Hеndricks appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence seized in a search of his residence pursuant to a warrant. We affirm.
FACTS
On May 10,1983 a customs officer at Los Angеles inspected a cardboard box arriving from Brazil addressed to Dennis Hendricks, 2835 North Sidney, Tucson, Arizona. The address on the box was Hendricks’s home address, but was there for identification only because the box was shipped in such a manner that Hendricks was required to pick it up personally. Inside the box was a suitcase in which the inspector found hidden 5-7 pounds of cocaine. The customs agent sent the box on to Tucson, where it was turned over to Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) officials.
While the DEA agents were holding the box, they gathered the following additional information, which was contained in the affidavit for the search warrant:
1. Dennis Hendricks and Gigi Ghazaro-sian lived at 2835 N. Sidney.
2. Ghazarosian used to live at 3344 N. Kelvin.
3. 3344 N. Kelvin is the location of a business named “Brazilian Imports”
4. Dennis Hendricks is the operator of Brazilian Imports.
5. On March 31, 1983 a greeting card containing 10.4 grams of coсaine arrived at Los Angeles Airport addressed to Brazilian Imports, 3344 N. Kelvin.
6. Ghazarosian’s car is registered to 3344 N. Kelvin and is in the long-term parking section of the Tucson Airport.
*654 Upon this evidence, аnd knowing that the box was at the airport in the possession of DEA agents, the magistrate issued a warrant for a search of Hendricks’s residence at N. Sidney. Although the warrant states that “on the premisеs known as 2835 N. Sidney ... there is now being concealed ... a ... cardboard box [containing cocaine],” (emphasis added) it further states “this search warrant is to be executed only upon the condition that the above described bоx is brought to the aforesaid premises” (emphasis added).
Hendricks made a motion to suppress, which was denied by the district court. Hendricks then entered a conditional guilty plea under Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2) and was sentenced to 3 years imprisonment and 5 years рrobation on one count of transportation of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 952(a) (1982). Hendricks appeals only the denial of the suppression motion.
DISCUSSION
We must inquire first whether probablе cause existed for issuance of the warrant. If so, our inquiry is at an end. If not, we look to whether the searching officers nonetheless acted reasonably and in good faith.
United States v. Leon,
— U.S. -,
I
The Search Warrant Was Issued Without Probable Cause.
In making the determinаtion as to probable cause, our role is limited to “ensuring that the magistrate had a ‘substantial basis for ... concluding]’ that probable cause existed.”
Illinois v. Gates,
If the suitcase had been in the house, or if probable cause existed to believe it was there, issuance of the warrant would have been proper. However, at the time the warrant was issued, the magistrate knew the suitcase was in the possession of the agents, not at the house. The agеnts, by calling Hendricks to come for the suitcase tried to ensure that the condition subsequent inserted into the warrant would happen. 1 However, at the time the warrant issued and, in fact, until the suitcase was actually brought to the house, there was no certainty that it would ever be brought there.
In
Durham v. United States,
The Government cites
United States v. Goff,
Defendant accurately perceives the vice of the prospective search warrant: By issuing such a warrant, the magistrate abdicates to the DEA agents an important judicial function — the determination that probable cause exists to believe that the objects are currently in the place to be searched. The cases cited by the Government,
e.g., United States v. Lowe,
Several cases in this circuit have considered the propriety of issuing search warrants for a suspect’s rеsidence based only upon probable cause that the suspect was guilty of the underlying crime. In
United States v. Lucarz,
[I]t cannot follow in all cases, simply from the existence of probable cause to bеlieve a suspect guilty, that there is also probable cause to search his residence. If that were so, there would be no reason to distinguish search warrants from arrest warrants, and cases like Chimel v. California,395 U.S. 752 ,89 S.Ct. 2034 ,23 L.Ed.2d 685 (1969), would make little sense.
Accord United States v. Freeman,
In contrast to
Lucarz,
here there is not sufficient nexus between the box and the residence.
See United States v. Lockett,
II
Application of The Exclusionary Rule Is Unwarranted In This Case.
Although the search warrant was invalid,
Leon,
At oral argument before our court, appellant urged that we exclude the evidence because the magistrate “wholly abandoned his judicial role ____”
Leon,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The fact that the agents creatеd the probable cause (if any) to search the house is analogous to a situation where police create exigent circumstances and then use the existence of thosе exigencies to justify a search.
See United States v. Allard,
. A preferred substitute to the procedure utilized in this case is the usе of a telephonic warrant. If the agents became aware of information that led them to believe that the suitcase was in the house, they could have so informed the magistrate so that the magistrate and not the agent could make the determination of probable cause.
. The parties did not argue that the other two exceptions to Leon applied.
