State of Tennessee v. Jerry Lewis Tuttle ( 2017 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    October 5, 2016 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JERRY LEWIS TUTTLE
    Appeal by Permission from the Court of Criminal Appeals
    Circuit Court for Maury County
    Nos. 21695, 22091    Stella L. Hargrove, Judge
    _____________________________
    No. M2014-00566-SC-R11-CD – Filed April 5, 2017
    _____________________________
    We granted the State‟s appeal primarily to determine whether the intermediate appellate
    court erred in finding the search warrant affidavit insufficient to establish probable cause,
    and in doing so, to revisit the continuing vitality of State v. Jacumin, 
    778 S.W.2d 430
    (Tenn. 1989). In Jacumin, this Court refused to follow Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    (1983), which adopted a totality-of-the-circumstances analysis for determining whether
    an affidavit establishes probable cause for a search warrant, and instead embraced, as a
    matter of Tennessee constitutional law, another test derived from two earlier United
    States Supreme Court decisions, Aguilar v. Texas, 
    378 U.S. 108
    (1964) and Spinelli v.
    United States, 
    393 U.S. 410
    (1969). For the reasons explained herein, we overrule
    Jacumin and adopt the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis for determining whether an
    affidavit establishes probable cause for issuance of a warrant under article I, section 7 of
    the Tennessee Constitution. Applying this standard, we reverse the Court of Criminal
    Appeals‟ decision holding the search warrant invalid. We also reverse the intermediate
    appellate court‟s conclusion that the evidence was insufficient to support the defendant‟s
    convictions for conspiracy to possess over 300 pounds of marijuana with intent to sell or
    deliver and conspiracy to commit money laundering and reinstate the trial court‟s
    judgment approving the jury‟s verdict. Finally, we affirm, on separate grounds, the Court
    of Criminal Appeals‟ decision upholding the trial court‟s judgment ordering forfeiture of
    the $1,098,050 cash seized when the search warrant was executed.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 11 Appeal by Permission; Judgment of the
    Court of Criminal Appeals Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part;
    Judgment of the Trial Court Reinstated
    CORNELIA A. CLARK, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which JEFFREY S. BIVINS,
    C.J., and SHARON G. LEE and HOLLY KIRBY, JJ., joined. ROGER A. PAGE, J., Not
    Participating.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Andrée S. Blumstein, Solicitor
    General; Andrew Craig Coulam, Assistant Attorney General; Brent Cooper, Assistant
    District Attorney General; T. Michel Bottoms, District Attorney General, for the
    appellant, State of Tennessee.
    John S. Colley III (at trial and on appeal) and Kevin S. Latta (at trial), Columbia,
    Tennessee, for the appellee, Jerry Lewis Tuttle.
    OPINION
    I. Factual and Procedural Overview
    In 2012, the Maury County Grand Jury returned two separate indictments charging
    the defendant, Jerry Lewis Tuttle, with multiple offenses in connection with a drug
    trafficking conspiracy. The indictments were issued after officers executed a search
    warrant on April 24, 2012, for property located at 4571 Dugger Road, Culleoka,
    Tennessee, in Maury County (“4571 Dugger Road property”).1 The property consisted of
    “5.77 acres,” and the defendant resided in a mobile home on the property with his wife,
    Tammy A. Tuttle, who was the record owner of the property.2 The warrant authorized
    officers to search the defendant‟s “single wide mobile home gray in color with an
    attached wood constructed covered front po[]rch” and “all outbuildings, outhouses and
    storage buildings, and all vehicles found thereon.” Officers were authorized to seize
    “[m]arijuana, all equipment, devices, records, computers and computer storage discs . . .
    used for the purpose of producing, packaging, dispensing, delivering or obtaining
    1
    The defendant‟s wife and adult son were also charged with criminal offenses after the search of
    the 4571 Dugger Road property and other locations, but this appeal involves only the defendant.
    2
    The State has not challenged the defendant‟s standing to contest the search on the ground that
    he was not listed as the record owner of the 4571 Dugger Road property, nor has the defendant contested
    his connection to the property.
