JOHN W. LUNGSTRUM, District Judge.
Defendant William F. Bivens, III has been charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). This matter comes before the court on defendant's motion to suppress evidence obtained during the execution of a search warrant—namely, a particular firearm that he allegedly unlawfully possessed as charged in Count One of the two-count Superseding Indictment. Because defendant's motion to suppress is based solely on his assertion that the affidavit supporting the warrant application contained misrepresentations and omitted material facts, defendant further requested an evidentiary hearing pursuant to Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154 (1978). On December 9, 2019, the court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion to suppress during which the court received evidence and heard additional argument on the motion.
Defendant's motion to suppress turns entirely on the affidavit supporting the warrant which authorized the January 2018 search of the residence and detached garage located at 3302 SE Girard Street in Topeka, Kansas and the person of defendant Bivens. The affidavit was prepared and sworn to by Deputy Henry Harmon of the Shawnee County Sheriff's Office. In his affidavit in support of the search warrant application, Deputy Harmon sought permission to search for, among other things, methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia, and firearms. In the affidavit, Deputy Harmon set forth the evidence supporting probable cause to search. That evidence consisted primarily of information obtained from Christopher Allen and Malachi Morgan, two cooperating witnesses; a September 2016 incident linking defendant Bivens with narcotics activity; and an early January 2018 attempted controlled buy in which the target of the buy stopped at the 3302 SE Girard address.
As set forth by Deputy Harmon in his affidavit, he and Sergeant Hawks of the Shawnee County Sheriff's Office conducted an "open air surveillance" in the parking lot of a Walmart store located at 1301 SE 37th Street in Topeka, Kansas.
Deputy Harmon highlighted in his affidavit the following information obtained during his interview of Mr. Allen: Mr. Allen has a substance abuse problem and typically uses methamphetamine; Mr. Allen lives at 3304 SE Girard Street; he purchases drugs from the defendant, who lives in the detached garage next door at 3302 SE Girard Street; he knows the defendant as "Wild Bill"; he identified "Wild Bill" as the defendant William Franklin Bivens from a photograph shown to him by Deputy Harmon; Mr. Allen purchased methamphetamine from the 3302 SE Girard address that evening at 6pm; he witnessed several drug transactions at the Girard address that evening; and he saw defendant Bivens with a holstered gun on his person that day. Deputy Harmon also related in his affidavit the information obtained from Mr. Morgan during Sergeant Hawks' interview of him: Mr. Morgan purchased or worked for methamphetamine over 20 times from the Girard address; he has used the Girard address as his methamphetamine supplier for more than two years; and he has seen the owner of the residence at 3302 SE Girard Street (who is someone other than defendant Bivens) store methamphetamine and firearms in two safes that are in the detached garage.
Deputy Harmon did not expressly disclose in the affidavit that Mr. Morgan was under the influence of drugs at the time of his interview.
The affidavit also set forth as evidence of probable cause a September 2016 incident in which the Topeka Police Department had contact with defendant Bivens in which defendant Bivens admitted post-Miranda that he was selling and using heroin. Finally, Deputy Harmon relayed in the affidavit that during the first week of January 2018, the Topeka Police Department attempted a narcotics buy with a confidential informant. The informant provided funds to the targeted individual for the purchase of methamphetamine. Officers followed the targeted individual to the 3302 SE Girard Street address, but no drugs or money were returned to the confidential informant. Deputy Harmon was involved in that early January 2018 attempted controlled buy in that he was conducting surveillance on the case and knew that the 3302 SE Girard Street address had come up during the context of that case. Deputy Harmon, however, did not mention his involvement in that case in the affidavit.
The Fourth Amendment permits the issuance of search warrants only upon a "truthful showing" of facts sufficient to comprise probable cause, meaning that "the information put forth is believed or appropriately accepted by the affiant as true." Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154, 164-65 (1978). Thus, if there is substantial evidence to support deliberate falsehood or reckless disregard for the truth, and the exclusion of false statements would undermine the existence of probable cause, a warrant is invalid. See id. at 171-72. This is equally true when an affiant knowingly or recklessly omits information from an affidavit that would have negated probable cause. Stewart v. Donges, 915 F.2d 572, 582-83 (10th Cir. 1990). Under Franks, then, 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. See Herrera, 782 F.3d at 573.
Defendant asserts that the affidavit supporting the warrant in this case contained both material misrepresentations and material omissions in violation of Franks.
