United States v. Isaac Green, Jr. , 572 F. App'x 438 ( 2014 )


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  •                         NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    File Name: 14a0522n.06
    Case No. 13-3844
    FILED
    Jul 16, 2014
    DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                         )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                        )
    )       ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    v.                                                )       STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
    )       THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
    ISAAC GREEN, JR.,                                 )       OHIO
    )
    Defendant-Appellant.                       )
    )       OPINION
    _____________________________________             )
    Before: SILER, GILMAN, and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges.
    RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge. Isaac Green, Jr. was convicted by a jury on
    firearms and counterfeiting charges.    He received concurrent sentences of 120 months of
    imprisonment on the firearms-related charges and 162 months of imprisonment on the
    counterfeiting charges. All of the tangible evidence against him was obtained by the police as a
    result of a search warrant executed at his residence in June 2012. Green sought to suppress the
    evidence on the basis of the allegedly defective search-warrant affidavit, which he claims was
    founded on intentionally made false statements.
    The sole ground for Green’s appeal is the failure of the district court to grant him an
    evidentiary hearing on his false-statements claim under Franks v. Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
    (1978). For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    Case No. 13-3844
    United States v. Isaac Green, Jr.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.     Factual background
    In June 2012, Officer Art Carter of the Youngstown Police Department swore out an
    affidavit to search a single-family residence on Upland Avenue in Youngstown, Ohio. Officer
    Carter’s affidavit described the alleged criminal activity as follows:
    1.     During the month of December 2011, officers of the Youngstown Police
    Department Vice Squad Unit, were approached by a reliable informant, who
    advised officers that a subject, unknown to the informant, was selling Crack
    Cocaine from 130 Upland. The Source further advised officers that the informant
    could purchase Crack Cocaine from said residence.
    2.      Based on the above, officers initiated an investigation and conducted
    random surveillance at 130 Upland. During the surveillance, officers observed
    numerous subjects go to 130 Upland, stay a short period of time and leave, such
    activity being common in the illegal sales of narcotics.
    3.      Also, during the month of December 2011, officers began receiving
    complaints from concerned citizens who live in the area about illegal sales of
    narcotics from the residence at 130 Upland.
    4.      During the week of December 12, 2011, Officer[s] Bigowsky [and]
    Aeppli met with a reliable informant [who] made a purchase of Crack Cocaine
    from John Doe at 130 Upland, under the controlled conditions to wit; officers met
    with and searched the informant with negative results. Officers then kept the
    informant under constant observation to and from the location. Upon returning,
    the informant turned over to officers suspected Crack Cocaine. The informant
    was searched a second time with negative results.
    5.      During the week of June 18, 2012, Officer[s] Carter [and] Voitus met with
    a reliable informant [who] made a purchase of Crack Cocaine from John Doe at
    130 Upland, under the same controlled conditions described in the previous
    paragraph. Upon returning, the informant turned over to officers suspected Crack
    Cocaine. The informant was searched a second time with negative results.
    6.      During the week of June 18, 2012, Officer[s] Voitus [and] Carter met with
    a reliable informant [who] made a purchase of Crack Cocaine from John Doe at
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    Case No. 13-3844
    United States v. Isaac Green, Jr.
    130 Upland, under the same controlled conditions described in the previous
    paragraph. Upon returning, the informant turned over to officer[s] suspected
    Crack Cocaine. The informant was searched a second time with negative results.
    7.     All three purchases of crack cocaine made during the weeks of December
    12, 2011, and June 18, 2012, were made from a subject, known to informant as,
    John Doe, described as M/B, 50’s, 5FT8IN, 150, Blk and Bro.
    8.      The exact dates of the Crack Cocaine purchases cannot be listed as it may
    reveal the identity of the informant.
    9.      The Crack Cocaine from December 12, 2011 and June 18, 2012 was field
    tested with positive results.
