OPINION AND ORDER
1. FACTS
The Drug Enforcement Agency and the Detroit Police Department were investigating brothers Keenan and Keon Wells’ relationship, if any, to the shooting deaths of four Detroit residents. The shootings were precipitated by disputes between the Wells brothers’ “Seven Mile Dogs” gang and a neighboring rival gang. These gangs engaged in a number of fights and other retaliatory attacks, which culminated in the four shooting deaths between April and August of 1997.
Defendant Jon Swaggerty allegedly belongs to the “Seven Mile Dogs” gang and is a close associate of Keenan Wells. Swaggerty resides at 19351 Biltmore in Detroit with his mother and other relatives. As part of the criminal investigation, the Detroit Police obtained a warrant to search 19351 Biltmore for “any guns or ammunition, [pjroof of residence for Keenan Wells, [and pjroof of residence for Keon Wells.” On October 9, 1997, 19351 Biltmore was searched pursuant to the warrant. Law enforcement officers found crack cocaine lying on the nightstand in Swaggerty’s bedroom. Under his mattress, they found two 9-millimeter handguns similar to the weapons used in the shooting deaths. Swaggerty was arrested and charged with possession with the intent to distribute cocaine and possession of firearms based on the seized evidence. '
He has filed a motion to suppress the gun and drug evidence taken from his home contending that the search violated the Fourth Amendment’s provision against unreasonable searches and seizures.
2. ANALYSIS
A. Validity of the Warrant
In order to obtain suppression of the evidence against him, Swaggerty must show that the warrant authorizing the search of his home was invalid. In order to issue a valid warrant, a judicial officer examines the
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affidavit on which the warrant is based and the “totality of the circumstances” stated to determine if the affidavit shows “a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.”
Illinois v. Gates,
Even with great deference, I cannot find probable cause to support the October 9, warrant authorizing the search of Swaggerty’s home. The affiant is a Detroit police officer who wrote ten numbered paragraphs to support the affidavit. The first eight of these paragraphs describe in detail the four shooting deaths, the role in which the Wells brothers are believed to have played in these deaths, and the eyewitnesses and victims who have identified the Wells brothers as the perpetrators. The ninth paragraph asserts that all police and Secretary of State records show the Wells brothers as residing at an address different from 19351 Biltmore. The tenth paragraph states:
10. On October 7, 1997, affiant and members of the “[ ] TASK FORCE,” in an effort to locate and arrest KEENAN WELLS, [sic] information was developed which indicated that KEENAN WELLS could be located at 19351 Biltmore, city of Detroit. At that location, the “Task Force” observed KEENAN WELLS exiting the Biltmore address, and made a positive visual identification. However, they were unable to make an apprehension at that time.
A nexus between the crime and the location to be searched must exist in order for a warrant to be constitutionally valid. A search of property merely because it is “owned, rented, or otherwise used by a criminal suspect [is] just the type of broad warrant the Fourth Amendment was designed to foreclose.”
United States v. Schultz,
So the warrant is invalid.
B. Good Faith Test
But finding a warrant invalid is only one hurdle a defendant must meet before a motion to suppress is granted. Swaggerty also needs to show that the “good faith” doctrine does not apply.
In
United States v. Leon,
Leon
describes four situations that are exceptions to the good faith doctrine. If one of these situations exists, evidence seized in a search under an invalid warrant is excluded from the prosecution’s ease-in-chief. The first of these situations occurs when the magistrate is “misled by information in an affidavit that the affiant knew was false or would have known was false except for this reckless disregard of the truth.”
Id.
As to these four situations, the first, second, and fourth are clearly not at issue. Nothing indicates the police lied in the affidavit and no evidence suggests the state judge acted’ as a “rubber stamp” by failing to give this matter proper consideration. The warrant clearly states the address of the house to be searched and gives a particularized description of the items to be seized. Thus, three of the four exceptions do not apply to this case.
Swaggerty must therefore satisfy the third exception to the good faith doctrine to succeed on his motion to suppress. This requires a showing that the affidavit was so lacking in an indicia of probable cause that a reasonable police officer could not in good faith have relied on the warrant. Determinations of probable cause and good faith are fact-intensive questions depending on so many different variables that “one determination will seldom be a useful ‘precedent’ for another.”
Gates,
In
United States v. Savoca,
A second relevant case is
United States v. Schultz,
In light of Savoca and Schultz, I turn now to the question of whether the facts in this case give rise to the indicia of probable cause necessary to admit the seized evidence under the good faith doctrine. As in Savoca, an indicia of probable cause arises from the fact that the Wells brothers were believed to have been involved in a series of crimes. It is reasonable for the police to have believed that Keenan Wells would keep his weapons within his close control so that he would be armed in the event another gang fight broke out. Thus, Wells’ presence at the 19351 Bilt-more address created an inference that he would have a stash of weapons at this location. Additionally, a reasonable inference of probable cause arises out of the officer’s experience that gang members store weapons in their homes. While the affidavit in question never specifically refers to the officer’s training and experience, the police may have noticed a pattern indicating where gang members in general, or the “Seven Mile Dogs” in particular, hid their weapons. Following Schultz, the police’s experience with this pattern created the indicia of probable cause necessary to satisfy Leon.
In this case, too, the police were faced with the daunting task of apprehending the perpetrators of four murders within a five-month period. Time to parse out the fine gradations of probable cause was simply lacking in the quest to catch the responsible parties. By submitting a sworn affidavit to a judicial officer, the police followed the constitutionally mandated protocols. Leon makes clear that as long as the police have an indicia of probable cause they can in good faith rely on the warrant.
I find that there exists an indicia of probable cause from which an objective police officer could in good faith have reasonably believed that probable cause existed. Therefore the good faith doctrine applies, and I deny Swaggerty’s motion to suppress.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
