United States v. Ezra Griffith , 867 F.3d 1265 ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued December 13, 2016             Decided August 18, 2017
    No. 13-3061
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    APPELLEE
    v.
    EZRA GRIFFITH,
    APPELLANT
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:13-cr-00013-1)
    William H. Burgess argued the cause for appellant. With
    him on the briefs were Darren S. Gardner, A.J. Kramer,
    Federal Public Defender, and Rosanna M. Taormina, Assistant
    Federal Public Defender. Tony Axam Jr., Assistant Federal
    Public Defender, entered an appearance.
    Lauren R. Bates, Assistant U.S. Attorney, argued the cause
    for appellee. With her on the brief were Elizabeth Trosman
    and Chrisellen R. Kolb, Assistant U.S. Attorneys.
    Before: BROWN, SRINIVASAN and PILLARD, Circuit
    Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SRINIVASAN.
    2
    Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge BROWN.
    SRINIVASAN, Circuit Judge: Most of us nowadays carry a
    cell phone. And our phones frequently contain information
    chronicling our daily lives—where we go, whom we see, what
    we say to our friends, and the like. When a person is suspected
    of a crime, his phone thus can serve as a fruitful source of
    evidence, especially if he committed the offense in concert with
    others with whom he might communicate about it. Does this
    mean that, whenever officers have reason to suspect a person
    of involvement in a crime, they have probable cause to search
    his home for cell phones because he might own one and it
    might contain relevant evidence? That, in essence, is the
    central issue raised by this case.
    Appellant Ezra Griffith was charged with unlawful
    possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He moved to
    suppress the firearm, arguing that police discovered it while
    executing an invalid warrant to search his home. The district
    court denied the motion, and a jury convicted Griffith at trial.
    Griffith now challenges the denial of his motion to suppress.
    The warrant authorized officers to search for and seize all
    cell phones and other electronic devices in Griffith’s residence.
    The supporting affidavit, however, offered almost no reason to
    suspect that Griffith in fact owned a cell phone, or that any
    phone or other device containing incriminating information
    would be found in his apartment. In our view, the fact that most
    people now carry a cell phone was not enough to justify an
    intrusive search of a place lying at the center of the Fourth
    Amendment’s protections—a home—for any phone Griffith
    might own.
    We therefore agree with Griffith that the warrant to search
    his residence was unsupported by probable cause. We also
    3
    reject the government’s arguments that, even if the warrant was
    invalid, the firearm still need not have been excluded from the
    evidence against him. Consequently, we vacate Griffith’s
    conviction.
    I.
    In January 2013, police obtained a warrant to search
    Griffith’s residence in connection with their investigation of a
    homicide committed more than one year earlier. Investigators
    concluded that the shooting related to a conflict between rival
    gangs. The officers knew Griffith was a member of one of the
    gangs and suspected he drove the getaway car, which
    surveillance footage had captured circling the scene. Two
    months after the shooting, police found a vehicle matching the
    surveillance footage and registered to Griffith’s mother. Eight
    months later, a detective met with Griffith’s mother, who
    confirmed that Griffith had been the vehicle’s principal user.
    During much of the year-long investigation, Griffith had
    been incarcerated on unrelated charges. Detectives obtained
    recordings of Griffith’s jailhouse phone calls made on the day
    they interviewed his mother. Griffith initiated four calls that
    day: two to his home number (where his mother lived) and two
    to his grandmother’s home phone. In one of the calls, Griffith
    spoke to Dwayne Hilton, another suspect in the shooting, and
    said, “man you know it’s about that.” A. 33. The two briefly
    discussed a “whip” (slang for car), before Hilton changed the
    subject. 
    Id. In another
    call, Griffith’s brother reported that
    fellow gang member Carl Oliphant needed to speak with
    Griffith. Oliphant did not have a cell phone, so Griffith’s
    brother walked with a phone to Oliphant’s house. Griffith then
    briefly explained to Oliphant that detectives had been
    investigating the car.
    4
    In September 2012, Griffith was released from his
    confinement on the unrelated charges after serving
    approximately 10 months. Detectives learned that Griffith
    moved into an apartment owned by his girlfriend, Sheree
    Lewis. In January 2013, police sought a warrant to search
    Lewis’s apartment.
    The bulk of the ten-page affidavit supporting the search
    warrant explained Griffith’s suspected involvement in the
    homicide committed more than one year beforehand. The
    affiant, a 22-year veteran of the police department, recounted
    the evidence and expressed his belief that Griffith had been the
    getaway driver. The affidavit also described the evidence that
    Griffith now lived with Lewis in her apartment.
    Two sentences in the affidavit then set out the basis for
    believing incriminating evidence would be discovered in the
    apartment. Those sentences read as follows:
    Based upon your affiant’s professional training
    and experience and your affiant’s work with
    other veteran police officers and detectives, I
    know that gang/crew members involved in
    criminal activity maintain regular contact with
    each other, even when they are arrested or
    incarcerated, and that they often stay advised
    and share intelligence about their activities
    through cell phones and other electronic
    communication devices and the Internet, to
    include Facebook, Twitter and E-mail
    accounts.
    Based upon the aforementioned facts and
    circumstances, and your affiant’s experience
    and training, there is probable cause to believe
    5
    that secreted inside of [Lewis’s apartment] is
    evidence relating to the homicide discussed
    above.
    A. 35-36. The affidavit then concluded by enumerating the
    items the officers sought to seize from the apartment,
    principally any cell phones and electronic devices found there.
    On January 4, 2013, a magistrate judge granted the
    application for a search warrant. As requested in the affidavit,
    the warrant authorized a search for, and seizure of, the
    following items:
    all electronic devices to include, but not limited
    to cellular telephone(s), computer(s), electronic
    tablet(s), devices capable of storing digital
    images (to include, but not limited to, PDAs,
    CDs, DVD’s [and] jump/zip drives), evidence
    of ownership of such devices, subscriber
    information relating to the electronic devices,
    any information describing, referencing, or
    mentioning in any[ ]way the above-described
    offense, any handwritten form (such as writing
    to include but not limited to notes, papers, or
    mail matter), photographs, newspaper articles
    relating to the shooting death [under
    investigation], and any indicia of occupancy of
    the premises described above.
    A. 26.
    Three days later, on January 7, a team of officers executed
    the search. The officers arrived at 7:10 AM and surrounded the
    building. When they knocked on the door and announced they
    had a search warrant, an officer assigned to contain the
    6
    premises observed an arm throw an object out of the
    apartment’s window. The officer determined that the object
    was a firearm and then glanced at the window. He saw Griffith
    looking back at him.
    About 30 seconds after the officers knocked on the door
    and announced they had a search warrant, Lewis opened the
    door. Officers found three people inside the apartment: Lewis,
    Griffith, and a six-year-old child. Officers knew one of those
    three people had tossed the gun out of the window. Officers
    seized the gun, and also seized a number of cell phones
    recovered in the course of their search of the apartment.
    Based on the containment officer’s identification of him,
    the government charged Griffith with possession of a firearm
    by a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
    Griffith moved to suppress all tangible evidence seized under
    the search warrant, including the gun. He challenged the
    warrant as facially invalid, arguing there was no evidence he
    had ever owned a cell phone or other electronic device, or that
    any such device would be found in the apartment. The
    government argued that the warrant was supported by probable
    cause, or that, at a minimum, the good-faith exception to the
    exclusionary rule applied. See United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
    (1984). The government further contended that Griffith in
    any event lacked standing to seek suppression of the gun
    because he had voluntarily abandoned it when he tossed it out
    of the window.
    The district court denied Griffith’s suppression motion.
    The court rejected the government’s abandonment argument
    because it thought the merits of the government’s position on
    that issue would rise or fall with the legality of the
    government’s “entry into the apartment that prompted the
    tossing of the gun.” A. 110. The court also declined to decide
    7
    whether the warrant was supported by probable cause, holding
    that, regardless, the good-faith exception to the exclusionary
    rule applied.
    At trial, a jury convicted Griffith of unlawful possession
    of a firearm by a felon. He appeals his conviction, challenging
    the district court’s denial of his suppression motion.
    II.
    We first consider the validity of the warrant authorizing
    the search of Lewis’s apartment. Because Griffith lived with
    Lewis at the time, he had a legitimate expectation of privacy in
    her home for purposes of raising a Fourth Amendment
    challenge. See Minnesota v. Olson, 
    495 U.S. 91
    , 96-97 (1990).
    The government’s argument in support of probable cause
    to search the apartment rests on the prospect of finding one
    specific item there: a cell phone owned by Griffith. Yet the
    affidavit supporting the warrant application provided virtually
    no reason to suspect that Griffith in fact owned a cell phone, let
    alone that any phone belonging to him and containing
    incriminating information would be found in the residence. At
    the same time, the warrant authorized the wholesale seizure of
    all electronic devices discovered in the apartment, including
    items owned by third parties. In those circumstances, we
    conclude that the warrant was unsupported by probable cause
    and unduly broad in its reach.
    A.
    The Fourth Amendment prescribes that “no Warrants shall
    issue, but upon probable cause.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. When
    assessing whether a search warrant is supported by probable
    cause, we ask whether the issuing judge had a “substantial
    8
    basis” for concluding that “a search would uncover evidence of
    wrongdoing.” Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 236 (1983)
    (quoting Jones v. United States, 
    362 U.S. 257
    , 271 (1960)).
    Although we pay “great deference” to the judge’s initial
    determination of probable cause, a warrant application cannot
    rely merely on “conclusory statement[s].” 
    Id. at 236,
    239
    (citing Nathanson v. United States, 
    290 U.S. 41
    (1933)).
    Here, the lion’s share of the affidavit supporting the
    warrant application is devoted to establishing Griffith’s
    suspected involvement as the getaway driver in a homicide.
    That information might have established probable cause to
    arrest Griffith for his participation in the crime. The warrant
    application, though, was for a search warrant, not an arrest
    warrant. And to obtain a warrant to search for and seize a
    suspect’s possessions or property, the government must do
    more than show probable cause to arrest him. The government
    failed to make the requisite showing in this case.
    1. The Supreme Court has long distinguished between
    arrest warrants and search warrants. See Steagald v. United
    States, 
    451 U.S. 204
    , 212-13 (1981). An arrest warrant rests
    on probable cause to believe that the suspect committed an
    offense; it thus primarily serves to protect an individual’s
    liberty interest against an unreasonable seizure of his person.
    
