United States v. Leonard ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •            United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 19-1392
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,
    v.
    TONY LEONARD, a/k/a Tom Cat, a/k/a Thomas Lee Jones,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
    [Hon. George Z. Singal, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Kayatta, Barron, Circuit Judges,
    and O'Toole, District Judge.
    Robert F. Hennessy for appellant.
    Julia M. Lipez, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
    Halsey B. Frank, United States Attorney, was on brief, for
    appellee.
    November 3, 2021
    Of   the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.
    O'TOOLE,      District     Judge.     Defendant-appellant          Tony
    Leonard entered a conditional guilty plea pursuant to Rule 11(a)(2)
    of   the   Federal       Rules    of    Criminal    Procedure   to    one    count   of
    possession of a firearm by a prohibited person. Prior to entering
    his plea, Leonard had moved to suppress evidence seized from a
    search of his residence. He requested a Franks hearing1 on the
    ground that the affidavit in support of the warrant that authorized
    the search omitted material information that, if it had been
    included, would defeat a finding of probable cause. The district
    court denied the motion in a summary order. Leonard appeals the
    district court's rejection of his request for a Franks hearing.
    We conclude that the district court did not err in
    denying Leonard a Franks hearing. Accordingly, we affirm that
    ruling.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    In   August    2017,     Lewiston    (Maine)    Police      Department
    ("LPD")    Patrolman          Zachary    Provost    submitted    an    affidavit     in
    support of an application for a state search warrant during the
    course     of    an     investigation      into     suspected   drug     possession,
    furnishing,          and/or   trafficking     by    Leonard.    Provost      had   been
    employed for five years by the LPD. He was assigned to the plain-
    clothes Special Enforcement Team, and he had completed several
    1 So called because the type of hearing derives from Franks v.
    Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
     (1978).
    - 2 -
    training courses related to drug enforcement and had participated
    in numerous drug investigations.
    Provost sought a warrant to search Leonard himself and
    his residence located at 41 Walnut Street, Lewiston, for drugs,
    drug paraphernalia, firearms, and other evidence. His affidavit
    identified both Apartment #2 and Apartment #3 at that location as
    Leonard's      residence.     The    apartments       were    described         as    being
    located in an off-white multi-unit apartment building directly
    above    the    Midtown     Athletic   Club.     In    support       of   his    warrant
    application,      Provost     provided    information         said    to       have    been
    received from three confidential informants or "CIs."2
    CI-1   provided     information    in    the    hope       of   favorable
    consideration in a pending criminal case involving violation of
    conditions of release and drug-related offenses. CI-1 also had
    prior    arrests      for   bail    violations        and    false    public         alarm.
    Nonetheless, Provost wrote that CI-1 had "been proven reliable by
    providing me with information that I have deemed credible from
    prior investigations."
    CI-1 informed Provost that a person nicknamed "TOMCAT"
    lived above the “Midtown” and was dealing "[c]rack." Provost knew
    2 In the affidavit, Provost refers to all the confidential
    informants simply as "CI." For clarity, this opinion refers to the
    CI who provided information to Provost as CI-1, the CI who provided
    information to the other LPD officer as CI-2, and the CI who
    provided information to an agent of the Maine Drug Enforcement
    Agency as CI-3.
    - 3 -
    from prior experience that Leonard used the street name "TOMCAT,"
    had a prior conviction for drug trafficking, and had recently been
    released from prison. Existing internal LPD records confirmed
    Leonard's use of the alias and identified 41 Walnut Street #3 as
    his residence. Additionally, a review of his prior criminal history
    confirmed     that    Leonard   had      numerous    convictions     for   drug
    possession and trafficking.
    CI-1 reported to Provost that TOMCAT had apartments on
    the second and third floors. He stated that the second-floor
    apartment was the "TRAP" spot that was unfurnished except for a
    folding card table and was commonly used as a "[p]arty [s]pot." He
    reported that TOMCAT lived in the third-floor apartment with his
    girlfriend.
    CI-1 further stated that TOMCAT had video monitoring
    devices in the hallways. TOMCAT had access to the surveillance
    equipment at all times and typically watched it while dealing
    "[c]rack [c]ocaine." CI-1 had seen TOMCAT in possession of a pistol
    and   ammunition     and,   within   a   week   or   so   before   the   warrant
    application, had observed TOMCAT packaging "[c]rack [c]ocaine" for
    distribution inside the second-floor apartment. He reported that
    TOMCAT kept his firearm and narcotics on the second floor, but he
    did not know where TOMCAT kept his drug proceeds.
