Lead Opinion
Reversed by published opinion. Judge DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge KING joined. Judge KING wrote a separate concurring opinion. Judge MICHAEL wrote a dissenting opinion.
OPINION
The Government appeals the district court’s order suppressing certain physical evidence seized pursuant to a search warrant. Finding that the good faith exception adopted by the Supreme Court in United States v. Leon,
I.
On February 10, 2000, Richmond Police Department Detective John O’Connor received information from a confidential informant that a black male known as “Boo-Man” possessed a large quantity of heroin and was dealing heroin in the end apartment (next to that of a Sequell Sedrick) on Walcott Place, in Richmond, Virginia. The informant advised O’Connor that “Boo-Man” had “quite a bit of heroin, that he had some in his crotch, [and] that he kept it in his Cadillac.” The informant “described the Cadillac,” and related that Boo-Man “made trips ... out of the area frequently, back and forth to the apartment delivering drugs.” The informant' further told Detective O’Connor that Boo-Man and his group were “beefing with another group ... over a dispute at a dance hall.”
Later that evening, Detective O’Connor applied for a warrant, making an affidavit as to these facts and further stating that for the previous eight years this confidential informant hаd provided the Richmond Police Department with accurate information, which law enforcement officers had corroborated through “DMV, and Criminal History Checks, Search warrants and arrests,” and that the information had led to the “seizure of large quantities of drugs, and guns” and several convictions. On the basis of this affidavit, a state magistrate issued a search warrant for the apartment at 2234 Walcott Place.
Detective O’Connor and other police officers conducted the search for several hours, beginning at 10:40 p.m. on February 10. The search yielded 196 gross grams of heroin, some marijuana, drug paraphernalia, a scale, bullets, and $10,750 in cash. The lessee of the apartment, Iris Johnson, was absent during the search, but two other residents of the apartment, Sumeka Plummer and Terrell Bynum (who the police learned was Boo Man), were present. However, the police arrested no one that evening.
On May 25, 2000, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent Kenneth Peterson sought another warrant to search 2234 Walcott Place. The affidavit, after two generic paragraphs identifying Agent Peterson as a DEA task force officer with training and experience in narcotics investigations, stated in relevant part:
3. This affidavit is made in support of a SEARCH WARRANT for the residence of Terrell BYNUM, located at 2234 Walcott Place, Richmond, VA. This location has been utilized by BYNUM in furtherance of drug trafficking crimes and is within the Eastern District of Virginia and the jurisdiction of the Court.
4. BYNUM is described by the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles as a male with a date of birth of 01/01/79 and social security number 227-43-1409. BYNUM has a criminal record in Virginia and is a convicted felon.
5. Information and intelligence provided in this investigation by a Confidential Source (CS) has been proven rehable and information provided to law enforcement has been verified. The CS has identified BYNUM as a large quantity dealer of heroin.
6. On February 10, 2000, a search warrant conducted at 2234 Walcott Place, Richmond, VA by DEA and the Richmond Police Department resulted in the seizure of approximately 196 gross grams of heroin. $10,750 in U.S. Currency was also seized from within the residence. Additionally, a digital scale, razor blade and packaging material were seized from the residence.
7. Within the past 72 hours, the CS has observed a large quantity of heroin within the residence at 2234 Walcott Place, Richmond, VA. The CS observed BYNUM packaging heroin for distribution and delivering a portion of the narcotics to three associates. A substantial amount of heroin remained within the residence after the delivery.
An Assistant United States Attorney reviewed and signed the affidavit, his signature indicating his approval of it. On the basis of this affidavit, a United States Magistrate Judge issued a search warrant. Government agents, including Agent Peterson, executed a search pursuant to the warrant on the evening of May 25, 2000. This search yielded а small amount of marijuana, a loaded .40 caliber Beretta semi-automatic pistol, and unspent .380 caliber and 9mm caliber ammunition. Brief of Appellant at 7.