    Id. at 213.
    A search warrant, by contrast, is grounded in
    “probable cause to believe that the legitimate object of a search
    is located in a particular place.” 
    Id. Rather than
    protect an
    individual’s person, a search warrant “safeguards an
    individual’s interest in the privacy of his home and possessions
    against the unjustified intrusion of the police.” 
    Id. In light
    of the distinctness of the inquiries, probable cause
    to arrest a person will not itself justify a warrant to search his
    property. Regardless of whether an individual is validly
    9
    suspected of committing a crime, an application for a search
    warrant concerning his property or possessions must
    demonstrate cause to believe that “evidence is likely to be
    found at the place to be searched.” Groh v. Ramirez, 
    540 U.S. 551
    , 568 (2004). Moreover, “[t]here must, of course, be a
    nexus . . . between the item to be seized and criminal behavior.”
    Warden, Md. Penitentiary v. Hayden, 
    387 U.S. 294
    , 307
    (1967).
    Those concerns about the distinct requirements for a
    search warrant are particularly salient in this case, for two
    reasons. First, the warrant application sought authorization to
    search a home, which stands at “the very core” of the Fourth
    Amendment’s protections. Silverman v. United States, 
    365 U.S. 505
    , 511 (1961); see 
    Groh, 540 U.S. at 559
    . Second, the
    scope of a permissible search depends on the specific spaces in
    which the object of the search might be found. See Maryland
    v. Garrison, 
    480 U.S. 79
    , 84-85 (1987). Authorization to
    search for an item fitting in the palm of a hand, like a cell
    phone, thus can entail an intrusive inspection of all corners of
    a home. (And here, as explained below, officers sought and
    obtained authorization to continue their search until they found
    every cell phone and electronic device in the apartment.) This
    case, in short, involves the prospect of an especially invasive
    search of an especially protected place.
    Although the warrant application sought authorization to
    search for items other than a cell phone, those additional items
    have no bearing on our assessment of probable cause to search
    the home. The application, for instance, encompassed the
    seizure of any documents, newspaper articles, photographs, or
    other information relating to the crime. The affiant, however,
    suggested no reason whatsoever to expect the presence of
    incriminating documents, newspaper articles, or photographs
    in the apartment. The affidavit in fact contained no mention of
    10
    those items apart from a final sentence summarily seeking
    authorization to seize any of them officers might happen to
    discover. The government thus understandably makes no
    argument that there was probable cause to search the apartment
    due to a belief that incriminating documents, articles, or
    photographs would be found there.
    The application also referenced electronic devices apart
    from cell phones, including computers, tablets, and personal
    digital assistants. Again, though, the affidavit provided no
    reason to suppose that Griffith possessed any of those devices
    or that any would be found in the apartment. And although we
    give a “commonsense” rather than “hypertechnical” reading to
    a warrant application, 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 236
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted), there is no commonsense reason
    simply to presume that individuals own a computer or tablet.
    Those sorts of devices do not approach cellphones in their
    ubiquity: whereas the Supreme Court, around the time of the
    warrant application in this case, observed that “more than 90%
    of American adults . . . own a cell phone,” Riley v. California,
    