    During the course of the investigation, Provost received
    information from another LPD Officer about another registered
    - 4 -
    confidential informant, CI-2. According to the other officer, CI-
    2 had prior arrests for theft, operating after a suspension, and
    forgery, but had previously provided information that was deemed
    credible by police and had led to an arrest. CI-2 claimed to be
    interested in reducing drug trafficking in the city because drugs
    had "directly affected this CI's life."
    CI-2 provided information to the police that TOMCAT was
    staying at 41 Walnut Street and was dealing "HARD," which Provost
    knew from his experience was a street term for crack cocaine. CI-
    2 stated he could purchase "[c]rack [c]ocaine" from TOMCAT at any
    time. On August 14, 2017, CI-2 reported that TOMCAT lived in the
    third-floor apartment, but utilized the second-floor apartment to
    deal "[c]rack." CI-2 reported there was constant foot traffic
    coming and going from the rear door of the building and that TOMCAT
    was often seen standing in the rear parking lot. CI-2 also stated
    that the residence was equipped with video surveillance.
    On August 15, 2017, Provost spoke with an agent of the
    Maine Drug Enforcement Agency, who informed him that agents had
    recently made contact with CI-3, a cooperating defendant. CI-3
    reported to them that TOMCAT was the largest drug trafficker in
    the area. CI-3 stated that TOMCAT had apartments on the second and
    third floors above the "Midtown Bar" on Walnut Street. CI-3 further
    stated that TOMCAT's customers typically used the rear entrance
    located   on   Bartlett   Street.   CI-3   had   recently   observed
    - 5 -
    approximately 1.5 ounces of "[c]rack [c]ocaine" and 1 ounce of
    "[c]ocaine HCL" in the apartment, where he had also previously
    observed firearms. CI-3 did not know who owned the firearms.
    Shortly before Provost applied for the warrant, the LPD
    conducted a controlled purchase of cocaine from Leonard, utilizing
    one of the confidential informants.3 According to the affidavit,
    officers searched the CI for contraband and equipped him with an
    electronic recording and monitoring device. Officers followed the
    CI to the parking lot at 41 Walnut Street, where the CI made
    contact with Leonard. The CI observed Leonard enter the back door
    leading to both the second- and third-floor apartments and return
    moments later. The CI provided TOMCAT with pre-counted, recorded
    United States currency in exchange for a quantity of cocaine. After
    the buy, the CI turned over cocaine to a detective. A field test
    indicated the presence of Cocaine HCL.
    On August 16, 2017, a state court judge issued the
    warrant to search Apartments #2 and #3 at 41 Walnut Street. The
    next day, LPD officers executed the search warrant. Officers found
    Leonard inside the third-floor apartment. Nearby was a jacket which
    contained a handgun and magazine. Officers also found cocaine,
    crack cocaine, more than $10,000 in U.S. currency, and a key that
    opened the second-floor apartment. In the second-floor apartment,
    3 The affidavit does not identify which of the three CIs made
    the purchase.
    - 6 -
    officers found recently purchased furniture in Leonard's name, a
    bill bearing his name, a handgun case corresponding to the handgun
    previously seized, another loaded magazine, a digital scale with
    white powder residue, a box of plastic baggies, and a firearm
    cleaning kit.
    A   grand   jury   returned    a   federal   indictment   against
    Leonard charging him with one count of possession of a firearm by
    a prohibited person in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and
    924(a)(2),     and   one   count   of   possession   with    the   intent   to
    distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and
    (b)(1)(C). Prior to trial, Leonard filed a motion to suppress the
    results of the August 17th search of 41 Walnut Street, as well as
    evidence seized pursuant to subsequent search warrants predicated
    on the evidence from the search on August 17. He sought a hearing
    pursuant to Franks v. Delaware on the basis of what he claimed
    were two material omissions from the warrant affidavit.
