UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plаintiff-Appellee v. MATHIAS MORA, Defendant-Appellant
No. 19-2097
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
February 24, 2021
PUBLISH
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
_________________________________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v.
MATHIAS MORA,
Defendant - Appellant.
No. 19-2097
_________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of New Mexico
(D.C. No. 1:16-CR-04358-MV-1)
_________________________________
Devon M. Fooks, Assistant Federal Public Defender, Office of the Federal Public
Defender, Albuquerque, New Mexico, for Appellant.
Tiffany L. Walters, Assistant United States Attorney (John C. Anderson, United States
Attorney, with her on the brief), Office of the United States Attorney, Albuquerque, New
Mexico, for Appellee.
_________________________________
Before TYMKOVICH, Chief Judge, BALDOCK, and CARSON, Circuit Judges.
_________________________________
CARSON,
_________________________________
In our Republic, the Constitution imposes important limitations on the
government to protect the rights of the governed. The Founders recognized that
those limitations may, at times, hinder government efficiency. But they decided that
the incremental burden constitutional obligations place on the government’s exercise
of power is worth the benefit to individual liberty.
Thе Fourth Amendment generally requires the government to obtain a valid
warrant to search a person’s home. Although this obligation may hinder law
enforcement efficiency, it protects the people from unreasonable intrusions. Indeed,
the Fourth Amendment stems from the bedrock principle that intrusion into the home
is “subversive of all the comforts of society.” Berger v. New York, 388 U.S. 41, 49
(1967) (quoting Entick v. Carrington, 19 How. St. Tr. 1029, 1066 (C.P. 1765)). If
courts stray from that long-standing principle, we forget “the very essence of
constitutional liberty and security.” Id.
Today we consider whether officers’ search of Defendant Mathias Mora’s
home violated the Fourth Amendment. We hold that no exigent circumstances
justified the officers’ nonconsensual, warrantless search (protective sweep) of
Defendant’s home. We also hold that the excised search warrant affidavit failed to
provide probable cause to search Defendant’s home. Exercising jurisdiction under
I.
Officers responded to a 911 call reporting that dozens of people exited the back of
a tractor trailer behind a supermarket. When officers arrived at the scene a few minutes
later, the tractor trailer was gone. But officers found fourteen people lacking
identification, some of whom admitted that a driver smuggled them across thе border in
the back of a tractor trailer. None of the captured passengers suggested that the driver, or
anyone else, took any passengers to another location.
Officers soon discovered a tractor trailer matching the 911 caller’s description in a
nearby Walmart parking lot. Officers opened the tractor trailer’s rear doors to find it
empty, except for a bottle apparently containing urine and the smell of body odor.
Officers did not open the locked cab door.
about ten minutes after it left the supermarket, showing that the driver—Defendant—
drove directly between the twо stores. The tractor trailer did not move, nor did anyone
besides Defendant exit the tractor trailer once it arrived at Walmart. After parking,
Defendant entered Walmart, made purchases, and left in a different car driven by his
wife.
Meanwhile, officers learned that the tractor trailer was registered to Defendant at a
local address, which turned out to be Defendant’s home. Officers proceeded to
Defendant’s home and beat him there. Soon after, Defendant arrived with his wife.
Officers approached Defendant and recognized him from the Walmart video footage.
Next, officers placed Defendant and Mrs. Mora under arrest and searched them
outside the home. During the search, officers seized keys and a cell phone from
Defendant’s pocket. Defendant admitted that he owned the tractor trailer and explained
that he kept it at Walmart because he did not have a commercial yard for it.
Likewise, officers seized keys and a cell phone from Mrs. Mora. Responding to
questions, she said that her son was inside the home, but nobody else was inside.
Officers then opened the home’s unlocked front door and called for the son to come
outside, which he did. Nobody else answered the officers’ call. A few minutes later,
officers questioned Mrs. Mora in the foyer of the home. She denied the officers
permission to search the home and forbade them from going past the foyer. At that point,
officers could see around the room, into the living room, the kitchen, and up the stairwell.
