The United States appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island,
On May 18, 1988 a state district court judge issued a warrant authorizing the search of the defendants’ residence on Branch Avenue in Providence, Rhode Island for controlled substances and related paraphernalia. In the course of the search, the Rhode Island State Police found and seized three firearms. Because Cochrane and Seplocha had prior felony convictions, a federal grand jury indicted them for unlawful possession of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Both defendants moved to suppress evidence of the firearms, and' Seplocha moved in addition to suppress a statement regarding the guns that she made at the time of the search. After an evidentiary hearing, a United States magistrate recommended to the district court that the motions to suppress be denied. The defendants objected to the magistrate’s findings and recommendations, and, after further hearings, the district court granted the motions to suppress. Its stated grounds were that the affidavit in support of the search warrant contained a false statement that had been included with reckless disregard for the truth and that, after excising the false statement, the affidavit was insufficient to establish probable cause.
The affidavit was verified on May 18, 1988 by Corporal James Mullen of the Rhode Island State Police. Mullen stated therein it was his “belief” that the defendants possessed and sold illegal substances at the Branch Avenue premises. He based this belief on information supplied by a confidential informant, coupled with his own investigation which disclosed that defendants “are in the criminal business of distributing controlled substances.” In the penultimate paragraphs of his affidavit, Corporal Mullen said:
During the week of May 10, 1988, your affiant was again in contact with the confidential informant and he advised that he had purchased marijuana and heroin from Ricky Cochrane and Joni Seplocha at their residence, as well as meeting them by a pre-arrangement, after discussing the sale of illegal drugs over telephone number 401-861-6708.
Your affiant is also aware of the criminal background of both Cochrane and Seplocha and attached to this affidavit are said criminal records.
Based on the previously-stated facts, it is your affiant’s belief that Ricky Coch-rane and Joni Seplocha are selling illegal substances and have illegal substances in their possession and control, along with other drug-related paraphernalia, at the previously-mentioned address.
A common-sense approach to this affidavit,
see United States v. Ventresca,
The district court concluded, however, that Mullen falsely and recklessly stated at another point in his affidavit that he himself had purchased drugs at the Branch Avenue house. In pertinent part, that portion of the affidavit reads as follows:
This [confidential] informant is advising your Affiant that a narcotics nuisance is presently being conducted at the above-mentioned location which is being operated and controlled by Ricky A. Cochrane and Joni Seplocha. This informant has advised that both Cochrane and Seplocha are supplying heroin, cocaine, and marijuana to persons unknown to your Affi-ant’s informant.
Your affiant’s knowledge in this matter is predicated upon previous purchases of these illegal substances which he has made from both Cochrane and Seplocha at the above-mentioned address. This informant has provided your affiant with telephone number 401-861-6708, and is the telephone number at which to contact Cochrane and Seplocha, as both Cochrane and Seplocha have given the informant this telephone number at which to contact him.
If we were to lift the first sentence of the second above-quoted paragraph from its informative surroundings and examine it in isolation, it may be that we would reach the same conclusion as did the district court, namely, that the word “he” referred to Mullen rather than the informant. However, the legal sufficiency of a search warrant affidavit should not be determined by a process of isolated dissection. The affidavit should be read “in its entirety, giving significance to each relevant piece of information” and should not be judged in “bits and pieces of information in isolation.”
Massachusetts v. Upton,
The magistrate to whom the suppression motion was referred by the district court “found no confusion” in the challenged language and “understood [it] to mean that Corporal Mullen’s informant purchased the illegal substances from Defendants at the Branch Avenue address.” The magistrate stated that he himself was not misled by the affidavit and that, in his opinion, no other judicial officer was misled.
Guided, as we must be, by the legal principles above set forth, we conclude that the magistrate was right and that the use of the word “he” in the challenged sentence was at most a grammatical mishap, neither reckless nor intentional in nature. We reach this conclusion with full awareness that a district court's basic or historical finding of fact may be set aside only if
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clearly erroneous,
United States v. Moore,
We are firmly convinced, after a common-sense reading of the affidavit as a whole, that, when Mullen stated “he” had purchased drugs at 875 Branch Avenue, he meant that the informant had made the purchase. This sentence comes in the middle of six paragraphs that refer to the activities and knowledge of the confidential informant. The immediately preceding sentence reads, “This informant has advised that both Cochrane and Seplocha are supplying heroin, cocaine, and marijuana to persons unknown to your Affiant’s informant.” It is simply unreasonable to conclude that, in the middle of talking about the informant’s knowledge, Mullen suddenly would switch to a discussion of purchases by himself and then immediately switch back to the activities of the informant. When the sentence is read in context, the only logical conclusion one can reach is that the word “he” refers to the informant, not to Mullen.
See United States v. Marcello,
The Supreme Court’s oft-quoted opinion in
United States v. Ventresca, supra,
Even assuming for the sake of argument that the challenged statement was made recklessly, if the statement is set to one side and the totality of circumstances evidenced in the balance of the affidavit supports a finding of probable cause, the evidence properly uncovered during the search need not be suppressed.
