United States v. Hugoboom ( 1997 )


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  •                                                                              F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    PUBLISH
    MAY 2 1997
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    PATRICK FISHER
    Clerk
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    No. 96-8050
    No. 96-8062
    DAVID EARL HUGOBOOM,
    TINA MARIE INSANA,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF WYOMING
    (D.C. No. 96-CR-0003-B)
    Donald E. Miller, Cheyenne, Wyoming, appearing for appellant Hugoboom.
    Andrea L. Richard, Rothgerber, Appel, Powers & Johnson, LLP, Cheyenne, Wyoming,
    appearing for appellant Insana.
    David A. Kubichek, Assistant United States Attorney (David D. Freudenthal, United
    States Attorney, with him on the brief), Casper, Wyoming, appearing for the appellee.
    Before ANDERSON, Circuit Judge, BRISCOE, Circuit Judge, and MCWILLIAMS,
    Senior Circuit Judge.
    MCWILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(a)(2), David Earl Hugoboom and Tina Marie
    Insana entered conditional pleas of guilty to Counts 1 and 4 of a four-count indictment.
    Count 1 charged them with unlawfully manufacturing methamphetamine within 1,000
    feet of an elementary school in Casper, Wyoming, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1),
    841(b)(1)(B), 860(a) and 
    18 U.S.C. § 2
    . Count 4 charged them with criminal forfeiture in
    violation of 21 U.S.C. § § 853(a)(1) and (a)(2). In thus pleading, Hugoboom and Insana,
    with the approval of the court and the consent of the government, reserved the right to
    appellate review of the district court’s order denying their pretrial motions to suppress.
    Hugoboom and Insana appeal that order.1 We conclude that the district court did not err
    in denying the motions to suppress, and therefore affirm. Some background facts are
    necessary to an understanding of the issue here presented.
    On January 17, 1996, United States Postal Inspector Alarick Holt was working at
    the Denver International Airport when he spotted what to him was a suspicious express
    mail parcel addressed to one Rick DeVoe, 1745 Pine Street, Casper, Wyoming 82604.2
    Inspector Holt had that parcel, along with several others, subjected to a “sniff” by a
    narcotics detection dog named Chris. When Chris sniffed the parcel addressed to
    1
    Counsel for Insana has filed a brief in this court and participated in oral argument
    of the case. Counsel for Hugoboom sought, and obtained permission from us, to adopt
    the brief filed by Insana, but did not participate in oral argument.
    2
    Among the factors which led Inspector Holt to pull this parcel out of the regular
    mail stream was that it was wrapped in ordinary brown paper, was heavily wrapped in
    gray duct tape, bore a fictitious return address (with no name) which had a zip code
    different from the zip code of the mailing address, and was mailed from Redlands,
    California.
    -2-
    DeVoe, it began barking, biting and scratching at the parcel. As a result of Chris’
    reaction, Inspector Holt sought and obtained a search warrant to open and inspect the
    contents of the parcel from the Hon. David L. West, a United States Magistrate Judge
    sitting in Denver, Colorado.
    After receiving the search warrant, Inspector Holt opened the parcel in question
    and found, inter alia, a silver colored bundle wrapped in duct tape shoved inside a stuffed
    gorilla. When opened, the packet revealed the presence of approximately 215 grams of a
    white powdery material. A “presumptive field test,” a Scott Reagent test, indicated the
    presence of cocaine. The substance was retested on January 18, 1996, again using the
    Scott Reagent test, and that test also indicated the presence of cocaine.3 However, in this
    appeal, neither Hugoboom nor Insana has challenged the validity of the warrant issued by
    the United States Magistrate Judge sitting in Denver, Colorado, authorizing Inspector
    Holt to open the parcel and inspect its contents.
    On January 18, 1996, Inspector Holt contacted the Drug Enforcement
    Administration (DEA) office in Casper, Wyoming, and made arrangements to carry out a
    “controlled delivery” of the parcel to DeVoe at the Casper address. In connection
    therewith, Inspector Holt applied for and received an “anticipatory search warrant” from
    the Hon. John C. Brooks, a United States Magistrate Judge sitting in Casper, Wyoming.
    Subsequent tests, however, proved that the substance was not cocaine, but actually
    3
    was ephedrine, a precursor to methamphetamine.
