ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
On May 22, 1984, after oral argument, we filed our opinion in these cases.
United States v. Little,
On July 5, 1984, before the time for petitioning for rehearing expired,
2
the Supreme Court decided
United States v. Leon,
— U.S. -,
The petition for rehearing is granted. 3 We hold that Leon does apply to these cases, that the officers who executed the warrant in question behaved in an objectively reasonable fashion, and that no material issues of fact exist that would make an additional hearing necessary on defendants’ motion to suppress. The Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule, as it has now been authoritatively defined, does not apply here, and the judgments of conviction are therefore affirmed.
I.
Leon
holds that “evidence obtained in objectively reasonable reliance on a subsequently invalidated search warrant,” — U.S. at-,
The first question is whether
Leon,
which was not the law (or was not thought to be) when defendants’ allegedly criminal conduct took place, when this warrant was issued and executed, when this case was tried, or when we initially decided this appeal, has any application at all to Harmon’s and Sager’s situations.
4
The defendants say no, and cite us to
United States v. Johnson,
The proposition that
Leon
was a clear break with the past gives us no trouble at all. But we cannot accept the rest of defendants’ argument. It rests on a reading of
Johnson
that takes words and phrases completely out of context and attempts to fit them into a situation wholly foreign to that for which they were written. The question in
Johnson
was whether
Payton v. New York,
Here, of course, the situation is reversed. The new rule
{Leon)
is less favorable to defendants than the old one
{Weeks)
and more supportive of police conduct. The authorities, far from resisting its application, seek it avidly. And application of
Leon
will not infringe on anyone’s reliance interest. The defendants do not claim that they planned to fly drugs in from Jamaica in reliance on any set of rules having to do with the introduction of evidence in criminal cases. We faced much the same question in our prior opinion in this very case. When the warrant in question here was issued, the sufficiency of affidavits based on informants’ tips was governed by the veracity and basis-of-knowledge tests set out in
Aguilar v. Texas,
Defendants did not plan any of their own conduct in reliance on rules of law governing the requisite specificity of affidavits for search warrants. It is therefore not unfair to them to apply the new rule.
United States v. Little,
There is some recent evidence that the Supreme Court would take the same position. In
Massachusetts v. Upton,
— U.S. -,
We hold that the
Johnson
rules of retro-activity do not control in this very different area. We turn instead to the traditional rule restated in
Solem v. Stumes,
II.
Defendants contend that even if Leon applies in principle, they come within three of the exceptions contained in the Supreme Court’s opinion. Specifically, they argue that this particular affidavit for warrant so clearly failed to establish probable cause that no objectively reasonable officer could have relied upon it; that the affidavit contained material misstatements of fact, either known to the affiant to be false, or included in the affidavit with reckless disregard of truth or falsity; and that the issuing magistrate was not neutral and detached, but acted as a mere “rubber stamp.” In the alternative, defendants contend that they are at least entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the application of some or all of these exceptions, and that we should not decide the issues against them on the present record. 8 We deal with each of the claimed exceptions in turn.
1. Defendants correctly point out that the government did not argue in the District Court that the officers who executed the warrant did so in “good faith.” It is perfectly true, therefore, that the question of the officers’ subjective good faith has not been litigated. This question, of course, is one of fact, and it normally should not be decided by an appellate court, especially when no evidentiary hearing on the question has taken place.
Leon,
however, does not turn on “good faith” in this sense. Although courts and lawyers have for some time discussed the proposed “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule, and although
Leon
is said, in some short-hand descriptions, to have adopted this exception, that is not at all what the Supreme Court has done. The Court, in fact, has been at pains to explain that it is objective reasonableness, not subjective good faith, that is important. “We emphasize that the standard of reasonableness we adopt is an objective one.”
Leon,
We see no reason for an additional evi-dentiary hearing on this issue. All of the facts relevant to the question of objective reasonableness have been fully ventilated. Defendants do not seem to suggest any new fact relevant to this issue that is not already in the record. Application of the objective-reasonableness standard is really more akin to the application of a new legal criterion to the same facts, than it is to the decision of a new question of fact. We could of course remand to the District Court for it to determine this question in the first instance, but the record is complete, and the issue has been fully briefed, and we see no reason for such a circuitous procedure. In our view, it is entirely prop *1266 er for us to address this issue and decide it on the present record.
