MEMORANDUM
I. INTRODUCTION
After two mistrials, Lacey Graves was convicted of armed bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2118(d). Presently before the Court is Graves’s Motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The motion presents two issues; First, whether trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move to suppress evidence obtained pursuant to facially invalid search warrants — the search warrants did not identify or incorporate by reference the items to be seized. Second, whether trial counsel was ineffective for failing to call Leslie Neal — a government witness at Graves’s first and second trials — as a defense witness at Graves’s third trial.
Because the record did not conclusively show that Graves was not entitled to relief, the Court held an evidentiary hearing on April 5, 2012. Following the hearing, the Court ordered additional briefing addressing the decisions in Groh v. Ramirez,
II. BACKGROUND
After two mistrials, Graves was convicted in November 2007 of armed bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(d). According to the government’s theory of the case at trial, Graves, with a mask and sunglasses covering his face, entered a Univest Bank, displayed a handgun, vaulted over the teller counter, and stole $6,421
A. The Eyewitnesses
Several bank employees who were working on the day of the robbery testified as to what they saw.
(a) Kimberly Krapf and Tara Detweiler Saw a Suspicious Woman and a Red Isuzu Rodeo
Branch manager Kimberly Krapf noticed a suspicious woman standing by the front entrance of the bank with a scarf over her head and face, looking into the glass lobby doors. (Trial Tr. 11/6/2007, at 38- 39.) The woman later drove away in a red Isuzu Rodeo. (Id. at 40, 99.) Before the car left the parking lot, Krapf alerted other еmployees to the suspicious activity, one of whom, Tara Detweiler, wrote down the license plate number of the Isuzu (although she was off by one letter). (Id. at 39- 40, 101-102; Trial Tr. 11/7/2007, at 34.) Later investigation by FBI Special Agent Kenneth Vincent revealed that the vehicle was registered to Graves. (Trial Tr. 11/7/2007, at 32-34.)
(b) Kimberly Buckley Saw the Robber
Shortly after the suspicious woman’s departure, the bank’s assistant manager Kimberly Buckley looked out the window of the bank’s break room and saw an African-American man approaching the bank. (Trial Tr. 11/6/2007, at 158-65.) She was able to look at him through open window blinds for one to two seconds before he covered his face with his umbrella. (Id. at 182-83.) It was dark and raining outside. (Id. at 183.) In observing the bank’s surveillance monitors, she saw him enter the bank, jump over the teller counter, and take money out of a teller’s drawer. (Id. at 185-87.)
Five days later, Special Agent Vincent showed Buckley a photo array that he had prepared with eight photos: one of Graves and seven “fillers.” (Id. at 195; 11/7/2007, at 45, 49-50.) All eight photos were presеnted to Buckley at one time on one sheet of paper. (Trial Tr. 11/7/2007, at 50; see also Government Trial Exhibit 14.) Special Agent Vincent told Buckley that the person she saw may not be among the pictures in the array. (Trial Tr. 11/7/2007, at 50.) The lighting behind Graves’s photo was slightly brighter than the lighting behind the fillers. (See Government Exhibit 14.) From this array, Buckley identified Graves as the person she observed from the break room.
The defense called Dr. Soloman Fulero, an expert on eyewitness identifications to counter Buckley’s testimony. He testified that there are three stages of memory: acquisition, retention, and retrieval, or in other words, “[p]utting it in, keeping it, and getting it back out.” (Id. at 137.) The defense attacked each of these stages of Buckley’s memory through Dr. Fulero’s testimony.
With respect to acquisition, Dr. Fulero testified that a dark rainy day could negatively affect a person’s ability to accurately remember an event. (Id. at 143-44.) He also testified regarding cross-racial identifications. He stated that people tend to be less accurate at identifying a person of a different race than their own. (Id. at 140-42.) For example, a white witness will not be as accurate identifying an African-American as he or she would be identifying another white person. (Id. at 141-42.)