Officers did not observe any signs of other people in the home.
Even so, officers conducted a warrantless search (protective sweep) of the home
after consulting with the U.S. Attorney’s Office “to ensure the safety of agents” and “the
safety of other potential undocumented immigrants.” Although they did not find any
people, officers noticed what they believed to be a gun safe and ammunition containers.
Officers also learned that Defendant was a felon, which would make him a prohibited
possessor. Later that day, the government obtained a warrant to search Defendant’s
home for evidence of alien smuggling and prohibited possession of a firearm or
ammunition. A subsequent search turned up both firearms and ammunition.
A grand jury indicted Defendant on charges of alien smuggling in violation of
officers’ warrantless search. The district court, however, denied Defendant’s motion
because the safety of potential aliens inside the home justified the search.
Defendant pleaded guilty to two counts of alien smuggling and one count of being
a felon in possession of a firearm. The district court sentenced him to sixteen months’
imprisonment for each alien smuggling count and forty-eight months’ imprisonment for
the felon in possession count, all to run concurrently. Defendant now appeals the denial
of his suppression motion, which relates only to his felon in possession conviction.
II.
We accept the district court’s factual findings unless clearly erroneous, but review
de novo the district court’s ultimate determination of reasonableness under the Fourth
Amendment. United States v. Garcia-Zambrano, 530 F.3d 1249, 1254 (10th Cir. 2008).
We consider whether the district court erred by denying Defendant’s motion to
suppress the firearms and ammunition seized from his home. Defendant contends that
officers unlawfully obtained firearms information during the warrantless search of his
home. Defendant argues that we should excise the firearms information from the
government’s search warrant affidavit and that doing so renders the affidavit insufficient
to estаblish probable cause to search his home. The government contends that even
without the information obtained during the warrantless search, the affidavit established
probable cause to believe officers would find evidence of alien smuggling in Defendant’s
home.
We begin our analysis by considering the validity of the search warrant affidavit
and determine that we must excise the firearms information obtained during the officers’
unlawful sweep of Defendant’s home. We next consider whether the affidavit
established probable cause to search Defendant’s home without that information. We
finally conclude that, without a valid warrant, the district court should have suppressed
the fruits of the search under the exclusionary rule.
A.
The government contends that officers had reason to believe that aliens inside
the home needed immediate aid, which justified the officers’ warrantless search of
Defendant’s home. We disagree.
The Fourth Amendment generally requires a warrant for officers to search a
person’s home. Mincey v. Arizona, 437 U.S. 385, 393–94 (1978). An exception
applies, however, when “the exigencies of the situation make the needs of law
enforcement so compelling that the warrantless search is objectively reasonable
under the Fourth Amendment.” Id. Specifically, “the Fourth Amendment does not
bar police officers from making warrantless entries and searches when they
reasonably believe that a person is in need of immediate aid.” Id. at 392. But this
exception “cannot be used merely to make law enforcement more efficient, to
safeguard evidence that could be protected in another manner, or simply because a
serious crime has been committed.” United States v. Porter, 594 F.3d 1251, 1255
(10th Cir. 2010). So, if a search warrant affidavit contains information obtained
through a prior, unlawful search, we must must excise that information and consider the
adequacy of the affidavit anew. United States v. Snow, 919 F.2d 1458, 1460 (10th Cir.
1990).
Here, officers had no reason to believe that anyone was in the home when they
entered without Defendant’s permission or a warrant. Officers arrived at Defendant’s
home before Defendant and Mrs. Mora returned, so they had ample opportunity to
observe the home and did not see any signs of danger. From the timeline of events,
officers knew that Defendant lacked a chance to return to the home and deposit aliens
after he released them from his tractor trailer behind the supermarket. Mrs. Mora
also told officers that nobody was in the home when they arrived except her son, who
exited the home in compliance with an officer’s command. Nobody else responded
to the officers’ calls, nor did officers hear any sоunds from the home. In fact,
officers questioned Mrs. Mora inside the foyer of the home, from which they could
see several rooms before conducting their warrantless search. Again, no officer
noticed any signs of other people from inside the home. Without evidence suggesting
anyone was in the home, let alone in need of aid, officers fail to
identifying exigent circumstances to justify their warrantless search of the home.1
Thus, we do not consider the firearms information gathered during the
unlawful sweep in our subsequent probable cause analysis. Put differently, the excised
affidavit does not establish probable cause to search the home for evidence of a felon in
possession violation. So all that remains is the government’s assertion that probable
cause existed that officers would find evidence of alien smuggling in the home.