    -2-
    controlled substances, or recording transactions involving controlled substances, [and]
    any indicia of ownership, dominion, or control over the premises to be searched . . . .”
    When the warrant was executed, officers found, inside the residence, eight pounds
    of marijuana, almost a half an ounce of cocaine, and between $95,000 and $98,000 cash,
    in $100 and $50 bills, as well as multiple guns, a large scale capable of weighing items
    up to thirteen pounds, a small scale capable of weighing items up to two pounds, a money
    counter, a device used to grind marijuana into a powder, and a pipe and other items
    associated with smoking marijuana. Just outside the residence in the trunk of the
    defendant‟s Honda Civic, officers located a number of additional guns and an
    ammunition can containing $1,000,300 cash, all in $100 bills that were issued prior to the
    year 2000. Officers also located marijuana plants growing in an Igloo cooler and various
    items of personal property, including vehicles and farming equipment, believed to be
    derived from the defendant‟s involvement in drug trafficking.
    The defendant moved pre-trial to suppress the evidence seized during the search,
    arguing that the affidavit supporting the search warrant failed to establish probable cause
    and contained false information. The defendant also moved to dismiss the forfeiture
    count of the indictment, arguing that the forfeiture was barred by the five-year statute of
    limitations and by the State‟s failure to comply with the forfeiture statute. After a hearing
    on March 19, 2013, the trial court denied the motions.
    The case proceeded to trial, and the jury found the defendant guilty of the
    following six offenses: (1) simple possession of cocaine in an amount of over .5 grams;
    (2) possession of marijuana in an amount of not less than one-half ounce nor more than
    ten pounds with intent to sell; (3) conspiracy to possess over 300 pounds of marijuana
    with intent to sell or deliver; (4) conspiracy to commit money laundering; (5) money
    laundering; and (6) unlawful possession of a firearm with intent to go armed during the
    commission of or attempt to commit a dangerous felony.3          The day after the jury
    rendered its verdict, the trial court held a hearing on the forfeiture count of the
    3
    After a separate sentencing hearing, the trial court imposed an effective fifty-year sentence, with
    a release eligibility of thirty-five percent. Neither party has raised any issue related to sentencing in this
    appeal.
    -3-
    indictment, Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-708(d) (2010), and ordered forfeiture of the cash
    and other personal property found during the search.4
    The defendant appealed, challenging the trial court‟s ruling on his motion to
    suppress, the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conspiracy convictions, and the
    trial court‟s decision ordering forfeiture of the cash. A majority of the Court of Criminal
    Appeals reversed the trial court‟s ruling on the defendant‟s motion to suppress and
    vacated the defendant‟s conspiracy convictions for insufficient evidence but affirmed the
    trial court‟s decision ordering forfeiture of the cash.5 We granted the State‟s application
    for permission to appeal.
    Because the issues before us involve facts presented in the affidavit and evidence
    introduced at separate hearings, we will separately summarize the facts and analyze the
    law related to each of the following issues: (1) whether the search warrant affidavit
    sufficiently established probable cause for issuance of the warrant; (2) whether the
    evidence presented at trial was sufficient to support the defendant‟s conspiracy
    convictions; and (3) whether, given the proof offered at trial and at the post-trial
    forfeiture hearing, the courts below properly ordered forfeiture of the cash seized on the
    4571 Dugger Road property.
    II. Search Warrant Affidavit
    A. Facts Recited in the Search Warrant Affidavit
    Trooper Shawn Boyd, a Tennessee Highway Patrol (“THP”) officer, prepared the
    April 23, 2012 affidavit that resulted in the issuance of the April 24, 2012 search warrant
    allowing officers to search the 4571 Dugger Road property.6 When he prepared the
    4
    Only the forfeiture of the cash is at issue in this appeal.
    5
    Judge Roger A. Page, who now serves as a member of this Court, dissented from the majority‟s
    decision to reverse the trial court‟s ruling on the motion to suppress and to reverse the defendant‟s
    convictions but concurred with the majority‟s forfeiture decision.
    6
    Trooper Boyd used this affidavit to obtain search warrants for other properties as well, but this
    appeal involves only the search of the property at 4571 Dugger Road.