Doing so, we have little difficulty in concluding that the officers here did behave in an objectively reasonable fashion. Our previous opinion fully details the facts and circumstances of this case and explains at some length what we believed (and still believe) to be the deficiencies in the affidavit. It must be said, though, that the case was a close one. Although the panel was unanimous, the District Court
9
went the other way, so it must be said here; as it was in
Leon,
that “[t]he affidavit ... provided evidence sufficient to create disagreement among thoughtful and competent judges as to the existence of probable cause.”
2. It is suggested that the affidavit contained misstatements of fact, that these misstatements were material, and that the officer either knew that certain parts of the affidavit were false or acted with reckless disregard of whether they were true 6r not. This of course is not a new argument.
Franks v. Delaware,
3. Defendants claim they should have an opportunity to show that the magistrate who issued the warrant abandoned his neutral and detached position and acted as a rubber stamp. The case cited by the Supreme Court in
Leon
to illustrate this exception is instructive. In
Lo-Ji Sales, Inc. v. New York,
He allowed himself to become a member, if not the leader, of the search party which was essentially a police operation. Once in the store, he conducted a generalized search under authority of an invalid warrant; he was not acting as a judicial officer but as an adjunct law enforcement officer. When he ordered an item seized because he believed it was obscene, he instructed the police officers to seize all ‘similar’ items as well, leaving determination of what was ‘similar’ to the officers’ discretion.
Id.
at 327,
Defendants have not offered to prove anything of the kind here. Instead, they argue simply that the affidavit was so insufficient that any magistrate who would have acted upon it favorably must have *1267 been a rubber stamp. This is only another way of phrasing the argument that no one who relied upon the affidavit could have been objectively reasonable, an argument that we have already rejected. We do not believe that the magistrate who issued this warrant was guilty of the kind of misconduct that the Supreme Court evidently had in mind in Leon and Lo-Ji.
III.
We reaffirm our previous holding that the affidavit was insufficient to establish probable cause, and that the magistrate’s order issued in response to it was invalid. Under Leon, however, because the officers behaved themselves in an objectively reasonable fashion, the evidence seized under the unconstitutional order cannot be suppressed. Our previous direction that the convictions of Harmon and Sager be reversed is set aside on rehearing, and these convictions are now
Affirmed.
Notes
. The opinion covered appeals by three defendants: Billy Gene Little, John Roger Sager, and Jay Houston Harmon. Little’s conviction was affirmed, and his case is no longer before this Court.
. We had extended the time on motion of the United States.
. This action by the panel makes the government’s suggestion for rehearing en banc moot. Defendants are of course free to file a timely petition for rehearing, with or without suggestion for rehearing en banc, directed to this, the second panel opinion in these cases.
. Defendants put some emphasis on the fact that the government did not question the exclusionary rule in this case until it filed its petition for rehearing. Ordinarily arguments raised for the first time on rehearing will not be considered. But here the argument is advanced in support of the judgment below, and defendants have had a full and fair opportunity to oppose it in their responses to the government’s petition. We review judgments, not opinions, and we may affirm a judgment on any ground supported by the record, whether or not that ground was urged below or passed on by the District Court.
. Harmon’s and Sager’s cases were not yet final, in this sense, when
Leon
was decided. "Final" for this purpose means that the time for petitioning for certiorari had .elapsed, or a petition for certiorari had been finally denied. See
United States v. Johnson, supra,
. ‘‘[H]eretofore, without discussion, we have applied new constitutional rules to cases finalized before the promulgation of the rule.”
Linklet-ter,
. In at least one of these cases, United States v. Cassity, the government's petition for certiorari, which we have obtained and examined, does not even raise the question of whether the exclusionary rule should be modified. The Supreme Court’s order nevertheless invites the government to avail itself of Leon when the case gets back to the Sixth Circuit on remand.
. Defendants do not claim that the fourth Leon exception, covering warrants that on their face fail to describe the places to be searched or the persons or things to be seized with sufficient particularity, applies here.
. The Hon. George Howard, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern and Western Districts of Arkansas.
