citation for the illegality. He also argues that where written materials are involved, the First Amendment demands a “scrupulous exactitude” that goes beyond the Fourth Amendment’s “particularity” requirement. I conclude that the warrant need not cite the statute. Permitting seizure of materials that relate to “illegal firearms or explosive devices” is sufficiently particular.
2
As for the “scrupulous exactitude” requirement, that comes from
Stanford v. Texas,
(b) The Computer Search Warrant. The residential search warrant authorized the agents to seize computers on the defendant’s premises, and they did so. Then they sought and obtained a second warrant to search three computers’ hard drives. That second warrant authorized seizure of:
a. text documents of any variety, including e-mail, websites, records of chat sessions, correspondence or shipping records; and
b. digital images of any variety, including still images and videos.
Search Warrant of 11/15/02 at 2 (Docket No. 25, ex. 6). The agents searched the computers pursuant to the second warrant. But there were no restrictions on the search, no references to statutes, and no references to crimes or illegality. The omission seems likely to have been a clerical error, occurring in the heat of the moment in seeking the second warrant, but the scope of the warrant as written is clearly excessive, and no justification was provided for such an unlimited search. The whole point of a warrant is to make general searches impossible.
United States v. Hinds,
The government also relies upon the good faith exception of
United States v. Leon,
3. Items Seized Outside the Warrant(s).
The defendant argues that the following items were seized ostensibly under the residential search warrant, but that they are not within its scope:
CD-ROMs with titles such as Ebay 2001 Spreadsheets, Sold Items from Auction Sites — Started 3/20/02 Pictures of Sold Items from Auction Sites
Secrets of Methamphetamine Manufacture (a book)
The Survival Chemist (a book)
Military Trader (a magazine).
The defendant also asserts that he does not yet know what the government seized under the computer warrant and reserves the right to move to exclude such items later. Since, I have found the second computer warrant too vague, I consider this request Moot.
Accordingly, to the extent the government relies upon the second warrant, the contents of the computers seized as a result are Suppressed; the motion is otherwise Denied. 4
So Ordered.
Notes
. Among other things, the Cl recounted that the defendant told him that he worked at M.I.T. and tested weapons for defense contractors, and that he was selling machine guns and explosive devices. The Cl described the machines the defendant used and where they were located. He gave physical descriptions of baseball-type grenades, Claymore anti-personnel land mines, and other land mines. He described how the defendant test-fired the machine guns he manufactured, and described the prices he was seeking. He also described how the defendant filled grenade bodies with a plastic explosive, whose color he described.
. The defendant has not articulated why a reference to "illegal” firearms is insufficiently particular. In fact, that is a carefully circumscribed category under Title 26 (largely things like machine guns, sawed off shotguns, other modified weapons and specified types of ordnance). Although there could be other categories of illegal weapons (for example, felons and domestic violence misdemeanants are prohibited from possessing firearms), the defendant has not argued that such categories applied to him, thereby making all weapons on his premises illegal. Therefore, the case is unlike
United States v. Roche,
. The briefs in this case seem to have overlooked a critical issue. The first warrant explicitly authorized the seizure of "all computers, computer related components and other digital storage devices," as well as "electronic” receipts and documentation of the illegal firearms in paragraph (I). The defendant has not challenged that authorization beyond the arguments described in text. Why the government needed the second warrant, therefore, is unclear to me.
See United States v. Upham,
. I am disappointed that neither party cited the First Circuit authority of Roche, Lafayette and Upham.