With respect to retrieval, Dr. Fuerlo discussed the best practices to conduct photo line-ups. He stated that there were four aspects of presenting a witness a photo array that are important to increase accuracy. (Id. at 150-51.) First, the suspect should not stand out from the fillers. (Id. at 151-57.) Second, the witness should be instructed that the suspect may not be in the array. (Id. at 157-59.) Third, accuracy is increased by showing the witness the photos one at a time (“sequentially”) rather than аll at once (“simultaneously”). (Id. at 159-61.) Finally, the presentation should be “double blind.” (Id. at 161-63.) The person presenting the photo array to the witness should not know who the suspect is so as to not subconsciously communicate the identity of the suspect to the witness. (Id.) Defense counsel argued that Buckley’s photo identification was undermined based on all but the second factor. (Trial Tr. 11/8/2007, at 51-52.)
(c) Tara Detweiler Saw Part of the Robber’s Face
Tara Detweiler was the teller at. the register that was robbed. (Trial Tr. 11/6/2007, at 103-104.) . When the robber was behind the counter, she saw through a gap between his sunglasses and mask that he had light skin and freckles or moles on his cheeks. (Id. at 108.) This description is consistent with Graves’s facial features.
B. The Physical Evidence and the Warrants
Graves was arrested, and a few days later, Magistrate Judge Jacob B. Hart signed two warrants authorizing searches of Graves’s Isuzu Rodeo and the residence of Graves’s girlfriend, Leslie Neal. Each warrant was accompanied by a warrant application and an affidavit sworn by Special Agent Vincent.
When Graves was arrested, he had between $600 and $700 in cash on his person. (Trial Tr. 11/7/2007, at 62.) Recovered from the Isuzu were, inter alia, new tool sets, automotive repair equipment, and numerous receipts for the purchase of goods and services totaling $1,653.90. (Id. at 66-69.) Among the items seized from Neal’s residence were purchase receipts totaling $226.03 and a pair of men’s New Balance sneakers. (Id. at 69-70.)
When the robber vaulted over the counter, he left shoe impressions. (Trial Tr. 11/6/2007, at 203.) Michael Smith, an FBI forensic examiner specializing in shoe print examinations, compared the impressions recovered from the counter to the New Balance sneakers seized from Neal’s home. (Id. at 73.) He could not state conclusively that those New Balance sneakers made the prints on the counter. (Id. at 70.) However, he concluded that the impression was consistent with the New Balance sneakers; they could have left the prints. (Id. at 70, 77.)
C. Leslie Neal’s Testimony
Leslie Neal was called as a government witness at the first two trials but not at
III. LEGAL STANDARD
Graves claims that his trial counsel was ineffective. “Strickland v. Washington supplies the standard for addressing a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.” United States v. Smack,
This standard requires a two-part inquiry. “First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient,” that is, “that counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” Id. at 687-88,
To establish prejudice, the defendant must demonstrate that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Id. at 694,
IV. DISCUSSION
Graves originally claimed that his two trial attorneys were ineffective for failing to (A) move to suppress certain evidence based on a lack of particularity in the warrant, (B) call Leslie Neal to testify at the third trial, and (C) acquire and authenticаte original bank surveillance tapes. However, at the evidentiary hearing, he withdrew his claim based on failing to acquire and authenticate the surveillance tapes after it was demonstrated to counsel that the originals were materially identical to what was shown to the jury. (Apr. 5, 2012 Hearing Tr. at 15-16.) The Court will address the remaining two claims in turn.
A. Failing to Move to Suppress Evidence
Graves argues that counsel was ineffective for failing to move to suppress the
(a) Performance
The Court ordered briefing addressing the decisions in Groh v. Ramirez,
In Graves’s case, the sections in the warrants for listing the items to be seized were left blank. The items to be seized were listed in Attachment B to the affidavits accompanying the search warrants, but those lists were not incorporated into the warrants themselves. For that reason, the government concedes that “the search warrants are facially invalid.” (Government’s Second Supplemental Brief, at 3.) However, it argues that the search of the Isuzu was constitutional because of the automobile exception to the warrant requirement. Additionally, the government contends that the evidence resulting from the search of Neal’s home should not be suppressed due to the good faith exception. The Court will address each search in turn.