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    , 2490 (2014), the same organization cited by
    the Court for that measure estimated the contemporaneous
    incidence of tablet ownership among adults at roughly 30%
    (2013), and of computer ownership at roughly 75% (2015), see
    Technology Device Ownership: 2015, Pew Research Center
    (Oct. 29, 2015), http://www.pewinternet.org/2015/10/29/
    technology-device-ownership-2015.
    2. That brings us back to the warrant application’s reliance
    on cell phones—in particular, on the possibility that Griffith
    owned a cell phone, and that his phone would be found in the
    home and would contain evidence of his suspected offense.
    With regard to his ownership of a cell phone, it is true that, as
    the Supreme Court recently said, cell phones are now “such a
    pervasive and insistent part of daily life that the proverbial
    11
    visitor from Mars might conclude they were an important
    feature of human anatomy.” 
    Riley, 134 S. Ct. at 2484
    . We do
    not doubt that most people today own a cell phone.
    But the affidavit in this case conveyed no reason to think
    that Griffith, in particular, owned a cell phone. There was no
    observation of Griffith’s using a cell phone, no information
    about anyone having received a cell phone call or text message
    from him, no record of officers recovering any cell phone in his
    possession at the time of his previous arrest (and confinement)
    on unrelated charges, and no indication otherwise of his
    ownership of a cell phone at any time. To the contrary, the
    circumstances suggested Griffith might have been less likely
    than others to own a phone around the time of the search: he
    had recently completed a ten-month period of confinement,
    during which he of course had no ongoing access to a cell
    phone; and at least one person in his circle—his potential co-
    conspirator, Carl Oliphant—was known not to have a cell
    phone.
    We are aware of no case, and the government identifies
    none, in which police obtained authorization to search a
    suspect’s home for a cell phone without any particularized
    information that he owned one. In the typical case, officers will
    have already come into possession of a suspect’s phone after
    seizing it on his person incident to his arrest. See, e.g., 
    id. at 2480-82;
    United States v. Bass, 
    785 F.3d 1043
    , 1049 (6th Cir.
    2015). Officers also might receive reliable indication of a
    suspect’s possession of a cell phone. See, e.g., United States v.
    Mathis, 
    767 F.3d 1264
    , 1269 (11th Cir. 2014); United States v.
    Grupee, 
    682 F.3d 143
    , 145-46 (1st Cir. 2012). There was no
    such information here about Griffith.
    3. To justify a search of the apartment to seize any cell
    phone owned by Griffith, moreover, police needed reason to
    12
    think not only that he possessed a phone, but also that the
    device would be located in the home and would contain
    incriminating evidence about his suspected offense. With
    respect to the first of those additional considerations, the
    affidavit set out no reason to believe the phone was “likely to
    be found at the place to be searched.” See 
    Groh, 540 U.S. at 568
    . People ordinarily carry their cell phones with them
    wherever they go. A cell phone, after all, is nearly a “feature
    of human anatomy.” 
    Riley, 134 S. Ct. at 2484
    . “According to
    one poll” cited by the Supreme Court, “nearly three-quarters of
    smart phone users report being within five feet of their phones
    most of the time,” leading the Court to describe persons “who
    own a cell phone” as “keep[ing] on their person a digital
    record of nearly every aspect of their lives.” 
    Id. at 2490
    (emphasis added).
    In that light, the assumption that most people own a cell
    phone would not automatically justify an open-ended warrant
    to search a home anytime officers seek a person’s phone.
    Instead, such a search would rest on a second assumption: that
    the person (and his cell phone) would be home. When, as here,
    the police execute a warrant early in the morning, such an
    assumption might be fair, but it entails adding another layer of
    inference onto an already questionable probable cause calculus.
    And the warrant in any event gave officers authority to search
    Griffith’s apartment for any cell phones without regard to his
    presence on the scene. Indeed, the police, not knowing whether
    Griffith owned a cell phone, sought and obtained authority to
    maintain their search until they found all cell phones in Lewis’s
    apartment, so that they could later assess which (if any)
    belonged to Griffith.
    The upshot is that the information in the warrant
    application might well have supported an arrest warrant for
    Griffith—which in turn presumably would have occasioned a
    13
    search of him incident to his arrest, and an ensuing seizure of
    any cell phone he owned in the most likely place to find it (on
    his person). See 
    id. at 2486.
    But the government instead
    elected to seek license to conduct a full-scale search of his
    entire home based on the possibility that he owned a phone and
    that a phone found there might be his.
    The government urges us to assume that a home might
    contain incriminating evidence based on decisions allowing a
    search of a residence for drugs. That context is markedly
    different. Our decisions have considered probable cause to
    suspect a person of involvement in drug trafficking as
    supporting probable cause to believe drugs will be found in his
    residence. See United States v. Washington, 
    775 F.3d 405
    , 409
    (D.C. Cir. 2014); United States v. Cardoza, 
    713 F.3d 656
    , 661
    (D.C. Cir. 2013). But we have done so precisely because drug
    traffickers “rarely keep on their person or immediately about
    them their entire supply of drugs.” 
    Washington, 775 F.3d at 409
    . And “[f]or the vast majority of drug dealers, the most
    convenient location to secure items is the home.” 
    Cardoza, 713 F.3d at 661
    (quoting United States v. Spencer, 
    530 F.3d 1003
    ,
    1007 (D.C. Cir. 2008)). The same considerations do not apply
    to cell phones. Although a trafficker ordinarily would keep the
    bulk of his drugs away from his person and in the security of
    his home, a person typically would keep her cell phone with
    her.
    4. Finally, even if we assume Griffith owned a phone and
    that his phone would be found in the apartment, what about the
    likelihood that the phone would contain incriminating
    evidence? Because a cell phone, unlike drugs or other
    contraband, is not inherently illegal, there must be reason to
    believe that a phone may contain evidence of the crime. On
    that score, the affidavit in this case stated only that, in the
    affiant’s experience, gang members “maintain regular contact
    14
    with each other” and “often stay advised and share intelligence
    about their activities through cell phones and other electronic
    communication devices and the Internet.” A. 35.
    That assessment might have added force if officers had
    been investigating a more recent crime. Because the
    information on a cell phone can enable reconstruction of the
    “sum of an individual’s private life,” 
    Riley, 134 S. Ct. at 2489
    ,
    the police often might fairly infer that a suspect’s phone
    contains evidence of recent criminal activity, see 
    id. at 2492,
    perhaps especially when, as here, multiple perpetrators may
    have coordinated the crime. But by the time police sought the
    warrant in this case, more than a year had elapsed since the
    shooting.
    We require the existence of probable cause “at the time
    that law enforcement applies for a warrant,” such that “the
    freshness of the supporting evidence is critical.” 
    Washington, 775 F.3d at 408
    ; see also United States v. Grubbs, 
    547 U.S. 90
    ,
    95 n.2 (2006). Insofar as Griffith might have used a cell phone
    to communicate with his associates around the time of the
    crime, the search of the apartment would be grounded in an
    assumption that he continued to possess the same phone more
    than one year later. In the intervening period, though, he had
    been confined for some ten months. What is more, even in the
    event that Griffith, after his release, recovered possession of the
    same phone he had owned at the time of the crime, he would
    have had ample opportunity to delete incriminating
    information from the device by the time of the search (which
    occurred more than four months after his release). He had
    every incentive to cleanse his phone, and also to refrain from
    adding any new incriminating information to it: he had become
    aware of the investigation of him by the time of his release.
    15
    In that light, the government gains little by relying on
    Griffith’s making of calls to his associates on a recorded jail
    line upon learning of the investigation. Griffith’s use of a
    landline phone when confined sheds minimal light on whether
    any cell phone he once owned would retain any incriminating
    information if recovered in a search of his post-release
    residence. Nor do Griffith’s calls from jail indicate how he
    would communicate upon his release, when he could contact
    his associates, if at all, in person. The jailhouse calls also
    occurred in response to a specific triggering event—his
    learning of the investigation. And, even then, those calls took
    place several months before officers obtained and executed the
    search warrant.
    As a general matter, the likelihood that incriminating
    evidence continues to exist in the place to be searched—taking
    into account “the opportunities those involved in the crime
    would have had to remove or destroy [incriminating] items”—
    is an important consideration when assessing the existence of
    probable cause. See 2 Wayne R. LaFave, Search & Seizure
    § 3.7(a) (5th ed. 2016). Here, that consideration weighs against
    justifying a search of Lewis’s apartment on any expectation
    that it would yield a phone that belonged to Griffith and
    retained information about a crime he might have committed
    more than one year earlier (and for which he had long known
    he was a suspect).
    In view of the limited likelihood that any cell phone
    discovered in the apartment would contain incriminating
    evidence of Griffith’s suspected crime, the government’s
    argument in favor of probable cause essentially falls back on
    our accepting the following proposition: because nearly
    everyone now carries a cell phone, and because a phone
    frequently contains all sorts of information about the owner’s
    daily activities, a person’s suspected involvement in a crime
    16
    ordinarily justifies searching her home for any cell phones,
    regardless of whether there is any indication that she in fact
    owns one. Finding the existence of probable cause in this case,
    therefore, would verge on authorizing a search of a person’s
    home almost anytime there is probable cause to suspect her of
    a crime. We cannot accept that proposition.
    We treat the home as the “first among equals” when it
    comes to the Fourth Amendment. Florida v. Jardines, 133 S.
    Ct. 1409, 1414 (2013). The general pervasiveness of cell
    phones affords an inadequate basis for eroding that core
    protection.
    B.
    The lack of probable cause to search Lewis’s apartment for
    any cell phone owned by Griffith itself renders the warrant
    invalid under the Fourth Amendment. But the warrant was also
    invalid for an additional reason: its overbreadth in allowing the
    seizure of all electronic devices found in the residence. The
    officers executing the warrant made good on that authorization,
    seizing six cell phones and one tablet computer.
    1. The Fourth Amendment requires that warrants
    “particularly describ[e]” the “things to be seized.” U.S. Const.
    amend. IV. That condition “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.” 
    Garrison, 480 U.S. at 84
    . Consequently,
    a warrant with an “indiscriminate sweep” is “constitutionally
    intolerable.” Stanford v. Texas, 
    379 U.S. 476
    , 486 (1965). We
    will hold a warrant invalid when “overly broad.” United States
    v. Maxwell, 
    920 F.2d 1028
    , 1033-34 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
    17
    In obligating officers to describe the items to be seized
    with particularity, the Fourth Amendment prevents “the
    issu[ance] of warrants on loose, vague or doubtful bases of
    fact.” Go-Bart Importing Co. v. United States, 
    282 U.S. 344
    ,
    357 (1931). In that way, “the requirement of particularity is
    closely tied to the requirement of probable cause.” 2 LaFave,
    Search & Seizure § 4.6(a). When a warrant describes the
    objects of the search in unduly “general terms,” it “raises the
    possibility that there does not exist a showing of probable cause
    to justify a search for them.” 
    Id. § 4.6(d).
    The warrant in this case authorized police to search for and
    seize “all electronic devices to include but not limited to
    cellular telephone(s), computer(s), electronic tablet(s), devices
    capable of storing digital images (to include, but not limited to,
    PDAs, CDs, DVD’s [and] jump/zip drives).” A. 36. The
    affidavit, as explained, failed to establish probable cause to
    suspect that any cell phones or other electronic devices
    belonging to Griffith and containing incriminating information
    would be found in the apartment. Yet the warrant did not stop
    with any devices owned by Griffith, which already would have
    gone too far. It broadly authorized seizure of all cell phones
    and electronic devices, without regard to ownership. That
    expansive sweep far outstripped the police’s proffered
    justification for entering the home—viz., to recover any
    devices owned by Griffith.
    Indeed, the terms of the warrant allowed officers
    unfettered access to any electronic device in the apartment even
    if police knew the device belonged to someone other than
    Griffith. He shared the apartment with Lewis, his girlfriend,
    and the warrant authorized police to search for and seize all of
    her electronic devices. For instance, if officers executing the
    warrant had seen Lewis using her cell phone in her apartment,
    the warrant would have authorized them to seize that phone.
    18
    Yet the police unsurprisingly offered no explanation of why
    Lewis’s devices could have been appropriately seized.
    The warrant’s overbreadth is particularly notable because
    police sought to seize otherwise lawful objects: electronic
    devices. Courts have allowed more latitude in connection with
    searches for contraband items like “weapons [or] narcotics.”
    