Shortly thereafter, a grand jury indicted Bynum, Plummer, and Johnson for multiple drug and firearm offenses. Bynum, Plummer, and Johnson moved to suppress the physical evidence that law enforcement authorities had seized pursuant to the February and May search warrants. The district court issued an order denying the suppression motion with respect to the February warrant, but granting it as to the May warrant. United States v. Bynum,
II.
In granting the motion to suppress on the basis of the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule, the district court found (1) that no probable cause supported the warrant and (2) that the Leon good faith exception did not “save[ ] the yield of the May 25 search from suppression.” Id. at 797-99. The Government contends that the court erred with respect to Both rulings. Assuming without deciding that no probable cause supported the warrant, we will proceed “immediately to a consideration of the officers’ good faith.” Leon,
Leon teaches that a court should not suppress the fruits of a search conducted under the authority of a warrant, even a “subsequently invalidated” warrant, unless “a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the search was illegal despite the magistrate’s authorization.” Leon,
(1) “the magistrate ... was misled by information in an affidavit that the affiant knew was false or would have known was false except for his reckless disregard of the truth”;
(2) the magistrate acted as a rubber stamp for the officers and so “wholly abandoned” his detached and neutral “judicial role”;
(3) “an affidavit [is] so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable”; or
(4) “a warrant [is] so facially deficient— ie., in failing to particularize the place to be searched or the things to be seized — that the executing officers cannot reasonably presume it to be valid.”
Id. at 923,
In holding that the third circumstance described by the Leon Court barred application of the good faith exception in this case, the district court misidentified when this circumstance occurs. Thus, the court stated that “[t]he good faith exception ... does not apply” when the affidavit fails to provide “a substantial basis for determining the existence of probable cause.” Bynum,
With the correct standard in mind, we believe it is clear that even if Agent Peterson’s affidavit does not provide a substantial basis for determining the existence of probable cause, see Illinois v. Gates,
In his affidavit, Agent Peterson (1) recited that Bynum resided at the apartment that he sought to search and had used the apartment in drug trafficking crimes, (2) stated Bynum’s birth dаte and social secu
Although in his affidavit, Agent Peterson did not expressly inform the magistrate judge that the confidential source was the same source who provided information for the February 10 search, from the affidavit the magistrate judge could reasonably have inferred a link between the confidential source and the February search. Paragraphs 3 and 4 of the affidavit establish that the warrant is requested to search 2234 Walcott Place, the residence of Terrell Bynum, a convicted felon, who has been using his home to traffic in illegal drugs. In paragraph 5 the affidavit states that a confidential source “in this investigation” has supplied reliable information to law enforcement officers, which “has been verified.” The affidavit then proceeds chronologically to detail, in the remainder of paragraph 5, what information the informant previously has provided during the investigation, i.e., that Bynum is “a large quantity dealer of heroin,” and then, in paragraph 6, how law enforcement has verified that information, i.e., by recovering 196 gross grams of heroin from the same site — -2234 Walcott Place — in the February search. The magistrate judge could, therefore, reasonably infer from reading paragraphs 5 and 6 seriatim, and in conjunction, that they are to be linked— to establish the veracity and reliability of the informant.