B.
We start our probable cause analysis, as we must, with the Fourth Amendment’s
text. The Fourth Amendment protects the “right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures” by
requiring probable cause to support a search warrant.
that “no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause”). “Probable cause to issue a
search warrant exists only when the supporting affidavit sets forth facts that would lead a
prudent person to believe there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime
will be found in a particular place.” United States v. Basham, 268 F.3d 1199, 1203 (10th
Cir. 2001).
Although Supreme Court decisions have chipped away at the Fourth
Amendment’s warrant requirement,2 the primary Tenth Circuit case upon which the
government relies confirms that “physical entry of the home is the chief evil against
which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.” United States v. Biglow, 562
F.3d 1272, 1275 (10th Cir. 2009) (quoting United States v. U.S. Dist. Court, 407 U.S.
297, 313 (1972)); see also Segura v. United States, 468 U.S. 796, 810 (1984) (concluding
that “the home is sacred in Fourth Amendment terms not primarily because of the
occupants’ possessory interests in the premises, but because of their privacy interests in
the activities that take place within”). Allowing officers to search a home based solely on
an affiant’s experience and pure speculation would perpetuate that evil.
Indeed, “a nexus must exist between suspected criminal activity and the place to
be searched.” Biglow, 562 F.3d at 1278. And probable cause “to search a person’s
residence does not arise based solely upon probable cause that the person is guilty of a
crime.” United States v. Rowland, 145 F.3d 1194, 1204 (10th Cir. 1998). Whether a
nexus exists to search a suspect’s home depends on the strength of the case-specific
evidence that links suspected criminal activity and the home. Compare id. (holding that
“additional evidence” must link a suspect’s home to “the suspected criminal activity”),
with United States v. Sanchez, 555 F.3d 910, 914 (10th Cir. 2009) (determining that
рrobable cause a suspect was a drug supplier justified the search of his home because
drug suppliers often keep contraband in their homes), and United States v. Reyes, 798
F.2d 380, 382 (10th Cir. 1986) (determining that evidence a suspect was a largescale drug
trafficker established probable cause to search that suspect’s home for drugs
evidence that drug traffickers often keep in their home). Factors courts may consider in
this analysis include: (1) the type of crime at issue, (2) the extent of a suspect’s
opportunity for concealment, (3) the nature of the evidence sought, and (4) all reasonable
inferences as to where a criminal would likely keep such evidence. Biglow, 562 F.3d at
1279.
We consider the type of crime at issue. Although thе totality of the circumstances
established probable cause that Defendant engaged in alien smuggling, the government
failed to articulate how evidence of alien smuggling justified the search of his home. To
be sure, we have upheld home searches involving largescale drug traffickers based on
known practices of the drug trade, but those determinations also involved months-long
investigations and corroborating evidence. Sanchez, 555 F.3d at 914 (corroborating
suspicion about the location of drugs with an officer’s observations of telephone
conservations and a resident’s presence at drug buys); Reyes, 798 F.2d at 382 (upholding
a probable cause determination based on the results of a five-month investigation). And
our precedent puts drug trafficking in a special class of crimes where we have “not
required particular facts to support the inference that a drug trafficker keeps his supply at
his residence.” Sanchez, 555 F.3d at 914 (observing that courts commonly hold “that this
gap can be filled merely on the basis of the affiant-officer’s experience that drug dealers
ordinarily keep their supply, records and monetary profits at home” (quoting 2 Wayne R.