    First, Leonard argued that Provost failed to disclose
    that   significant     interfering      background   noise   prevented      the
    electronic recording and monitoring device from capturing usable
    audio information. Leonard contended that the omission created the
    false impression that something of evidentiary value had actually
    been recorded or monitored, implicitly boosting the affidavit's
    narrative. Second, Leonard argued that Provost failed to disclose
    that after completing the controlled buy, the CI did not meet
    - 7 -
    immediately with police but rather left the area in a car with an
    unidentified person and, only after that, met up with police to
    turn over some cocaine. Leonard argued that the circumstance raised
    the possibility that the CI had obtained the cocaine from some
    source other than Leonard, including the person with whom the CI
    had left the area. Disclosure of that fact, he argued, would have
    weakened the case for probable cause.
    In response, the government contended that the omitted
    information would not have materially weakened the probable cause
    determination, and that even if the warrant affidavit was deemed
    to lack probable cause, thus invalidating the warrant, the officers
    had relied in good faith on the judicially authorized search
    warrant. See United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
     (1984).
    The district court denied both Leonard's Franks motion
    and his motion to suppress in a brief written decision. The
    district court accepted Leonard's factual allegations as true but
    concluded that Leonard had not demonstrated that he was entitled
    to a Franks hearing. As to the failure to note that the recording
    equipment carried by the CI did not provide corroboration for the
    CI's own narrative, the district court found that it was not a
    material omission because the affiant did not suggest that the
    recording device had led to confirming information. As to the
    presence of the unnamed additional person in the car with the CI,
    the district court determined that even if the affidavit had
    - 8 -
    included the information, it would not have sufficiently cast doubt
    on the significant amount of other information in the affidavit
    that supported probable cause, particularly the consistency of the
    information provided by the separate CIs. The court also concluded
    that the probable cause standard would have been met even if the
    omitted information had been included in the warrant affidavit.
    The district court did not address the government's alternative
    good-faith reliance argument.
    After his conditional plea, Leonard was sentenced by the
    court to ninety-six months' imprisonment.4 Leonard had reserved
    his right to appeal the district court's order denying the request
    for a Franks hearing and motion to suppress, and he timely filed
    this appeal.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    Leonard challenges the district court's denial of his
    request for a Franks hearing and consequently its denial of his
    motion to suppress the fruits of the search. "In considering a
    district court's decision to deny a Franks hearing, [this Court]
    review[s] factual determinations for clear error and the probable
    cause determination de novo." United States v. Arias, 
    848 F.3d 4
     Leonard pled guilty with respect to possession of a firearm
    by a prohibited person. The second count of the indictment,
    possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, was dismissed by
    the district court upon the government's motion.
    - 9 -
    504, 511 (1st Cir. 2017) (citations omitted); accord United States
    v. Barbosa, 
    896 F.3d 60
    , 67 (1st Cir. 2018).
    The Fourth Amendment provides that "no Warrants shall
    issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation
    . . . ." U.S. Const. amend. IV. This requires the judicial officer
    considering a warrant application "to make a practical, common-
    sense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in
    the affidavit before [them], including the veracity and basis of
    knowledge of persons supplying hearsay information, there is a
    fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be
    found in a particular place." United States v. Tanguay, 
    787 F.3d 44
    , 50 (1st Cir. 2015) (quoting Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    ,
    238 (1983)). "Performance of this task must take account of the
    totality of the circumstances." 
    Id.
     (citing Gates, 
    462 U.S. at 238
    ).
    Information supporting probable cause may be set out in
    an affidavit submitted with the application for a search warrant.
    An affidavit supporting a search warrant is presumptively valid.
    United States v. Gifford, 
    727 F.3d 92
    , 98 (1st Cir. 2013). However,
    a defendant may rebut this presumption and challenge the veracity
    of the affidavit in a pretrial hearing, "eponymously called a
    Franks hearing." Barbosa, 896 F.3d at 67 (citations omitted). At
    a Franks hearing, if a defendant shows by the preponderance of the
    evidence   that   the   affidavit   "contains   false   statements   or
    - 10 -
    omissions, made intentionally or with reckless disregard for the
    truth, and that a finding of probable cause would not have been
    made   without   those   false   statements   or   omissions,   then   the
    defendant is entitled to the suppression of evidence obtained under
    that warrant." Arias, 848 F.3d at 511 (citing Tanguay, 787 F.3d at
    49).
