This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2004).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A05-823
State
of
Respondent,
vs.
Appellant.
Filed April 11, 2006
Affirmed
Klaphake, Judge
Mille Lacs County District Court
File Nos. K4-04-757/K6-04-1392/K6-04-1313/K9-04-639
Mike Hatch, Attorney General, Thomas R. Ragatz, Scott F. Cloutier, Assistant Attorneys General, 1800 Bremer Tower, 445 Minnesota Street, St. Paul, MN 55101-2134; and
Considered and decided by Klaphake, Presiding Judge, Peterson, Judge, and Hudson, Judge.
KLAPHAKE, Judge
During a
seven-month period between May and December 2004, four separate warrants were
issued to search the residence of appellant
Appellant moved to suppress the evidence seized on each of the search warrants. At a contested omnibus hearing, the district court denied appellant’s motions to suppress.
After
submitting the matter to the district court for trial pursuant to State v. Lothenbach, 296 N.W.2d 854 (
A search
warrant may be issued only upon a finding of probable cause by a neutral and
detached magistrate.
To determine whether probable cause exists,
[t]he task of the issuing [judge] is simply to make a practical, common-sense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit, . . . including the ‘veracity’ and ‘basis of knowledge’ of persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.
State v. Wiley,
366 N.W.2d 265, 268 (
1. May 24, 2004 Warrant
This warrant was issued based on information from multiple sources, including two confidential reliable informants (CRI) who were known to the investigating officer and had provided reliable information to the officer in the past. In March 2004, one informant told the officer that he or she had personally seen meth and paraphernalia in appellant’s house; it was unclear, however, exactly when these observations were made. On May 24, the other informant told one of the officer’s colleagues that, within the past few days, appellant had allowed a partial meth cook to take place in her detached garage and that appellant would be in possession of approximately one ounce of meth on May 24; it was unclear where the informant obtained this information.
In addition to the information provided by these two informants, the investigating officer further stated that (1) he had learned of extensive and ongoing sales of meth from appellant’s home taking place at odd hours during late night and early morning hours; (2) there were periods of heavy traffic that stayed for short periods of time at appellant’s home; (3) police had responded to several calls for assistance at appellant’s residence; and (4) during these calls police had seen drug paraphernalia and observed appellant under the influence of controlled substances. The officer ran a criminal history on appellant and found that she had an “extensive criminal history throughout 5 states and including 16 aliases,” with most of the entries involving “prostitution type arrests.”
While
none of these facts alone might have supported the issuance of a warrant, when
considered together, the components reveal “an internal coherence” that gives
weight to the whole. Wiley, 366 N.W.2d at 268. In particular, the information is timely and
not stale because it supports an inference of ongoing drug activity at the
house. See State v. Dyer, 438 N.W.2d 716, 719 (
Appellant also challenges the basis for the issuance of a nighttime warrant. See Minn. Stat. § 624.14 (2004) (authorizing issuance of warrant outside hours of 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. only when necessary to “prevent the loss, destruction, or removal of the objects of the search or to protect the searchers or the public”). The investigating officer provided the following statements to support issuance of a nighttime warrant:
Your Affiant
received information at 1900 hours, which led to the application of this search
warrant. Due to the nature of sales of
controlled substances, it is common for a large amount of controlled substance
to be sold in a very short amount of time.
Information was received from a CRI that
The information was received at 7:00 p.m., and the warrant
was executed around 10:00 p.m. Contrary
to appellant’s arguments, the warrant application does not contain mere
boilerplate language and includes specific reasons to believe that issuance of
the warrant outside the normal hours was necessary in this case.
2. June 21, 2004 Warrant
This application recites all of the information included in the affidavit supporting the first warrant and the following new information:
Your Affiant
received information from Princeton Police Officer Joseph Backlund on 6-20-04
via cellular phone call that
Again, while these allegations alone might not support the issuance of a warrant, when considered together with the information and circumstances surrounding the issuance and execution of the first warrant, probable cause existed to support this second warrant.
In
particular, Moos stated that he had personally observed meth in a specific
place in appellant’s home only two days earlier. See
Ward, 580 N.W.2d at 71 (stating that “[r]ecent personal observation of
incriminating conduct [is] the preferred basis for an informant’s knowledge”)
(quotation omitted). While Moos was
under arrest, he is not a “typical stool pigeon” who is arrested and who, at
the suggestion of the police, “agrees to cooperate and name names in order [to]
curry favor with the police.”
3. November 11, 2004 Warrant
The
application for this warrant recites all of the information from the first and
second warrants. It also contains new
information provided by a CRI who made at least two “controlled buys” of meth
from appellant at her residence within the past 45 days and who informed the
investigating officer of his or her belief that meth was present in the
residence. The officer stated that the
CRI “was going to advise your Affiant when he/she believed there would be more
controlled substances in the home of
Appellant
argues that none of the information provided a sufficient link to conclude that
there would be drugs in the home on November 11, which is five months after the
execution of the second warrant. The
information regarding the controlled buys, which were completed within 45 days
of the warrant request, supports an inference that the drug activity has
continued to take place at the house and makes the information timely and not
stale. See Dyer, 438 N.W.2d at 719.
Further, the two-day delay in executing the warrant was permissible
because probable cause to search still existed at the time the warrant was
executed. State v. Yaritz, 287 N.W.2d 13, 16 (
4. December 3, 2004 Warrant
The application for the fourth warrant recites the information from the first three warrants and adds two additional pieces of information. First, a “cooperating individual” informed the affiant that he or she was present at appellant’s residence within the past 10 days, when controlled substances were purchased, and was present at the residence within the past 20 days when a controlled substance believed to be meth was purchased. On December 3, 2004, a second informant, whom the affiant described as a CRI, told the affiant that there would be controlled substances at appellant’s residence on that same day.
Again,
while this new information might fail to support the issuance of a warrant on
its own, when we consider that drugs had been found at appellant’s residence
only a few weeks earlier during the execution of the third warrant, the
reliability assigned to informants described as CRI’s, and the deference we
give to an issuing court’s probable cause determination, probable cause existed
to support this fourth warrant. And,
with respect to the issuance of a nighttime warrant, while the information
contained in the application is either boilerplate or does not pertain to the facts
surrounding this fourth warrant, the affidavit was submitted to the issuing
judge at 7:10 p.m., and the warrant was issued and served soon thereafter, at
8:32 p.m. A court may consider the
“facts stated in the affidavits,” when issuing a nighttime warrant. Minn. Stat. § 626.14; see State v. Wasson, 615 N.W.2d 316,
319-20 (
Affirmed.