    Stanford, 379 U.S. at 486
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    But the understanding is different when police seize
    “innocuous” objects. See Andresen v. Maryland, 
    427 U.S. 463
    ,
    482 n.11 (1976). Those circumstances call for special “care to
    assure [the search is] conducted in a manner that minimizes
    unwarranted intrusions upon privacy.” Id.; see also 2 LaFave,
    Search & Seizure § 4.6(d).
    Of course, even with searches of lawful objects, we may
    allow a broader sweep when a reasonable investigation cannot
    produce a more particular description. See 
    Andresen, 427 U.S. at 480
    n.10. There may be circumstances in which police have
    probable cause to seize a phone, yet still lack specific
    information about the phone’s make or model. For example,
    police might learn a suspect uses a phone through an informant,
    and thus have no ability to describe the specific characteristics
    of any phone belonging to him. In that sort of situation, we
    recognize that some innocuous devices would need to “be
    examined, at least cursorily,” to determine their relevance to
    the investigation. 
    Id. at 482
    n.11.
    But even then, it is no answer to confer a blanket
    authorization to search for and seize all electronic devices. The
    warrant must be tailored to the justifications for entering the
    home. In this case, the warrant should have limited the scope
    of permissible seizure to devices owned by Griffith, or devices
    linked to the shooting. The Department of Justice in fact
    encourages use of that sort of approach in certain situations.
    19
    See Office of Legal Educ., Searching and Seizing Computers
    and Obtaining Electronic Evidence in Criminal Investigations,
    Crim.     Div.,   Dep’t     of    Justice      69-72     (2015),
    https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/criminal-ccips/lega
    cy/2015/01/14/ssmanual2009.pdf.
    Such a warrant would have enabled police to sweep more
    broadly when executing the search, but would have disabled
    them from seizing devices plainly unrelated to the crime.
    Officers, for example, could have examined a device they
    initially thought might belong to Griffith, but they could not
    have seized the device if they became aware it belonged to
    Lewis. That sort of approach would “minimize[] unwarranted
    intrusions upon privacy.” 
    Andresen, 427 U.S. at 482
    n.11.
    2. The government does not deny that the warrant in this
    case would be invalid insofar as it authorized the seizure of all
    devices found in the apartment without regard to ownership.
    The government instead argues that, for various reasons, the
    warrant should be read more narrowly. We find those
    arguments unpersuasive.
    For instance, the government submits that the warrant
    should be read in conjunction with the attached affidavit,
    which, in the government’s view, would narrow the
    permissible scope of seizure to the shooting under
    investigation. We read warrants by reference to an affidavit,
    however, only if the issuing judge uses “explicit words on the
    warrant” indicating an intention to incorporate the affidavit’s
    contents and “thereby limit [the warrant’s] scope.” 
    Maxwell, 920 F.2d at 1032
    . Here, the warrant referenced the affidavit
    only in noting generally that the “[a]ffidavit, herewith attached,
    having been made before me by Detective Konstantinos S.
    Giannakoulias,” provided “probable cause.” A. 26. We have
    rejected similar statements as insufficient to demonstrate the
    20
    requisite intention to narrow a warrant’s sweep by
    incorporating an affidavit. See 
    Maxwell, 920 F.2d at 1032
    -33.
    Nor does the government allay our concerns by suggesting
    it would have attempted to determine which of the seized
    devices in fact belonged to Griffith and would have sought a
    separate warrant to search the contents of those—and only
    those—devices. As an initial matter, the warrant, according to
    its terms, seemingly would have authorized police to search
    any electronic devices in the residence. At the federal level,
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41 provides that, “[u]nless
    otherwise specified,” a warrant authorizing seizure of
    electronic storage media also “authorizes a later review of the
    media or information consistent with the warrant.” Fed. R.
    Crim. P. 41(e)(2)(B). The warrant here included no express
    limitations on agents’ authority to examine any electronic
    devices seized. To the extent the officers showed restraint
    when executing the search, “this restraint was imposed by the
    agents themselves, not by a judicial officer.” 
    Groh, 540 U.S. at 561
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    In any event, our holding does not turn on whether the
    police had the power to search the devices’ digital contents.
    The police lacked probable cause to seize all electronic devices
    in the home in the first place. The warrant was invalidly
    overbroad in enabling officers to do so.
    Finally, the government raises a procedural objection
    concerning whether Griffith properly preserved a challenge to
    the warrant’s particularity before the district court. We find no
    merit in the government’s objection. Griffith’s overbreadth
    argument is simply an extension of his probable cause
    challenge, which he has pressed all along. He does not claim
    that the warrant failed to list the particular items police would
    seize. Instead, he claims that the warrant was overbroad in
    21
    authorizing “seizure of theoretical electronic devices that
    belonged to people who were unrelated to the warrant’s
    justifications.” Appellant Reply Br. 19. That is a species of
    the same legal theory he urged before the district court: the
    police lacked probable cause to seize all electronic devices in
    the residence. See United States v. Peyton, 
    745 F.3d 546
    , 551-
    52 (D.C. Cir. 2014). We agree, and hold the warrant was
    constitutionally invalid for that reason.
    III.
    The invalidity of the search warrant would not necessarily
    require excluding evidence recovered in its execution. Under
    the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule, “evidence
    seized in reasonable, good-faith reliance on a search warrant”
    need not be excluded, even if the warrant turns out to have been
    unsupported by probable cause. 
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 905
    (citation
    omitted). Here, the district court, while suggesting it might
    disagree with the issuing judge’s probable-cause
    determination, declined to suppress the firearm because it
    concluded the good-faith exception applied. We find Leon’s
    good-faith exception inapplicable in the particular
    circumstances of this case.
    As the Court explained in Leon, the good-faith exception
    does not apply if a warrant is “based on an affidavit so lacking
    in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its
    existence entirely unreasonable.” 
    Id. at 923
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted). When applying that standard, we consider the
    objective reasonableness not only of “the officers who
    eventually executed the warrant, but also of the officers who
    originally obtained it or who provided information material to
    the probable-cause determination.” 
    Id. at 923
    n.24. We thus
    ask whether an objectively reasonable officer could think the
    22
    affidavit established probable cause, keeping in mind the
    inadequacy of a “bare bones” affidavit. 
    Id. We conclude
    that the affidavit in this case fell short to an
    extent precluding good-faith reliance on the warrant. As
    explained, the government’s theory of probable cause to search
    the apartment runs as follows: (i) Griffith might own a cell
    phone; (ii) if so, his phone might be found in the residence; and
    (iii) if so, the phone might retain incriminating
    communications or other information about a crime committed
    more than one year earlier.            Whatever may be the
    reasonableness of any of those inferences standing on its own,
    demonstrating probable cause required adequately establishing
    all three in combination. The affidavit did not approach doing
    so. It provided no explanation at all of whether Griffith might
    own a phone or whether any such phone might be in his home.
    And with regard to whether any phone would retain any
    incriminating information about a shooting occurring more
    than one year beforehand, it observed only that gang members
    often stay in contact about their activities.
    Additionally, the affidavit sought, and the warrant granted,
    authorization to search for and seize every electronic device
    found in the home. The warrant’s material overbreadth in that
    regard underscored the police’s unawareness of the existence
    of any such devices in the first place (much less the existence
    of any belonging to Griffith): given that police did not know
    whether Griffith owned a cell phone or any other electronic
    device, they could not describe ex ante the devices they would
    search for and seize. But it was no solution to rely on a catchall
    provision authorizing seizure of every device they might
    happen to find in the house. Nothing in the affidavit or warrant
    supported—or could have supported—probable cause to seize
    any and all phones, tablets, computers, and other electronic
    devices in the apartment.
    23
    With regard to the warrant’s overbreadth, our dissenting
    colleague emphasizes that, in one previous decision, we
    applied the good-faith exception to deny suppression of
    evidence seized under an overbroad warrant. See infra at 8-10
    (Brown, J., dissenting). But that decision, United States v.
    Maxwell, 
    920 F.2d 1028
    , did not purport to hold that the good-
    faith exception always applies in the case of an overbroad
    warrant. The inquiry is a contextual one, and courts have
    denied reliance on the good-faith exception when a warrant
    sweeps too broadly in describing the items subject to seizure.
    See United States v. Leary, 
    846 F.2d 592
    , 606-10 (10th Cir.
    1988). In Maxwell, moreover, we cast no doubt on the
    existence of probable cause to suspect the presence in the
    searched residence of at least some incriminating items
    encompassed by the warrant. Here, though, for the reasons
    explained, the affidavit failed to establish probable cause to
    believe that any cell phone (or other electronic device)
    containing incriminating information about Griffith’s
    suspected offense would be found in the apartment.
    Taken together, those failings as to probable cause and
    overbreadth bring the warrant beyond the good-faith
    exception’s reach. In so holding, we stress that the inquiry is
    an objective one. We have no occasion to suspect any ill
    motive or subjective bad faith on the part of the officers who
    prepared and executed the warrant. The Supreme Court has
    found Leon’s objective standard unmet notwithstanding the
    absence of any reason to suppose that officers acted in bad faith
    in relying on an invalid warrant. See 
    Groh, 504 U.S. at 563-65
    & n.8. We do the same here.
    Further, we do not doubt that most criminals—like most
    people—have cell phones, or that many phones owned by
    criminals may contain evidence of recent criminal activity.
    Even so, officers seeking authority to search a person’s home
    24
    must do more than set out their basis for suspecting him of a
    crime. The affidavit in this case might have established the
    authority to seize an individual; it fell materially short of
    justifying a search of his home.
    IV.
    Finally, the government argues we should decline to
    suppress the firearm because Griffith abandoned the gun by
    throwing it out of the window. Griffith, though, tossed the
    firearm in response to the police’s announcement that they had
    a warrant to search the apartment. Because the warrant was
    invalid and the officers thus lacked authority to execute the
    announced search, we find suppression of the firearm to be
    warranted.
    Officers may lawfully seize property that has been
    voluntarily abandoned. See United States v. Thomas, 
    864 F.2d 843
    , 845-46 (D.C. Cir. 1989). But we do not treat an item as
    voluntarily abandoned when a person discards it “due to the
    unlawful activities of police officers, as where the disposal was
    prompted by police efforts to make an illegal arrest or search.”
    2 Wayne R. LaFave et al., Criminal Procedure § 3.2(h) (4th ed.
    2016) (internal quotation marks omitted). For example, in
    United States v. Wood, 
    981 F.2d 536
    (D.C. Cir. 1992), we
    ordered the suppression of a gun dropped by a suspect after
    police had unlawfully ordered him to “halt right there,” 
    id. at 537,
    541. Although the suspect had discarded the gun, we
    found “a direct nexus between the illegal seizure and the
    recovery of the weapon.” 
    Id. at 541;
    see also United States v.
    Brodie, 
    742 F.3d 1058
    , 1063 (D.C. Cir. 2014); United States v.
    Lewis, 
    921 F.2d 1294
    , 1302 (D.C. Cir. 1990). Our sister
    circuits likewise uniformly decline to deem evidence
    voluntarily abandoned when it is thrown away as the direct
    consequence of officers’ efforts to execute an unlawful search
    25
    or seizure. See United States v. Stephens, 
    206 F.3d 914
    , 917
    (9th Cir. 2000); United States v. Austin, 
    66 F.3d 1115
    , 1118
    (10th Cir. 1995).
    Similarly, we cannot treat Griffith’s actions here as a
    voluntary abandonment. Griffith tossed the gun out of the
    window only after officers had knocked on the door and
    announced a search warrant. The officers’ invocation of a
    warrant was tantamount to a pronouncement that Griffith had
    “no right to resist the search.” See Bumper v. North Carolina,
    
