Reversed by published opinion. Judge TRAXLER wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINS and Judge Titus joined.
OPINION
Luis Perez was charged in a four-count indictment with narcotics and firearms offenses after law enforcement officers *459 searched his home pursuant to an informant’s tip. Perez filed a pretrial motion to suppress the evidence recovered in the search and his confession to the officers executing the search warrant. The district court granted Perez’s motion to suppress, holding that the warrant was not supported by probable cause and was thus invalid and that the good faith exception to the warrant requirement did not apply. The government appeals, and we reverse.
I.
On July 11, 2002, Deputy Kevin Unger, an officer employed by the Roane County, West Virginia, Sheriffs Department, was approached by Timothy Taylor while Un-ger was investigating a reported breaking and entering at the home of Taylor’s parents. At Taylor’s request, Unger spoke with him in private. Taylor revealed that ongoing drug-related activities had been occurring at the residence of Sarah Parkinson and Perez, who was Parkinson’s boyfriend, on Mount Hope Road in Roane County. Taylor occasionally visited Parkinson’s home because Parkinson was the mother of his girlfriend. Taylor told Un-ger that he witnessed Parkinson and Perez possessing and using large quantities of marijuana on several occasions. Unger spoke with Taylor for approximately 30 minutes and reduced the substance of their conversation to the following written statement, which was signed by Taylor and included his post-office box, date of birth, and social security number:
Myself and Stephanie Workman were living in the old school house on Mt. Hope. Sarah Parkinson McGlothlin, Stephanie’s mom, rented it to us. Sarah’s house is the two story white house on the same driveway as Rick Moores. Louis Perez lives there and her other daughter stays there. While at her house I’ve seen big bags of marijuana on several occasions. They have also smoked it around me on several occasions. I don’t want my girlfriend around this. I also would like my name to be confidential and anonymous.
I have read this statement and find it to be true and correct.
J.A. 17. The signed statement was dated July 11, 2002.
The next day, Unger prepared an affidavit to be submitted with his application for a search warrant, which recounted his conversation with Taylor: “This officer took a statement from a reliable and credible witness that stated on several occasions [he had] been to the residence [of Perez and Parkinson]. While there, [he] noticed several bags of marijuana and observed [Perez and Parkinson] smoking marijuana on several occasions at the above residence.” J.A. 18.
Unger presented to the magistrate his affidavit and the statement signed by Taylor. Additionally, Unger told the magistrate that Taylor indicated he had observed this marijuana use within a , few days of their July 11 conversation. Prior to submitting the application for a search warrant, Unger learned from Senior Trooper Doug Starcher, who was familiar with Perez, that Perez had been convicted of distributing cocaine in 1995; however, there is no record evidence that Unger passed this information along to the magistrate. The magistrate issued the search warrant, pursuant to which Unger, Starch-er, and other officers recovered marijuana, cocaine, drug paraphernalia, and firearms from the Mt. Hope residence identified by Taylor. Perez acknowledged responsibility for these items in response to questions from law enforcement officers.
Perez was indicted for possession with intent to distribute marijuana, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug *460 trafficking offense, and possession of a firearm by a felon. Perez moved to suppress the items yielded by the search as well as his confession. The district court granted the motion.
First, the district court determined that the search warrant was not supported by probable cause and was therefore invalid. The district court based this conclusion on its belief that “Unger lacked information concerning Taylor’s veracity or reliability” and “completely failed to corroborate any of the information provided by Taylor.” J.A. 90. “[B]ecause Taylor’s allegations of criminal misconduct provided the sole support for the issuance of the warrant,” J.A. 89, the district court reasoned that the magistrate judge “lacked a substantial basis to believe the known facts and circumstances were sufficient” to establish probable cause that “evidence of a crime would be found at Parkinson’s home.” J.A. 94.
Second, the district court considered whether, even if the search had been illegal, the evidence was admissible under the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule carved out in
United States v. Leon,
The government immediately appealed this ruling.
II.
Assuming without deciding that the district court correctly concluded the search warrant was invalid for lack of probable cause, we exercise our discretion to proceed directly to the question of good faith.
See Leon,
The “search of private property without proper consent” violates the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches “unless it has been authorized by a valid search warrant” or it falls within “certain carefully defined classes of eases” that permit warrantless searches.
Camara v. Municipal Court of San Francisco,
“Leon
teaches that a court should not. suppress the fruits of a search conducted under the authority of a warrant, even a ‘subsequently invalidated’ warrant,
*461
unless ‘a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the search was illegal despite the magistrate’s authorization.’ ”
United States v. Bynum,
Usually, searches conducted “pursuant to a warrant will rarely require any deep inquiry into reasonableness, for a warrant issued by a magistrate normally suffices to establish that a law enforcement officer has acted in good faith in conducting the search.”
Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted).
Leon,
however, identifies four circumstances in which an officer’s reliance on a warrant would not qualify as “objectively reasonable”: (1) when the issuing judge “was misled by information in an affidavit that the affiant knew was false or would have known was false except for his reckless disregard of the truth”; (2) when “the issuing magistrate wholly abandoned his judicial role in the manner condemned in
Lo-Ji Sales, Inc. v. New York,
A.
The core of the district court’s rejection of the good faith exception was premised upon the third circumstance identified by Leon — that the supporting affidavit was “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.” Id. The district court found that Unger submitted a “bare bones” affidavit that was so deficient that any “reasonably well [-]trained officer would have known the search was illegal, despite the Magistrate Judge’s authorization,” and that, in issuing the warrant, the magistrate essentially “acted as a rubber stamp for law enforcement.” J.A. 96. As set forth below, we cannot agree. 1
Although the concept of probable cause resists an exacting definition, it “exist[s] where the known facts and circumstances are sufficient to warrant a man of reasonable prudence in the belief that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found” in a particular place.
