WM. R. WILSON, JR., District Judge.
Pending is Defendant's Motion to Suppress (Doc. No. 94). The Prosecution has responded.
Defendant Silas Roynel Swift moves to suppress drug-related evidence found in his SUV and house. These are the facts:
On the afternoon of September 29, 2009, officers from Arkansas's 16th Judicial District Drug Task Force got information from a confidential informant about drug activity by Michael Dawson.
Task Force Investigators drove to the Reed Road residence to observe and get a description of the mobile home and vehicles there, in order to provide information for the search warrant. The officers noticed a small red car in front of the residence and a broken down truck in the back yard, but Swift's vehicle was not there. Investigator Afton Fletcher prepared an affidavit and search warrant. The district judge of the District Court of Independence County issued the warrant, which permitted the search of the residence and "any and all vehicles and persons present at the scene."
Swift arrived at 44 Reed Road before the execution of the search warrant. None of the officers doing surveillance saw Swift arrive.
When the warrant was executed, some officers went to the back of the residence to secure the rear door. As officers began to knock and announce at the front door, the officers at the rear door heard someone "messing" with the back door knob. Officers entered and saw Dawson and Swift running from the back door into the living room. The men were ordered to lie on the floor. Investigator James Humphrey saw a glass smoking pipe on the floor within a foot of Swift's right hand, but out of Dawson's reach.
In the search of the residence that followed, officers found a small amount of marijuana and a plastic bag containing nearly a pound of methamphetamine.
Based on the drug evidence found at 44 Reed Road and in Swift's SUV, Investigator Fletcher got a search warrant for Swift's home. The search at Swift's home turned up $16,000 in cash and a photograph of marijuana.
Swift moves to suppress evidence obtained by the execution of both search warrants.
Swift presents several arguments that can be handled briefly:
1. Swift does not have standing to challenge the search of Dawson's mobile home. By Swift's own assertion, he was a visitor to the mobile home, arriving minutes before the execution of the search warrant. Casual visitors such as Swift have no legitimate expectation of privacy in the residence of their hosts.
2. Swift's arrest was based on probable cause and presents no basis for suppression. Officers had ample information about Dawson's drug activities, and when they arrived at 44 Reed Road, both
3. Contrary to Swift's claim, his cellular telephone was searched under the authority of a warrant.
The remaining issues are whether the searches of Swift's SUV and home were based on probable cause. After reviewing all the evidence, I find that the search of Swift's SUV was not based on probable cause, and the evidence found in it is inadmissible. The search of Swift's home was not based on probable cause either, but the evidence found there is admissible under United States v. Leon
Swift argues that the evidence found in his vehicle must be suppressed because the warrant's "any and all vehicles" language was not based on probable cause, and the Leon good-faith exception does not apply.
The Prosecution's papers (and arguments at the suppression hearing) tend to focus on two problems not at issue in this case: whether Swift's vehicle was within the scope of the 44 Reed Road warrant, and whether "all vehicles" warrants satisfy the particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment. The crux of this case, however, is that the 44 Reed Road warrant lacked probable cause to search "any and all vehicles." To resolve confusion, I start by pointing out that the search of Swift's SUV does not present a scope or particularly issue.
The Prosecution suggests that the search of Swift's vehicle was legal, based on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals case of United States v. Gentry.
The Prosecution also argues that "all vehicles" warrants satisfy the particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment. Though some state courts have found otherwise (holding that such "any and all" language is per se unconstitutional for lack of particularity), most courts considering this question, including the federal courts, have recognized that "any and all" warrants can satisfy the particularity requirement.
I note, however, that such "any and all" language is nettlesome. The clear, unambiguous language of the Constitution requires that a warrant describe the place to be searched "with particularity." It requires expanding this plain Constitutional language to find that "any and all vehicles" (belonging to who knows whom) is "particular." A judge ingrafting such an expansive meaning on "with particularity" could rightly be accused of "making law" rather than applying the plain language of the Constitution. I hesitate to do so here, since my philosophy runs to strict construction. That said, I turn to the core issue in this case: the probable cause question.
It is well settled that a warrant to search a home for drug-related evidence allows officers to also search residents' vehicles found at the scene.
The Eighth Circuit has held that a warrant for a home does not automatically allow the search of guests' vehicles.
To answer this question, I must review the search warrant application to ensure that the Issuing Judge had a "substantial basis for . . . concluding that probable cause existed"
Investigator Fletcher's affidavit recites the following facts:
Notably, the affidavit sets forth no facts about vehicles at 44 Reed Road. The only
Based on this affidavit alone, the resulting warrant allows for search of "any and all vehicles and persons present at the scene."
The Prosecution concedes that neither the Eighth Circuit nor the Supreme Court has said what kind of probable cause showing is required to support an "any and all vehicles" warrant.
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution says that "no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." So, the Fourth Amendment establishes two requirements:
Of course, these two requirements must be considered together. The particularity requirement "ensures that the search will be carefully tailored to its justifications, and will not take on the character of the wide-ranging exploratory searches the Framers intended to prohibit."
So when, as in this case, a warrant's scope is so broad as to encompass "any and all vehicles" at a scene, without naming any vehicle in particular, the probable cause on which it stands must be equally broad. Specifically, the Fourth Amendment requires that the probable cause showing in support of an "any and all vehicles" warrant must demonstrate that, at the time of the search, a vehicle's mere presence at the target location is
My conclusion as to the Fourth Amendment's probable cause requirement for "any and all vehicles" warrants is supported by other circuits that have considered a different kind of "any and all" warrant: warrants for "all persons" present at a residence.