    391 U.S. 543
    , 550 (1968). As soon as police claimed to have
    a search warrant, Griffith knew he had no choice but to grant
    them access to his home, either by opening the door and
    allowing them inside or by submitting to a forced entry after a
    “reasonable wait time.” See Hudson v. Michigan, 
    547 U.S. 586
    , 590 (2006) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The government does not dispute that Griffith abandoned
    the gun in reaction to the officers knocking on the door and
    announcing they had a search warrant. The government
    nonetheless contends that, under California v. Hodari D., 
    499 U.S. 621
    (1991), there was no need to suppress the firearm. In
    that case, a suspect ran from a pursuing officer instead of
    submitting to the latter’s show of authority calling for him to
    stop; and in the course of his flight, he dropped drugs he had
    been carrying. See 
    id. at 625-26.
    The “narrow question”
    considered by the Court was “whether, with respect to a show
    of authority . . . a seizure occurs even though the subject does
    not yield.” 
    Id. at 626.
    The Court concluded that no seizure had
    taken place because the subject did not submit to the officer’s
    assertion of authority. And because there had been no seizure,
    the abandoned drugs were not the fruit of any seizure and thus
    need not have been excluded. 
    Id. at 629.
                                   26
    Hodari D. differs from this case in significant respects.
    That case involved an officer’s efforts to seize a person on the
    street, not to search a person’s home. An “officer’s leave to
    gather information is sharply circumscribed when he steps off
    [public] thoroughfares and enters the Fourth Amendment’s
    protected areas,” 
    Jardines, 133 S. Ct. at 1415
    , with “the home”
    standing at “the Amendment’s very core,” 
    id. at 1414
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted). And regardless of the venue, to the
    extent the attempted seizure of a fleeing person in Hodari D.
    could have implications for the announced search of a home,
    Hodari D. turned on the subject’s refusal to submit to the
    officer’s assertion of authority. 
    See 499 U.S. at 626-27
    . If a
    person submits to the officer’s show of authority, Hodari D. is
    inapplicable. See 
    Wood, 981 F.2d at 539-41
    . Here, the officers,
    upon announcing their possession of a search warrant,
    proceeded to execute their search of the apartment without any
    resistance from Griffith or the other occupants.
    The government does not dispute that suppression of the
    firearm would be appropriate if, at the time Griffith tossed it
    out of the window, the officers had already begun crossing the
    threshold of the door. At that point, the government evidently
    allows, a search would have commenced and exclusion of any
    relinquished evidence would be required. But Griffith, the
    government emphasizes, abandoned the gun before the officers
    entered the house—i.e., while they stood at the door poised to
    enter after having announced they had a search warrant. We
    see no basis for drawing such a rigid distinction between the
    officers’ announcement of a warrant and their ensuing entry.
    Imagine, for example, that police knock on a home’s door,
    falsely claim to have a search warrant, and then ask the resident
    to hand over all firearms when she comes to the door. She
    might comply, as the officers, by invoking a warrant, will have
    effectively announced that she has no right to resist their entry.
    27
    See 
    Bumper, 391 U.S. at 550
    . Under the government’s theory,
    there presumably would be no need to suppress the firearms
    because the officers would have obtained them without
    entering the home. We reject the suggestion that the
    admissibility of firearms obtained by virtue of the officers’
    misconduct in such a situation would turn on whether they
    happened to have placed one foot inside the home. Indeed, the
    Supreme Court has elsewhere explained that a person’s Fourth
    Amendment interests in his home “would be of little practical
    value if the State’s agents could stand in a home’s porch or side
    garden and trawl for evidence with impunity.” 
    Jardines, 133 S. Ct. at 1414
    .
    To be sure, officers generally may approach a home and
    knock on the door without raising any Fourth Amendment
    concerns. If an occupant responds to the officers’ knock by
    abandoning (or voluntarily turning over) evidence, there will
    have been no Fourth Amendment violation. But that is
    because, “[w]hen law enforcement officers who are not armed
    with a warrant knock on a door, they do no more than any
    private citizen might do.” Kentucky v. King, 
    563 U.S. 452
    , 469
    (2011) (emphasis added). When an officer claims to have a
    warrant, however, she invokes authority unavailable to a
    private citizen. To conclude otherwise would allow the police
    to go door-to-door announcing search warrants in the hopes
    that occupants would respond by abandoning contraband or
    other evidence within the officers’ view.
    For those reasons, we decline in this case to draw a
    talismanic line at the home’s door. Once the police assert
    authority to search a home pursuant to an invalid warrant,
    evidence relinquished in response to the officers’
    announcement is unlawfully obtained. Here, consequently, we
    hold that the firearm abandoned in response to the police’s
    28
    announcement of an invalid search warrant must be
    suppressed.
    *    *   *    *   *
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the
    district court and vacate Griffith’s conviction.
    So ordered.
    BROWN, Circuit Judge, dissenting: Today the Court’s
    opinion attempts to write the good faith exception out of our
    case law. Nothing in the record suggests the officers involved
    in this case were doing anything other than attempting to solve
    an unsolved murder while scrupulously observing the letter of
    the law. Yet, today’s opinion impugns their motives by
    declaring their reliance upon a search warrant approved by a
    disinterested magistrate to be “entirely unreasonable.” It also
    misconstrues the very purpose of the exclusionary rule and the
    point of the good faith exception by applying the former and
    rejecting the latter in a way that contradicts precedent from
    both the Supreme Court and this Court. Because I believe the
    good faith exception to the exclusionary rule easily
    encompasses the facts of this case, I respectfully dissent.
    I.
    A.
    As explained by the Supreme Court, “[t]he Fourth
    Amendment protects the right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
    searches and seizures . . . [but] says nothing about suppressing
    evidence obtained in violation of this command.” Davis v.
    United States, 
    564 U.S. 229
    , 236 (2011). Consequently, the
    use of evidence obtained pursuant to an unlawful search or
    seizure “work[s] no new Fourth Amendment wrong.” United
    States v. Calandra, 
    414 U.S. 338
    , 354 (1974). Moreover, the
    exclusion of evidence is “not a personal constitutional right,”
    Stone v. Powell, 
    428 U.S. 465
    , 486 (1976), “nor is it designed
    to redress the injury occasioned by an unconstitutional search,”
    