    A defendant, however, is not entitled to a Franks hearing
    as a matter of right. Rather, he first must make a "'substantial
    preliminary showing' . . . that 'a false statement or omission in
    the affidavit was made knowingly and intentionally or with reckless
    disregard for the truth' and that the false statement or omission
    was 'necessary to the finding of probable cause.'" Id. at 511
    (quoting United States v. McLellan, 
    792 F.3d 200
    , 208 (1st Cir.
    2015)). When a defendant claims there were material omissions from
    the facts asserted in an application, he must therefore show that
    the omission was "intentional or reckless" and that "the omitted
    information,     if   incorporated   into   the   affidavit,   . . .   [is]
    sufficient to vitiate probable cause." Tanguay, 787 F.3d at 49.
    Against this backdrop, we turn to Leonard's attempt to
    persuade the Court that the district court erred in its conclusion
    that he had failed to make a threshold showing sufficient to
    entitle him to a Franks hearing. He contends that if the affidavit
    were reformed to include the omitted facts regarding the background
    noise and the presence of another individual in the cooperator's
    - 11 -
    vehicle, the affidavit would have been insufficient to establish
    probable cause that a search of Leonard's residence would turn up
    evidence of a crime.5 He also claims the affidavit was insufficient
    to establish a nexus to Leonard's third-floor residence.
    A.          Sufficiency of the Affidavit
    The district court found that an affidavit reformed as
    Leonard claims it should be would still support probable cause
    because   the   omitted   information   would   not   have   sufficiently
    negated   the   considerable   force    of   other   information   in   the
    affidavit, particularly the consistency of information provided by
    three separate confidential informants.
    When, as here, the showing of probable cause is based
    primarily on information provided by CIs with some additional
    corroboration by police investigation, we apply a "nonexhaustive
    list of factors" to examine the affidavit's probable cause showing.
    United States v. Tiem Trinh, 
    665 F.3d 1
    , 10 (1st Cir. 2011).
    These factors include, among others, (1)
    whether the affidavit establishes the probable
    veracity and basis of knowledge of persons
    supplying hearsay information; (2) whether an
    informant's   statements   reflect   firsthand
    5 Leonard also attempts to address the first element of the
    Franks test, i.e., that the affiant intentionally or with reckless
    disregard for the truth omitted information from the affidavit.
    However, he does so only cursorily. But we need not consider
    whether Leonard has waived this argument because we conclude that
    Leonard has failed to satisfy the second element of the Franks
    test and thus his challenge fails on that ground.
    - 12 -
    knowledge; (3) whether some or all [of] the
    informant's     factual     statements      were
    corroborated     wherever     reasonable     and
    practicable      (e.g.,      through      police
    surveillance);    and   (4)   whether    a   law
    enforcement   affiant    assessed,   from    his
    professional   standpoint,    experience,    and
    expertise, the probable significance of the
    informant's provided information.
    
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citations omitted). "Because '[n]one of
    these factors is indispensable,' a stronger showing of supporting
    evidence as to one or more factors may effectively counterbalance
    a lesser showing as to others." 
    Id.
     (alteration in original)
    (quoting United States v. Zayas–Diaz, 
    95 F.3d 105
    , 111 (1st Cir.
    1996)).
    A reformed affidavit to include what Leonard claims was
    improperly    omitted    information     would    satisfy    the   Tiem   Trinh
    factors. First, the affidavit established the probable veracity of
    the CIs. As to CI-1, Provost stated the source had proven reliable
    in the past with information Provost had deemed credible from prior
    investigations. See United States v. Barnard, 
    299 F.3d 90
    , 93 (1st
    Cir. 2002); see also Tiem Trinh, 
    665 F.3d at 10
    –11 (noting that
    references     to   a   CI's   history    of     providing   information     to
    authorities provides       "some assurance of reliability"); United
    States v. Khounsavanh, 
    113 F.3d 279
    , 286–87 (1st Cir. 1997). Though
    CI-1   had   pending    charges   at   the     time,   providing   perhaps   an
    incentive to falsify information, "[t]he risk that the informant
    is lying or in error need not be wholly eliminated. Rather, what
    - 13 -
    is needed is that the probability of a lying or inaccurate informer
    has     been    sufficiently       reduced     by    corroborative        facts    and
    observations." See Khousavanh 
    113 F.3d at 284
     (internal quotations
    omitted). As to CI-2, despite previous arrests, the source had
    provided information in the past that had been found credible and
    had resulted in an arrest. See Tanguay, 787 F.3d at 50. CI-2 was
    not working for any consideration, but rather                       claimed to be
    motivated by personal experience to help to reduce drug trafficking
    in Lewiston. There is no particular background information about
    CI-3,    but     his    trustworthiness       is    enhanced   by   the    fact    the
    information       CI-3    provided    implicated      himself   to    some       degree
    because he had personally observed drugs and firearms in Leonard's
    apartment. See id. (noting that trustworthiness may be enhanced by
    the     extent     to     which      statements       are   against       interest).