LaFave, Search and Seizure § 3.7(d), at 421–22 (4th ed. 2004))). Despite the
government’s reliance on drug trafficking cases, alien smuggling is not part of that
special class where we have held that probable cause that a defendant committed the
crime suggests the concealment of evidence in the home. Thus, evidence that Defendant
engaged in alien smuggling does not categorically or independently establish a nexus to
his home under our precedents—as would evidence of drug trafficking.
Considering the nature of the evidence sought and Defendant’s opportunity for
concealment together, the government identifies a few general statements in the affidavit
about commonly owned items. The affiant stated, based on his training and experience,
that alien smugglers often use electronic communication devices, GPS devices, and
electronic banking systems to conduct operations and store records. None of those
boilerplate statements, however, are specific to Defendant’s crime or circumstances.3
United States v. Zimmerman, 277 F.3d 426, 433 (3d Cir. 2002) (observing that
“[r]ambling boilerplate recitations designed to meet all law enforcement needs do not
produce probable cause” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). The search
warrant affidavit
used, any of the supposedly suspicious items in connection with alien smuggling. See
United States v. Cordova, 792 F.3d 1220, 1225 (10th Cir. 2015), as corrected (July 31,
2015) (suppressing еvidence obtained during a home search because, “without other
information implicating [] [defendant] or his home in criminal activity, the officer’s
suggestion that [] [defendant] engaged in an activity sometimes associated with criminals
is sheer speculation and of minuscule value”); Poolaw v. Marcantel, 565 F.3d 721, 732,
n.10 (10th Cir. 2009), as amended (July 24, 2009) (rejecting a probable cause
determination because of “the lack of specific information linking” what officers sought
in the place to be searched despite general assertions based on officer experience; adding
that “[f]or an officer’s experience and training to support a finding of probable cause, the
affidavit must set out facts explaining why, based on this experience and training, there
was reason to believe the contraband is more likely to be found at the particular location”
(emphasis added)). Rather, the only object that the affidavit linked to Defendant’s illegal
defendant’s home because the affidavit’s “combined boilerplate language and
minimal handwritten information provide few, if any, particularized facts of an
incriminating nature and little more than conclusory statements of affiant’s belief that
probable cause existed” (emphasis added)); see also United States v. Bosyk, 933 F.3d
319, 349 (4th Cir. 2019) (Wynn, J., dissenting) (opining that “when individualized
information connecting an individual to a crime is absent, an affiant—much less a
court—cannot rely on generalized, boilerplate assumptions about criminal habits”).
activity was his tractor trailer. And, when they sought the warrant, officers knew
Defendant parked the tractor trailer at Walmart and did not bring home any items from it.
Even if Defendant used a GPS, online banking, or other means of electronic
record-keeping for his alien smuggling operation, we could reasonably infer that he did
so on a cell phone. Riley v. California, 573 U.S. 373, 395 (2014) (observing that, as of
2014, over ninety percent of American adults owned a cell phone). But the assumption
that a suspect maintains illicit records on a cell phone does “not аutomatically justify an
open-ended warrant to search a home anytime officers seek a person’s phone.” United
States v. Griffith, 867 F.3d 1265, 1273 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (reversing a probable cause
determination because the general assertion that gang members “maintain regular contact
with each other” was not specific enough to justify the search of a defendant’s home for a
cell phone). “Instead, such a search would rest on a second assumption: that the person
(and his cell phone) would be home.” Id. To be sure, many people keep their cell phone
in their pocket or otherwise nearby, rather than leaving it at home during a day’s work.
Id. (citing a poll that “nearly three-quarters of smart phone users report being within five
fеet of their phones most of the time”). Thus, the government’s bare speculation that
Defendant may have kept a cell phone in his home, which he could have used in alien
smuggling, does not justify the search of his home.
In fact, officers apprehended Defendant before he ever made his way inside his
home. And upon searching Defendant and his wife, officers seized a cell phone and keys
from each individual outside the home. So Defendant did not have a chance to hide any
evidence he ferried with him in his home before officers apprehended him and seized the
item most likely to contain alien smuggling records. See Biglow, 562 F.3d at 1279
(considering “the extent of a suspect’s opportunity for concealment”). Thus, the common
nature of the evidence sought and Defendant’s lack of opportunity for concealment
further undermine the government’s position that officers had a fair probability of finding
evidence of alien smuggling in his home.