Franks v. Delaware,
(1) Mullen, a 15-year veteran of the Rhode Island State Police and a member of its Narcotics Unit, was involved with other members of the Narcotics Unit in ongoing narcotics investigations;
(2) The defendant Seplocha, a former Rhode Island lawyer, had been disbarred after being sentenced on drugs and weapons charges;
(3) On January 15, 1988, other members of the Narcotics Unit who were sur-veilling a heroin distribution point, arrested Seplocha when she left that point with heroin in her possession;
*639 (4) Seplocha was the girlfriend of defendant Cochrane and both of them had criminal records;
(5) Mullen knew from his own independent investigation that defendants were in the criminal business of distributing drugs;
(6) Mullen personally had conducted numerous surveillances of both defendants when they resided together at 51 Glendale Avenue in Providence;
(7) For some time Mullen had been receiving information from a “confidential and reliable” informant, who admitted that he was a purchaser and user of drugs;
(8) This informant previously had provided Mullen with information regarding drug trafficking which led to the seizure of a controlled substance and an arrest, and also had provided information concerning the criminal activity of individuals not associated with a drug investigation;
(9) The informant also had advised Mullen that a narcotics nuisance “presently” was being conducted at the Branch Avenue residence and was being operated and controlled by the defendants, who were supplying heroin, cocaine and marijuana at that location;
(10) Defendants “recently” had moved to the Branch Avenue address from their former residence on Glendale Avenue;
(11) According to the informant, one of the reasons for moving was that defendants feared police surveillance and wiretaps and moved frequently to avoid police monitoring of their criminal activities;
(12) Police surveillance participated in by Mullen established that both defendants resided at the Branch Avenue address;
(13) During the week of May 10, 1988, the informant told Mullen that he had purchased marijuana and heroin at the defendants’ Branch Avenue residence.
Over the years, much has been written about the standards for appellate review of findings of “ultimate fact”, more properly known as mixed questions of law and fact. Differences, in some instances irreconcilable, exist in the opinions of both the Supreme Court
1
and the Courts of Appeal of the various Circuits.
2
This court has adhered steadfastly to the rule that findings of both historic and ultimate fact are tested by the “clearly erroneous” rule on appeal.
See Lynch v. Dukakis,
This appears to accord with the Supreme Court’s most recent pronouncements in this area. Thus, in
Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc., supra,
Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Illinois v. Gates, supra,
At the very outset of its discussion, the district court espoused an erroneous principle that apparently colored its thinking on the entire issue before it. Referring to a dictum in
Jaben v. United States,
People do not lightly admit a crime and place critical evidence in the hands of police in the form of their own admissions. Admissions of crime, like admissions against proprietary interests, carry *641 their own indicia of credibility — sufficient at least to support a finding of probable cause to search.
Id.
at 583,
In his acclaimed dissent in
Donnelly v. United States,
Proceeding from what we conclude was an improper foundation, the district court found the information concerning the informant’s “veracity” or “reliability” to be scarce. It also found references to the informant’s “track record” to be unsatisfactory because the record did not disclose that the evidence provided by the informant on prior occasions had resulted in convictions rather than simply in arrests. Citing a law review article written in 1974, the district court concluded that there was no way to assess the credibility of the informant “based on this record of the information he had given on past occasions.”
We believe that this reasoning is flawed. The sworn statement of Officer Mullen, a veteran police officer, that his informant was “reliable” and that prior information provided by him had resulted in seizure of a controlled substance and an arrest should not be belittled because, to the date of the affidavit, there had not yet been a conviction. Such a requirement misconstrues the whole concept of probable cause.
See Brinegar v. United States, supra,
Indeed, Chief Justice Burger, writing in
United States v. Harris, supra,
The affidavit disclosed that only a few days before it was executed the confidential informant had informed Mullen that he had purchased marijuana and heroin from the defendants at their Branch Ave
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nue residence. The district court nonetheless held that, since the informant did not state whether the purchase in question was made “during that week or ten months before”, the information was “fatally flawed” as the basis for a finding of probable cause. This observation overlooked other information in the affidavit to the effect that the defendants had “recently moved” to the Branch Avenue address from their former residence on Glendale Avenue. “When an affidavit in support of a search warrant does not contain the date of the activities therein alleged, but is factually related to other information before the magistrate which does contain the date, it is permissible to draw the inference that the events took place in close proximity to the date given.”
United States v. Bonilla Romero,
In sum, after reviewing the affidavit in a common-sense manner, both in toto and in redacted form, we hold, for all the reasons above stated, that it provided a substantial basis from which to conclude that the Rhode Island police had probable cause to search the Branch Avenue premises. Accordingly, the order of the district court is
REVERSED.
Notes
.
Helvering v. Tex-Penn Oil Co.,
.
Huntington Branch, NAACP v. Town of Huntington,
