Jefferson Dwain Butler appeals his conviction of unlawful possession of the component parts of a destructive device, a hand grenade, in violation of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5861(d) & 5871. We affirm.
Butler and his family resided in the compound of the Covenant, the Sword, and the Arm of the Lord (CSA), a paramilitary, white, Christian, supremacy group, the activities of which are described in some detail in
United States v. Ellison,
After the search, a federal grand jury returned an indictment against Butler charging violations of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5861(d) & 5871. The District Court 1 denied Butler’s motion to suppress evidence seized in the search of his residence, and the case went to trial. The jury found Butler guilty as charged. On appeal from his conviction, Butler challenges the District Court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence. He first contends that the search warrant was facially defective under the Fourth Amendment because it failed to describe with particularity the place to be searched and the items to be seized. Butler also asserts that the affidavit supporting the application for the warrant was insufficient to establish probable cause to search his particular residence.
In
Ellison,
we considered these same issues in the context of the search of the entire CSA compound.
Courts generally approve warrants that “provide reasonable guidance to the exercise of informed discretion of the officer executing the warrant.”
United States v. Paul,
We agree with the District Court that in the present case the warrant was as specific as it could be under the circumstances. The entire CSA compound clearly was suspect. As set forth in the affidavit accompanying the application for the search warrant, the informants stated that most of the occupants of the compound were armed and were involved in making firearms or explosives. They also stated that caches of firearms and explosives were hidden throughout the compound, including the church and the living quarters; that the stolen jewelry was distributed to a number of CSA members, each living in a different residence; and that the buildings were used as common property, with the leaders regularly making and changing housing assignments. It was impossible for the law enforcement agents to know *953 who lived in what dwellings within the compound because there were no individual property records or deeds, nor were there postal or utility records that would identify the occupants of the residences. Because everyone living in the compound was suspected of making or possessing illegal weapons and of storing them in their residences as well as in other places within the compound, the agents were justified in searching, as the warrant specified, all buildings and dwellings in which these items could be stored.
As to the items seized,
2
the specificity required in a warrant is flexible and will vary with the circumstances and the type of items involved.
Marvin v. United States,
probable cause is a flexible, commonsense standard. It merely requires that the facts available to the officer would “warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief” ... that certain items may be contraband or stolen property or useful as evidence of a crime____ A “practical, nontechnical” probability that incriminating evidence is involved is all that is required.
Id.
at 742,
Butler contends that several items were seized from his residence and introduced at trial which were not specified in the search warrant: military hand grenade spoons, firing pins, primers, and safety pins; two empty cans of smokeless powder and one empty can of black powder; evidence tags describing three non-electric blasting caps and a length of white safety fuse; a Montana driver’s license for Butler; a bill of sale and registration form for a Ford Pinto; a handbook entitled “Secret— Two Component High Explosive Mixtures and Improvised Shaped Charges”; and photographs of the interior and exterior of Butler’s residence.
3
Under the above rules, we find that the District Court properly held that the items seized were either sufficiently described in the warrant or fell within the plain view exception to the search warrant requirement. Although the component parts of hand grenades (powder, firing pins, fuses, etc.) were not specifically set forth in the warrant, we believe the generic reference in the warrant to explosives amply covers such component parts.
See Spinelli v. United States,
Under the totality of the circumstances as described here and in
Ellison,
we conclude that the magistrate had a substantial basis for finding that probable cause existed for a search of the compound and of all dwelling places therein.
Illinois v. Gates,
Notes
. The Honorable H. Franklin Waters, United States District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas.
. The search warrant described the items to be seized as
illegal firearms, explosives along with stolen jewelry and automobiles. Also, equipment used to make silencers and the conversion of weapons from semi-automatic to automatic status, records relating to the purchase and sale of firearms or the identity of fugitives on the property, and a weapon, that is, a knife, that may have been used in the murder of an individual in Oklahoma as more specifically set out in the attached affidavit.
Ellison, Designated Record at 13.
. It is not clear whether the photographs were found at Butler's residence or were taken by law enforcement agents during the search. For our purposes here, we assume they were found during the search.
