Filed: Jul. 20, 2020
Latest Update: Jul. 20, 2020
Summary: FILED United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit PUBLISH July 20, 2020 Christopher M. Wolpert UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Clerk of Court TENTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. No. 19-6036 JIMMIE DARYL MOSES, Defendant-Appellant. APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA (D.C. NO. 5:15-CR-00041-F-1) Josh Lee, Assistant Federal Public Defender (Virginia L. Grady, Federal Public Defender, with him on the briefs), Office of the Fed
Summary: FILED United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit PUBLISH July 20, 2020 Christopher M. Wolpert UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Clerk of Court TENTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. No. 19-6036 JIMMIE DARYL MOSES, Defendant-Appellant. APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA (D.C. NO. 5:15-CR-00041-F-1) Josh Lee, Assistant Federal Public Defender (Virginia L. Grady, Federal Public Defender, with him on the briefs), Office of the Fede..
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FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH July 20, 2020
Christopher M. Wolpert
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Clerk of Court
TENTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. No. 19-6036
JIMMIE DARYL MOSES,
Defendant-Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA
(D.C. NO. 5:15-CR-00041-F-1)
Josh Lee, Assistant Federal Public Defender (Virginia L. Grady, Federal Public
Defender, with him on the briefs), Office of the Federal Public Defender, Denver,
Colorado, for Appellant.
Steven W. Creager, Assistant United States Attorney (Timothy J. Downing,
United States Attorney, and Ashley L. Altshuler, Assistant United States
Attorney, with him on the brief), Office of the United States Attorney, Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma, for Appellee.
Before TYMKOVICH, Chief Judge, BRISCOE, and MATHESON, Circuit
Judges.
TYMKOVICH, Chief Judge.
Jimmie Daryl Moses pleaded guilty to a federal firearm charge after the
district court denied his motion to suppress evidence uncovered in a search
conducted on his property in Norman, Oklahoma. The search was intended to
uncover evidence of an illegal automobile “chop shop” operation, but law
enforcement also found a firearm that Moses should not have possessed as a
former felon.
Moses reserved the right to challenge the suppression order and argues on
appeal that the district court impermissibly denied him an evidentiary hearing
under Franks v. Delaware,
438 U.S. 154 (1978), to challenge the search warrant.
He specifically contends Norman police recklessly neglected to tell the state judge
issuing the warrant that the police had materially exculpatory evidence in the
form of video footage of his property. We agree with the district court that the
video footage was not materially exculpatory and does not negate the strong
probable cause established by the affidavit submitted to the state judge.
Therefore, exercising our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we AFFIRM
the district court’s order denying a Franks hearing.
I. Background
In October 2012, the Norman Police Department began investigating
vehicle thefts happening across Norman, Oklahoma. During this investigation,
one of the officers, Detective Barbour, uncovered evidence suggesting Moses was
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operating at his residence in rural Norman a “chop shop”—or a place where stolen
cars are taken to be “chopped” up and sold for parts. Detective Barbour, after
interviewing at least five informants and inspecting aerial photographs of Moses’s
property, came to believe that stolen vehicles were being taken to the property,
sold to Moses in exchange for methamphetamine, stripped for parts, scrubbed of
their vehicle identification (or VIN) numbers, and then resold in Oklahoma City
through organized crime channels. To help confirm the detective’s suspicions,
the Police Department arranged for a video camera to be installed on a pole near
the property in April 2013. The camera had a view of the driveway, part of the
main house, and two other buildings on the property. The video feed from the
camera was apparently not monitored until June 11, at which time the
investigators agreed on a plan by which they would review a list of vehicles
reported stolen and “check the video feed every 3-4 days” for any of the vehicles
on the list. R., Vol. 1 at 100. A few days later, on June 17, Norman Police
received a tip that Moses suspected the camera was there and spying on his
property.