    Davis, 564 U.S. at 236
    . Instead, the exclusionary rule is a
    “prudential doctrine” created to “compel respect” for the
    Fourth Amendment’s guaranty against unreasonable searches
    and seizures. 
    Id. 2 Deterring
    law enforcement officials from engaging in
    future Fourth Amendment violations supports this goal.
    Herring v. United States, 
    555 U.S. 135
    , 141 (2009); 
    Calandra, 414 U.S. at 348
    . However, the mere fact that the exclusion of
    evidence would result in deterrence is alone insufficient to
    justify the exclusion of evidence. See Hudson v. Michigan, 
    547 U.S. 586
    , 596 (2006) (stating the existence of deterrence
    benefits “is a necessary condition for exclusion,” but not a
    “sufficient” one); see also 
    Calandra, 414 U.S. at 350
    (stating
    the Fourth Amendment does not “require[] adoption of every
    proposal that might deter police misconduct”). For this reason,
    the Supreme Court has limited the exclusionary rule’s
    application to situations where the rule’s deterrence purpose is
    “most efficaciously served.” United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
    , 908 (1984). Thus, “[w]here suppression fails to yield
    ‘appreciable deterrence,’ exclusion is ‘clearly . . .
    unwarranted.’” 
    Davis, 564 U.S. at 237
    (quoting United States
    v. Janis, 
    428 U.S. 433
    , 454 (1976)).
    The calculus is simple: The suppression of evidence that
    is otherwise probative and reliable results in “substantial social
    costs.” 
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 907
    . “The principal cost of applying
    the rule is, of course, letting guilty and possibly dangerous
    defendants go free—something that offends basic concepts of
    the criminal justice system.” 
    Herring, 555 U.S. at 141
    .
    Furthermore, if applied indiscriminately, courts run the risk of
    “generating disrespect for the law and administration of
    justice.” 
    Stone, 428 U.S. at 491
    . Society, the Supreme Court
    has held, “must swallow this bitter pill” only “as a last resort.”
    