    -4-
    affidavit, Trooper Boyd had worked as a THP officer for ten years and had been assigned
    to the Nashville Drug Enforcement Agency Task Force (“Nashville DEA”) for two years.
    The investigation culminating in the request for this warrant began after another
    THP officer stopped a motorist, Adrian Davis, on March 2, 2012, for a routine traffic
    violation. When a consensual search of Mr. Davis‟s vehicle yielded a small amount of
    marijuana and Lortab pills, Mr. Davis offered to provide law enforcement with
    information concerning a marijuana trafficking organization. The THP officer issued Mr.
    Davis a citation for possession of drugs, released him, and gave him Trooper Boyd‟s
    telephone number. Mr. Davis called Trooper Boyd the next day, and two days after that,
    March 5, 2012, Trooper Boyd interviewed Mr. Davis.
    During this interview, Mr. Davis admitted to Trooper Boyd that he had previously
    received marijuana from an Atlanta, Georgia based marijuana distribution organization
    operated by a Hispanic man named Martinez. Mr. Davis stated that the defendant‟s son,
    Christopher Tuttle (“Son”), known to Mr. Davis as “Red,” received large quantities of
    marijuana—approximately 600 to 700 pounds—from this same drug trafficking
    organization (“DTO”) on a weekly basis. When shown the photograph from Son‟s
    driver‟s license, Mr. Davis identified Son, stated that he had seen Son picking up
    marijuana from couriers of the DTO about a year earlier, stated that Son drove a white
    Nissan truck and lived in South Nashville (although Mr. Davis did not know the exact
    location), and, relevant to the case, stated that Son‟s “whole family [was] involved with
    selling drugs.” Mr. Davis also provided Trooper Boyd with his own telephone number
    and with two addresses at which he resided.
    Using this information, Nashville DEA learned that Mr. Davis‟s telephone number
    was connected to ongoing DEA investigations in Atlanta, Georgia, and Birmingham,
    Alabama, into marijuana distribution organizations. Atlanta DEA already had a wiretap
    on Mr. Davis‟s phone number, and, on January 14 and 15, 2012, intercepted Mr. Davis
    “discussing multi[-]hundred pound marijuana deals” with the target of its investigation.
    Birmingham DEA had tracked a suspected drug dealer, Cleto Medina, the target of its
    investigation, to one of the addresses Mr. Davis gave Trooper Boyd as his residence and
    had information, via wiretap, that another suspect, known as “The Red,” was “believed to
    be receiving large shipments of marijuana in Tennessee.” Birmingham DEA had
    received this information from Austin, Texas DEA, which was conducting a wiretap as
    part of an investigation it was conducting of a marijuana trafficking organization based in
    Texas.
    In March 2012, Austin DEA informed Nashville DEA of its investigation of the
    Mario Martinez Calderon DTO, which was receiving, transporting, and distributing
    kilograms of cocaine, methamphetamine, and marijuana from Austin, Texas to
    Birmingham, Alabama. Austin DEA advised that Mr. Medina had been identified as the
    person in Birmingham to whom the Martinez-Calderon DTO supplied drugs.
    -5-
    Furthermore, Austin DEA advised that, on March 6, 2012, one of its confidential
    informants made a controlled call to Mr. Medina and learned that he had a Tennessee
    customer known as “El Rojo,” which translates to “The Red.” Mr. Medina and the
    confidential informant discussed the price of cocaine and possible future deals with “El
    Rojo” and another Tennessee customer involving multiple kilograms of cocaine. Mr.
    Medina stated that “he ha[d] known „El Rojo‟ for a while and that „El Rojo‟ is very
    careful.”
    On March 16, 2012, Birmingham DEA advised Nashville DEA that Mr. Medina
    had received a shipment of drugs in Birmingham and that Mr. Medina‟s brother and co-
    conspirator, Biato Jaramillo, would be transporting drugs to a customer in Tennessee that
    day. At approximately 5:30 a.m. that day, Birmingham DEA advised Nashville DEA that
    their agents were following a maroon Ford Expedition with an Alabama license tag north
    on Interstate 65 toward Tennessee and that the Expedition was transporting a large
    amount of narcotics. Nashville DEA responded by sending officers to conduct
    surveillance of the vehicle once it crossed into Tennessee. Birmingham DEA agents
    followed the vehicle until it crossed into Tennessee at approximately 7:56 a.m., at which
    point Nashville DEA began following the vehicle as it continued north on Interstate 65.