    Additionally, none of the CIs were anonymous tipsters; rather,
    they were "known to the police and could be held responsible if
    [their] assertions proved inaccurate or false." See Barnard, 
    299 F.3d at 93
    .
    Second, the information provided by the CIs was based on
    firsthand information and/or provided detailed information about
    Leonard's criminal activity. See Gates, 
    462 U.S. at 234
    ; Barnard,
    
    299 F.3d at 93
    . Their reliability is bolstered by the "extent and
    level    of     detail"    of     their     information     regarding      the    drug
    trafficking operation in the apartments, which reflected "hidden,
    - 14 -
    illegal activity, and not generally obtainable, irrelevant, or
    non-incriminating facts." See Tiem Trinh, 
    665 F.3d at 11
    . CI-1
    reported that he had been inside the apartment and had personally
    observed    Leonard       packing       crack   cocaine      for    distribution     and
    possessing        a    pistol     and    ammunition.        Additional     information
    specifically          described   the     two   apartments,        the   occupants   and
    furnishings, location of video monitoring devices, specifics about
    Leonard's    behavior,          and     other   details.      Similarly,     CI-3    had
    personally observed the presence of drugs and firearms in the
    apartment and also provided details as to the use of the apartments
    and how drug customers would enter the building.
    Third, several components of the CIs' information were
    corroborated.          Significantly,       there     was     "cross-corroboration"
    between     the       multiple    sources       to   different       law   enforcement
    officers.6 See Barnard, 
    299 F.3d at 94
    . All three reported that
    6 Leonard suggests that because Provost refers to each
    confidential informant as "CI", it is possible that there are not
    three different CIs but rather just a single CI. The district
    court, however, concluded the opposite, finding that the affidavit
    contained   "consistent    information    provided   by    multiple
    confidential informants." We do not think this finding was in clear
    error. The way each CI is described in the affidavit shows that
    Provost understood each CI to be a different person. See Barnard,
    
    299 F.3d at 94
    . Provost provided different criminal histories,
    motivations for working with law enforcement, and contributions to
    prior investigations for each CI. Moreover, each CI interacted
    with a different law enforcement officer and provided different
    details of TOMCAT's operation that were broadly consistent. See
    
    id. at 94-95
    .
    - 15 -
    Leonard dealt crack cocaine. All three described Leonard's use of
    the two apartments on the second and third floors of 41 Walnut
    Street, with two of them detailing that Leonard lived on the third
    floor and dealt drugs on the second floor. Two described the video
    surveillance, two observed a firearm, and two noted that customers
    used       the   rear   door.   Further,    Provost    himself    conducted    some
    independent         investigation     regarding       the   details,       including
    reviewing the LPD system to verify that Leonard used the alias
    "TOMCAT," that he lived at the address identified by the CIs, that
    he had prior convictions for drug possession and trafficking, and
    that he had been recently released from prison.7 "Taken together,
    the    source[s']       account[s]"   and    the   detective's      investigation
    provided         "substantial    corroboration     for      the   CI[s']     crucial
    allegation of criminal conduct by defendant at his home." See 
    id. at 95
    .
    Additionally, officers engaged a CI in a controlled buy.
    The CI was searched for contraband before the buy and was followed
    to Leonard's residence at 41 Walnut Street. The CI made contact
    with Leonard, who was observed entering the rear door of the
    Leonard contends that Provost's review of the LPD's internal
    7
    records does not count as corroboration for these purposes because
    the information was publicly available. But the alias TOMCAT was
    not readily available to the public.