    10.    The informant has been to 130 Upland in the past 72 hours and observed
    Crack Cocaine on the premises.
    11.     The informant has been proven reliable in the past by supplying officers
    with information leading to the arrest of several subjects for narcotic violations
    and by supplying officers with information that officers were able to verify by
    their own independent investigation.
    12.     Officers are requesting a nighttime Search Warrant because:
    A. Cover of darkness will afford the officers greater protection and safety
    and allow officers to approach undetected so that items to be seized will
    not be destroyed.
    B. Subject named in Warrant is more likely to be present.
    C. Much [of the] activity described occurred during the night season.
    13.     Officers are requesting that the Court authorize the search for all persons
    on the premises because:
    A. The insidious nature of the contraband is such that those involved will
    act in secret and to the exclusion of innocent persons and possible
    informants. Thus, Affiant believes that no innocent persons will be
    present at the time of the search.
    B. Since Affiant has requested a nighttime Search Warrant, the
    probability that innocent persons will be present during the search is
    minimal.
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    Case No. 13-3844
    United States v. Isaac Green, Jr.
    A municipal judge reviewed and signed Officer Carter’s search-warrant application on
    June 21, 2012. Later that evening, officers searched Green’s home and found Green sitting on a
    couch in the living room. During the search of Green’s house and detached garage, the officers
    discovered, among other things, loose crack cocaine, cocaine residue, digital scales, cash,
    multiple computers, a computer printer, counterfeit money, and various firearms.
    B.     Procedural background
    Green moved to suppress the evidence found during the search, arguing that Officer
    Carter’s search-warrant affidavit was “bare bones” and thus did not establish probable cause.
    One month later, Green filed a supplemental motion asserting that (1) the search-warrant
    affidavit did not establish probable cause to search his detached garage, (2) Officer Carter
    intentionally made false statements in his affidavit, and (3) Green was entitled to a hearing under
    Franks v. Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
    (1978). The district court denied Green’s motions.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A.     Standard for a Franks hearing
    A defendant is entitled to a Franks hearing if he (1) “makes a substantial preliminary
    showing that a false statement knowingly and intentionally, or with reckless disregard for the
    truth, was included by the affiant in the warrant affidavit,” and (2) “the allegedly false statement
    is necessary to the finding of probable cause.” United States v. Graham, 
    275 F.3d 490
    , 505 (6th
    Cir. 2001) (internal quotation marks omitted). We have previously explained that “[a] defendant
    who challenges the veracity of statements made in an affidavit that formed the basis for a warrant
    has a heavy burden.” United States v. Bennett, 
    905 F.2d 931
    , 934 (6th Cir. 1990).
    The first prong of the Franks analysis (whether the defendant has made a substantial
    preliminary showing of intentional or reckless falsity) is a factual question that we evaluate
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    United States v. Isaac Green, Jr.
    under the clear-error standard. See United States v. Poulsen, 
    655 F.3d 492
    , 504 (6th Cir. 2011)
    (“The determination as to whether a statement made in an affidavit is made with reckless
    disregard of the truth is a fact question.”) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also 
    Graham, 275 F.3d at 505
    (“[T]he district court’s factual findings are reviewed for clear error.”). If a
    defendant makes this substantial preliminary showing, we turn to the second prong of the Franks
    analysis by removing the allegedly false statement and asking whether the search-warrant
    affidavit still supports a finding of probable cause. 
    Graham, 275 F.3d at 505
    .
    The second prong of the Franks analysis (whether an allegedly false statement is
    necessary to a finding of probable cause) is a legal question that we review de novo. 
    Id. (explaining that
    “conclusions of law are reviewed de novo”). Probable cause exists if the
    remaining portions of the affidavit provide the court “with a basis for finding that there was a fair
    probability that contraband or evidence of a crime would be found.” 
    Id. at 504.