    At approximately 8:26 a.m., officers observed the Expedition take exit 37 onto Tennessee
    State Highway 50 and stop at a Shell gas station near the exit. The Expedition pulled
    next to a gas pump, and the driver went into the store, returned to the vehicle, drove the
    vehicle to a parking space, and stopped.
    About thirty minutes later, at approximately 8:58 a.m., an officer observed a white
    Nissan Titan truck, later identified as belonging to Son, arrive at the gas station, pull next
    to the gas pumps, and then leave the gas station, followed by the maroon Expedition.
    Officers followed the vehicles as they traveled west on Highway 50 and then turned onto
    Highway 373 at about 9:09 a.m. However, when the vehicles turned onto Mooresville
    Pike a short time later, officers were unable to maintain surveillance in the rural area
    without risking discovery, so “contact with the vehicles was lost for a period of time.”
    During this time, officers learned from searching a computer database containing real
    estate records that Son possibly had family in the area, because Tammy A. Tuttle was
    listed as the record owner of property located nearby at 4571 Dugger Road, Culleoka,
    Tennessee.
    Trooper Boyd and another officer then drove past the 4571 Dugger Road property
    and observed Son‟s white Nissan Titan truck parked in the driveway behind the
    defendant‟s mobile home. A short time later, officers observed Son‟s vehicle pull onto
    Highway 373, drive to Highway 50, and then pull onto Interstate 65, heading north
    toward Nashville.
    -6-
    Based on the foregoing, Trooper Boyd expressed his belief “that during this
    meeting [on March 16, 2012] BIATO JARAMILLO transferred drugs to [Son]” at the
    4571 Dugger Road property. Trooper Boyd acknowledged that officers had no
    information implicating Tammy A. Tuttle in Son‟s drug trafficking activities, but, as
    Trooper Boyd recited in the affidavit, officers were aware that Son‟s father had
    previously resided on the property and that Son had previously hidden proceeds of an
    earlier drug trafficking scheme on the 4571 Dugger Road property. In particular, Trooper
    Boyd explained that, on December 14, 2000, a Davidson County Grand Jury had charged
    Son and other co-conspirators in a multi-count indictment for their involvement in a
    marijuana distribution organization Son operated. The charges stemmed from separate
    February 2000 traffic stops of Son and his wife, which resulted in the seizure of over
    $60,000 cash derived from drug proceeds, a July 2000 seizure of 2,600 pounds of
    marijuana from a rental truck that another co-conspirator intended to deliver to Son, an
    August 2000 seizure of 2,200 pounds of marijuana from a vehicle in Son‟s possession,
    and $25,000 cash Son had retrieved from another co-conspirator‟s residence to pay the
    driver of the loaded vehicle. As part of this investigation, a search warrant was executed
    on August 11, 2000, at the 4571 Dugger Road property, and officers “located a metal
    ammo can, which contained a plastic bag with $112,000[] in U.S. currency. The plastic
    bag had „$200,000‟ and the initials „CT‟ written on it.”7 Investigators suspected that the
    cash constituted Son‟s proceeds from drug trafficking activities, which Son had hidden at
    his father‟s residence.
    Trooper Boyd recounted that, on the morning of April 2, 2012, Birmingham DEA
    observed suitcases being offloaded from a bus and loaded into Mr. Medina‟s white
    Lincoln Navigator in Birmingham. Around noon that same day, Birmingham DEA
    informed Trooper Boyd of a call it had intercepted between Mr. Medina and Son, during
    which Mr. Medina asked if Son was ready, and Son answered in the affirmative. Mr.
    Medina told Son he would leave at 1:30 p.m. and would arrive around 4:30 p.m. Son
    agreed to this time and told Mr. Medina to call when he was near the state line. Mr.