The district court, however, noting the absence of any explicit fink or any other specific information as to the confidential source’s prior proved reliability, found that the Leon good faith exception did not “save[ ] the yield of the May 25 search from suppression.” Bynum,
In Wilhelm, after receiving an anonymous telephone tip that an informant had seen marijuana being sold in the defendant’s home within the past 48 hours, an officer applied for a search warrant. Wilhelm,
Here, unlike Wilhelm, the officer relied not on an unknown informant but one whom he knew and who had provided reliable information in the past that law enforcement officers had “verified.” The Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized that a proven, reliable informant is entitled to far more credence than an unknown, anonymous tipster. See, e.g., Florida v. J.L.,
Moreover, as noted above, in the case at hand the magistrate judge reasonably could have inferred from the affidavit that law enforcement officers had verified prior information obtained from this same confidential source by a fruitful search of the same search site (Bynum’s residence) just three and a half months eаrlier. The Supreme Court has expressly recognized that affidavits in support of search warrants should not be subject to “[technical requirements of elaborate specificity,” and that a magistrate has the “authority ... to draw such reasonable inferences as he will from the material supplied to him by applicants for a warrant.” Gates,
Furthermore, the affidavit provided explicit corroboration of possible illegal drug activity at the search site, which far exceeds that in the affidavit at issue in Wilhelm. Critically, Agent Peterson’s affidavit stated that Bynum was. a convicted felon with a criminal record in Virginia, who resided at the proposed search site, a site where officers had seized a large amount of heroin and United States currency less than four months earlier. An officer’s report in his affidavit of “the target’s prior criminal activity or record is clearly material to the probable cause determination,” United States v. Taylor,
Nor, again unlike Wilhelm, is there an indication in this case of any sort of bad faith by the officer who prepared the affidavit. The affiant in Wilhelm craftily choose his words in an attempt to clothe a totally anonymous source with “genuine substance.” Id. at 123. In contrast, as the district court recognized, “[t]here is nothing here to suggest that” Agent Peterson in any way “was dishonest.” J.A. at 361 (Transcript of Suppression Hearing at 331). Cf. Leon,
In reaching its contrary conclusion, the district court may have found relevant Agent Peterson’s failure to state exрressly in his affidavit that the confidential informant on whom he relied had also provided the information for the fruitful February search of the same apartment. See Bynum,
If the district court relied on the absence of this information in refusing to apply Leon’s good faith exception, that reliance was error. When, as here, the affidavit itself provides information not “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable,” Leon,
This is not to say that absent an affidavit with the required “indicia of probable cause,” Leon,
Our dissenting colleague, Judge Michael, makes a persuasive case that such information should not be considered in determining whether the officer displayed the objective reasonableness described in Leon. To so hold would certainly seem, as Judge Michael well explains, to undercut Fourth Amendment protections, аnd be at odds with the very purpose of the Leon good faith exception. On the other hand, to refuse to consider such information in making the Leon inquiry creates an anomaly. Even though Leon itself renders admissible evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant supported by an affidavit that lacks probable cause, Judge Michael’s interpretation of Leon would bar admission of evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant supported by the affidavit of an officer, who, in fact, possesses probable cause, but inadvertently omits some information from his affidavit.
Today, we need not resolve this difficult question. Wholly apart from the information known to Agent Peterson but not included in his affidavit, that affidavit contained sufficient indicia of probable cause so as not to render reliance on it totally unreasonable. Accordingly, we hold that the Leon good faith exception applies and the district court should not have suppressed the evidence obtained during the May 25, 2000 search.
III.
For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is
REVERSED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I am pleased to concur in Judge Motz’s excellent analysis and application of the good faith exception enumerated by the Supreme Court in United States v. Leon. I write separately, however, because I believe this search warrant to be properly supported and to have been properly issued.
First of all, we must recognize that Agent Peterson and his colleagues did most everything right. They assessed their evidence; they prepared their affidavit and paperwork for the search warrant application; they took their information and papers to an Assistant United States Attorney for review and critique; they obtained the approval of the prosecutor for what they were about to do; they placed their affidavit before the sitting United States Magistrate Judge in Richmond for an independent judicial assessment; they obtained the duly issued search warrant from the Magistrate Judge; and then, as Judge Motz properly concludes, they executed the warrant in good faith. See Massachusetts v. Sheppard,
Turning to the sufficiency of the warrant, we must look to the totality of the circumstances to assess whether a search warrant affidavit supports a finding of probable cause. See Illinois v. Gates,
I fully agree with Judge Motz that this case presents an entirely different factual situation from that in United States v. Wilhelm,
In sum, Agent Peterson’s affidavit, as presented to the Magistrate Judge,, contained substantial and pertinent information from which probable cause could be found. When evaluated in context — in the totality of the circumstances — this affidavit made a compelling case that there was drug activity afoot in the Richmond residence of a known drug trafficker.