Finally, in other contexts, we have required more than an affiant’s bare assertions
that criminals typically store evidence in their home without corroborating evidence to
uphold the constitutionality of
government’s proffered “logical inference” that a suspect would store contraband at his
home where no information suggested the suspect “previously transported cоntraband . . .
to his home or that he had previously stored contraband at his home”). We cannot rely on
the home-storage inference where the home “was but one of an otherwise unlimited
possible sites for viewing or storage” and the “affidavit provided no basis to either limit
the possible sites or suggest that [the defendant’s] home was more likely than the
otherwise endless possibilities.” Id. at 1205. Although the government suggests that
Defendant’s home is his only logical storage place, he could have instead conducted
business and stored records in his tractor trailer cab—effectively, his office. But officers
did not search the tractor trailer cab beforе they searched his home. The affiant’s
inferences about where a suspect would store evidence, without corroborating evidence,
therefore fail to justify the search of Defendant’s home.
Although we often require “little additional evidence” to satisfy the Fourth
Amendment’s requirements, the government does not provide any specific evidence
linking Defendant’s alien smuggling to his home. See Biglow, 562 F.3d at 1279 (internal
quotations marks omitted). The affiant’s general assertions about the tools of the trade
are not enough to establish the requisite nexus in this case. To hold otherwise would
continue to erode the plain meaning of the Fourth Amendment by nullifying the
longstanding principle that probable cause оf a crime does not amount to probable cause
to search the suspect’s home. Rowland, 145 F.3d at 1204. We therefore conclude that
the excised affidavit does not provide probable cause to search Defendant’s home for
evidence of alien smuggling.
C.
Of course, “[e]vidence obtained as a direct result of an unconstitutional search or
seizure is plainly subject to exclusion.” Segura, 468 U.S. at 804. Without the unlawful
search of Defendant’s home, the government does not establish how the officers would
have otherwise discovered evidence of firearm possession underlying Defendant’s
conviction on appeal.4 United States v. Larsen, 127 F.3d 984, 987 (10th Cir. 1997)
(requiring an “investigation that inevitably would have led to the evidence be
independent of the constitutional violation” to admit evidence first obtained through an
illegal search). So the exclusionary rule mandates the suppression of that evidence.
United States v. Cunningham, 413 F.3d 1199, 1203 (10th Cir. 2005) (recognizing the
exclusionary rule mandates the suppression of evidence obtained as the result of an
illegal search). We therefore remand to the district court with instructions to suppress
evidence obtained during the search of Defendant’s home because the officers lacked
probable cause for the search.
IV.
For these reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s suppression order and
REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
19-2097, United States v. Mora
TYMKOVICH, Chief Judge, concurring.
I concur in the judgment because I agree with the majority that probable
cause to suspect a person of a crime does not equal probable cause to search that
person’s home for a cell phone, computer, or tablet. I write separately to
emphasize that, because Mr. Mora operated his business out of his home, this is a
closer case than the facts would suggest.
affidavit containing unconstitutionally obtained information that was critical to
establishing probable cause. See United States v. Karo, 468 U.S. 705, 719 (1984).
I agree with the majority that the warrantless sweep of Mr. Mora’s home was not
justified by an objectively reasonable belief that there were aliens inside the homе
in need of immediate aid. Thus, the operative question is whether the warrant
affidavit—once stripped of the information obtained during the warrantless sweep
of Mr. Mora’s home—established probable cause to search the home. See United
States v. Snow, 919 F.2d 1458, 1460 (10th Cir. 1990).