The majority of courts to consider "all persons" warrants have reached the same conclusion: An "all persons" search warrant is authorized under the Fourth Amendment only if the supporting affidavit establishes probable cause that evidence of illegal activity will be found upon every person likely to fall within the warrant's scope at the time of execution.
For example, in Owens v. Lott, a 2004 case from the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, the court held that "all persons" warrants for private premises only "pass constitutional muster if the affidavit and information provided to the magistrate supply enough detailed information to establish probable cause to believe that all persons on the premises at the time of the search are involved in the criminal activity."
The Fourth Circuit agreed with the district court that the affidavit in support of an "all persons" warrant did not supply probable cause where "[t]he only justification presented to the magistrate for the search of all persons at the premise[s] was [the officer's] experience in drug enforcement. . . that subjects present at the scene of [an] illegal drug distribution . . . commonly have drugs in their possession."
To clarify its holding, the Fourth Circuit listed hypothetical factors that could support a "all persons" warrant, including: facts demonstrating a history of drug dealers and users frequenting the target residence; evidence of regular traffic of individuals to and from the residence; or facts indicating that the home's location and surrounding neighborhood were likely to attract only people involved in the drug
The reasoning in Owens is basic. It applies the clearly established Fourth Amendment requirement that a warrant's scope be no broader than the probable cause on which it stands. So when a warrant allows the search of "all persons" at a target location, the probable cause showing must implicate any and all persons at the target location at the time of the search. Similarly, an "all vehicles" warrant must be based on a probable cause showing that implicates any and all vehicles at the target location, including the vehicles of guests and other callers present at the time of the search.
Investigator Fletcher's affidavit provides no facts explicitly implicating guests or their vehicles in drug activity. Instead, the affidavit alleges that Dawson was selling drugs from 44 Reed Road and that Dawson and "others" were smoking marijuana there.
The sum of these inferences drawn from inferences (otherwise known as speculation)
Because the "any and all vehicles" language was not based on probable cause, the search of Swift's SUV was unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment. The remaining question is whether the Fourth Amendment's exclusionary rule requires suppression of the evidence found in Swift's vehicle. I find that it does.
"[E]vidence obtained as a result of a defective search warrant is generally inadmissible."
Under the good-faith exception, "evidence seized pursuant to a search warrant. . . that is later determined to be invalid, will not be suppressed if the executing officer's reliance upon the warrant was objectively reasonable."
When an issuing magistrate abandons his judicial role, suppression of the evidence is appropriate because "no reasonably well trained officer should rely on the warrant."
I find that the Issuing Judge in this case was not acting in a neutral and detached manner when he issued the warrant allowing the search of "any and all vehicles and
The totality of these circumstances makes it clear to me that the Issuing Judge was not acting in a neutral and detached manner when he issued the search warrant for 44 Reed Road. I do not believe that a neutral and detached judge could pass eyes over language as Constitutionally nettlesome as "any and all vehicles and persons" without serious pause. This is particularly true when the language is contained in boilerplate paragraphs of a "bare bones" affidavit prepared by the applying officer. The Fourth Amendment requires a neutral figure to step between citizens and officers; here, in contrast, the Issuing Judge effectively acted as an adjunct law enforcement officer.
Exclusion of the evidence found in Swift's SUV will further the purpose of the exclusionary rule. It may be, in some other case, that drugs are likely to be found in every vehicle present at a residential target location; but, the Fourth Amendment requires an officer to demonstrate this on sworn, particularized facts in front of a neutral and detached magistrate. Investigator Fletcher testified that he simply includes the "any and all vehicles and persons present at the scene" language in every affidavit and warrant he writes for the search of a residence. In other words, officers have taken up the habit of using boilerplate language to turn every drug-related search of a private residence into a general warrant to search each and every person and vehicle within the curtilage of the residence.
I do not exclude this evidence lightly. I believe that the drug at issue in this case—methamphetamine—is vicious. But, as the Seventh Circuit has observed, "[t]he war against drugs cannot be fought with unconstitutional procedures."
Swift argues that the affidavit in support of the warrant for his home failed to establish a connection between his home and his alleged involvement in drug trafficking.
Investigator Fletcher's affidavit for the warrant to search Swift's home sets out the fact that Swift was arrested for possession of a pound of methamphetamine found in the trailer at 44 Reed Road, as well as the pound of methamphetamine found in his SUV.
The affidavit, however, gives no facts connecting Swift's home to drug activity. The question is whether the bare inference that drug traffickers may keep contraband or evidence in their home is always sufficient to provide probable cause to search their home.
The Eighth Circuit has been clear that it has not adopted a per se rule that probable cause to arrest a drug trafficker establishes an inference that there is evidence at his residence.
Still, the evidence is admissible at trial. The Eighth Circuit has often held that officers can reasonably rely on search warrants that lack any connection between a drug trafficker and his home, and that the resulting evidence is admissible under Leon.
For the reasons set out above, Defendant's Motion to Suppress (Doc. No. 94) is GRANTED IN PART, in that evidence discovered in Swift's vehicle is inadmissible under the Fourth Amendment's exclusionary rule.
Swift's Motion is DENIED IN PART, because: (1) he does not have standing to challenge the validity of the 44 Reed Road search warrant as to the residence; (2) he was arrested with probable cause; (3) his cellular telephone was within the scope of the warrant for 44 Reed Road; and, (4) although the search of Swift's residence was unconstitutional, the evidence found there is admissible under Leon.
4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 1.3, at 68-69 (1996 & Supp. 2000).