Precedential
Precedential
Precedential
I.
On October 6, 2005, Officer Ryan, a veteran of the
Philadelphia Police Departments narcotics unit, submitted an
affidavit in support of search warrants for six locations in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Officer Ryan submitted a second
affidavit on October 7, 2005, seeking search warrants for
additional locations. Because no party presented evidence
outside the affidavits themselves, our factual discussion is
drawn almost entirely from the affidavits.4 (App. 158-160.)
A.
According to his October 6 affidavit, Officer Ryan
received a tip from a confidential informant on September 28,
2005 that implicated Joseph Doebley, Michael Doebley and
Edward Stearn in drug distribution crimes in the city of
Impala. Soon thereafter, officers watched Doebley sell a 3.5gram baggie of cocaine, in a controlled buy, from the inside of
his Impala.
During surveillance on October 4 and 5, police officers
confirmed Joseph Doebleys drug involvement and tracked his
movements among several properties in the neighborhood. On
October 4, a white male exited 4808 Comly, spoke with Joseph
Doebley in the side yard, drove to the intersection of
Cheltenham and Hegerman, and completed a sale of
approximately 3.5 grams of cocaine from inside his car. The
white male returned to 4808 Comly and counted out and
delivered currency to Doebley, who entered 4808 Comly and
departed after a brief stay. Later that evening, Doebley left 4808
Comly in the blue-and-white pickup truck, and approximately
two hours later, arrived at 5038 Homestead. He remained there
for two hours. After a brief stop at 4808 Comly, Doebley was
next observed as he parked in a rear driveway near 4049 Higbee
at approximately 11:50 p.m. He entered the rear yard of 4049
Higbee, which contained a pit bull, and entered the attached
garage through a rear door. Police terminated surveillance
shortly thereafter, but at 7:15 a.m. the next morning, officers
observed that the pickup truck remained parked in the rear of
4049 Higbee. According to the affidavit, property records listed
Ruth Nolan as the owner of 5038 Homestead, and listed 4049
Higbee as a co-owner address. The affidavit did not name the
co-owner. Police also learned that the water bill for 5038
Homestead was mailed to 4049 Higbee.
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B.
On October 7, 2005, Officer Ryan submitted a second
affidavit seeking warrants to search 5020 Homestead and 5034
Homestead, the rust-colored Chevrolet Impala and the blue-andwhite pickup truck. This affidavit incorporated the first
affidavit, detailed the results of additional surveillance, and
reported the results of the October 6 searches. (App. 95-97.)
On the morning of October 6, FBI and IRS agents raided
Dangerous Curves Gentlemens Club at Homestead Street and
State Road, adjacent to the 5000 block of Homestead Street. At
3:15 p.m., a confidential informant arranged another controlled
purchase from Joseph Doebley, but the purchase was not
consummated. At approximately 3:30 p.m., federal agents left
the Gentlemens Club, and [s]hortly after that, Edward Stearn,
Michael Doebley, and one Chris Simon left 5019 Homestead
and entered 5020 Homestead. (App. 96.) Thereafter, Michael
Doebley entered and exited 5022, 5038 and 5034 Homestead in
a short span of time, and he returned to 5022 Homestead.
Edward Stearn then departed 5022 Homestead, entered 5019
Homestead, exited carrying clothes and a bag, and entered a
black truck. At the same time, Michael Doebley left 5022
Homestead carrying white trash bags and entered a grey Jeep
Cherokee. Both vehicles departed at the same time. According
to the affidavit, young white males exited 5019 Homestead and
5038 Homestead, and they fled East bound with backpacks.
(App. 96.) Shortly thereafter, highway patrol units stopped
10
See also United States v. Burton, 288 F.3d 91, 104 (3d
Cir. 2002); United States v. Hodge, 246 F.3d 301, 306 (3d Cir.
2001); United States v. Jones, 994 F.2d 1051, 1056 (3d Cir.
1993).
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B.