1. Search of the Isuzu and the Automobile Exception
As a general matter reasonable searches and seizures must be based upon probable cause and executed pursuant to a warrant. However, the automobile exception to the warrant requirement permits “warrantless searches of any part of a vehicle that may conceal evidence ... where there is probable cause to believe that the vehicle contains evidence of a crime.” United States v. Salmon,
[PJrobable cause can be, and often is, inferred by considering the type of crime, the nature of the items sought, the suspect’s opportunity for concealment and normal inferences about where a criminal might hide the fruits of his crime---- A court is entitled to draw reasonable inferences about where evidence is likely to be kept, based on the nature of the evidence and the type of offense.
United States v. Hodge,
Probable cause to search the Isuzu existed in this case. The bank employee saw Neal suspiciously looking into the bank and then drive away in the Isuzu shortly before the robbery. The Izusu was registered to Graves, who the bank’s assistant manager picked out of a photo line-up. Had defense counsel moved to suppress the evidence from the search of
2. Search of Neal’s Home and the Good Faith Exception
The government argues that evidence from the search of Neal’s home should not be suppressed because of the good faith exception. The government relies principally on Herring v. United States,
Based on the law at the time of Graves’s trial, the good faith exception does not apply. The Leon good faith exception provides that suppression of evidence “is inappropriate when an officer executes a search in objectively reasonable reliance on a warrant’s authority.” United States v. Williams,
1. Where the magistrate issued the warrant in reliance on a deliberately or recklessly false affidavit;
2. Where the magistrate abandoned his or her judicial ■ role and failed to perform his or her neutral and detached function;
3. Where the warrant was based on an affidavit so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable; or
4. Where the warrant was so facially deficient that it failed to particularize the place to be searched or the things to be seized.
Id. at 437-38; see also Leon,
The Supreme Court discussed the good faith exception and facially deficient warrants in Groh in the context of a qualified immunity claim.
Like the warrant in Groh, the warrant for the search of Neal’s home failed to specify any item to be seized. Nor did the warrant incorporate the list of items to be seized in Attachment B to the affidavit accompanying the search warrant. The section of the warrant for listing the items to be seized was left blank. The Court concludes that a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the search was illegal. The warrant was so facially deficient that the executing officers could not reasonably have presumed it to be valid. Accordingly, the good faith exception does not apply to this case. Had defense counsel moved to suppress the evidence because the search warrants did not identify or incorporate by reference the items to be seized, that motion would have been granted.
The Court next turns to the question whether there was a valid reason defense counsel did not move to suppress on that ground. “To overcome the Strickland presumption that, under the circumstances, a challenged action might be considered sound trial strategy, a habeas petitioner must show either that: (1) the suggested strategy (even if sound) was not in fact motivating counsel or, (2) that the actions could never be considered part of a sound strategy.” Thomas v. Varner,
At the evidentiary hearing, one of Graves’s trial lawyers stated that she did not see anything inappropriate or unlawful in the warrant application with respect to the search warrant’s description of the items to be seized. (Apr. 5, 2012 Hearing Tr. at 43-44.) Thus, defense counsel’s failure to move to suppress on particularity grounds was not based on trial strategy.
“All lawyers that represent criminal defendants are expected to know the laws applicable to their client’s defense.” See Osagiede v. United States,
(b) Prejudice
Generally, in assessing prejudice, the appropriate question is whether “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Strickland,
In Fretwell, defendant Bobby Ray Fret-well was convicted in Arkansas of capital felony murder.