During the course of the investigation, the police interviewed a number of
informants. The informants all told stories consistent with the theory that Moses
was running a chop shop on his property. One told Detective Barbour that two
people were “getting their drugs from a guy named ‘Daryl’ last name unknown
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[who] was busted for a chop shop on north Porter some time ago.” R., Vol. 1 at
89. The informant also told police that one of those people “takes the stolen
vehicles to ‘Daryl’ to have them stripped down.”
Id. While the informant did not
know Daryl’s last name, he did know that Daryl had “a white tow truck with no
marking on it” and that he was getting methamphetamine from a person associated
with the Mexican Cartel.
Id.
Another informant told Detective Barbour that stolen vehicles were being
taken to a property “east of Norman” to be “chopped up” so that their parts could
be “taken to Oklahoma City.”
Id. at 91. While this informant did not know the
property owner’s name, he described a man matching Moses’s appearance and
described a property matching the aerial photographs.
A third informant told Detective Barbour that cars were taken to a property
in the vicinity of Moses’s, where they would wait “until it cools off.”
Id. A
fourth told police that a man brought stolen cars to Daryl’s property in the part of
town where Moses lived in exchange for methamphetamine. The same informant
also said there was “a shop or barn where Daryl normally works on the vehicles.”
Id.
A final informant told police he had taken stolen cars to Daryl’s property
and stated: “Daryl gets the cars, turns them over by stripping the vehicle,
destroying the [VIN], and then getting rid of the rest of the vehicle.”
Id. at 92.
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He also said they would drive stolen vehicles to a brown building on the property,
get their meth, and then bring the vehicles to the shop on the property.
To the extent that the informants described the site of the exchange of cars
for meth and the owner of that site, their descriptions all match the property and
Moses, respectively. The aerial photographs that Detective Barbour attached to
his affidavit confirm the existence of various structures referred to by the
informants, and they also showed approximately 20 vehicles on the
property—including a truck that might be an unmarked white tow truck and some
vehicles that were apparently not in use, as demonstrated by the way they were
parked. Based on his training and experience, the detective averred that the
photographs showed what one would expect to see if “an active chop shop
[existed] on the property.”
Id.
The affidavit included no mention of the pole camera or the fact that its
footage yielded nothing suspicious. 1
1
Because the pole camera footage was only stored on a month-to-month
basis, it was not preserved long enough for the district court to review it. We
therefore must rely on police officers’ testimony as to what was on the footage.
According to an investigator’s sworn affidavit, Detective Ware said that “in the
five months the camera was up and running and prior to the execution of the
search warrant he never saw a vehicle on Mr. Moses’s property that had been
reported stolen.” R., Vol. 1 at 103. Unsurprisingly, then, Detective Barbour did
not rely on that pole camera footage when he sought a search warrant for the
property. Instead his 14-page search affidavit discussed his interviews with
various informants and contained aerial photographs of the property.
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A state judge issued the warrant, and Norman police executed it on
September 4, 2013. During their search, officers discovered a stolen pistol on
Moses’s person, several stolen vehicles, parts of stolen vehicles, license plates
from stolen vehicles, and other items one might expect to find at a chop shop.
They also found 26.15 grams of methamphetamine and stolen firearms in Moses’s
bedroom.
Id.
Moses was arrested and indicted with being a felon in possession of a
firearm, a federal crime under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Moses moved to suppress
evidence uncovered during the search. He argued that pole camera footage
vitiated probable cause and that Detective Barbour’s exclusion of material
evidence from the warrant affidavit was reckless, in violation of Moses’s Fourth
Amendment rights. He further argued that he was entitled to a Franks hearing
because he made a substantial preliminary showing of Detective Barbour’s
recklessness and the video footage’s materiality.
The district court denied his motion to suppress and declined to grant
Moses an evidentiary hearing. The court reasoned that any pole camera footage
would have been insufficient to negate the strong probable cause that resulted
from the cross-corroborated testimony of five witnesses and the aerial
photographs. The district court observed the absence of suspicious activity on the
camera was not all that concerning. After all, it noted, stolen vehicles were
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brought onto the property at night, when the camera would not have been able to
see any criminal activity.