“Probable cause to issue a search warrant exists only when the supporting
affidavit sets forth facts that would lead a prudent person to believe there is a fair
probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular
place.” United States v. Basham, 268 F.3d 1199, 1203 (10th Cir. 2001). But
“[p]robable cause to search a person’s residence does not аrise based solely upon
probable cause that the person is guilty of a crime.” United States v. Rowland,
145 F.3d 1194, 1204 (10th Cir. 1998). Instead, the Fourth Amendment requires
some additional evidentiary nexus linking a suspect’s home to the suspected
criminal activity. Id. Mr. Mora does not dispute that officers had probable cause
to believe he was smuggling undocumented aliens when they applied for a
warrant to search his home. Rather, he argues the officers did not have probable
cause to believe evidence of such smuggling would be found in his home.
Whether a “sufficient nexus has been established between a defendant’s
suspected criminal activity and his residence . . . necessarily depends upon the
facts of each case.” United States v. Biglow, 562 F.3d 1272, 1279 (10th Cir.
2009). In Biglow, we identified three categories of “additional evidence,” each of
which, standing alonе, can satisfy the Fourth Amendment nexus requirement: (1)
direct evidence or personal knowledge that the items sought in the warrant
application are located in a home, (2) “an affiant officer’s statement that certain
evidence—in his or her professional experience—is likely to be found in a
defendant’s residence,” and (3) inferences reasonably drawn from the
government’s evidence. Id. at 1279–80. Relevant here are the second and third
categories.
As to the second category, we have long recognized judges “may rely on
the opinion of law enforcement officers as to where contraband or other evidence
may be kept.” Id. at 1279 (internal quotation marks omitted). But while we
routinely credit an affiant’s еxperience, knowledge, and training in evaluating a
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warrant application, judges “need not jettison all common sense” and “defer[] to
the officers’ experience” in assessing whether there is a fair probability that
evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place. United States v. Martinez,
643 F.3d 1292, 1300 (10th Cir. 2011). Above all, the probable cause inquiry is a
“commonsense, practical question” to be informed by the totality of the
circumstances present in any particular case. See Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213,
Per the third category, the requisite “additional evidence” can also take the
form of a common-sense judgment that a given suspect would store incriminating
evidence in his home. We regularly credit inferences that certain types of
criminals are likely to operate out оf a home or home office based upon the nature
of the
affidavit established probable cause that the defendant was dealing drugs and
further stated that, based on the officer’s experience, drug dealers often store
additional quantities of drugs at their homes, along with drug paraphernalia and
their cash proceeds. United States v. Sanchez, 555 F.3d 910, 913–14 (10th Cir.
2009). We concluded the affidavit satisfied the Fourth Amendment nexus
requirement because it is “merely common sense that a drug supplier will keep
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evidence of his crimes at his home.” Id. at 914; United States v. Stein, 819 F.
App‘x 666, 669–70 (10th Cir. 2020) (explaining it was reasonable to assume that
digital evidence of a conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction would be
found on electronic devices in the defendant’s home because he was tasked with
procuring bomb-making materials, which “could be expected to produce a digital
trail”); Anthony v. United States, 667 F.2d 870, 874–75 (10th Cir. 1981)
(explaining it was reasonable to assume the defendant’s residence would contain
evidence of illegal wiretapping because recording devices must be assembled and
he might have assembled the device at his residence).
We have also found a sufficient nexus between a suspect’s residence and
certain possessory crimes where, given the nature of the contraband and certain
corroborating facts, it was reasonable to infer that a suspect would store the
contraband at home. For example, in United States v. Potts, 586 F.3d 823, 831
(10th Cir. 2009), we concludеd it was reasonable to assume the defendant would
keep photographs of child pornography in his residence where the warrant
affidavit indicated the defendant: (1) owned a computer and was employed as a
teacher at two elementary schools; (2) kept child pornography “in a large binder”;
and (3) obtained the images by downloading them from the internet, which “could
take hours to complete.” Id. Such factors, we explained, “weigh[ed] against the
possibility that [the defendant] might have kept the materials at his workplaces.”
Id.; see also, United States v. Rahn, 511 F.2d 290, 292–94 (10th Cir. 1975)
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(holding it was reasonable to assume an ATF agent who allegedly possessed
stolen guns and had used one to go hunting would keep the gun at home even
though “there [were] other places where the guns might have been stored”).