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III.
motions, the Courts first order did not mention, much less
analyze, whether each defendant possessed a legitimate
expectation of privacy in the places searched. See Rakas, 439
U.S. at 140. Indeed, the Court apparently ordered the exclusion
of evidence based on its bare conclusion that the relevant
searches were illegal. The Court held:
Because I find a number of the searches
conducted on October 6, 2005 unreasonable under
the Fourth Amendment, I will suppress the
evidence seized during those searches. . . . In sum,
any evidence seized on warrants issued for 4049
Higbee Street, 5022, 5019, 5038, 5020, and 5034
Homestead street., [sic] as well as the warrant for
blood and saliva from Stearn is suppressed.
Stearn, 548 F. Supp. 2d at 193-194 (citation and quotation
omitted). As the accompanying order made clear, the Court
suppressed this evidence as to all three defendants, ignoring
Rakass directive that courts limit the exclusionary remedy to
individuals whose own Fourth Amendment rights have been
violated. Rakas, 439 U.S. at 139. For nearly forty years, the
Supreme Court has unwaveringly required the proponent of a
motion to suppress to assert[] his own legal rights and interests
rather than basing his claim for relief upon the rights of third
parties. E.g., id. at 139. This is black-letter law.
Strikingly, the Courts across-the-board exclusion order
suppressed evidence against a defendant who did not even
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challenge its admissibility. See Stearn, 548 F. Supp. 2d at 194195. Indeed, although Edward Stearn challenged only the
warrants for 5019 Homestead and his saliva, the District Courts
wholesale suppression of evidence from the other searches
foreclosed the Governments use of that evidence against him as
well. (See App. 98-108, 194-195.) The District Court thereby
made the exclusionary remedy available to a defendant who did
not even challenge a series of searches, much less prove an
expectation of privacy therein. This, too, was a fundamental
error.
egregious error.
IV.
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2.
initiated drug deals from the 4808 Comly gym, it was more
reasonable to infer that the gym was the situs of contraband. Id.
at *5. In the Courts view, the searches violated the Fourth
Amendment because the defendants homes lacked a recited
nexus to the crimes alleged. Id. at *5.
Although we agree that the Fourth Amendment precludes
the search of a home lacking a nexus to the alleged crimes, we
disagree with the Courts assessment of what constitutes a nexus
sufficient to justify a search. The starting point is that a
magistrate judge may infer probable cause from the type of
crime, the nature of the items sought, the suspects opportunity
for concealment and normal inferences about where a criminal
might hide . . . [evidence]. Jones, 994 F.2d at 1056. Proceeding
from that premise, Hodge, Whitner and Burton permit the
magistrate to infer from the type of crime, nature of the items
sought and the defendants opportunit[ies] for concealment
that a drug dealer in some circumstances may use his home to
store evidence associated with drug dealing. Although the
District Courts bright-line rules were based on factual elements
present in Whitner, Hodge and Burton, the factual circumstances
of those cases do not limit the inferences a detached magistrate
is permitted to draw. We understand the District Courts
inclination to read these cases narrowly, but we must reject its
attempt to substitute bright-line rules for a more fluid . . .
assessment of probabilities in particular factual contexts. Gates,
462 U.S. at 232. Gates directs, and we agree, that probable cause
is an inquiry not readily, or even usefully, reduced to a neat set
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Id.
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299.
104.
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Relevant for our purposes, the good faith exception does not
apply where the affidavit is so lacking in indicia of probable
cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely
unreasonable. Leon, 468 U.S. at 923 (citation and quotation
omitted); Williams, 3 F.3d at 74 n.4. These are the rare
circumstances in which, although a neutral magistrate has found
probable cause to search, a lay officer executing the warrant
could not reasonably believe that the magistrate was correct.
Although few of our cases ultimately condemn officers
reliance on a warrant as unreasonable, this exception to the
good faith exception retains vitality in our Court. See
Zimmerman, 277 F. 3d at 429; id. at 440 (Alito, J., dissenting).
In Zimmerman, child pornography was seized pursuant to a
warrant to search for both adult and child pornography, based on
an affidavits allegation that the defendant had shown adult
pornography to a child some six to ten months prior. Id. at 429
(majority opinion). With little difficulty, we determined that no
probable cause existed to search for either type of pornography:
the affidavit contained no evidence suggesting the defendant
possessed child pornography, and information linking the
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required.
C.
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under the Leon good faith exception, and we uphold the search
on those grounds.
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Conclusion
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