II. Analysis
Moses contends on appeal he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing to
establish that the police recklessly omitted material exculpatory evidence as
required by Franks. As in the district court, he argues the pole camera footage
that showed no sign of criminal activity would have defeated probable cause,
making its omission from a search warrant application improper.
A. Franks v. Delaware
Under Franks, a Fourth Amendment violation occurs if “(1) an officer’s
affidavit supporting a search warrant application contains a reckless misstatement
or omission that (2) is material because, but for it, the warrant could not have
lawfully issued.” United States v. Herrera,
782 F.3d 571, 573 (10th Cir. 2015);
see also Kapinski v. City of Albuquerque, (No. 19-2149,
2020 WL 3635094, at
9–10 (10 th Cir. July 6, 2020). Thus in order to obtain any sort of relief under
Franks, a defendant must show both recklessness and materiality.
If a defendant makes a “substantial preliminary showing” that both of these
elements exist, he is entitled to an evidentiary hearing to prove a Franks
violation.
Franks, 438 U.S. at 155. Such a substantial preliminary showing
requires more than mere allegations of defects in a warrant. A defendant must
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produce evidence of the complained-of defects by offering “[a]ffidavits or sworn
or otherwise reliable statements of witnesses.”
Id. at 171. If the defendant
cannot produce such evidence, he must explain why he cannot do so.
Id.
In considering whether a Franks hearing was appropriate, the district court
determined that Moses failed to make any substantial preliminary showing that the
pole camera footage was material. To the contrary, the absence of any suspicious
activity on camera is to be expected, according to the district court, if the criminal
activity happened at night when the camera could not see it. That Moses also
knew about the camera further suggests the camera would not be expected to yield
anything suspicious, as he would have taken extra measures to avoid doing
anything criminal in its field of vision.
Because the district court, and now the parties, focused almost exclusively
on the materiality prong, we consider that prong first. And because we conclude
the district court came to the correct decision on this prong, any consideration of
the recklessness prong is unnecessary since the failure to show either materiality
or recklessness is fatal to a defendant’s entitlement to a Franks hearing.
B. Application
1. Evidentiary Standard
We begin by describing the proper standard for the district court to use
when deciding to grant or deny a Franks hearing. Moses argues that a district
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court is required to draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the movant and
objects to the fact the district court did not draw such inferences. Specifically, he
argues the district court was required as a matter of law to accept every step of a
lengthy and unsubstantiated inferential chain. The first inference he says was
required is that the police installed the pole camera and reviewed the footage in
good faith. The district court would then be required to draw the inference that
“the surveillance camera” installed and monitored in good faith by competent
police “would have captured some indication that a chop shop was in operation on
Mr. Moses’s property if such activity were, in fact, occurring.” Aplt. Br. at 26.
He further argues the district court should have inferred from the fact the police
did not include any evidence in their warrant affidavit that they “failed to capture
any suggestion of any kind that Moses was operating a chop shop.”
Id. at 27
(emphasis in the original). This all builds up to the ultimate link in the chain that
Moses “could not operate a chop shop for five months without leaving behind
some visual evidence of such an operation” on the pole camera.
Id. In short,
Moses argues the district court was required to infer materiality of the omitted
evidence.
As an initial matter, we disagree with Moses’s premise that the district
court was required to draw inferences supporting his theory of the case. Instead,
our cases make clear a district court is not required to draw all logically
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permissible inferences favorable to a defendant seeking a Franks hearing. We
made this point most forcefully only recently when we held: “A reviewing judge
may infer recklessness . . . . But this is not a mandatory or automatic inference.”
Kapinski,
2020 WL 3635094, at 17 (citing Beard v. City of Northglenn,
24 F.3d
110, 116 (10th Cir. 1994)). And in United States v. Williams, we concluded a
police affiant’s past misconduct did not “allow us to infer that a false statement
was deliberately or recklessly included” in a warrant affidavit.