Fretwell filed a federal habeas corpus petition challenging his sentence on ineffective assistance of counsel grounds because his attorney did not raise an objection based on Collins. Id. However, after the petition was filed, the United States Supreme Court overruled Collins in Lowenfield v. Phelps,
In Graves’s case, the government argues that under Herring v. United States,
The Court must first address the question of whether the evidence would be suppressed under Herring. If the evidence would be admissible under Herring, the current law, Graves’s would not have suffered “legitimate prejudice.” See Terry Williams,
1. Whether the Evidence Would Be Suppressed Under Herring
In certain circumstances, the remedy for a Fourth Amendment violation is the suppression of the evidence obtained as a result of the unconstitutional search. This principle of excluding evidence at trial is called the “exclusionary rule.” Herring involves the so-called “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule, which was established in United States v. Leon,
The Supreme Court has since expanded the “Leon good faith exception.” See Davis v. United States, - U.S. -,
Herring involves another extension of the good faith exception. In that case, defendant Bennie Dean Herring drove to the Coffee County Sheriffs Department to retrieve something from his impounded truck. Herring,
The Supreme Court ruled in Herring that the evidence from the search should not. be suppressed. Id. at 147-48,
There has been significant disagreement regarding the interplay between Herring and limitations on the good faith exception identified in Leon. The issue that has divided the courts is whether evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant that is so facially deficient that the executing officers cannot reasonably presume it to be valid may nevertheless be admissible under Herring if law enforcement’s conduct is not deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent. As to this question, there is disagreement among the circuits;
(i) The Circuit Split
On one side of the circuit split is the Sixth Circuit. That court has ruled, even after Herring, that еvidence should always be suppressed when obtained pursuant to a warrant that is so facially deficient that the executing officers cannot reasonably presume it to be valid. United States v. Lazar,
The Second Circuit reached the opposite result, concluding that courts must make an additional culpability determination before evidence obtained pursuant to a facially invalid warrant can be suppressed. In United States v. Rosa, police searched defendant Efrain Rosa’s home.
The Court next addresses the Third Circuit cases interpreting Herring.
(ii) The Disagreement in the Third Circuit
There has also been disagreement within the Third Circuit regarding Herring’s effect on the limitations to the good faith exception outlined in Leon.
In Virgin Islands v. John,
The Third Circuit outlined the limitations on the good faith exception, including the one relevant to Graves’s case (where warrants are facially invalid) and the one at issue in John itself: “where the warrant was based on an affidavit so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.” Id. at 418. The court stated that “[t]hese limited exceptions are consistent with the approach taken in Herring because each of these circumstances involves conduct that is deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent, and thus the benefits of deterring future misconduct outweigh the costs of excluding the evidence.” Id. (internal quotations and alterations omitted).
Referencing the limitation on the good faith exception applicable to warrants that lack indicia of probable cause, the court stated, “Policing this requirement easily passes the cost-benefit analysis set forth in Herring. Reliance on a warrant affidavit
However, in the non-precedential decision United States v. Wright, a different Third Circuit panel disagreed with, the John court’s characterization of Herring. According to that panel, while the good faith exception does not apply to facially invalid warrants, evidence still may not necessarily be suppressed. For the exclusionary rule to apply, police conduct must also be “deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent.” See Herring, 555 U.S. at 144,
In Wright, the area of the warrant application “face sheet” to list the items to be seized contained the words, “SEE ATTACHED AFFIDAVIT OF PROBABLE CAUSE.”
The district court in Wright ruled that the officers were not entitled to rely on the good faith exception because their search was based on a facially invalid warrant. Id. That court reasoned, “In Herring, the Supreme Court did not abandon or question its clear statement in Leon that ‘a warrant may be- so facially deficient — i.e., in failing to particularize the place to be searched or the things to be seized — that the executing officers cannot reasonably presume it to be valid.’ ... The Third Circuit repeated this rule, presuming it to be valid even in light of Herring.” United States v. Wright,
The Third Circuit disagreed with the district court in Wright. Specifically, the Wright panel stated that the district court’s “assumption that a facially invalid warrant automatically triggered a per se application of the exclusionary rule” was “erroneous.”
