Marcus Robertson appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence. Robertson claims that the warrant authorizing seizure of the evidence was too general, that no exception to the warrant requirement permitted the seizures, and that the government exceeded the scope of the warrant. We hold that the warrant was sufficiently particular and that the federal agents reasonably relied on the warrant even if it was too broad. However, we also hold that the agents wrongfully seized two items that were not covered by the warrant. We therefore affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand to the district court.
BACKGROUND
At 2:00 a.m. on January 29, 1998, Marcus Robertson and another man approached Thomas Ziemba while he was unloading his car in a motel parking lot. They demanded his car keys and wallet, then hit him on the head with a pistol. Robertson’s companion drove off in Ziemba’s car.
Later that morning federal agents found Ziemba’s car in the parking lot of the apartment building where Robertson was living. All of Ziemba’s personal belongings, which he had packed in his car because he was moving, were missing.
In the evening one government agent interviewed Robertson, who identified himself as Dennis Howard, in the apartment where Robertson had been living. Robertson said he didn’t know anything about Ziemba’s car, but the agent noticed several items in the kitchen: a Braun Aromatic box, a red and white plastic ice chest, a green rubberized bag with clothes in it, and yellow jumper cables.
The agent then sought a detailed description of the stolen property from Ziemba, but could not find him until the next morning. Ziemba told the agent that the property missing from his car included those four items, but he could not recall and specifically describe the rest of his things, most of which were clothing. The agent then prepared an affidavit and application for a warrant to search Robertson’s apartment. The court issued the warrant that day, authorizing the agents to search for and seize the four items that the agent specifically mentioned “and other instrumentalities and fruits of the crime of armed carjacking.”
That evening at 9:00 the agents began the search. After a protective sweep during which no evidence was seized, the agents located the renter, Christelle Green. One of them interviewed Ms. Green in the kitchen while the others searched the apartment. The agents searched the entire apartment but did not find the four specific items listed in the warrant.
After failing to find the four items, an agent left to bring Ziemba to the apartment. The agents brought Ziemba through the apartment and had him identify his property. Ziemba identified several things that the agents then seized: two dumbbells, a leather jacket, two pans, a measuring cup, nine books, and a trash can.
The agents also seized several other items: a .22' revolver, a camel head container with ammunition and coins inside, three traffic tickets issued to William E. Winder, photos of Robertson and others displaying gang signals and signs, and a book with a receipt to Ziemba sticking out of it.
After a grand jury indicted Robertson for carjacking and related crimes, the court denied Robertson’s motion to suppress the evidence, holding that the warrant was sufficiently specific and that the items not covered by the warrant were in plain view. Robertson appealed to this court.
DISCUSSION
We must accept the district court’s findings of fact unless clearly erroneous.
United States v. McAlpine,
*1033 I. The Warrant’s Specificity
The Fourth Amendment requires warrants to describe particularly the things to be seized, so that “nothing is left to the discretion of the officer executing the warrant.”
Stanford v. Texas,
In general, a warrant is sufficiently specific if it “enables the searcher to reasonably ascertain and identify the things authorized to be seized.”
United States v. Wolfenbarger,
Even if generic descriptions are necessary, however, “the fourth amendment requires that the government describe the items to be seized with as much specificity as the government’s knowledge, and circumstances allow, and “warrants are conclusively invalidated by their substantial failure to specify as nearly as possible the distinguishing characteristics of the goods to be seized.’ ”
United States v. Leary,
The warrant in this case differs from those authorizing seizure of any evidence relating to violations of broad statutes.
See id.
at 601-02; Voss,
II. Good Faith Exception
Even if the warrant was not specific enough, the court should not suppress the evidence because the agents seized it in objectively reasonable reliance on the warrant.
See United States v. Leon,
Robertson’s only claim that the agents should not have relied on the warrant is that it was “so facially deficient—i.e., in failing to particularize the place to be searched or the things to be seized—that the executing officers [could not] reasonably presume it to be valid.”
Leon,
“A reasonably well-trained officer should know that a warrant must provide guidelines for determining what evidence may be seized.”
Leary,
III. Ziemba’s Identification of His Property
Robertson complains that the officers improperly used Ziemba to establish probable cause at the scene. Federal law permitted the agents to use Ziemba’s help in executing the search warrant by identifying the items covered by the warrant.
See
18 U.S.C. § 3105;
United States v. Clouston,
Robertson also argues that the agents unlawfully extended the search by going to get Ziemba after they had searched the entire apartment and found none of the specific items listed in the warrant.
See Horton v. California,
IV. Evidence Outside the Warrant
The police seized three items that were not covered by the warrant: the traffic tickets, the gang photos, and the camel head container with ammunition inside. These were not “fruits” of the carjacking because they obviously were not Ziemba’s. Nor were they “instrumentalities,” because Robertson did not use them in any way to perform the carjacking.
The court must suppress the traffic tickets and the photos because the agents were not justified in seizing them without a warrant. The plain view exception to the warrant requirement allowed the police officers to seize the camel head container with ammunition inside, because its “incriminating character” was “immediately apparent.”
Horton,
We therefore hold that the district court correctly denied Robertson’s motion to suppress, except for the traffic tickets and photos, and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
