In this criminal case, the district court suppressed certain evidence, ruling that the items seized were beyond the scope of the officers’ warrant and did not fall within the plain view exception to the fourth amendment. The government appeals the pretrial suppression order pursuant to 18 U.S. C. § 3731. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
On November 21, 1985, a state trooper, Robert Friend, obtained warrants to search various premises frequented by defendant-appellee Joseph Rutkowski: Rutkowski’s home, summer cottage, and boat house. 1 The warrants described the objects to be seized as “stolen handguns, jewelry and coins.” A supporting affidavit explained that the items had been taken in a Brock-ton, Massachusetts housebreak some seven months earlier. The affidavit incorporated the police report (which, in turn, limned the circumstances of the heist and the nature of the purloined property).
Friend, in command of a decemvirate of lawmen, executed the search warrant later that day. By invitation, Special Agent Daryl Diotte of the United States Postal Service accompanied the search party. The search, which covered Rutkowski’s apartment, a common basement in the apartment house, and a detached garage, began shortly after 3:00 p.m. During roughly six hours of exploration, the officers seized over 300 items, including tools, electronic gear, twelve pounds of platinum, a bag of jewelry, a gun, and miscellaneous household effects. As matters turned out, none of the items — including the jewelry and the weapon — had been described in the warrant paperwork or taken in the Brockton burglary.
The platinum is the cynosure of this appeal. The troopers came across it approximately five hours into the search. Behind a layer of wall insulation in the basement, a coffee can was found; inside the coffee can were several envelopes; inside the envelopes were pieces of what appeared to be virgin metal. Friend testified that he was aware that some platinum had been stolen from a United States Post Office in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Although he was unsure of the composition of the metal strips, he seized them. At search’s end, he contacted Diotte (who had left Rutkowski’s apartment earlier) to tell him of the discovery. A day or two thereafter, Friend brought the metal to the State Police laboratory, where it was identified for the first time as platinum. Friend then provided Diotte with samples for more sophisticated analysis. Eventually, the authorities concluded that the seized pieces had been stolen from the post office.
A federal grand jury indicted Rutkowski for unlawful possession of matter stolen from the mail, i.e., the platinum, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1708. He promptly moved to suppress, claiming that seizure of the platinum transgressed his constitutional rights. Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court ordered suppression, rejecting the government’s argument that the seizure was lawful under the plain view doctrine. United States v. Rutkowski, Cr. No. 88-103-H (D.Mass. June 24, 1988). This appeal followed.
II. PLAIN VIEW
The plain view doctrine constitutes an exception to the warrant requirement of the fourth amendment. Under certain circumstances, evidence discovered in plain view may be lawfully seized even though the police were not originally authorized to search for it.
See Arizona v. Hicks,
We will reverse a district court’s decision as to the availability of the plain view exception only for clear error.
United States v. Doherty,
Justifiable Presence
Although we acknowledge that Rutkowski has consistently questioned the validity of the search warrant, we believe that contention to be shaky and decline to address it. At least for now, we assume the warrant’s validity. Thus, we regard the troopers’ entry into the dwelling as lawful. What is more, there is no meaningful evidence that the search exceeded the scope and intensity which the warrant authorized. Friend had a right to be where he was, looking at what he was looking at, when he came across the pieces of metal: after all, the warrant authorized a search of the entire premises for easily-hidden objects like jewelry and coins. In executing the warrant, therefore, the troopers had every right to examine the basement and to inspect the area behind the wallboard. They also had a right to look inside both the coffee can and the envelopes. As we have said:
As a general proposition, any container situated within residential premises which are the subject of a validly-issued warrant may be searched if it is reasonable to believe that the container could conceal items of the kind portrayed in the warrant.
United States v. Gray,
In sum, the first requirement for application of the plain view doctrine was clearly
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met. On this record, there is no legitimate reason to question that “the seizing officer [had] a prior justification for being in a position to see the [platinum].”
Johnston I,
Immediate Awareness
We next consider the district court’s conclusion that “the incriminating nature of the platinum was not immediately apparent.” This conclusion, we think, is eminently supportable. 2
The principle upon which the “immediate awareness” prong of the plain view exception operates is akin to that underlying the incandescent light bulb. When an officer spots an object not described in the warrant, authority to seize depends upon knowledge — the extent to which bits and bytes of accumulated information then and there fall into place. The sum total of the searchers’ knowledge must be sufficient to turn on the bulb; if the light does not shine during the currency of the search, there is no “immediate awareness” of the incriminating nature of the object. Put in more conventional terms, the officers’ discovery of the object must so galvanize their knowledge that they can be said, at that very moment or soon thereafter, to have probable cause to believe the object to be contraband or evidence.