    -3-
    In his affidavit, Inspector Holt recited the statements previously made by him in his
    affidavit to the Magistrate Judge sitting in Denver. In addition, Inspector Holt set forth
    the results of the presumptive field test and indicated that he and DEA agents proposed to
    make a controlled delivery of the parcel to the named addressee. Inspector Holt also
    stated that “[i]n the light of the above circumstances, there may be practical difficulties in
    obtaining access to the Magistrate Judge in a timely fashion.” Accordingly, he requested a
    search warrant to be issued with its execution contingent upon the delivery of the parcel
    to a responsible adult at the residence located at 1745 Pine Street, Casper, Wyoming, who
    willingly “accept[s] delivery” and signs a receipt therefor. On the basis of Inspector
    Holt’s affidavit, Magistrate Judge Brooks issued a search warrant which both Hugoboom
    and Insana do challenge in this appeal.
    But, there is still another search warrant in the case! After receiving the
    anticipatory search warrant on January 18, 1996, Inspector Holt, dressed as a postal
    carrier and arriving in an official postal vehicle, delivered the parcel to the residence at
    1745 Pine Street. Inspector Holt knocked at the door, and persons later identified as Rick
    DeVoe and David Hugoboom responded thereto. When Inspector Holt indicated that he
    had a parcel for a Rick DeVoe, the latter identified himself as DeVoe and signed a receipt
    for the parcel, which was handed to him. Inspector Holt then left the residence and went
    to a staging area where other officers were waiting. About fifteen minutes later, Inspector
    -4-
    Holt, along with DEA agents and officers from the Casper Police Department, returned to
    the residence and executed the anticipatory search warrant.
    Upon arriving back at the Pine Street address, Inspector Holt and the others began
    the search by first knocking at the door and announcing their presence, and thereafter
    entering the residence and conducting a protective sweep of the premises. During the
    course of the protective sweep, Hugoboom attempted, unsuccessfully, to leave the house
    via the back door. Tina Insana was found in the lower level of the residence.
    During the ensuing protective sweep of the residence, Inspector Holt and others
    looked into a small storeroom through an open door where they saw glass jars containing
    various liquids, a large plastic container, numerous coffee filters, a Pyrex dish, a beaker,
    plastic tubing and the like. Based on their observations, Inspector Holt and a DEA agent
    consulted with the United States Attorney’s office to determine whether the laboratory
    apparatus could be properly seized under the authority of the anticipatory search warrant.
    After concluding that the anticipatory search warrant was not sufficiently broad to
    warrant seizure of the laboratory items, Inspector Holt sought and received a third search
    warrant from Magistrate Judge Brooks authorizing seizure of the laboratory
    paraphernalia. In his affidavit, Inspector Holt recited much of which he had said in his
    two prior affidavits, adding, however, a description of what he and the other officers had
    seen while executing the second search warrant.
    -5-
    This third warrant, also issued on January 18, 1996, at about 4:52 p.m., resulted in
    the seizure, on the same day, of the methamphetamine laboratory. Subsequent to the
    execution of this third warrant, each of the three defendants, after being advised of their
    rights, confessed to DEA agents, in varying degrees, to manufacturing methamphetamine
    at the residence at 1745 Pine Street. However, neither Hugoboom nor Insana has
    challenged the third warrant in the present appeal.
    At the hearing on the motions to suppress, the government called as witnesses
    Alarick Holt, the postal inspector; Kenneth Gurule, a Denver Police officer who was the
    handler of the dog which “sniffed” the package at Denver International Airport; George
    Angelos, a forensic scientist who testified that “presumptive examinations” were
    designed “to get a general idea as to what you might be dealing with” and were not
    “definitive”; and Steven Perkins, a DEA agent in Casper, Wyoming, who participated in
    the execution of the anticipatory search warrant and later interrogated DeVoe, Hugoboom
    and Insana.4 Defendant Insana also testified at the suppression hearing, and stated that
    she packed the parcel addressed to DeVoe at the Casper address with ephedrine and that
    her sister mailed it.
    In denying the two motions to suppress, the district court found, inter alia, that the
    warrant issued in Denver to search the package was based on probable cause and was
    Insana stated, inter alia, to Agent Perkins that DeVoe had been distributing
    4
    methamphetamine in the Casper area “that he received from sources in California since
    approximately August 1995 . . . .”
