Pоlice executed a warrant to search Andrew MeDuffy’s home for marijuana and other drugs. They found not marijuana but 11 grams of crack cocaine. McDuffy pled guilty to pоssessing with intent to distribute five grams or more of crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). His conditional guilty plea preserved his right to appeal the district court’s deniаl of his request for a
Franks
hearing to contest allegedly misleading-statements in the affidavit supporting the search warrant. See
Franks v. Delaware,
I. The Facts and Procedural Background
In February 2009, Officer Eddie Connelly sought a warrant to search for marijuana and other drugs in the Rock Island home that McDuffy shared with his girlfriend Kamarra Jаckson. Officer Connelly’s supporting affidavit drew upon his own investigation and a confidential informant’s report. The informant, who had been in touch with the police for two mоnths, reported having lived in McDuffys neighborhood for four years. He correctly identified McDuffys home, which he asserted was plagued by “non-stop” and “obvious” drug traffic. He said he had seen McDuffy hide about two ounces of crack cocaine in his back yard several months earlier, although he did not specify how he was able to recognizе the drug as crack or estimate its weight. The informant also said he had seen McDuffy hand over a “large roll” of cash to two men on his lawn in early February, and that the next day, sеven different men stopped by MeDuffy’s home for five-minute visits.
After receiving the informant’s report, Officer Connelly examined the contents of a sealed trash bag left in the allеy next to the home shared by Jackson and McDuffy. In the bag he found mail addressed to Jackson, indicating that the trash came from their home. In the trash he also found a small flakе of a leaf that field-tested positive for the active ingredient in marijuana, tetrahydrocannabinol.
A criminal background check rounded out the picture. Accоrding to local police records, McDuffy had past “involvements for” manufacture or delivery of marijuana, as well as simple possession. According to state and national records, McDuffy had garnered at least six charges and five prior convictions for drug crimes.
*363 The next day, Officer Connelly put all this information in an affidavit for a sеarch warrant, except that he did not give any indication of the actual, tiny quantity of marijuana he had found. He referred only to “an amount of suspected Cannabis.” A stаte judge deemed the affidavit sufficient for a search warrant. With that warrant in hand, police searched McDuffy’s home two days later and found not marijuana but the craсk cocaine. The local investigation led to this federal prosecution.
In the district court, McDuffy moved to suppress the crack and, in the alternative, requestеd a
Franks
hearing on the ground that Officer Connelly deliberately misled the judge when he failed to quantify the tiny amount of marijuana found in his trash. The court denied both motions. The affidavit was sufficient to establish probable cause, the court concluded, because of the combination of the report from the informant, the marijuana found in the trash, and McDuffy’s history of drug crimes. The district court found that the omission of quantity was not material because “any measurable amount” would be sufficient to support a violation, citing
United States v. Biondich,
II. Analysis
On appeal McDuffy argues that the district court wrongly denied him a Franks hearing to challenge the honesty of the affidavit supporting the search warrant. If the state judge had understood just how little marijuana was found, McDuffy contends, the judge would not have found probаble cause to allow a search of the home for more.
To obtain a
Franks
hearing based on the omission of marijuana quantity, McDuffy had to make a substantial preliminary showing that the оmission was reckless or intentional, and that curing it would defeat probable cause; an omitted detail is “material” only if its inclusion would upset a finding of probable cause.
Franks,
McDuffy’s argument fails on the materiality prong of the
Franks
test, even if we assume for purposes of argument that Officer Connelly’s omission of the amount of marijuana he found in the trash was a deliberate сhoice. Even a very small quantity of marijuana in the trash provided sufficient reinforcement of the other information in the affidavit indicating a reasonable likelihood that McDuffy was dealing drugs from his home. Each individual detail in the affidavit would not have been sufficient by itself to support a finding of probable cause, but the details were mutually reinforcing. The whole was greater than the sum of the individual details. See
United States v. Olson,
The currency handoff on McDuffy’s lawn, followed the next day by the arrival of seven men who each stayed for five minutes or less, was suspicious in and of itself, and even more so in light of the marijuana the police found in his trash. The transactions observed by the informant increased the likelihood that McDuffy was directly involved with any drugs found in his trash, and that he was handling larger quantities. McDuffy’s many prior drug convictions cast doubt on аny innocent explanations for the marijuana flake, the currency handoff, and the stream of visitors to his home. See
United States v. Smith,
Thus, even if the affidavit had been revised to clarify that only one flake of marijuana was found in the trash, the affidavit would still have reflected a “substantial сhance” that police could find drugs in McDuffy’s home.
Gates,
McDuffy offers three arguments to oppose this conclusion, but none is persuasive. First, he uses the confidential informant’s conclusory stаtements about drug activity to question his reliability. But the report of the currency handoff followed by the visitors to McDuffy’s home was firsthand and precise, and thus more reliable. Seе
United States v. Koerth,
Second, McDuffy points out that his pri- or convictions should not be dispositive in establishing probable cause. See
Olson,
Third, McDuffy strеsses that the drug quantity found in his trash was very small. Yet even a tiny bit of discarded drugs increases the likelihood that police will find more in the home.
United States v. Billian,
Because an accurate description of the drug quantity would not have defeated *365 probable cause, we need not decide whether the omission was reckless or intentional.
The judgment of conviction is Affirmed.