Here, the excised warrant affidavit details how the officers discovered the
evidence of alien smuggling, found the semi-truck used to transport the aliens,
and came to suspect Mr. Mora was the driver. The affidavit further provides that,
during questioning, Mr. Mora admitted to owning the semi-truck and explained
that “he parks the truck at the Walmart parking lot because he does not have a
commercial yard.” R., Vol. I at 70. The affiant officer also summarized his
relevant training and experience, nоting he had “been a federal law enforcement
officer for over 18 years in total with Homeland Security Investigations and
United States Customs Service” and had acquired knowledge and received
training on alien smuggling and human trafficking. Id. at 68. Based upon this
training and experience, the affiant officer expressed his opinion that alien
smugglers use, among other things, cell phones and computers to facilitate their
criminal activity and conduct the business side of the crime.
But that was it. As the majority explains, the handwritten bare-bones
assertions
specificity to the home. It is true that Mr. Mora worked out of his home. But he
parked his rig at a different location. Besides, the officers had little experience
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with alien smuggling operations and so lacked a history from which we could
confidently defer to their knowledge and experience about these types of crimes.2
While it may be reasonable to infer that Mr. Mora would keep at least one
electronic device in his home and that it would contain evidence of alien
snuggling, I agree with the majority that this inference, standing alone, cannot
satisfy the nexus requirement. Without more, cell phones and home computers
and tablets, ubiquitous аs they are, would always justify a home search. But see
Biglow, 562 F.3d at 1280; see also United States v. $149,442.43, 965 F.2d 868,
874 (10th Cir. 1992) (“Where a suspect has no place of business separate from his
residence, it is reasonable for an officer to conclude that evidence may be at the
suspect’s residence.”).
In sum, I think the facts in the affidavit fall just short of establishing a
nexus between the suspected alien smuggling and Mr. Mora’s home.
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Notes
arrested Defendant outside the home and had no reason to enter the home in the first
place.
Of course, the categorical nature of the crimes alleged or items sought isnot determinative, as the nexus inquiry necessarily depends upon the specific
facts presented in the warrant affidavit. Biglow, 562 F.3d at 1279.
concurring) (lamenting that the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement has
“become so riddled with exceptions that it [is] basically unrecognizable”).
Supervisor Lucero testified at Mr. Mora’s suppression hearing that he hadbeen with HSI since 2001 but had “never seen” a “potential tractor-trailer
smuggling load in Albuquerque,” making the “whole situation . . . kind of a
unicorn to deal with.” Aplt. App. Vol. II at 150. Moreover, Agent Lopez—the
agent who submitted the warrant affidavit—similarly noted that HSI had “never
seen this in Albuquerque” before. Aplt. App. Vol. II at 26.
afterthought when viewed in the context of the whole affidavit. Those statements
comprise one hand-written paragraph at the bottom of an otherwise typed, four-page
document focusing on the officers’ investigation and specific observations of
Defendant. See United States v. Weaver, 99 F.3d 1372, 1379 (6th Cir. 1996)
(concluding that an affidavit did not support the issuance of search warrant for the
exigent circumstances, the government amended its original response to Defendant’s
motion to suppress to include an inevitable discovery argument. Specifically, the
government added two pages to the end of the its fifteen-page response brief to argue that
even an excised search warrant affidavit provided probable cause to search Defendant’s
home and officers would have inevitably found evidence of firearm possession during
their search. We acknowledge that the government raised this argument below, but
courts generally frown upon parties basing their appellate argument on an issue
mentioned only in passing before the district court. See Allen v. Sybase, Inc., 468 F.3d
642, 652 (10th Cir. 2006) (“We are underwhelmed by defendants’ inconsistent arguments
and limit our review to the position they presented to the district court.”); see also
Campbell v. Ackerman, 903 F.3d 14, 18 (1st Cir. 2018) (“Our jurisprudence simply does
not allow a litigant to switch horses in mid-stream.”)
