SHARON L. GLEASON, District Judge.
Before the Court at Docket 41 is Defendant Ricky Allen Blodgett's Motion for Franks Hearing Motion to Suppress Evidence. The Government responded at Docket 49.
In Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154 (1978), the Supreme Court established a two-prong test for challenging the sufficiency of a warrant affidavit. "A defendant is entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the validity of the affidavit underlying a search warrant if the defendant can make a substantial preliminary showing that (1) the affidavit contains intentionally or recklessly false statements or misleading omissions, and (2) the affidavit cannot support a finding of probable cause without the allegedly false information."
Here, Mr. Blodgett alleges that two portions of the affidavit are false or not properly stated: (1) "The Trooper did not inform the magistrate that no picture or copy of the xray was retained;" and (2) "The Trooper knew the source of the May 14, 2014, `tip' and that it was not accurate as to the issue of firearms." Mr. Blodgett asserts that "[t]he search warrant is not valid due to the[se] mis-statements and omissions of [Trooper] Calt."
In response to Mr. Blodgett's claim, the Government asserts that at the time the affidavit was produced, it is likely that Trooper Calt still had the photograph in his possession.
Under the applicable standard, Mr. Blodgett has failed to make the substantial showing necessary to warrant a Franks hearing on this issue. Of the five factors outlined in Perdomo, Mr. Blodgett fails to meet at least two. Mr. Blodgett has failed to make a detailed offer of proof to show that Trooper Calt's affidavit "contains intentionally or recklessly false statements or misleading omissions." Trooper Calt's affidavit indicates that he had viewed an x-ray image that appeared to show heroin in a FedEx package; Mr. Blodgett has not challenged this statement as a misrepresentation. Trooper Calt did not state that he had retained the x-ray photograph, and Mr. Blodgett has not provided any evidence that Trooper Calt made a false statement to the contrary. Furthermore, Mr. Blodgett has failed to show that Trooper Calt's supposed failure to inform the magistrate judge that he did not retain the photograph was necessary to a finding of probable cause. The magistrate judge granted the warrant based on Trooper Calt's manifestations that he had seen the photograph, not that he currently possessed it. Therefore, Mr. Blodgett cannot show that Trooper Calt's possession of the photograph was essential to the finding of probable cause.
Mr. Blodgett provides no evidence of his claims that Trooper Calt "knew the source of the May 14, 2014, `tip' and that it was not accurate as to the issue of firearms" and that Trooper Calt "knew it was the issue of Mr. Blodgett's mother in law."
Mr. Blodgett's statement can be read as an allegation that either the tipster lied about Mr. Blodgett's possession of guns and Trooper Calt knowingly repeated that lie, or that Trooper Calt lied about what the tipster said. Regardless, Mr. Blodgett has not made any offer of proof to support these claims. Nor has he shown that these supposed misrepresentations were necessary to a finding of probable cause. As the Government's response indicates, the May 13, 2014 tip was corroborated in other ways, including the tipster's knowledge of Mr. Blodgett's location and recent trips to Mexico.
In light of the foregoing, Defendant's Motion for Franks Hearing at Docket 41 is DENIED.