Similarly, the court concludes that Deputy Harmon's failure to indicate in the affidavit that law enforcement agreed to assist Mr. Allen with an outstanding warrant in Wabaunsee County or suggested to Mr. Morgan that no charges would be filed against him stemming from his arrest does not constitute a reckless or material omission. As the Tenth Circuit has acknowledged—and as this court indicated at the hearing—judges issuing search warrants often know, even without an explicit statement in the affidavit, that many informants "may only be assisting police to avoid prosecution for their own crimes." United States v. Morin, 188 Fed. Appx. 709, 712 (10th Cir. 2006) (quoting United States v. Avery, 295 F.3d 1158, 1168 (10th Cir. 2002)). In Morin, for example, the defendant argued that the affiant omitted material information from the warrant affidavit when he failed to note that an informant was "a recently arrested methamphetamine user who agreed to be an informant in the hope that he would receive leniency from prosecutors." Id. The Circuit rejected that argument and held that other facts in the affidavit—namely, that the informant had purchased methamphetamine from the defendant in the past—were sufficient to alert the judge that the informant may have been cooperating with police for self-serving reasons. Id. Again, Deputy Harmon explicitly disclosed that both Mr. Allen and Mr. Morgan had significant substance abuse problems and were frequent purchasers of illegal narcotics. Given that information, coupled with the fact that these individuals were arrested in possession of methamphetamine, the failure to disclose Mssrs. Allen's and Morgan's motivations for providing information to law enforcement does not undermine the existence of probable cause or invalidate the warrant.
Moreover, even if the motivations or mental states of Mssrs. Allen and Morgan might undermine their credibility in some general sense, the fact that Mr. Allen and Mr. Morgan separately and simultaneously provided the same information about the defendant and the 3302 SE Girard address was sufficient to indicate to officers that the specific information provided was reliable and sufficient to establish probable cause. Mssrs. Allen and Morgan were stopped together, transported separately to the police station and, without an opportunity to get their "stories straight," both identified the source of their drugs as the Girard address and placed defendant at that address. See United States v. Wright, 350 Fed. Appx. 243, 247 (10th Cir. 2009) (information provided by confidential informants and included in warrant affidavit was sufficiently reliable in part because the information provided by each informant corroborated the information received from the other informants); Brinlee, 146 Fed. Appx. at 239 (holding that an officer's omission of details that allegedly could have led the magistrate judge to infer from "[a cooperating witness's] behavior that she was under the influence of drugs or had a motive to lie," was not material where "the affidavit contained detailed descriptions given by [the witness] along with information from other sources, which enhanced her credibility and corroborated her statements about the presence of drugs in the house").
This is particularly true because the information provided by both Mr. Allen and Mr. Morgan in terms of narcotics activity at the 3302 SE Girard address was consistent with information that Deputy Harmon already had about the Girard address from the early January 2018 attempted controlled buy. According to Deputy Harmon, he included the facts about the early January 2018 attempted controlled buy for that very reason—it provided an historical context establishing the Girard address as a place of potential narcotics activity. Defendant contends that the affidavit's reference to the January 2018 attempted controlled buy is misleading because it suggests that defendant was a target of that controlled buy or suggests that a controlled buy was attempted at the residence. The court disagrees. A plain reading of the short paragraph referencing the January 2018 attempted controlled buy simply indicates that the target of that buy was followed to the Girard address. Defendant is not mentioned in that paragraph and there is nothing that would suggest that defendant was a target in that attempted controlled buy or that a controlled buy was attempted at that address. In short, the information provided about the controlled buy further corroborates the information later provided to officers by Mssrs. Allen and Morgan—that drug trafficking activities were taking place at the Girard address.
Defendant's final challenge to the warrant concerns Deputy Harmon's statement in the affidavit that Mr. Allen told him "that he normally purchases his drugs from William Franklin Bivens." Defendant asserts that this statement is materially false because Mr. Allen stated only that he purchases his drugs from "Wild Bill" and never identified Mr. Bivens by name. While defendant is technically correct as to what defendant said to Deputy Harmon, the meaning of Deputy Harmon's statement is clear from a full reading of the paragraph explaining Mr. Allen's knowledge of Mr. Bivens' identity:
When placed in context, Deputy Harmon clearly indicates that Mr. Allen positively identified "Wild Bill" as the same person in the photo depicting defendant Bivens and as the same person from whom he routinely purchased methamphetamine.
In his reply brief, defendant suggests that the fact that Mr. Allen was shown a single photo that formed the basis of his identification of Mr. Bivens was improper and that the court should disregard that identification when assessing the existence of probable cause. Defendant's motion, however, seeks to impeach the veracity and care of the affiant. Franks, 438 U.S. at 171. Defendant does not suggest that Deputy Harmon misrepresented or omitted any facts about Mr. Allen's identification of Mr. Bivens from a single photo. Indeed, the language of the affidavit clearly suggests that Mr. Allen identified Mr. Bivens from a single photo. Moreover, it is clear from the affidavit that Mr. Allen had numerous encounters with Mr. Bivens such that he would be able to credibly identify Mr. Bivens from a single photograph and that, in such circumstances, the use of a single photo is not unnecessarily or impermissible suggestive. See United States v. Evans, 2015 WL 2070969, at *11 (D. Minn. May 1, 2015) (when someone already familiar with a suspect is asked to comment on whether a recorded voice or image portrays the suspect, concerns underlying improperly suggestive lineup are absent) (citing United States v. Dobbs, 449 F.3d 904, 910 (8th Cir. 2006)).
For the foregoing reasons, defendant has not shown that Deputy Harmon's affidavit supporting the warrant application contains any deliberate or reckless misstatements or omissions. The motion is denied.