The government urges this Court to follow the Third Circuit’s decision in Wright and hold an evidentiary hearing to determine the subjective mental state of the officer who prepared the warrant to search Neal’s home. The government asserts that such a hearing will show that the deficiency in the warrant was not a result of deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent conduct. Consequently, according to the government, the evidence from the search would not be suppressed under Herring.
The Court disagrees with the government’s position that the subjective mental state of the officer is relevant. To the contrary, the Court concludes that the exclusionary rule applies in this case because the warrant was so facially deficient that the executing officers could not have reasonably presumed it to be valid.
This Court is faced with two competing Third Circuit interpretations of Herring. In John, the Third Circuit stated that the situations identified in Leon where the good faith exception does not apply are “consistent with the approach taken in Herring because each of these circumstances involves conduct that is deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent, and thus the benefits of deterring future misconduct outweigh the costs of excluding the evidence.”
The decision in Wright is non-precedential. Such opinions “are not binding precedent in this circuit.” Kolkevich v. Att’y Gen. of U.S.,
The Wright panel dismissed the John court’s discussion of Herring as dicta. This Court disagrees that John can be so easily disregarded. In John, the Third Circuit granted certiorari on the question of “whether the decision of the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands is inconsistent with Herring .... ” Id. at 415. Thus, it was squarely faced with the question of how Herring affected the pre-existing law on the good faith exception. As discussed above, the Supreme Court in Leon set forth four situations in which the good faith exception does not apply. See Leon,
That reasoning applies equally to the other limitations on the good faith exception outlined in Leon, including the one at issue in this case: where a warrant is so facially deficient that the executing officers could not reasonably have presumed it to
The Wright panel also faulted the district court for its “conflation of the similar-but-separate good faith exception and exclusionary rule doctrines.”
Moreover, this Court agrees with the Third Circuit in John and the district court in Wright that Herring did not alter the prior state of the law concerning the limitations on the good faith exception outlined in Leon. Herring itself is not entirely clear on what role the subjective mental state of a law enforcement officer should play in determining whether the good faith exception should apply. At one point in the opinion, the Supreme Court states that “the exclusionary rule serves to deter deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent conduct.”
However, at another point, the Court in Herring steps back from this broad language, stating, “The pertinent analysis of deterrence and culpability is objective, not an inquiry into the subjective awareness of arresting officers. We have already held 'that 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 in light of all of the circumstances.” Id. at 145,
Given this all of these statements in Herring, this Court concludes that Herring did not undermine that part of Leon in which the Court stated that the good faith exception is not applicable where a warrant is “so facially deficient — i.e., in failing to particularize the place to be searched or the things to be seized — that the executing officers cannot reasonably presume it to be valid.” See Leon,
In sum, this Court concludes that where a warrant is so facially deficient that the executing officers could- not reasonably have presumed it to be valid, as in this case, the good faith exception does not apply. Such conduct is at a minimum,
2. Whether There is a Reasonable Probr ability that the Result of the Proceeding Would Have Been Different
To satisfy the traditional prejudice prong of the Strickland test, a petitioner must show that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Strickland,
The evidence that would have been suppressed are a pair of men’s New Balance sneakers and receipts for purchases totaling just over $225. Graves’s trial was a close case, resulting in two mistrials before a conviction. Nevertheless, when considering the totality of the circumstances, there is not a reasonable probability that, had the evidence from Neal’s home .not been available at trial, the outcome would have been different.
The suppressed evidence did not have a strong impact on the trial. Even without the receipts for approximately $225 worth of purchases found in Neal’s home, the government still would have been able to present to the jury the receipts for approximately $1,650 worth of purchases found in the Isuzu. Moreover, the receipts were not even strong evidence of post-robbery spending because they only accounted for a fractiоn of the over $6,000 stolen from the bank.