576 F.3d 1149,
1162 (10th Cir. 2009). Of course, in light of the fact Franks requires a
substantial showing of recklessness, it makes little sense for a court to draw an
unsubstantiated inference of recklessness. See Kapinski,
2020 WL 3635094, at
17 (concluding an inference of recklessness requires confirmation and would be
improper where “the record lacks direct evidence of . . . recklessness and fails to
support any such inference”). And the principle is at least as compelling when
considering the materiality prong, as we do here. The law cannot require a
substantial showing of materiality at the same time as it forces a district court to
simply infer it.
A district court reviewing the probable cause for a warrant puts itself in the
shoes of the warrant’s issuing jurist and gives substantial deference to the prior
decision. See Illinois v. Gates,
462 U.S. 213, 236 (1983) (“A magistrate’s
‘determination of probable cause should be paid great deference by reviewing
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courts.’”) (quoting Spinelli v. United States,
393 U.S. 410, 419 (1969)). The
district court is, therefore, only required to make any inferences that would have
been required when the warrant application was considered. As it turns out, a
court assessing probable cause based on the totality of the evidence in a warrant
application is rarely ever compelled to draw any particular inference. Because the
assessment of probable cause “does not lend itself to a prescribed set of rules,”
id.
at 239, a judge is free to draw, “or to refuse to draw,” any “reasonable inferences
as he will from the material supplied to him.”
Id. at 240. Moses’s understanding
of the district court’s role is incompatible with this scheme and our case law.
In support of his argument to the contrary, Moses suggests that he was
entitled to summary-judgment-like inferences in his favor, citing only a case
discussing the summary judgment standard. See Pioneer Centres Holding v.
Aleurs Fin., N.A.,
858 F.3d 1324, 1334 (10th Cir. 2017) (stating that a “district
court must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party” on a
motion for summary judgment). He contends the denial of a motion to suppress
effectively killed his case and amounted to the equivalent of summary judgment
against him. But we are aware of no persuasive authority suggesting that
borrowing the summary judgment standard is appropriate in the context of a
Franks motion, and we decline to adopt it.
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Pointing to a Seventh Circuit case, Moses also contends the district court is
required to take any permissible inference in favor of the defendant into account,
even if that court decided the inference was inappropriate. But in that case,
United States v. Clark, the court concluded “credibility omissions do not require
courts to infer recklessness” and “the omission of so much important [material]
information permits (but does not require) an inference that the omissions were
deliberate or reckless.”
935 F.3d 558, 566 (7th Cir. 2019) (emphasis in the
original); see also Kapinski,
2020 WL 3635094, at 17.
To be fair, Moses specifically cites one line in Clark: “If the showing of
probable cause in the warrant application depended on the credibility of the
informant, that permissible inference should be enough to obtain a Franks
hearing.” 935 F.3d at 566. We take his argument to be that, because a
“permissible inference should be enough to obtain a Franks hearing,” any
plausible inference in favor of a Franks hearing necessitates one. Such a reading,
though, misunderstands the Seventh Circuit’s point. We read that case to say that
when a permissible inference is actually drawn, it may necessitate a Franks
hearing. To require a court to grant a Franks hearing just because some inference
is permissible collapses the distinction between required and permissible
inferences and ignores the general principles that the Supreme Court has set out
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for reviewing probable cause determinations.
See 462 U.S. at 236. We reject any
argument that has us read Clark otherwise.
In short, our cases hold that unsubstantiated inferences are not “mandatory
or automatic” in the Franks context. Kapinski,
2020 WL 3635094, at 17; United
States v. Hopson, 643 F. App’x 694, 697 (10th Cir. 2016) (affirming the district
court’s refusal to draw inference in defendant’s favor when a logical alternative
explanation existed). We therefore reject Moses’s proposed evidentiary standard
and proceed to consider whether the omission of information regarding the pole
camera was material to the state court’s issuance of a search warrant by
considering the totality of the evidence.