    B.     Green’s arguments
    As a threshold matter, Green argues that Officer Carter deliberately falsified the entirety
    of the substantive portions of the search-warrant affidavit because it is nearly identical to the
    affidavit at issue in United States v. Pusey, 189 F. App’x 475 (6th Cir. 2006) (rejecting a Franks
    challenge arising out of another search in Youngstown, Ohio). But this court has previously
    determined that similar “boilerplate” arguments are without merit because the fact that a
    search-warrant affidavit is an almost “word-for-word” copy of the affidavit in a prior case is
    irrelevant “[a]s long as there is sufficient information to provide probable cause for the search.”
    See United States v. Weaver, 
    99 F.3d 1372
    , 1378 (6th Cir. 1996) (internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also United States v. Moore, 
    661 F.3d 309
    , 312 (6th Cir. 2011) (upholding a largely
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    United States v. Isaac Green, Jr.
    boilerplate search-warrant affidavit where an unnamed confidential informant had witnessed the
    defendant engaging in drug transactions).
    In other words, the fact that officers recycle boilerplate language—a phenomenon that
    Green refers to as “uncanny coincidences between . . . affidavits”—does not necessarily mean
    that those officers knowingly, intentionally, or recklessly included false statements. See 
    Weaver, 99 F.3d at 1381
    (explaining that “[t]he Fourth Amendment does not require an officer to reinvent
    the wheel with each search warrant application”).         We therefore cannot accept Green’s
    conclusory argument that Officer Carter falsified the entirety of the search-warrant affidavit
    simply because it appears to have been adapted from a prior affidavit. See 
    Bennett, 905 F.2d at 934
    (explaining that, to make a substantial preliminary showing of intentional or reckless falsity
    under Franks, a defendant’s “allegations must be more than conclusory”).
    Instead, this court’s well-settled framework for Franks hearings requires a defendant to
    “point to specific false statements” and then “accompany his allegations with an offer of proof.”
    United States v. Cummins, 
    912 F.2d 98
    , 101, 103 (6th Cir. 1990) (emphasis added)
    (independently evaluating the defendant’s offer of proof in support of his Franks claim and
    concluding that he “has failed to meet his burden of proof in establishing deliberate falsehood or
    reckless disregard for the truth”).   If a defendant carries his burden of proof, then those
    individual allegations—not the entire affidavit—are set aside and we review what remains to
    decide the issue of probable cause. See 
    Graham, 275 F.3d at 505
    (explaining that if a defendant
    makes a substantial preliminary showing of intentional or reckless falsity tied to individual
    allegations, then we evaluate “the affidavit’s remaining content” rather than gaze skeptically at
    the entirety of the affidavit).
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    Case No. 13-3844
    United States v. Isaac Green, Jr.
    We now turn to Green’s specific challenges to the search-warrant affidavit, which pertain
    to (1) Green’s appearance; (2) the sum allegedly paid by the informant for varying amounts of
    drugs; (3) Officer Carter’s employment history; (4) the lack of complaints from two of Green’s
    neighbors about drug activity at Green’s residence; and (5) field reports stating that the drugs
    obtained during the controlled purchases tested positive for heroin, not cocaine. Tellingly,
    however, none of these allegations directly challenge the affidavit’s allegations that the three
    controlled purchases in fact occurred. Thus, even if we assume arguendo that Green has made a
    substantial preliminary showing that several statements tangentially related to the controlled
    purchases were intentionally or recklessly falsified, his argument would still fail because even “a
    single controlled purchase is sufficient to establish probable cause to believe that drugs are
    present at the purchase location.” United States v. Archibald, 
    685 F.3d 553
    , 558 (6th Cir. 2012);
    see also United States v. Jackson, 
    470 F.3d 299
    , 308 (6th Cir. 2006) (holding that there was
    probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant where the officer’s “corroboration of events
    that occurred during the controlled buy, as set forth in the affidavit, provide sufficient probable
    cause”).