    Davis, 564 U.S. at 237
    . Therefore, in addition to showing the
    suppression of evidence will significantly deter unlawful
    behavior in the future, parties arguing for suppression must
    overcome the “high obstacle” of the rule’s “costly toll upon
    truth-seeking and law enforcement objectives” through
    3
    demonstrating the benefits of suppression outweigh these
    significant costs. 
    Herring, 555 U.S. at 141
    .
    In United States v. Leon, the Supreme Court recognized a
    good faith exception to the exclusionary rule for evidence
    obtained by law enforcement officers acting in “objectively
    reasonable reliance” on a search warrant issued by a “detached
    and neutral magistrate” that has ultimately been found to be
    invalid. 
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 913
    , 920–22. The Court explained
    “the exclusionary rule is designed to deter police misconduct
    rather than to punish the errors of judges and magistrates.” 
    Id. at 916.
    Furthermore, “[i]n the ordinary case, an officer cannot
    be expected to question the magistrate’s probable-cause
    determination.” 
    Id. at 921.
    Thus, “a warrant issued by a
    magistrate normally suffices to establish that a law
    enforcement officer has acted in good faith in conducting the
    search.” 
    Id. at 922.
    The only instances in which the good faith exception does
    not apply are when the law enforcement officers are “reckless,”
    “dishonest,” or “could not have harbored an objectively
    reasonable belief in the existence of probable cause.” 
    Id. at 926;
    see also Illinois v. Krull, 
    480 U.S. 340
    , 348–49 (1987)
    (stating “evidence should be suppressed only if it can be said
    that the law enforcement officer had knowledge, or may
    properly be charged with knowledge, that the search was
    unconstitutional”). Accordingly, if a magistrate relies upon a
    “bare bones” affidavit that is “so lacking in indicia of probable
    cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely
    unreasonable,” suppression is appropriate. 
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 923
    & n.24. 1 However, the use of such an extreme remedy
    1
    The Court contends its result is “the same” as Groh v. Ramirez, 
    540 U.S. 551
    (2004), where, the Court claims, “[t]he Supreme Court . . .
    found Leon’s objective standard unmet notwithstanding the absence
    4
    when law enforcement officers have sought a warrant is
    extremely rare, and the Supreme Court has only applied the
    exclusionary rule to such situations where police conduct was
    both intentional and highly culpable. 
    Herring, 555 U.S. at 143
    –44; see also 
    Davis, 564 U.S. at 240
    (stating the Supreme
    Court has “never applied the exclusionary rule to suppress
    evidence obtained as a result of nonculpable, innocent police
    conduct”).
    Furthermore, Supreme Court case law makes clear that a
    “bare bones” affidavit is one supported only by the “bare
    conclusions of others.” Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 239
    (1983); see also Nathanson v. United States, 
    290 U.S. 41
    , 44–
    47 (1933) (invalidating a warrant supported only by an
    affidavit stating the officer “ha[d] cause to suspect and [did]
    believe that” liquor illegally brought into the United States was
    located on certain premises); Aguilar v. Texas, 
    378 U.S. 108
    ,
    109–15 (1964) (invalidating a warrant based solely on an
    officer’s statement that he had “received reliable information
    from a credible person and [did] believe” that heroin was stored
    in a particular home); Giordenello v. United States, 
    357 U.S. 480
    , 486 (1958) (striking a warrant issued where the complaint
    contained “no affirmative allegation that the affiant spoke with
    personal knowledge of the matters contained therein,” failed to
    of any reason to suppose that officers acted in bad faith in relying on
    an invalid warrant.” Maj. Op. at 24. But Groh cited Leon to hold
    “the warrant was so obviously deficient that we must regard the
    search as ‘warrantless’ within the meaning of our case law.” 
    See 540 U.S. at 558
    . Moreover, the Court’s pin cites to Groh include the
    Supreme Court explaining why “no reasonable officer could believe”
    the warrant at issue was constitutionally sound. See 
    id. at 564–65.
    When the Court relies on a case where an officer is found plainly
    incompetent—the standard for piercing his qualified immunity—
    how can the Court credibly claim it is not passing judgment on the
    officers relying on the warrant here? See Maj. Op. at 24.
    5
    “indicate any sources for the complainant’s belief,” and did not
    set forth “any other sufficient basis upon which a finding of
    probable cause could be made”). Thus, only where an affidavit
    is “so lacking in sworn and particularized information that not
    even an order of court [could] have justified [the search]” can
    it be properly characterized as bare bones. See 
    Herring, 555 U.S. at 143
    –44.
    B.
    The warrant in this case established probable cause for the
    search. The affidavit submitted by Detective Giannakoulias
    begins by giving the exact address of the apartment to be
    searched and describing the building in which it is located. It
    then details Detective Giannakoulias’s extensive experience as
    a law enforcement officer, including 22 years of service at the
    Metropolitan Police Department, formal training in criminal,
    death, gang, and narcotics investigations, 10 years of
    experience investigating gang-related murders, and the
    execution of over 500 search warrants for various drug and
    violent crimes. The next 8 pages of the affidavit provide
    detailed information of the investigation of the murder of Mico
    Briscoe—a crime that took place over a year before police
    sought the current search warrant—and Ezra Griffith’s
    connection to the crime.
    The affidavit described the murder and the existence of
    video footage capturing a gold, four-door sedan leaving the
    scene of the crime with two murder suspects in it. It then
    described the police’s efforts to identify and locate the car
    captured by the surveillance footage, which eventually led
    them to Ms. Jesimenia Queen—Griffith’s mother—who they
    then interviewed about the car and its connection to the Briscoe
    murder. Queen confirmed the car used to belong to her and
    was used exclusively by Griffith, “a validated member” of the
    6
    “E Street Bangaz” gang. App’x 30–31. After he became aware
    of this interview, Griffith made jail house calls to numerous
    people, including his mother, his grandmother, Dwayne Hilton,
    and Sheree Lewis. These calls often discussed the police
    interview about the car and its association with the Briscoe
    murder. 20 days after making these calls, Griffith was released
    from prison, and police were eventually able to locate his
    address as being with Lewis at the location for which they
    sought a warrant.
    Only after providing all of these details did Detective
    Giannakoulias rely on his training and experience to assert that
    gang members maintain regular contact with each other, even
    while incarcerated, and they discuss criminal activities through
    phones or other electronic devices. The affidavit ends by
    requesting the seizure of:
    all electronic devices to include but not limited
    to cellular telephone(s), computer(s), electronic
    tablet(s), devices capable of storing digital
    images (to include, but not limited to, PDAs,
    CDs, DVD’s jump/zip drives), evidence of
    ownership of such devices, subscriber
    information relating to the electronic devices,
    any information describing, referencing, or
    mentioning in anyway the [shooting death of
    Mico Briscoe], any handwritten form (such as
    writing to include but not limited to notes,
    papers, or mail matter), photographs,
    newspaper articles relating to the shooting death
    of Mico Briscoe, and any indicia of occupancy
    of the premises described above.
    App’x 36.       After reviewing Detective Giannakoulias’s
    affidavit, a magistrate from the Superior Court of the District
    7
    of Columbia determined that it established probable cause and
    authorized law enforcement officers to seize the items listed in
    the affidavit.
    Even if this Court were to assume Detective
    Giannakoulias’s affidavit failed to establish probable cause to
    search Lewis’s apartment, I can find no discernable basis to
    justify the Court’s assertion that the warrant was “so lacking in
    indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its
    existence entirely unreasonable.” Maj. Op. at 22. Based on the
    affidavit, it was reasonable for the magistrate to conclude
    Griffith was either directly involved with the Briscoe murder
    or had vital information regarding its commission.
    Additionally, the police knew Griffith actively communicated
    with both his family and other suspects about the Briscoe
    murder while he was incarcerated. These communications
    provided concrete facts to support Detective Giannakoulias’s
    assertion that gang members share intelligence with each other,
    even while incarcerated. Moreover, there was at a minimum a
    fair probability that Griffith would continue to have
    conversations about the investigation of the Briscoe murder,
    given the close proximity of his release from prison with his
    last jailhouse call—a mere 20 days. An investigator’s common
    sense would also lead him to conclude that Griffith would
    speak much more freely and candidly about his involvement in
    the Briscoe murder once his communications were not being
    monitored by the police. 2 Thus, concrete facts existed from
    which investigators could infer Griffith was involved with the
    Briscoe murder and was talking to his confederates about it.
    2
    At numerous points during his jailhouse calls, Griffith begins
    discussing the murder and the investigation but quickly changes the
    subject so as to avoid making any incriminating statements.
    8
    In dismissing these logical inferences, the Court focuses
    on the fact that the affidavit does not mention Griffith owning
    or using a cell phone. But these statements ignore the realities
    of the world in which we live and jettison the common-sense
    inquiry judges are to make when determining the existence of
    probable cause. See 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 238
    (“The task of the
    issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical, common-sense
    decision whether . . . there is a fair probability that contraband
    or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.”); see
    also United States v. Davis, 
    617 F.2d 677
    , 692 (D.C. Cir. 1979)
    (stating judges evaluating the existence of probable cause
    “need not confine their evaluations within rigorous legalistic
    boundaries but instead may use their common sense”). The
    Supreme Court has recognized that “a significant majority of
    American adults now own [cell] phones.” Riley v. California,
    
    134 S. Ct. 2473
    , 2484 (2014). This statement is confirmed by
    the Pew Research Center, whose research indicates that in 2013
    over 90% of American adults owned a cell phone. See Lee
    Rainie, Cell Phone Ownership Hits 91% of Adults, PEW
    RESEARCH           CENTER            (June         6,        2013),
    http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2013/06/06/cell-phone-
    ownership-hits-91-of-adults/. Furthermore, this number jumps
    up to 97% for adults between ages 18 and 34. 
    Id. Thus, the
    Court’s assertion that the affiant’s failure to allege that Griffith
    owned a cell phone somehow resulted in a bare bones affidavit
    devoid of any indicia of probable cause that Griffith did, in fact,
    own a cell phone is “[p]ure applesauce.” King v. Burwell, 
    135 S. Ct. 2480
    , 2501 (2015) (Scalia, J., dissenting).
    While the Court is, admittedly, on firmer grounds when
    assessing the warrant’s shortfalls as to other electronic devices,
    this is an issue of breadth, not whether there was any indicia of
    probable cause, and this Court has never refused to apply the
    good faith exception because a warrant was overbroad. On the
    contrary, this Court’s previous approach has been to “decline
    9
    to order the suppression of the evidence seized pursuant to” a
    warrant “we conclude[d] . . . was overly broad” so long as the
    law enforcement officers “reasonably relied on the warrant in
    good faith.” United States v. Maxwell, 
    920 F.2d 1028
    , 1034
    (D.C. Cir. 1990). In United States v. Maxwell, this Court
    applied the good faith exception to a fatally overbroad warrant
    authorizing the seizure of all of the following:
    any and all seals representing or appearing to
    represent any agency of the United States; any and all
    writings and documents representing or appearing to
    represent any agency of the United States; any
    interstate or foreign correspondence, handwritten
    notes, carbons, bank records, negotiable instruments,
    logs, ledgers, address books, travel documents,
    memoranda or notations pertaining to interstate or
    foreign commerce; transmissions made pertaining to
    interstate or foreign commerce; any and all documents
    generated in connection with or evidencing a scheme,
    artifice or devise of transactions in interstate or
    foreign commerce; any electronic memory
    equipment, materials, tapes, records, discs, discettes
    or any other medium used to store information
    pertaining to interstate or foreign commerce; all
    machinery, equipment, or transmitting devices used or
    capable of being used to send via interstate or foreign
    commerce: sounds, signals, pictures, or writings
    transmitted by wire for the purpose of executing such
    scheme or artifice.
    