    - 16 -
    building and returning with a substance which later tested positive
    for cocaine.
    To   be    sure,   the   controlled      buy   was   not     free   from
    problems, and those problems were not disclosed in the warrant
    affidavit. The recording and monitoring device placed on the CI
    was ultimately unhelpful because of significant background noise.
    However, the affidavit did not state that the device documented
    useful evidence, 8 and officers were able to surveil 41 Walnut
    Street to at least some extent during the buy. Somewhat more
    problematic is that the CI traveled away from 41 Walnut Street
    with another person before meeting the agents to turn over the
    purchased cocaine, raising at least a speculative possibility that
    someone other than TOMCAT had been the source of the drugs the CI
    turned over to police. But a "less than ideal" controlled buy can
    still    provide     some   support    for     a   probable     cause    finding,
    particularly where, as here, the buy yielded information that was
    consistent with what the police were told by the three CIs.
    Khounsavanh, 
    113 F.3d at 286
    ; see also, e.g., United States v.
    8 Indeed, the affidavit cites the CI personally and not a
    recording as the source of information as to TOMCAT'S activities
    during the buy. Leonard's contention that the affidavit "nowhere
    suggests that police surveilled or even attempted to surveil the
    suspect resident during the alleged transaction" is simply not
    consistent with what the affidavit reports. The affidavit states
    that the "CI was followed to the parking lot of 41 Walnut [Street]"
    and that "[a]fter conducting the transaction[,] said CI was
    followed back to the designated meet location."
    - 17 -
    Genao, 
    281 F.3d 305
    , 309 (1st Cir. 2002); United States v. Garcia,
    
    983 F.2d 1160
    , 1166–67 (1st Cir 1993). Probable cause only requires
    a showing of a "fair probability" that contraband or evidence would
    be found in the apartment, Khounsavanh, 
    113 F.3d at 283,
     and the
    other aspects of the buy (including the CI's report that Leonard
    provided    the     cocaine),   the     cross-corroboration         of   detailed
    information about Leonard's criminal activity in the residence,
    and   the   independent     verification       about   residence,    alias,   and
    criminal background by Provost, sufficiently corroborated the CIs'
    factual statements advanced in support of the warrant.
    Finally, as to the fourth Tiem Trinh factor, Provost
    assessed     from     his    professional        experience    the       probable
    significance of the informants' information. He described his five
    years on the task force, his prior experience investigating drug
    trafficking cases, and his experience preparing and participating
    in the execution of numerous search warrants. He noted that based
    on his training and experience, it was common for drug traffickers
    to store in their residence records pertaining to their operations,
    drug paraphernalia, and sums of money that are drug proceeds. "In
    the eyes of the issuing justice, these statements could have
    boosted the reliability" of the CIs' information as to Leonard's
    - 18 -
    drug trafficking and firearms possession. See Barnard, 
    299 F.3d at 95
    .
    Taken together, these facts--even based upon a reformed
    affidavit to include the omissions--were sufficient to give the
    issuing judge a substantial basis upon which to conclude that there
    was a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime would
    be found.
    B.        Nexus to Third-Floor Apartment
    We turn to Leonard's alternate argument. He contends
    that the affidavit, if reformed, would be insufficient to establish
    a fair probability that evidence material to any crime would be
    found      in    Leonard's   third-floor     apartment   specifically.   The
    government argues in response that the claim should only be
    reviewed for plain error because Leonard forfeited the theory by
    never expressly arguing before the district court that the reformed
    affidavit failed to establish nexus to the third-floor apartment.
    The government further argues that even if the argument had been
    fully preserved, Leonard cannot show that the reformed affidavit
    would have undercut probable cause to search both apartments.
    "A warrant application must demonstrate probable cause
    to believe that (1) a crime has been committed—the 'commission'
    element, and (2) enumerated evidence of the offense will be found
    at the place to be searched—the so-called 'nexus' element." United
    States v. Feliz, 
    182 F.3d 82
    , 86 (1st Cir. 1999). With respect to
    - 19 -
    the "nexus" element, a judicial officer must "make a practical,
    common-sense decision whether, given all the circumstances set
    forth in the affidavit before him . . . there is a fair probability
    that   contraband   or   evidence    of   a   crime   will   be   found   in   a
    particular place." 