The suppression of the New Balance sneakers similarly does not undermine confidence in the jury’s verdict. FBI forensic examiner Michael Smith testified that he could not make a positive identification that the New Balance sneakers made the impression left on the bank teller’s counter. Rather, he could only conclude that the impression was consistent with the New Balance sneakers — that it was possible they could have left the impression. Additionally, one witness testified that the man she saw rob the bank was wearing boots, not sneakers, which undermines the importance of the sneakers to Graves’s conviction. (Nov. 6, 2007 Trial Tr. at 57-60.)
There was ample evidence of Graves’s guilt. The core of the trial was Kimberly Buckley’s identification. Buckley stated that she saw Graves’s face before he put on his mask only moments before the robbery. Moreover, the government presented evidence that Graves’s car was at the bank shortly before the robbery. A woman seen suspiciously looking into the bank left the parking lot in that car. Finally,
The receipts and sneakers recovered from Neal’s home played only a small part in the trial. There is not a reasonable probability that, without that evidence, Graves would not have been found guilty. Thus, Graves’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim based on the failure to move to suppress the evidence from Neal’s home based on lack of particularity in the warrant is denied.
B. Failing to Call Neal as a Witness
Graves also argues that counsel was ineffective for not calling Neal as a witness in the third trial. The Court rejects that argument.
In evaluating counsel’s performance, a reviewing court must make “every effort ... to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruсt the circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.” Strickland, 466, U.S. at 689. Moreover, there is a “strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance; that is, the defendant must overcome the presumption that, under the circumstances, the challenged action ‘might be considered sound trial strategy.’” Id.
In this case, counsel testified to the disadvantages of calling Neal as a witness: She placed Graves in the area at the time of the robbery and her testimony was not particularly credible. According to her version of events, at Graves’s behest she drove to the bank parking lot to purchase marijuana, but the seller did not immediately show up. When she looked through the bank window she said she was not “casing” the bank, but rather looking for a clock to determine the time.
Trial counsel weighed the positives and negatives of Neal’s testimony. They made a strategic decision not to call Neal as a witness. (See Apr. 5, 2012 Hearing Tr. at 35-36, 44-45.) This decision was not so unreasonable as to be constitutionally deficient. Thus, Graves’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim based on the failure to call Neal as a witness is denied.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Graves’s Motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 is denied. An appropriate order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 27th day of June, 2013, upon consideration of Defendant’s Motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence by a Person in Federal Custody (Document No. 215, filed October 6, 2010) and the related filings of the parties, following a hearing on April 5, 2012, for the reasons set forth in the Memorandum dated June 27, 2013, IT IS ORDERED as follows:
1. Defendant’s Motion under § 2255 is DENIED;
2. The Court ISSUES a certificate of appealability with respect to defendant’s claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move to suppress the evidence found in the search of Leslie Neal’s home due to the fаilure of the government to list the items to be seized in the search warrant or to incorporate a list of such items in the search warrant. The certificate of appealability includes, but is not limited to, the issue of whether evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant that is so facially deficient that the executing officers cannot reasonably presume it to be valid may nevertheless be admissible under Herring
A certificate of appealability WILL NOT ISSUE with respect to any other claim because reasonable jurists would not debate whether the other portions of the motion state a valid claim of the denial of a constitutional right as required under 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2). See Slack v. McDaniel,
3. Copies of the two warrant packages shall be docketed by the Deputy Clerk.
Notes
. For further background on the case, see United States v. Graves,
. Graves moved to suppress this out-of-court identification, which the Court dеnied by Order dated June 21, 2006 (Document No. 42).
. A copy of each "warrant package” shall be docketed by the Deputy Clerk.
. Compare United States v. Lazar,
. Compare Virgin Islands v. John,
. United States v. Rosa,
. As noted above, Judge Kaplan — who joined the decision in Rosa — changed his mind upon reading the petition for rehearing en banc. Rosa,