    Id. at 1033.
    Comparing the Maxwell warrant to the one at issue
    in this case, I see no discernable reason why one falls within
    the good faith exception and the other does not. If anything,
    the warrant at issue in this case is much narrower. While the
    Maxwell warrant essentially allowed police to seize “all or
    10
    virtually all of [the defendant’s] business records and
    equipment,” 
    id., the warrant
    in this case is essentially limited
    to any electronic devices owned or likely to be used by Griffith
    and capable of electronically communicating or storing
    information and any documents relating to the Briscoe murder,
    see App’x 36.
    Moreover, the warrant in this case did not authorize a
    general search of all of Griffith’s records and the files
    contained within any electronic devices discovered. On its
    face, the warrant only authorized the seizure of the electronic
    devices, not a search of their content. As explained by the
    government both in its brief and at oral argument, an additional
    search warrant was required in order for law enforcement
    officers to search within these devices. Gov’t Br. 29–30 &
    n.15; Oral Arg. Rec. at 24:40–25:02. These additional
    protections show that the officers here were operating in the
    real, tech-savvy world and doing their best to adapt available
    tools to act within the law, all while investigating an unsolved
    murder for which they had few leads prior to connecting
    Griffith to the car captured on videotape leaving the scene of
    the crime. While this Court seems unconcerned with
    handcuffing the ability of police to investigate crimes, our
    precedent emphasizes that our probable cause analysis should
    reflect a proper “concern[] with [the] realities of administration
    of criminal justice.” United States v. Vaughn, 
    830 F.2d 1185
    ,
    1186 (D.C. Cir. 1987).
    Equally troubling is the Court’s willingness to cast aside
    the vital role an officer’s training and experience play in
    establishing probable cause and good faith. The affiant in this
    case had 22 years of experience working as a law enforcement
    officer and had spent 10 of those years specializing in gang-
    related murders. An officer with these credentials should be
    entitled to some deference or, at a minimum, not to have his
    11
    reliance on his training and extensive experience maligned as
    wholly unreasonable. However, this is precisely what the
    Court has done, despite the fact we have repeatedly held an
    officer’s training and experience can play a vital role in
    establishing probable cause. See United States v. Cardoza, 
    713 F.3d 656
    , 661 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (finding an officer’s knowledge
    based on his training and experience reinforced finding
    probable cause); United States v. Johnson, 
    437 F.3d 69
    , 72
    (D.C. Cir. 2006) (finding an affidavit based largely on the
    affiant’s professional experience to be sufficient to establish
    probable cause); United States v. Thomas, 
    989 F.2d 1252
    ,
    1254–55 (D.C. Cir. 1993) (same).
    Recognition of the realities of criminal investigations and
    common sense seem conspicuously absent from the Court’s
    approach. Relying on a series of nonsequiturs, the Court
    creates a world in which it is unreasonable to assume Griffith’s
    behavior will be similar to 90% of the adult population (i.e. he
    will have access to one or more cell phones); inconceivable that
    recent hot leads in a stale murder investigation might engender
    conversation among gang members who were likely involved
    in the killing; and risible to think leads relating to criminal
    activity might be found in the call history, texts, or e-mail of
    several phones to which Griffith had access, rather than only
    on a phone for which he is the listed subscriber. Oddly, the
    Court does think the warrant establishes probable cause to
    arrest Griffith and subject him to a search incident to arrest and
    an inventory booking search, although the same facts are not
    sufficient to sustain a search warrant or to demonstrate good
    faith on the part of the officers.
    The facts of this case illustrate precisely why the good
    faith exception is so vital to our Fourth Amendment
    jurisprudence. As the Court acknowledges, there is no
    indication of bad faith or recklessness on the part of these
    12
    officers. They were diligently trying to build their case, relying
    on the limited—but promising—evidence available to them.
    Their investigation into the Briscoe murder—a crime that had
    occurred over a year before they sought the warrant to search
    Griffith’s apartment—had reached a lull until they discovered
    Griffith’s car and connected it to him. Once they made this
    connection, they did not act rashly or hastily by attempting to
    coerce a confession out of Griffith but instead approached their
    investigation in a methodical and deliberate manner in order to
    discover the truth. They collected evidence by interviewing
    Griffith’s mother and reviewing his jailhouse calls. After
    coming to the conclusion that Griffith was probably involved
    in the Briscoe murder and that their recent investigatory
    progress might trigger a desire to communicate with the other
    suspects, they sought a warrant to obtain any devices which
    might contain incriminating statements from Griffith or other
    leads. Thereafter, they planned to obtain yet another warrant
    to authorize them to search any electronic devices they seized.
    Nothing in the facts suggest they sought to deceive the
    magistrate or that they did anything other than present the
    limited evidence they had in hopes that it would establish
    probable cause. Once the magistrate held their evidence
    sufficient, they relied upon that determination to search the
    apartment, and they did so in a way that complied with the
    law—i.e. knocking and announcing before entering and
    limiting their search to the confines of the warrant. The search
    confirmed their instincts were good. They recovered six cell
    phones and an electronic tablet—certainly an atypical number
    of phones for a household consisting of two adults. In the
    process of conducting the search, they discovered Griffith was
    guilty of another crime: unlawfully possessing a firearm.
    13
    II.
    And that is perhaps the most troubling part of this case at
    the end of the day. There is no doubt that Griffith is guilty of
    the crime for which he has been convicted. By suppressing the
    gun Griffith unlawfully possessed, the Court is going to
    “offend[] basic concepts of the criminal justice system” by
    allowing a “guilty and possibly dangerous defendant[] go free.”
    
    Herring, 555 U.S. at 141
    . And they are allowing this to happen
    not because the police intentionally violated the law or acted in
    a highly-culpable manner, but rather because the police relied
    upon a neutral and detached magistrate who determined
    probable cause existed. This result is directly contrary to the
    purpose of the exclusionary rule and Supreme Court precedent
    that reserves suppression only for the most serious police
    misconduct. If courts are going to impose a remedy as extreme
    as excluding evidence that is probative, reliable, and often
    determinative of a defendant’s guilt, we have a duty to protect
    officers who are doing their best to stay within the bounds of
    our ever-evolving jurisprudence. We live in a society where
    virtually every action an officer takes is now being heavily-
    scrutinized. Thus, the need for vindication when law
    enforcement officers behave in an exemplary fashion is more
    critical than ever. Unfortunately, the officers in this case are
    not going to get the vindication they deserve. Furthermore, I
    have no doubt this case will be used in future cases to further
    undermine the good faith exception until either this Court
    sitting en banc or the Supreme Court steps in to cure today’s
    grievous error. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-3061

Citation Numbers: 867 F.3d 1265

Filed Date: 8/18/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (38)

United States v. Timothy Dwayne Austin , 66 F.3d 1115 ( 1995 )

United States v. Richard J. Leary, and F.L. Kleinberg & Co. , 846 F.2d 592 ( 1988 )

United States v. Johnson, Curtistine , 437 F.3d 69 ( 2006 )

United States v. Daniel Thomas , 864 F.2d 843 ( 1989 )

United States v. Spencer , 530 F.3d 1003 ( 2008 )

United States v. Carl Eugene Stephens, Opinion , 206 F.3d 914 ( 2000 )

Stanford v. Texas , 85 S. Ct. 506 ( 1965 )

United States v. Kinley Thomas , 989 F.2d 1252 ( 1993 )

United States v. Leethaniel Vaughn , 830 F.2d 1185 ( 1987 )

United States v. Dennis S. Lewis. United States of America ... , 921 F.2d 1294 ( 1990 )

United States v. Carrye E. Maxwell , 920 F.2d 1028 ( 1990 )

Go-Bart Importing Co. v. United States , 51 S. Ct. 153 ( 1931 )

Nathanson v. United States , 54 S. Ct. 11 ( 1933 )

United States v. Calandra , 94 S. Ct. 613 ( 1974 )

Steagald v. United States , 101 S. Ct. 1642 ( 1981 )

Giordenello v. United States , 78 S. Ct. 1245 ( 1958 )

Riley v. Cal. United States , 134 S. Ct. 2473 ( 2014 )

King v. Burwell , 135 S. Ct. 2480 ( 2015 )

Illinois v. Gates , 103 S. Ct. 2317 ( 1983 )

United States v. Leon , 104 S. Ct. 3405 ( 1984 )

View All Authorities »