See Hicks,
In this case, the district court concluded that the light bulb had not been electrified. Given the calculus of probable cause and the uncertainties which pervade the record, we are unable to say that the court was clearly wrong. At the outset, we remark the court’s finding that Friend — a person who possessed no expertise in identifying precious metals — did not recognize the platinum as platinum when he seized it. The court also found that the platinum was not determined to have been stolen until a “much later” time. These are findings of fact, sufficiently record-rooted to command our respect. That being the case, it becomes surpassingly difficult to posit error in the court’s follow-on finding that, whatever suspicions Friend harbored regarding the envelopes’ contents, there was no probable cause at the time of seizure. While the evidence in this record did not compel the district court to conclude that the government failed to carry its burden, we believe the evidence plainly permitted such a conclusion.
To be sure, “ ‘[p]robable cause’ need not be tantamount to ‘proof beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ”
United States v. Hoffman,
We turn to the facts and the reasonable inferences sustainable therefrom. The incriminating nature of the metal seems to have been considerably less than apparent. In this connection, we think it significant that possession of platinum is not itself illegal. Furthermore, when Friend found the metal in the envelopes, he was not able to identify it as platinum — much less to identify it as stolen platinum. 3 And, although Friend did testify to an awareness that platinum had been stolen from a Pennsylvania post office, he did not advance any reason to connect Rutkowski with that robbery.
Also, the record can plausibly be read to support the idea that whatever awareness the troopers came to possess was gradual rather than immediate. By Friend’s own account, determining the metal’s inculpato-ry nature was a bifurcated process, begun after seizure and not completed for several days. Friend did not consult Diotte until the search was over. At that juncture, the postal inspector was unable to identify the strips or determine whether they were stolen. The district court could well have found that 48 hours elapsed before the metal was authoritatively identified as platinum; and that it took a much longer time to ascertain that the metal comprised the platinum stolen during the post office robbery. Taking the entire mise-en-scéne into account, it cannot be said that the facts available to Friend before the search’s conclusion would necessarily have led a reasonably cautious lawman to believe that the metal strips were stolen property.
We summarize succinctly what the record tells us. Here, unlike in certain of the cases relied on by the United States,
see infra,
the totality of the circumstances fails to energize the plain view exception. There is no showing either that the seized property was incriminating
by virtue of its intrinsic nature
or that some discernible nexus existed between the seized items and the criminal activity underlying the outstanding warrant, making the metal’s incul-patory character apparent. Given the fact that neither the discoverer nor the “expert” with whom he first consulted was able to identify the metal or determine its provenance
at the time of the search,
the district court’s deduction that the metal strips’ incriminating nature was not immediately apparent cannot be upset.
Compare, e.g., United States v. Szymkowiak,
Before leaving this subject, we take a moment to point out why, in our judgment, the government’s three lighthouse cases are distinguishable. In
United States v. Aguirre,
we upheld the seizure, without a warrant, of keys found in plain sight. We explained that “the material contained in the original warrant went a long way toward furnishing the necessary factual predicate [to establish probable cause]. The obvious connection between the keys and the plot closed any remaining gap in the circle.”
In
Johnston I,
the issue on appeal was whether the searchers “ha[d] the knowledge based on facts
available to them at the time of the search,
of [the seized] items' criminal nature.”
Appellant’s reliance upon
United States v. Meyer,
III. CONCLUSION
Perhaps, if viewing the case through a fresh glass, we might have seen the bulb glowing earlier and more brightly, thereby altering the outcome of this suppression motion. But, whether or not we, if sitting as a court of first impression, would have called the same tune is beside the point. To a large degree, factual matters are for the district court.
See, e.g., Reliance Steel Products Co. v. National Fire Ins. Co.,
We need go no further. Following an examination of the record as a whole, and mindful of the need for courts to delineate exceptions to the fourth amendment’s warrant requirement “jealously and carefully,”
Coolidge,
Affirmed.
Notes
. This appeal concerns only the search of Rut-kowski’s principal residence in Fall River, Massachusetts. Accordingly, we will not refer again to the companion searches.
. The district court likewise found that "discovery of the platinum was anything but inadvertent.” The viability of this conclusion seemingly presents a much closer question. Inasmuch as the "immediate awareness” criterion was not met, however, it is unnecessary to consider whether inadvertency was also lacking. See supra at 5 and cases cited (to invoke plain view exception, prosecution must prove existence of all prerequisites).
. His words were these: "I didn’t know whether it was gold, platinum, boronium, whatever, but I mean I may have guessed that it might be platinum.”
. At the suppression hearing, Friend admitted that he had no prior reason to suspect Rutkow-ski of involvement in the Pennsylvania heist or in theft of platinum. He had originally invited Diotte to join the search party not because of any such suspicions, but because he had (for some unspecified reason) formed a belief that appellee might be in possession of counterfeit stamps.