    -6-
    “neither overbroad nor too general.” The district court then went on to hold that the
    anticipatory search warrant issued in Casper, Wyoming, to search the premises located at
    1745 Pine Street also was based on probable cause. In connection therewith, the court
    also stated that “[a] heightened standard, in my judgment, is not required for such a
    warrant.” Further, the district court concluded that the anticipatory search warrant was
    “neither overbroad nor too general.” Finally, the district court held that the third warrant
    was based on probable cause and was “properly issued and executed.”
    As indicated, in the present appeal, Hugoboom and Insana challenge only the
    second warrant, i.e., the anticipatory search warrant issued by Magistrate Judge Brooks in
    Casper, Wyoming, on January 18, 1996. They argue that the anticipatory warrant violates
    the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution which prohibits “unreasonable
    searches and seizures” and requires that search warrants be issued only upon “probable
    cause.”5
    In denying the defendants’ motions to suppress, the district court held, inter alia,
    that on the record before it there was probable cause to issue the anticipatory search
    warrant and that it was not otherwise unconstitutional. And that basically is the only issue
    to be resolved on appeal. We agree with the district court.
    Counsel for Insana also contends that the search and seizure under the anticipatory
    5
    search warrant violates Article l, Section 4, of the Wyoming Constitution. This being a
    federal indictment and, conditional plea of guilty thereto, we are not concerned, as such,
    with the Wyoming Constitution.
    -7-
    In reviewing a district court’s denial of a motion to suppress, we should view the
    evidence adduced at the hearing on the motion in a light most favorable to the
    government and we should review a district court’s findings of fact only for clear error.
    United States v. Glover, 
    104 F.3d 1570
    , 1576 (10th Cir. 1997); United States v. Alarcon-
    Gonzalez, 
    73 F.3d 289
    , 291 (10th Cir. 1996). However, questions concerning the
    reasonableness of a search under the Fourth Amendment, and the existence, or non-
    existence, of probable cause, are subject to de novo review by us. United States v.
    Alvarez, 
    68 F.3d 1242
    , 1244 (10th Cir. 1995); United States v. Carhee, 
    27 F.3d 1493
    ,
    1496-97 (10th Cir. 1994).
    Many, if not most, search warrants are effective upon issuance and may be
    executed immediately thereafter. However, an anticipatory search warrant, i.e., a warrant
    which only becomes effective upon the happening of a future event, is not
    unconstitutional per se and is, indeed, no stranger to the law. Such warrants have
    repeatedly been upheld, assuming probable cause and so long as the conditions precedent
    to execution are clearly set forth in the warrant or in the affidavit in support of the
    anticipatory warrant. See United States v. Gendron, 
    18 F.3d 955
    , 965 (1st Cir. 1994);
    United States v. Lawson, 
    999 F.2d 985
    , 987-88 (6th Cir. 1993); United States v.
    Tagbering, 
    985 F.2d 946
    , 950 (8th Cir. 1993); United States v. Rey, 
    923 F.2d 1217
    , 1220-
    1221 (6th Cir. 1991); United States v. Wylie, 
    919 F.2d 969
    , 974 (5th Cir. 1990); United
    -8-
    States v. Garcia, 
    882 F.2d 699
    , 703 (2d Cir.), cert. den. 
    493 U.S. 943
     (1989); United
    States v. Goodwin, 
    854 F.2d 33
    , 36 (4th Cir. 1988).
    The rationale for upholding an anticipatory search warrant when challenged on
    Fourth Amendment grounds is well set forth in United States v. Gendron, 
    18 F.3d 955
    ,
    965 (1st Cir. 1994), where Chief Judge Breyer, now Justice Breyer, spoke for the panel as
    follows:
    [11,12] In general, the simple fact that a warrant is “anticipatory”--i.e.,
    that it takes effect, not upon issuance, but at a specified future time--does not
    invalidate a warrant or make it somehow suspect or legally disfavored.
    Warrants often do specify that they will take effect upon issuance. But the
    Constitution imposes no such requirement. Rather, it says that a search must
    not be “unreasonable,” and that warrants must be supported by “probable
    cause.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. There is nothing unreasonable about
    authorizing a search for tomorrow, not today, when reliable information
    indicates that, say, the marijuana will reach the house, not now, but then. Nor
    does it seem automatically unreasonable to tie the warrant’s search authority
    to the future event that brings with it the probable cause (e.g., the time of
    “delivery of a large brown package addressed to X with return address Y”).
