Eric Wayne Kelley entered a conditional plea of guilty to possession of child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4)(B), reserving the right to appeal the district court’s 1 denial of his motion to suppress evidence gathered during a warrant search of his home. On appeal, he also argues that the court imposed a substantively unreasonable twenty-year consecutive sentence. We affirm.
I. The Suppression Issue
On the day in question, Kelley was living in Sherwood, Arkansas, under an assumed name; he was wanted in Texas for sexual assault of a child. The United States Marshals Service learned of his likely whereabouts and alerted the Sherwood Police Department, providing a photo of Kelley and advising that he was believed to be keeping the company of a young Middle Eastern boy. Sherwood Police Officer Kevin Webb stopped Kelley for questioning as he drove away from his residence accompanied by a young boy matching the Marshals Service description. Kelley could not provide identification and was placed under arrest when he admitted he was the person in the Texas photo. While being taken to the police station, he repeatedly asked to call his sister, explaining that he needed a prescription for his eyes.
Kelley introduced the child as his “nephew.” The boy told Sergeant William Michaels that Kelley was “his friend.” Placed in a squad car to keep warm, the boy began crying, concerned he was in trouble. Sergeant Michaels brought the child to the stationhouse, where his mother joined them and consented to an interview. Embarrassed and fearful, the boy told the interviewing police officer that he was often in Kelley’s home, and that Kelley had sexually abused and taken nude photographs of the boy that the boy thought were downloaded to a computer in Kelley’s bedroom. Sergeant Michaels prepared and presented a warrant affidavit to a state court judge shortly after midnight, requesting that a night-time search for child pornography be authorized because “the objects to be seized are in danger of imminent removal.” The judge issued a warrant stating it could be executed day or night. Police executed the warrant at two o’clock that morning, seizing vast quantities of child pornography.
Kelley was tried and convicted of rape in state court based in part on evidence seized during the night-time search. The Supreme Court of Arkansas reversed, concluding that this evidence must be excluded because the warrant and affidavit lacked a sufficient factual basis to justify authorizing a night-time search under Arkansas Rule of Criminal Procedure 13.2(e).
Kelley v. State,
Kelley moved to suppress the evidence seized in his home arguing, in part, that the warrant affidavit lacked proper justification to search at night. At the suppression hearing, Sergeant Michaels testified that he told the issuing judge under oath that Kelley had been demanding to call his sister and, based on a prior experience, Michaels was worried that electronic files and other forms of child pornography that were the object of the warrant search would be moved or destroyed. This testimony was consistent with the state court record.
See Kelley,
We first put aside Kelley’s reliance on the Supreme Court of Arkansas ruling that Sergeant Michaels’s affidavit and the state court warrant failed to comply with Arkansas Criminal Rule 13.2(c). “[F]ederal courts do not suppress evidence seized by state officers in conformity with the Fourth Amendment because of state law violations.”
United States v. Appelquist,
Like Arkansas Criminal Rule 13.2(c), Rule 41(e)(2)(A)(ii) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides: “The warrant must command the officer to ... execute the warrant during the daytime, unless the judge for good cause expressly authorizes execution at another time.” However, as there was no federal involvement, Rule 41(e)(2)(A)(ii) did not govern the actions of the Sherwood Police officers and the state court judge who applied for, issued, and executed the warrant.
See Maholy,
The Fourth Amendment protects individuals from unreasonable searches and seizures. Police intrusion into the privacy of one’s home at night was a concern of the common law before the Fourth Amendment was adopted. Reflecting that concern, our first Congress by statute authorized only daytime searches in 1789.
See United States ex rel. Boyance v. Myers,
“With few exceptions,” the Supreme Court has required that police obtain a warrant before searching a person’s home.
Kyllo v. United States,
II. The Sentencing Issue
After the Supreme Court of Arkansas reversed Kelley’s conviction, he was retried, again convicted of rape, and sentenced to forty-seven years in prison. The Supreme Court of Arkansas affirmed.
Kelley v. State,
“[Sjubstantive appellate review in sentencing cases is narrow and deferential;] ... it will be the unusual case when we reverse a district court sentence — whether within, above, or below the applicable Guidelines range — as substantively unreasonable.”
United States v. Feemster,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable J. Leon Holmes, Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. We do not address the distinct question whether circumstances arising after issuance *918 of a daytime warrant may make night-time execution reasonable.
. Because the night-time search was not unreasonable, we need not consider, as we do when Rule 41(e)(2)(A)(ii) applies and has been violated, “whether the night search prejudiced the defendants or whether there was reckless disregard of the proper procedure for a night search by the officials involved.”
United States v. Berry,