Because I believe this warrant to have been validly issued, I would find it unnecessary to reach the good faith issue. All that said, I am pleased to concur with Judge Motz on that point.
Notes
The affidavit of Agent Peterson, dated May 25, 2000, gave the Magistrate Judge the following pertinent information: (1) Bynum lived at (and thus controlled) the premises to be
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority assumes without deciding that Agent Petеrson’s affidavit failed to establish probable cause for the May 25, 2000, search of an apartment at 2234 Wal-cott Place in Richmond. The majority then holds that the evidence from that search can nonetheless be admitted under the good faith exception established by United States v. Leon,
I.
In deciding whether Agent Peterson’s affidavit was so lacking in indicia of probable cause that no reasonable officer would have submitted it to a magistrate, we must view the affidavit in the light of the totality-of-the-circumstances test for probable cause established by the Supreme Court in Illinois v. Gates,
Paragraph 7 of Agent Peterson’s affidavit, ante at 194, states that the confidential informant had been inside Bynum’s apartment at 2234 Walcott Place within the last 72 hours and had observed Bynum preparing “a large quantity of heroin” for distribution. If credible, this information shows that the informant had a sufficient basis of knowledge to establish probable cause for the May 25 search. Conversely, if the information in paragraph 7 is not credible, the affidavit falls so far short of establishing probable cause that no reasonable officer would have submitted it to a magistrate. Thus, the critical question in this ease is whether an objectively reasonable officer would have believed that Agent Peterson’s affidavit provided the magistrate with a substantial and independent basis for concluding that the confidential informant was credible. The government argues that the credibility of the informant in Agent Peterson’s affidavit is supported by (a) the agent’s claims about the informant’s reliability in paragraph 5 and (b) the corroboration of the informant’s tip in paragraphs 3, 4, and 6. Neither provided the magistrate with a substantial and independent basis for crediting the informant’s
A.
The first sentence in paragraph 5 attempts to establish the confidential informant’s veracity by pointing to his track record. It states:
Information and intelligence provided in this investigation by a Confidential Source (CS) has been proven reliable and information provided to law enforcement has been verified.
The bar for establishing an informant’s veracity through references to his track record is not high. For example, courts have uniformly held that an informant’s veracity is adequately established when the affiant asserts that the informant has supplied information leading to arrests and convictions. See, e.g., United States v. King,
This point is not undercut by the majority’s statement that, under applicable Supreme Court precedent, “a proven, reliable informant is entitled to far more credence than an unknown, anonymous tipster.” Ante at 197. I agree that an officer will often have better reason to trust an informant he 'knows than an anonymous voice on the other end of a telephone line. The cases cited by the majority, however, do not speak to the question of whether a magistrate must treat a known confidential informant whose veracity is supported only by bare bones assertions as more credible than an anonymous informant. Neither Florida v. J.L.,
Agent Peterson’s assertion in paragraph 5 that his informant had provided reliable and verified information in the past is a bare conclusion that should have been given little or no weight by the magistrate. No reasonable officer would have thought this assertion provided the magistrate with a substantial and independent basis for crediting the informant’s tip. Consequently, Agent Peterson could rely on the May 25 warrant in good faith only if he could reasonably believe that his affidavit’s corroborating evidence provided the magistrate with a substantial basis for concluding that the informant was truthful.
B.