    Ricciardelli, 998 F.2d at 10-11. In principle, the use of a “triggering event”
    can help assure that the search takes place only when justified by “probable
    cause”; and anticipatory warrants may thereby offer greater, not lesser,
    protection against unreasonable invasion of a citizen’s privacy. As one
    commentator has put it,
    as a general proposition the facts put forward to justify issuance
    of an anticipatory warrant are more likely to establish that
    probable cause will exist at the time of the search than the
    typical warrant based solely upon the known prior location of
    the items to be searched at the place to be searched.
    2 Wayne H. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 3.7(c), at 97 (2d ed. 1987). Were
    “anticipatory warrants” unlawful, law enforcement agents would have to wait
    until the triggering event occurred; then, if time did not permit a warrant
    application, they would have to forego a legitimate search, or, more likely,
    -9-
    simply conduct the search (justified by “exigent circumstances”) without any
    warrant at all. See Vale v. Louisiana, 
    399 U.S. 30
    , 34-35, 
    90 S. Ct. 1969
    , 1971-
    1972, 
    26 L.Ed.2d 409
     (1970); 2 LaFave, supra, § 6.5. We are not surprised
    that courts have found “anticipatory warrants,” considered as a class, perfectly
    consistent with the Constitution.
    In denying the defendants’ motions to suppress, the district court rejected defense
    counsel’s suggestion that an affidavit for an anticipatory search warrant should, because it
    is “anticipatory” in nature, be subjected to “special scrutiny,” i.e., closer scrutiny than an
    affidavit seeking the issuance of a warrant which would be effective immediately. In
    rejecting that suggestion, the district court in the instant case opined that “. . . all an agent is
    reasonably required to do is have probable cause. He’s not required to have four times
    probable cause or five times or ten times. He’s just required to have probable cause. I think
    they had it.” The district court then added that “[a] heightened standard, in my judgment, is
    not required for such a warrant.”
    On appeal, counsel argues that the district court erred in not applying a higher degree
    of scrutiny to an application for an anticipatory search warrant than it would to an application
    for a search warrant to be effective on issuance. We agree with the district court on this
    matter. In support of our determination, see United States v. Gendron, 
    18 F.3d at 965
    , where
    the First Circuit stated that anticipatory search warrants are not “somehow suspect or legally
    disfavored” and that the Constitution only requires that “a search must not be ‘unreasonable,’
    and that warrants must be supported by ‘probable cause.’”
    - 10 -
    Counsel also argues that there was not probable cause to support the anticipatory
    search warrant because the affidavit for the warrant only related to the proposed controlled
    delivery and that there was no “independent evidence” of drug activities being carried on at
    1745 Pine Street. We disagree. In United States v. Lawson, 
    999 F.2d 985
    , 987 (6th Cir.
    1993), the Sixth Circuit rejected the suggestion made in that case that the anticipatory
    warrant was issued without probable cause because it did not “contain results of surveillance
    of the address, nor did it contain information from other law enforcement agencies
    concerning Mr. Lawson’s known or suspected drug activities.” It was defendant’s further
    contention in that case that “the sole link between Mr. Lawson and the alleged drug
    trafficking activities was his name as an addressee on the package, confirmed by his receipt
    of the package.” Lawson, 
    999 F.2d at 987
    . As indicated, the Sixth Circuit, citing United
    States v. Rey, 
    923 F.2d 1217
     (6th Cir. 1991), rejected such suggestion and noted that in Rey
    “[t]he affidavit only referred to the controlled delivery, and gave no information regarding
    illicit activity concerning the defendant or the residence.” 
    Id.
     We agree.6
    6
    We reject any suggestion that the anticipatory search warrant was not based on
    probably cause because the substance in the parcel believed to be cocaine later turned out
    to be ephedrine. In this general connection, in Illinois v. Rodriguez, 
    497 U.S. 177
    , 185
    (1989), the Supreme Court said that “[i]t is apparent that in order to satisfy the
    ‘reasonableness’ requirement of the Fourth Amendment, what is generally demanded of
    the many factual determinations that must regularly be made by agents of the
    government--whether the magistrate issuing a warrant, the police officer executing a
    warrant, or the police officer conducting a search or seizure under one of the exceptions
    to the warrant requirement--is not that they always be correct, but that they always be
    reasonable.”
    - 11 -
    Further, and in this same general connection, the Seventh Circuit in United States v.
