Duane Bradley McCoy entered a conditional guilty plea to a charge of possessing child pornography, 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4)(B) (2000). After sentencing, he filed this appeal, challenging the order of the District Court 1 denying his motion to suppress. We affirm.
On January 14, 2004, Detective Randy Hutchinson of the Albia, Iowa, police department was contacted by a day-care provider who reported the alleged sexual abuse of a four-year-old girl by McCoy, the live-in boyfriend of the girl’s mother. An employee of the Iowa Department of Human Services, the Albia police chief, and Hutchinson went to the mother’s residence. The child, her mother, and McCoy were all interviewed, and ultimately McCoy was arrested for sexually assaulting the child. When McCoy declined a request to search his laptop computer, the police chief took custody of the computer. The next day, Hutchinson secured a warrant, authorized by a state magistrate judge, to search McCoy’s computer and his car. The child pornography that was the subject of the charge to which McCoy pleaded guilty was found during a forensic investigation of the computer.
McCoy first challenges the District Court’s conclusion that the search of his computer was supported by probable cause. We review the court’s legal conclusion de novo and any supporting factual findings for clear error.
United States v. Gettel,
By definition, probable cause “deals ‘with probabilities. These are ... the factual and practical considerations of everyday life on which reasonable and prudent men ... act.’ ”
Id.
at 241,
As for the search of McCoy’s car, the warrant application did not provide any additional facts to support a finding of probable cause to search the vehicle specifically. That is, nothing was set out to indicate why Hutchinson thought there was a fair probability he would find child pornography in a search of McCoy’s car.
2
The District Court determined that the warrant application did not establish probable cause to search the vehicle. But the court decided that the good-faith exception to the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule applied in this case.
United States v. Leon,
It is clear from the evidence presented at the suppression hearing that the state magistrate, when authorizing the warrant, was not acting as a “rubber stamp” for Hutchinson in his quest to search the car.
Leon,
*865 The District Court’s denial of McCoy’s motion to suppress is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Robert W. Pratt, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa. Judge Pratt now serves as Chief Judge for the Southern District of Iowa.
. According to the District Court, the items retrieved from the car included “a pair of female toddler underwear, nude images of female adults, and a three-bladed knife.” Mem. Op. & Order of Oct. 26, 2004, at 7. It seems unlikely that any of these items would be used as evidence to prove that McCoy possessed child pornography, especially since the authorities found actual child pornography on his computer. But McCoy sought suppression in the District Court, and he appeals that court's denial, so we will decide the issue.
