Max Scharfman appeals from his conviction, after a trial before Judge Edward C. McLean in the Southern District of New York, of unlawful possession of furs stolen from an interstate shipment in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 659.
Scharfman does not question the sufficiency of the evidence nor does he assert any other ground for the reversal of his conviction except that all of the physical evidence admitted at his trial was seized during an illegally conducted search. Two pre-trial motions to suppress the evidence were denied. The second motion was made after the decision in Spinelli v. United States,
On November 13, 1967, a Railway Express Agency International (REA) truck loaded with several hundred fur garments and destined for out of state buyers was hijacked at gun point in New York City. Some months later an unnamed informant told FBI agents that furs from that shipment could be found at two stores, Rosalie Furs, Inc. in New Rochelle and a Freeport location housing Rosalie Furs, Inc. and H. Appel Furs of Freeport, Inc. The informant had previously helped agents secure four convictions and was himself an experienced furrier. His tip was corroborated by Herbert Perlman, an employee of one of the shippers whose furs were hijacked. He visited the Rosalie store in New Rochelle and observed a “natural ranch mink coat” which he positively identified as having been a part of the hijacked shipment. FBI agents also discovered that the two stores were owned by Scharfman and one Frank Moccardi. United States Commissioner Earle N. Bishopp issued warrants for the search of these two premises on the basis of affidavits by FBI Agents Kilcommons and Fusco reciting the above facts. The affidavits sought, and the warrants granted, permission to search for books and records used as instrumentalities of the crime as well as the garments. 1 The two premises were searched on March 20, 1968 by Special Agents of the FBI. Index cards and large quantities of furs were seized from each store; in addition, a binder of consignment memoran-da was taken from the Freeport establishment.
We see little merit to appellant’s argument that probable cause for
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the search did not exist. The reliability of the informant was demonstrated by his knowledge of the underlying crime, his knowledge of the fur industry, and information which he supplied in the past and which also led to four convictions. These factors clearly meet the requirement laid down in Aguilar v. Texas,
Scharfman argues that the warrants are defective for still another reason. He submits that the failure to particularize the items to be seized converted the search into a general one, and accordingly violated the fourth amendment.
2
We do not agree, although we recognize that the property must be identified sufficiently to prevent “a mere roving commission.” United States v. Quantity of Extracts, Bottles, etc.,
The futility of further particularization is clear in this case. If the REA manifest had contained descriptions of the hijacked garments and these had been made available to the FBI (this is not conceded by the government), the warrant conceivably could have contained a descriptive itemization. In such an instance, however, if the searching agents entered a specified location with thousands of garments on the premises but the warrant itemized only a few hundred which had been allegedly stolen, the task of identifying and seizing the specific garments would have required a legion of fur experts to perform the task in a reasonable period. As we said in another context concerning appropriate search warrant procedures, the Fourth Amendment requirements do not impose a burden on the executing officer “beyond his power to meet.” United States v. Bozza,
Scharfman also attacks the seizure of the index cards and consignment memorandum book because the warrant failed to describe them adequately. He further argues that proba
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ble cause did not exist for the seizure. It is settled that magistrates can make use of their background of experience to determine whether probable cause exists.
See
Rosencranz v. United States,
Scharfman also argues that the memo book, containing entries written in his own hand, should have been suppressed because the fifth amendment would permit him to refuse to produce such evidence if he had possession. His analogy is inapposite. We held in United States v. Bennett,
Notes
. The Freeport warrant authorized a search for “fur coats, stoles, jackets and other finished fur products, books, records and other fruits and instrumentalities. * * * ” The New Rochelle warrant authorized a search for “the property specified [furs] and for such books and records as are being used as means and in-strumentalities of the above described crimes. * * * ”
. The fourth amendment provides:
“ * * * no Warrants shall issue * * * [unless] particularly describing the * * * things to be seized.”
. Although the specificity point was not explicitly raised in Vitali, it is inconceivable that by mixing legitimately obtained watchbands with the stolen merchandise so as to make them virtually indistinguishable, the defendant could invalidate the seizure because more specificity has become impossible. The allegedly stolen merchandise is “particularly describ[ed],” in such instances even when generic.