The corroborating information in Agent Peterson’s affidavit appears in paragraphs
The Supreme Court has explained that partial corroboration of a tip helps to establish an informant’s veracity because if “an informant is right about some things, he is mоre probably right about other facts.” Gates,
Answering this question requires some standard for deciding when an informant’s truthfulness about one fact makes it reasonable to assume that he has also been truthful about other facts. The Supreme Court’s cases on corroboration indicate that confirmation of the informant’s truthfulness about, just any set of facts will not do. Instead, the Court has asked whether the informant’s knowledge of the facts verified by the police indicates that he was аlso in a position to know about the criminal activity allegedly being carried out by the subject of the tip. In Florida v. J.L., for example, an anonymous caller told police that a young black male wearing a plaid shirt at a certain bus stop was carrying a gun. The police went to the bus stop and saw a young , black male who was wearing a plaid shirt; one policeman frisked the young man after ordering him to put his hands up on the bus stop. J.L.,
Under this analysis the proper question to ask about Agent Peterson’s affidavit is whether the fact that the informant correctly identified Bynum as a heroin dealer makes it reasonable to credit his claims, set out in paragraph 7 of the agent’s affidavit, that he (the informant) had been inside Bynum’s apartment and that he had personally observed Bynum preparing heroin for distribution. I submit that it does not. A person could easily know Bynum’s general reputation as a heroin dealer without having the sort of relationship with Bynum that would make the person privy to the details of Bynum’s
This point, however, does not settle the corroboration issue because our cases appear to recognize a second method of corroboration distinct from that discussed in Gates, White, and J.L. For example, in United States v. Lalor,
As the majority points out, ante at 198, courts have consistently observed that a suspect’s prior criminal activity can help to corroborate an informant’s tip. This is not surprising. As a matter of common sense, an informant’s allegation that a convicted drug dealer is selling heroin sounds more credible than an allegation that a local choir director has become a crack dealer. Nevertheless, courts usually rely on a suspect’s prior criminal history as only one among several factors supporting the reliability of the informant’s tip. See, e.g., United States v. Burke,
At least in the circumstances of this case, I believe that the implications of a positive answer are unacceptable. As I see it, the veracity of the informant in this case is supported solely by Agent Peterson’s bare bones assertion of the informant’s reliability and by the consistency of the tip with Bynum’s prior criminal history. I have already explained that the bare bones assertions in paragraph 5 of the affidavit do not elevate the credibility of Agent Peterson’s informant above that of an anonymous informant. See supra at 203-04; Brack,
While I would not go so far as to say that the veracity of an untested informant’s tip can never be corroborated solely by a suspect’s criminal history, the circumstances in which police should be allowed to search a home on this basis should be rare. A contrary holding gives police no incentive to seek independent confirmation of an informant’s claim that a suspect is currently engaged in criminal activity. At the very lеast, police should be able to rely solely on prior criminal history to establish the veracity of a confidential informant only when that criminal history is quite recent. Here, it would be unreasonable to contend that just because police found evidence of heroin trafficking in Bynum’s apartment during a search on February 10, there was a fair probability that evidence of heroin trafficking would still be
In sum, the corroboration in paragraphs 3, 4, and 6 of Agent Peterson’s affidavit was insufficient to merit application of the good faith exception on either theory of corroboration. The problem under the first theory is that even if the police could be said to have confirmed the informant’s claim that Bynum was a large quantity heroin dealer, the informant’s knowledge of that fact has little weight because it does not demonstrate that the informant was in a position to have the kind of inside information attributed tо him in paragraph 7. The problem under the second theory is that, in circumstances like this ease, allowing a tip to be corroborated solely by evidence of a suspect’s prior criminal activity will gut the protections of the Fourth Amendment for persons with criminal histories. “Once a crook, always a crook” may be an epigram that is useful at times, but it should not be given the place in our Fourth Amendment law that the majority accords it today.
C.
For the foregoing reasons, I conclude that a reasonable officer would not have submitted Agent Peterson’s affidavit to a magistrate because a reasonable officer would have recognized that the affidavit did not provide the magistrate with a substantial and independent basis for crediting the informant’s claims reported in paragraph 7 of the affidavit. Consequently, Agent Peterson’s affidavit was “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable,” and Leon’s good faith exception should not apply. Leon,
II.