Ornelas v. United States,
. We conclude that Unger’s reliance on the warrant was objectively reasonable. Undeniably, the information supplied by Unger within the four corners of his affidavit leaves much to be desired. On its face, it does not identify the informant or even make clear whether the informant was known or anonymous. Moreover, the affidavit standing alone does not explain the basis for Unger’s conclusion that the source was “reliable and credible.” There are no details supplied by the affidavit itself that would explain the nexus between the informant and the alleged wrongdoers.
However, we are not limited to consideration of only the facts appearing on the face of the affidavit.
See Legg,
During the application process, Unger presented the magistrate with Taylor’s signed statement, which the affidavit explicitly referenced. Taylor’s statement was sufficiently detailed for the magistrate to conclude, first, that the information was supplied to Unger in person by a known witness. There is a substantial difference between an informant who deals with the authorities in person .and an anonymous phone caller. Indeed, “courts have had no difficulty distinguishing between cases involving face-to-face encounters with informants and cases involving anonymous tipsters.”
United States v. Christmas,
One additional point bears mentioning. The district court noted that the information supplied by Taylor to Unger was stale, indicating that the information supplied by Taylor was more than one year old. And, in fact, neither the affidavit nor Taylor’s statement indicates when Taylor observed the drug related activity. The district court, therefore, suggested that the magistrate “did not know the age of the information presented in the affidavit,” J.A. 91, which further eroded the magistrate’s basis for finding probable cause.
See United States v. McCall,
Although the conflicting testimony regarding what Taylor originally said about the freshness of the information may well be relevant to the theory that Unger knowingly or recklessly misled the magistrate, Perez does not make this argument. Moreover, this theory did not serve as one of the bases for the district court’s ruling, which rested instead on the court’s conclusion that the affidavit completely lacked any indicia of probable cause and that the magistrate that issued the warrant did not adequately perform its detached and neutral judicial function.
Our focus, therefore, is properly on the information presented to the magistrate. Taylor, of course, was not able to comment on what information was presented to the magistrate. At the suppression hearing, Unger’s uncontroverted testimony was that Unger stated orally to the magistrate that Taylor, during the July 11 meeting, indicated that Perez’s conduct had been “ongoing for a period of time,” and that Taylor had witnessed the events he described “within days” of his encounter with Unger. J.A. 62. As it is the only evidence of what was presented to the magistrate regarding the staleness of Taylor’s information, Unger’s reliance on the warrant was reasonable in this regard as well.
Cf. United States v. Edwards,
In light of the totality of the circumstances, Unger’s reliance on the warrant was objectively reasonable. The affidavit, when considered together with Taylor’s statement that was presented to the magistrate, was not “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.”
Leon,
B.
The district court’s conclusion that the
Leon
good faith exception does not apply to Unger’s “bare bones” affidavit was premised on our decision in
United States v. Wilhelm,
We held that the affidavit was insufficient to support the issuance of a search warrant for Wilhelm’s residence because it “depended on information from an unnamed informant” and offered only “con-clusory descriptions” rather than specific information that would establish the “informant’s truthfulness or reliability.” Id. at 120. Further, the tipster’s description of the criminal activity, as recounted by the affidavit, could have been provided by “anyone who occasionally watches the evening news,” without any knowledge of what was happening inside of the residence, and thus afforded no basis for a probable cause finding. Id. at 121'.
Next, we held that the good faith exception did not apply because the facts presented the third circumstance identified in
Leon
— the supporting “affidavit [is] so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.”
Leon,
In the present case, the district court found that Unger’s affidavit presented “few distinguishing features” from the “bare bones” Wilhelm affidavit, noting only that Unger had a “personal encounter with the informant.” J.A. 96. The district court, however, concluded that Unger’s “brief meeting [with Taylor] does nothing to transform the ‘bare-bones’ affidavit” into one upon which Unger could reasonably rely. J.A. 96.
Wilhelm
does not dictate the result reached by the district court. First, it is no small difference that Unger relied on information obtained in a face-to-face meeting with a witness who revealed his identity and social security number instead of the anonymous phone call at issue in
Wilhelm.
As previously noted, the circumstances necessarily surrounding a face-to-face meeting alone provide certain indi-cia of credibility that are lacking when the warrant is based solely on a telephone call from an anonymous, never-to-be-identified informant.
See DeQuasie,
Second, although
Wilhelm
did not find that the supporting affidavit was presented in bad faith, we observed that the officer’s “use of phrases such as ‘concerned citizen,’ ‘mature’ and ‘truthful demeanor’ strike this court as attempts to endue the affidavit with the appearance of genuine substance; this tactic suggests that [the officer] knew that probable cause was lacking, and thus that reliance on the resulting warrant was not reasonable.”
Wilhelm,
Third, Unger’s affidavit submitted with the warrant application, unlike the one in
Wilhelm,
was not a “bare bones” affidavit containing “wholly conclusory statements which lacked the facts and circumstances from which a judicial officer could have independently determined probable cause.”
DeQuasie,
Finally, for the reasons explained previously, the magistrate’s issuance of a search warrant pursuant to Unger’s application can in no sense be viewed as tantamount to “actfing] as a rubber stamp.”
Wilhelm,
III.
For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that Deputy Unger’s reliance on the search warrant for the contraband that precipitated Perez’s arrest was objectively reasonable under Leon. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the district court.
REVERSED
Notes
. Perez does not contend that Unger misled the magistrate with false information or that the warrant is so deficient on its face that no officer could reasonably believe it was valid.
. In
Wilhelm,
we rejected the government's argument that the affiant officer did, in fact, corroborate various details "because the
only
evidence presented to the state magistrate was contained in [the supporting] affidavit.”