    Nor did Green actually make a substantial preliminary showing of intentional or reckless
    falsity. His first allegation regarding the inconsistencies between the suspect’s description in the
    search-warrant affidavit and Green’s description in the presentence report does not establish that
    the affidavit was intentionally or recklessly falsified. A litany of reasons might justify these
    differences, ranging from the informant’s honest though flawed recollection of the suspect’s
    physical attributes, to the faulty transmission of this information to the police, to the passage of
    time.   For these reasons, the 2013 presentence report, with its greater variance from the
    search-warrant affidavit and the police reports, does not show that the controlled purchases never
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    United States v. Isaac Green, Jr.
    occurred.   The district court therefore did not clearly err in finding that “the informant’s
    descriptions are not so significant that . . . Officer Carter’s statement was false.”
    Green has forfeited his next challenge pertaining to the amount of money that the
    informant paid during the controlled purchases by raising the issue for the first time on appeal.
    See United States v. Lopez-Medina, 
    461 F.3d 724
    , 738–39 (6th Cir. 2006) (“[W]hen a party has
    brought a pretrial suppression motion, . . . any new suppression arguments raised for the first
    time on appeal that were not contained in the original suppression motion will be deemed waived
    under Rule 12(e)” of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure) (emphasis added). We arrive at
    this conclusion given Green’s concession in his reply brief that “it is true that defense counsel
    did not make these specific arguments in the suppression hearing.”
    Nor did the district court clearly err in concluding that Green failed to make a substantial
    preliminary showing that Officer Carter intentionally or recklessly falsified his law-enforcement
    experience. Although Officer Carter’s statements differ slightly between the search-warrant
    affidavit and his trial testimony, Green has offered no evidence showing that Officer Carter
    intentionally or recklessly falsified those portions of the affidavit. Moreover, Officer Carter’s
    statements could simply be the result of negligence or mistake, neither of which entitles a
    defendant to a Franks hearing.        See 
    Cummins, 912 F.2d at 102
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    Green next argues that two of Green’s neighbors testified that they had never observed
    drug trafficking (or other illegal behavior) at Green’s residence.         But as the district court
    correctly noted, the neighbors’ testimony “does not by itself mean that other citizens did not see
    such activity or that Officer Carter himself did not observe such activity.” Moreover, even if the
    allegation pertaining to neighbor complaints is removed, the affidavit would still contain
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    United States v. Isaac Green, Jr.
    allegations pertaining to the three controlled drug purchases, the existence of which are sufficient
    in themselves to support a finding of probable cause. See 
    Archibald, 685 F.3d at 558
    .
    We further note that Green’s reliance on United States v. Black, No. 98-5155, 
    1999 WL 357759
    (6th Cir. May 19, 1999), with regard to the “neighbors” issue is misplaced. The court in
    Black remanded the case for a Franks hearing because a neighbor’s testimony that he had never
    smelled marijuana on the premises called into question the likelihood that an officer smelled
    marijuana prior to exiting his police vehicle. 
    Id. at *3
    (explaining that the neighbor had been on
    Black’s property “numerous times and never smelled marijuana” and was thus “in a better
    position to smell the marijuana than officers sitting inside a [police] vehicle”) By contrast, the
    testimony of two of Green’s neighbors is insufficient to call into question the likelihood that drug
    trafficking occurred on the premises, particularly considering that both neighbors admitted that
    they were away from their homes for significant periods of time.
    Finally, Green disputes that the cocaine purchased by the informant was field-tested
    “with positive results” because Officer Carter’s June 19, 2012 narcotics report shows a positive
    result for heroin, not crack cocaine. But Green’s citation to the record is incomplete. Officer
    Carter twice testified that the substance obtained during the controlled purchases was crack
    cocaine. He attributed the heroin misclassification to human error, which is insufficient to make
    a substantial preliminary showing that Officer Carter intentionally or recklessly falsified his
    affidavit. See 
    Cummins, 912 F.2d at 102
    .
    III.    CONCLUSION
    For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
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