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (quoting Gates,
    
    462 U.S. at 238
    ). "The criterion . . . is whether the facts
    presented in the affidavit would 'warrant a man of reasonable
    caution' to believe that evidence of crime will be found." 
    Id. at 87
     (quoting Texas v. Brown, 
    460 U.S. 730
    , 742 (1983)).
    With respect to a suspected drug dealer's residence,
    "[t]he inquiry is not whether 'the owner of the property is
    suspected of crime' but rather whether 'there is reasonable cause
    to believe that the specific things to be searched for and seized
    are located on the property to which entry is sought.'" United
    States v. Roman, 
    942 F.3d 43
    , 51 (1st Cir. 2019) (quoting Zurcher
    v. Stanford Daily, 
    436 U.S. 547
    , 556 (1978)). "A nexus . . . need
    not, and often will not, rest on direct observation, but rather
    can be inferred from the type of crime, the nature of the items
    sought, the extent of an opportunity for concealment and normal
    inferences as to where a criminal would hide [evidence of a
    crime]." 
    Id.
     (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting Feliz, 
    182 F.3d at 88
    ). To permit such an
    inference of a nexus to a defendant's residence, the court looks
    to whether "generalized observations" that "drug dealers tend to
    - 20 -
    store   evidence   in   their   homes"   are   combined   with   "specific
    observations, or facts, connecting the drug dealing to the home,"
    such as "evidence that drug distribution was being organized from
    [the defendant's] residence, that the defendant used his home as
    a communications hub for drug activity, or that the defendant
    move[d] back and forth from his residence in relation to the drug
    transactions." 
    Id. at 51
    –52 (alterations in original) (citations
    omitted) (internal quotations omitted).
    It is not necessary for us to decide whether Leonard
    waived the nexus argument, because even if it were preserved,
    Leonard cannot show the district court committed any error in
    finding that the reformed affidavit would have supported probable
    cause to search both the second- and third-floor apartments.
    Provost made several "generalized observations" based on
    his training and experience, such as the commonality of individuals
    involved in illegal trafficking of drugs to: possess and store
    more than one kind of scheduled drug; possess, maintain, and keep
    at their residence records, journals, or notes pertaining to drug
    trafficking; possess, maintain, and keep at their residence drug
    paraphernalia; and possess, maintain, and keep with or near them,
    including at their residence, sums of money.
    The affidavit in this case combined those generalized
    observations with "specific observations" connecting Leonard's
    suspected drug trafficking to his third-floor apartment. While CI-
    - 21 -
    1 and CI-2 described the specific drug trafficking as occurring on
    the second floor, there was nevertheless sufficient information to
    infer evidence would be found on the third floor as well. Two CIs
    described Leonard's use of surveillance equipment which monitored
    the hallways and common areas of the building. There appeared to
    be   a   common    street-level    door   that    led    to   both    floors   and
    frequently was utilized by customers and also by Leonard during
    drug deals.
    CI-1    noted   that    Leonard      possessed      a    firearm   and
    ammunition, evidence that would likely be present where he lived
    and not just where he conducted sales. Leonard had a history of
    drug-related      convictions     and,   when   asked,   CI-3       reported   that
    Leonard was the largest drug trafficker in the area at the time.
    According to CI-1, the "TRAP" spot itself was sparsely furnished,
    containing only a folding card table, permitting the inference
    that Leonard kept important items, such as his cash and items he
    bought with his drug proceeds, in a separate "safe yet accessible"
    place, like his home. See, e.g., Feliz, 
    182 F.3d at 87
    –88. And, of
    course, the place in which CIs observed Leonard to be in possession
    of drugs and a firearm was just below his own known residence,
    making it likely he could easily move such things between the two
    apartments. The facts that would have been presented in a reformed
    affidavit would still "warrant a man of reasonable caution" to
    - 22 -
    believe it reasonably likely that evidence of crime would be found
    in Leonard's third floor apartment. See 
    id. at 86
    .
    In sum, there was no error in the district court's ruling
    that Leonard had failed to make the threshold showing necessary to
    obtain a Franks hearing. If the omitted information had been
    included in the warrant application, the reformed affidavit would
    nevertheless have justified the necessary finding of probable
    cause to search both apartments.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    - 23 -