2. Materiality
In examining whether the excluded information would have been material,
we consider whether the affidavit, had it included the omitted information, still
would have supported probable cause and thereby justified a warrant.
Herrera,
782 F.3d at 575. Or, put another way, we ask whether the inclusion of the video
footage in the affidavit would negate the existence of probable cause in support of
the search warrant. See Kapinski,
2020 WL 3635094, at 11; Puller v. Baca,
781
F.3d 1190, 1197 (10th Cir. 2015).
An affidavit supports probable cause for a search warrant “if the totality of
the information it contains establishes the fair probability that contraband or
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evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.” Hopson, 643 F. App’x at
696. Like the district court, we conclude the affidavit established probable cause
and the footage would not have negated it, making the omission of the footage
immaterial.
We begin by noting Moses conceded at oral argument that the search
warrant affidavit established probable cause and only argues the pole camera
footage negates that probable cause. Before we proceed to considering the
materiality of the footage, though, it is worth remembering just how strong was
the probable cause established by the affidavit.
As described above, cross-corroborating informant testimony and aerial
photographs established very strong probable cause to believe that Moses was
operating a chop shop. Several informants described a criminal scheme in which
a man named Daryl accepted stolen vehicles in exchange for methamphetamine at
a property with multiple structures. According to informant testimony, Daryl was
a white, gray-haired man in his late fifties. Moses and his property match the
descriptions. Moses, whose middle name is Daryl, was white, gray-haired, male,
and in his late fifties, and he lived on the road named by informants. Aerial
photographs of his property show multiple structures—making it seem likely that
the informants were talking about Moses’s property. And while there is no brown
structure on the property matching the testimony of one of the informants, there is
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a brown structure on an adjacent property that, according to the affiant, might
have been accessed by Moses per local custom. The photographs also show many
vehicles. Among those vehicles is a white truck that arguably looks like the
unmarked, white tow truck an informant said “Daryl” owned. And some of the
vehicles on the property were clearly in disuse—making it all the more probable
that there was a chop shop being run on the property.
Moses’s materiality argument centers on the notion that a lack of suspicious
video evidence fatally undercuts any reason to search the property. We do not
agree. According to Detective Ware’s statements to an investigator, the pole
camera never caught sight of any vehicles matching the descriptions of ones
reported stolen. It is safe to say, then, that the footage certainly would not have
added to probable cause. Moses argues the footage would have detracted from
probable cause, and so much so that it would make a warrant-issuing court reject
the otherwise strong probable cause established by testimonial and photographic
evidence. We simply are not persuaded that the lack of suspicious activity on
video undermines that probable cause—let alone fatally.
As the district court noted, it is perfectly logical that the camera would not
have caught sight of anything suspicious. Detective Barbour told the state judge
that all the relevant criminal activity was happening at night. The camera may
well not have been able to pick up anything suspicious at night, even if such
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activity were occurring. Moses counters this point by noting that there is a flood
light on the property, visible in the aerial photographs, that would have
illuminated the property at night when criminal activity was supposed to have
occurred. Moses presents no evidence, though, that the flood light would have
been turned on all night or would have illuminated the part of the property being
surveilled with the pole camera. We also note that Moses likely suspected the
camera was there as early as the sixth day of monitoring—meaning he could have
avoided doing anything suspicious in view of the camera for almost the entire
time the feed was monitored.
Given the context, the district court was correct to decide that criminal
activity would not necessarily have been captured by the camera. We therefore
conclude that the pole camera footage—and the fact that it did not show any
criminal activity—would not have negated probable cause if it were included in
the search warrant affidavit.
III. Conclusion
Because we conclude any omitted evidence of pole camera footage was not
materially exculpatory and did not negate probable cause established by other
evidence in the search warrant application, the district court did not err in denying
Moses’s request for a Franks hearing on his motion to suppress evidence. We
accordingly AFFIRM the district court.
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