    Leidner, 
    99 F.3d 1423
    , 1427 (7th Cir. 1996), noted that “[s]everal circuits agree that in order
    for an anticipatory warrant to satisfy the probable cause standard it must demonstrate that
    contraband is on a ‘sure course’ to the designation to be searched.” Certainly, the alleged
    contraband in the instant case was on a “sure course” to 1745 Pine Street.
    In the affidavit attached to his application for an anticipatory search warrant, Inspector
    Holt stated, inter alia, that on January 18, 1996, or “in the event delivery is unsuccessful [on
    January 18, 1996] on succeeding dates thereafter, within the time period authorized,” he
    would attempt to deliver the parcel here in question to an adult at the Pine Street address and
    that upon delivery to a willing adult and upon obtaining a signed receipt for such delivery,
    the search warrant would then be executed. The anticipatory search warrant which
    Magistrate Judge Brooks issued did not, itself, state that the warrant should only be executed
    after delivery of the parcel at the Pine Street address to an adult who signed a receipt
    therefor. Counsel argues that such omission is constitutional error. We disagree. In accord,
    see United States v. Moetamedi, 
    46 F.3d 225
    , 229 (2d Cir. 1995), where the Second Circuit
    spoke as follows:
    These requirements were satisfied in this case. The Affidavit
    stated clear and precise conditions for the execution of the
    Warrant, see supra note 1, and these conditions were satisfied by
    the circumstances of the delivery of the Package, as determined
    by Chief Judge McAvoy in factual findings that are not clearly
    erroneous. See Moetamedi, 
    1993 WL 147461
    , at *5. Certainly,
    the most efficient way to ensure that an anticipatory warrant is
    properly executed is to include the conditions for its execution
    - 12 -
    in the warrant. We will not posit a Fourth Amendment violation
    requiring suppression, however, when constitutionally
    satisfactory conditions for execution of the warrant are stated in
    the affidavit that solicits the warrant, accepted by the issuing
    magistrate, and actually satisfied in the execution of the warrant.
    The anticipatory search warrant issued by Magistrate Judge Brooks contained a
    printed statement which read as follows: “YOU ARE HEREBY COMMANDED to search
    on or before                         (not to exceed 10 days).” For some reason, the “on or
    before” date was not set forth in the warrant signed by the Magistrate Judge. This omission
    is said, by counsel, to constitute constitutional error. We do not agree. In this connection,
    we note that the anticipatory warrant in the instant case was, in fact, executed within minutes
    after the delivery of the alleged contraband to DeVoe. A similar argument was rejected by
    the Eleventh Circuit in United States v. Gerber, 
    994 F.2d 1556
    , 1559-60 (11th Cir. 1993).
    In that case, the court stated that the Fourth Amendment does not specify that a search
    warrant contain an expiration date, and, citing with approval United States v. Stefanson, 
    648 F.2d 1231
    , 1235 (9th Cir. 1982), spoke as follows:
    This court has adopted the Ninth Circuit standard for analyzing
    alleged violations of Rule 41 relating to search warrants:
    “[U]nless a clear constitutional violation occurs,
    noncompliance with Rule 41 requires suppression
    of evidence only where (1) there was ‘prejudice’
    in the sense that the search might not have occurred
    or would not have been so abrasive if the rule had
    been followed, or (2) there is evidence of intentional
    and deliberate disregard of a provision in the Rule.
    - 13 -
    United States v. Loyd, 
    721 F.2d 331
    , 333 (11th Cir. 1983) (per
    curiam) (quoting United States v. Stefanson, 
    648 F.2d 1231
    ,
    1235 (9th Cir. 1981) (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
    We further reject counsel’s contention that the search and seizure authorized by the
    anticipatory search warrant was “overbroad” in that it authorized seizure of items other than
    cocaine, which, as indicated, was mistakenly believed to be the substance delivered. This
    argument was rejected by the Sixth Circuit in United States v. Rey, 
    923 F.2d 1217
    , 1220 (6th
    Cir. 1991), where the court observed that “other circuits have rejected the claim that a
    warrant authorizing a search for drug paraphernalia as well as contraband is overbroad, even
    though based only on a knowledge of a controlled delivery.” And, in any event, in United
    States v. Brown, 
    984 F.2d 1074
    , 1077 (10th Cir. 1993), we noted that “[a]t least eight circuits
    have held that where a warrant contains both specific as well as unconstitutionally broad
    language, the broad portion may be redacted and the balance of the warrant considered
    valid.”
    Judgment affirmed.
    - 14 -