OPINION
Roger Dale McLevain appeals his conviction and sentence for violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) on the grounds that (l)the district court erred in denying McLevain’s motion to suppress, (2)the district court erred in admitting several pieces of evidence of prior bad acts, (3)the communication between the court and jury outside defense counsel’s presence violated McLevain’s rights, and (4)the district court misapplied
Apprendi v. New
Jersey,
I.
On December 28, 1999, Gary Cauley failed to return from work release at the Daviess County Detention Center in Da-viess County, Kentucky. Based on information from a confidential informant, the Daviess County Jailer Harold Taylor sought a search warrant for Roger Dale McLevain’s house at 8865 Sacra Drive, Maceo, Kentucky, in the early afternoon of December 29. McLevain is the defendant now before us.
The affidavit supporting the search warrant suggested a connection between McLevain and Cauley’s girlfriend, Lydia Bell. The informant told the police that Bell had been staying at McLevain’s residence, and she had been picked up from there by a friend on the night Cauley escaped. She went to Cauley’s mother’s house, where she received a call from Cauley at the Detention Center. Bell then borrowed Cauley’s mother’s car and returned it about an hour and a half later. The affidavit contained no information as to McLevain himself, but Cauley and McLevain were known to be friends. On the basis of this information, Taylor sought a search warrant for McLevain’s house. A state court judge determined that Taylor had probable cause to believe that Cauley could be at McLevain’s residence, and he issued the warrant to search the residence. The warrant described the residence to be searched, including the detached garage and the outbuilding, and named Cauley and McLevain to be seized. It has never been explained why McLevain was included.
Taylor sought assistance from the Daviess County Sheriffs Department. That department was aware that McLevain had a criminal record with a narcotics offense. Officers of both the Daviess County Detention Center and the Daviess County Sheriffs Department executed the warrant at McLevain’s home at about 2:00 p.m. on December 29. Law enforcement officers surrounded the home and forcibly entered through both the front and the back doors. The officers at the front door immediately seized McLevain in the hallway and gained control over his girlfriend and two children *438 in the front room. The officers then began searching for Cauley. Narcotics Detective Jim Acquisito went into the master bedroom, from where MeLevain had just emerged, and looked under the bed for Cauley. Acquisito saw there a twist tie and a cut cigarette filter. He suspected these items to be drug paraphernalia. He informed his supervisor and took photographs of this evidence, although he left it undisturbed.
Later in the search for Cauley, who was never found at McLevain’s home, another officer drew Acquisito’s attention to a spoon with residue on a tackle box in a sink in the garage. Acquisito conducted a field test on the residue, and he found it to be residue of methamphetamine. At about the same time, Acquisito noticed on the mantel of the fireplace in the garage a prescription bottle, with no label, filled with a clear liquid that looked like water. Acquisito identified these four items as drug paraphernalia, and he used them to establish probable cause in seeking a second warrant. Upon returning with the second warrant, the officers discovered, concealed inside a kerosene heater in the garage, approximately eighty-five grams of methamphetamine; $5,710 in cash; and various plastic bags, syringes, twist ties, and electronic scales. These items formed the basis for the charges against MeLe-vain.
MeLevain filed a motion to suppress, objecting to the plain view discovery of the evidence in the first search. He argued that none of the first four pieces of evidence was immediately incriminating. He also argued that the discovery took the officers beyond the scope of a search for an escapee. The district court denied this motion.
II.
We review a district court’s legal conclusions with respect to a motion to suppress de novo.
See United States v. Crozier,
A.
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution protects citizens from unreasonable searches and seizures. Generally, a warrant based on information establishing probable cause is required to search a person or a place and to seize evidence found there. The warrant requirement exists to measure the probable cause asserted and to ensure that “those searches deemed necessary are as limited as possible. Here, the specific evil is the ‘general warrant’ abhorred by the colonists.... ”
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
There exist several exceptions to the warrant requirement, but at issue in the case before us is the “plain view” exception to the warrant requirement. In
Coolidge,
Although the specific circumstances under which the “plain view” exception comes into play vary, “[w]hat the
*439
‘plain view’ cases have in common is that the police officer in each of them had a prior justification for an intrusion in the course of which he came inadvertently across a piece of evidence incriminating the accused.”
Coolidge,
The “plain view” test was refined in
Horton v. California,
B.
We now turn to the analysis of the four prongs of the “plain view” exception. While there was dispute at the district court level as to whether or not the items seized in McLevairis home were actually in plain view, the district court weighed the credibility of the testimony and found that they were. We need not further address this issue.
McLevain complains that the search and seizure of the evidence .against him, as a basis for a second warrant, was particularly egregious in light of the fact that the search was for two full-grown men. While the Supreme Court held in
Harris,
“The same meticulous investigation which would be appropriate in a search for two small canceled checks could not be considered reasonable where agents are seeking a stolen automobile or an illegal still,”
C.