Because I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the information in Agent Peterson’s affidavit was substantial enough to warrant application of the good faith exception, I must deal with a question that the majority did not have to reach: namely, whether an officer’s good faith can be established on the basis of information known to the officer but never presented to a magistrate. Relying on United States v. Weeks,
It is important to set the government’s position in context. Agent Peterson’s actual affidavit said only that the confidential informant had provided reliable information that had been verified. If we credit the government’s claims about what Agent Peterson knew but did not tell the magistrate, Agent Peterson’s affidavit could have said, among other things, that the informant had worked for the Richmond Police Department for eight years, that the informant’s tips had led to multiple convictions in state and federal courts, and (most significantly) that the informant had supplied the tip that established probable
As the majority observes, ante at 199, courts have split on the difficult question of whether information known to an officer but never presented to a magistrate can be used to establish the officer’s good faith. The government urges us to hold that it can, but I think the Supreme Court’s explanations of the good faith exception in Leon and Malley show that the government is wrong. The problem with the government’s position stems from its basic premise that objective good faith is determined by the reasonableness of the officer’s belief in the existence of probable cause. An officer’s reasonable belief that he has probable cause for a search may be a necessary condition of objective good faith, but it is not a sufficient condition. Leon also requires courts to ask whether the officer had an objectively reasonable belief that his affidavit gave the magistrate a substantial basis for finding probable cause. The point is underscored by Leon’s language describing the third circumstance that bars application of the good faith exception: “Nor would an officer manifest objective good faith in relying on a warrant based on an affidavit so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.” Leon,
The same point is implied by Leon’s general principle that the exclusionary rule should apply when “a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the search was illegal despite the magistrate’s
The government’s reading of Leon’s third disqualifying circumstance as covering only cases where the officer lacked an objectively reasonable belief in the existencе of probable cause significantly reduces the scope of the third circumstance. In essence, the government suggests that a bare bones affidavit is only bad if the affiant had no objectively reasonable basis for his conclusory assertions. This cannot be correct. The first problem with a bare bones affidavit is not that the affiant’s claims of probable cause might be unfounded, but that the conclusory character of those claims prevents the magistrate from properly performing his constitutional role. See, e.g., Gates,
In sum, the government cannot establish an officеr’s objective good faith under Leon by producing evidence of facts known to the officer but not disclosed to the magistrate. This is because Leon requires that the officer be able to entertain a reasonable belief that the magistrate had a substantial basis for finding probable cause. Whether that belief is reasonable can depend only upon the facts presented to the magistrate. Thus, even in the most benign of circumstances (for example, when an officer has inadvertently omitted from his affidavit a crucial detail that would have established the relationship between the suspected criminal activity and the place to be searched), what the officer knew but did not tell the magistrate is irrelevant. See People v. Deitchman,
III.
In dissenting from Leon nearly twenty years ago, Justice Brennan predicted that the long run effect of that decision would be “to undermine the integrity of the warrant process.” Leon,
. I deal briefly with one point raised by the majority that was not pressed by the government. The majority suggests that even though Agent Peterson failed to “expressly inform the magistrate judge that the confidential source was the same source who provided information for the February 10 search,” ante at 196, Peterson reasonably relied on the search warrant in part because the magistrate "could reasonably have inferred a link between the confidential source [referred to in paragraphs 5 and 7 of Agent Peterson’s affidavit] and the February search [described in paragraph 6 of the affidavit],” id. I agree with the majority that the good faith exception would apply in this case if the affidavit fairly implied that the informant mentioned in paragraphs 5 and 7 provided the information that supported the warrant for the February 10 search. I cannot agree, however, that a magistrate could reasonably draw the inference suggested by the majority. Because the link between Agent Peterson’s confidential informant and the February 10 search would provide such powerful evidence of the informant’s veracity, a reasonable magistrate would expect the affidavit to set out this information explicitly. See United States v. Bynum,
. It might be questioned whether this second method of corroboration is consistent with the reasoning of the Supreme Court cases on corroboration of informants’ tips. Those cases explain that confirming one aspect of an informant's tip helps to demonstrate that the informant was both “honest” and “well informed.” White,
. A possible exception is United States v. Taylor,
. I trust the majority would agree that there must be some point at which a suspect’s prior criminal activity is simply too remote in time to justify an inference that an unproven informant’s allegation of present criminal activity is trustworthy. Obviously, the majority does not believe that point has been reached in this case.
