The United States appeals from the district court’s order suppressing evidence discovered during a search of Elliott’s apartment. The district court found that the warrant authorizing the search was not supported by probable cause. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731. We reverse.
I
On May 4, 1988, Diane Wilson contacted the Ketchikan Police Department and re *222 ported that Elliott was in possession of marijuana and cocaine. Later that day the prosecutor applied for a search warrant in a hearing before a state judge. At this hearing Wilson testified in person and under oath. She stated that she had been living with Elliott until that day, and that she had seen marijuana and cocaine in his apartment. She testified that there was about one-quarter ounce of cocaine presently in the apartment, that she had witnessed Elliott using cocaine several times in the past, that she had seen a small amount of marijuana that day in the apartment, and that during the previous week she had seen Elliott with a “garbage bag full of marijuana” which he said he was attempting to “get rid of.” She also stated that Elliott was growing marijuana using a “grow light” in “the back room, behind the apartment.”
Also at the hearing, Detective Young testified about his inspection of Elliott’s utility records. He stated that he was in possession of Elliott’s monthly electric bills, which showed a high and fluctuating level of usage. Detective Young testified that such a pattern is consistent with marijuana growing operations.
The state judge issued the warrant, based upon this testimony. At Elliott’s apartment the officers found cocaine and marijuana in the main room. In a storeroom behind the apartment, accessible through a hole in the bathroom wall concealed by a burlap sack, the officers found some 300 marijuana plants.
In federal district court, Elliott challenged the validity of the search warrant. He argued first that Young had presented false testimony with regard to the electric bill. Young had in his possession the bill for the upper right apartment in the building. Elliott lived in the lower right apartment. Elliott contended that Young knew or should have known that he had the wrong bill. Second, Elliott argued that Wilson’s testimony was unreliable and was insufficient to establish probable cause. Finally, he maintained that the warrant to search his apartment did not extend to the storeroom where the marijuana plants were found.
The district judge ordered that the evidence be suppressed because (1) Officer Young intentionally or recklessly misled the issuing judge with regard to the electric bill, and (2) Wilson’s testimony standing alone was insufficient to establish probable cause. He disagreed with Elliott’s third claim, ruling that the search of the storeroom was within the scope of the warrant. On appeal, the government challenges the first two conclusions, and Elliott challenges the third.
II
Ordinarily, a magistrate’s determination that sufficient probable cause exists to issue a search warrant will not be overturned unless it is clearly erroneous.
United States v. McQuisten,
A.
We first consider whether the warrant was supported by sufficient indicia of probable cause. The district court found that Young intentionally or recklessly misled the issuing judge with regard to the electric bill. We cannot conclude that this finding is clearly erroneous.
When intentional or reckless misstatements by police officers are demonstrated, “the reviewing court should set the ... false assertions to one side and then deter
*223
mine whether the ... remaining [testimony] is still sufficient to establish probable cause.”
United States v. Ippolito,
The district court next determined that, with Young’s statements excised, the evidence before the magistrate (consisting of the testimony of Wilson) was insufficient to establish probable cause. We now review that conclusion.
An informant’s description of illegal activity is sufficient to establish probable cause if the totality of the circumstances indicate that the tip is reliable.
Illinois v. Gates,
In this case, Wilson provided detailed information regarding the amounts of drugs present, and regarding the marijuana-growing operation.
See Gates,
Probable cause has been found under similar circumstances with substantially lesser indicia of reliability. In
Massachusetts v. Upton,
The decisions of other circuits are not to the contrary. In
United States v. Pelham,
there could hardly be more substantial evidence of the existence of the material sought and its relevance to a crime than *224 [the informer’s] direct viewing of marijuana in [the defendant’s] house. When a witness has seen evidence in a specific location in the immediate past, and is willing to be named in the affidavit, the “totality of the circumstances” presents a “substantial basis” for conducting a search for that evidence.
Id.
at 878;
see also United States v. Ross,
Elliott argues that Wilson’s testimony should be discounted because it was delivered in response to leading questions, because Wilson had a motive to testify against him, and because evidence suggests that she may have planted cocaine in Elliott’s apartment in order to incriminate him. We address each of these arguments in turn.
First, there is no bar to leading questions at a probable cause hearing. Here the district attorney appeared with Wilson before the magistrate and questioned her under oath. While the questions may have been leading, the magistrate found Wilson’s testimony to be reliable. It is more customary for a police officer to appear alone at such hearings and describe what was conveyed to him earlier by an informant.
See, e.g., Upton,
Second, Wilson’s motive to testify does not undercut her credibility. In
Upton,
the informant stated that she had broken up with defendant and “wanted to burn him.”
Finally, Elliott argues at length that Wilson fabricated the evidence against him. This contention is insufficient for several reasons. Post-issuance attacks upon the testimony delivered at a search warrant hearing are permitted only with respect to the misstatements of governmental actors.
Franks,
Neither the magistrate nor the district judge made any finding that the government knew or should have known of any misstatements or wrongdoing on the part of Wilson. Indeed, the magistrate refused to find that Wilson had in fact fabricated any testimony. Although there was some evidence that Wilson once considered such a plan, the magistrate concluded that “[t]here was no evidence presented at the hearing to show that informant Wilson ever carried out any proposed scheme to plant cocaine.” Elliott is unable to point to any finding in the record even showing that Wilson made misstatements, much less that the government knew of them. In addition, Elliott’s allegations of wrongdoing go only to the presence of cocaine. Wilson also testified as to the presence of a mari *225 juana-growing operation, and to the fact that some time previously Elliott had a garbage-bag full of marijuana at his residence. These statements alone are sufficient to establish probable cause.
We therefore hold that the district court erred in ruling that Wilson’s testimony standing alone did not support a finding of probable cause. Wilson demonstrated an adequate basis for her knowledge, and testified in detail and under oath as to her personal observations of illegal activity. The totality of the circumstances clearly shows more than “bare bones” allegations,
see Gates,
B.
Elliott contends that the district court erred in ruling that the search warrant extended to the storeroom behind the apartment. The district court concluded that the room in question was part of Elliott’s apartment. We agree. The room was accessible through a hole cut in the wall of Elliott’s bathroom and covered by a burlap bag. This unconventional manner of access did not sever the room from the rest of the apartment. To the contrary, it made the room part of the apartment. Thus, the search of the storeroom did not exceed the scope of the warrant authorizing a search of the apartment.
Ill
We conclude that Wilson’s testimony established probable cause to believe Elliott had drugs in his apartment, and that the officers did not impermissibly exceed the scope of the warrant in searching the storeroom. Elliott has not established any violation of the fourth amendment.
REVERSED.