We then turn to the other three factors of the “plain view” exception. In order to determine whether the officers were legally present at McLevain’s residence, we begin with the first warrant that was the basis for the officers’ presence in the McLevain residence. We look to the first warrant to define the scope of the original search.
To begin, “In determining whether a search warrant is supported by probable cause, a magistrate must employ a flexible, totality of the circumstances standard.”
United States v. Canan,
*440
In
United States v. Leon,
Even if the warrant application was supported by more than a ‘bare bones’ affidavit, a reviewing court may properly conclude that, notwithstanding the deference that magistrates deserve, the warrant was invalid because the magistrate’s probable-cause determination reflected an improper analysis of the totality of the circumstances or because the form of the warrant was improper in some respect.
While granting due deference to the state court judge, we question why McLevain was named for seizure in the warrant. The United States offered no evidence of his having played an active role in facilitating or effectuating Cauley’s escape. Nevertheless, we find that the warrant was valid, and the officers were lawfully present at McLevain’s house. 1
McLevain also takes issue with the presence of the narcotics officers at the search of his home. “When a law enforcement officer has prior knowledge of the existence and location of property which he has probable cause to believe is illegally possessed, as well as ample opportunity to obtain a judicially sanctioned search warrant, the Fourth Amendment mandates that he must follow this procedure.”
United States v. Sanchez,
D.
Once we have established that the officers were lawfully present, the next prong of the “plain view” doctrine requires that the criminality of the articles before the officers be “immediately apparent.”
Coolidge,
*441
This Court has long deliberated what “immediately apparent” means. We summarized the factors used in many of our prior cases in
United States v. Beal,
Before turning to the facts of similar cases and the facts at hand, we should also note that the Supreme Court does not require that officers
know
that evidence is contraband. Instead, “probable cause is a flexible, common-sense stándard. It merely requires that the facts available to the officer would ‘warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that certain items may be contraband or stolen property or useful as evidence of a crime.”
Texas v. Brown,
We begin with the first of the Beal factors. No nexus between the object seized and the items in the search warrant exists in our case. Cauley was the subject of the search. McLevain was an afterthought that has never been explained. The warrant had nothing to do with drug paraphernalia.
The second factor is whether the “intrinsic nature” of the items gives probable cause to believe it is contraband, such as marijuana or cocaine on a table in plain view. The case of
Arizona v. Hicks,
McLevain claims that there is nothing about the intrinsic nature of a twist tie, a cigarette filter, a spoon with residue, or a bottle that makes it immediately apparent that those items are contraband. In
McLemon,
a room was searched pursuant to a cocaine conspiracy, and agents seized a note pad and calendar from a desk, under the “plain view” exception.
In one sense, the facts of this case are similar to those of
Texas v. Brown.
In that case, an officer made a “plain view” seizure of narcotics at a routine driver’s license checkpoint.
Id.
at 730,
The final
Beal
factor examines whether “the executing officers can
at the
time
3
of discovery of the object on the facts then available to them determine probable cause of the object’s incriminating nature.”
*443
In a very, recent case from this Court, we held, “when an item appears suspicious to an officer but further investigation is required to establish probable cause as to its association with criminal activity, the item is not immediately incriminating.”
United States v. Byrd,
E.
The final aspect of the “plain view” doctrine requires that an officer have a lawful right of access to the object at issue. We said in
Coolidge,
“plain view alone is never enough to justify the warrantless seizure of evidence.”
Acquisito had before him the cut cigarette filter, the twist tie, and a spoon with residue on it, if not the prescription bottle, when he field-tested the spoon. Before seizing the spoon and testing it, he suspected the items were drug paraphernalia. He should have sought a warrant at that time. The evidence was not going anywhere. McLevain was in custody, and his girlfriend and two children were still in the house. Acquisito should have taken his evidence of probable cause to a magistrate rather than attempting to seize it under the “plain view” exception. Acquisito had no lawful right of access to the items.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE.
Notes
. McLevain, at the district court and before this Court, challenged the lawfulness of the search on the basis that the officers did not properly knock and announce before making entry into his home. The district court found that although the officers may not have waited an appropriate time after their announcement, exigent circumstances existed, making entry proper. Because we find that the search failed on other grounds, we need not answer this question.
. The Supreme Court has been "unwilling to entertain Fourth Amendment challenges based on the actual motivations of individual officers,”
Whren v. United States,
. Other circuits dispute this factor, as to whether probable cause must arise upon viewing the object or may arise later. The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, for example, says probable cause may arise in light of other objects later discovered.
United States v. Johnston,