    Medina and Son discussed “luggage,” with Mr. Medina saying it was just one big
    luggage and the amount was 170. Referring to what Trooper Boyd believed was money
    to pay for the drugs, Son told Mr. Medina that he did not have all of it but was very close
    7
    As a result of the 2000 search, the defendant was also charged with criminal offenses, and pled
    guilty on April 9, 2002, to conspiracy to sell over seventy pounds of marijuana and to one count of money
    laundering as the result of his assistance in the concealment of Son‟s drug proceeds. He received an
    eight-year sentence for each offense.
    -7-
    and was going to another location to find out if he could get all of it. Based on his
    training and experience, Trooper Boyd believed that “luggage” referred to marijuana and
    “170” referred to the cost of the marijuana as $170,000. Trooper Boyd interpreted the
    coded language in the phone call as Son and Mr. Medina “making plans in order to
    conduct a marijuana transaction.”
    At 3:30 p.m. that same day, April 2, 2012, Birmingham DEA contacted Trooper
    Boyd and advised that, during an intercepted call, Son had instructed Mr. Medina to take
    exit 32 off Interstate 65, turn left, and proceed to a Texaco gas station. Mr. Medina had
    repeated the instructions and agreed to call Son when he exited the Interstate. Acting on
    this information, Nashville DEA established surveillance of Highway 373, known as the
    Culleoka Highway, at exit 32 in the direction Son told Mr. Medina to travel. Officers
    also set up surveillance at a market located at 2345 Culleoka Highway. At approximately
    4:00 p.m., officers observed the white Navigator leave Interstate 65 at exit 32 and
    proceed west on Highway 373, as Son had instructed. At approximately 4:07 p.m.,
    another officer observed Son arrive at a nearby gas station in his white Nissan Titan truck
    and pull next to the gas pumps. Shortly after Son arrived, the Navigator, driven by a
    Hispanic male wearing blue jeans, a striped shirt, and a ball cap, stopped next to the gas
    pumps. Officers observed the Hispanic man and Son leave their vehicles and walk
    towards the front of the market. Both men soon returned to their vehicles and departed
    the gas station, with the Navigator following the Son‟s vehicle as it turned onto
    Mooresville Pike in the direction of Dugger Road. Because of the rural location, officers
    were again unable to follow the vehicles after they turned without risking discovery.
    However, at 4:20 p.m., Birmingham DEA Special Agent Shawn Steven advised
    Officer Boyd that Birmingham DEA had received “a cell phone GPS [global positioning
    system] location of [Mr. Medina‟s] phone and [that] it placed [Mr. Medina] on Dugger
    Road in Culleoka.” In his affidavit, Trooper Boyd stated that Son “was found at this
    same location during the surveillance that took place on March 16, 2012.”
    The next day, April 3, 2012, a federal magistrate judge authorized the GPS
    tracking of Son‟s telephone number, and GPS tracking that same day placed Son on
    Remuda Circle in Smyrna, Tennessee. Trooper Boyd traveled to Remuda Circle and
    observed Son‟s white Nissan Titan truck in the driveway.
    On April 4, 2012, Trooper Boyd returned to Remuda Circle at approximately
    12:46 p.m., because GPS had placed Son‟s telephone there, but the white Nissan Titan
    truck was not at the residence. At approximately 1:30 p.m., Trooper Boyd observed the
    vehicle pull into the driveway and saw a white female exit the vehicle and enter the
    residence via the garage. Ten minutes later, Trooper Boyd saw the white female and Son
    exit the residence and enter the vehicle, with the female driving and Son in the passenger
    seat. About two hours later, the vehicle returned to Remuda Circle and backed into the
    -8-
    garage. Trooper Boyd observed Son exit from the driver‟s side and a teenage male exit
    from the passenger side. Both entered the residence via the garage.
    The next day, April 5, 2012, Trooper Boyd obtained an order from a Tennessee
    trial judge to intercept and monitor calls to a phone number Son used. On April 11, 2012,
    Trooper Boyd intercepted a call between Mr. Medina and Son, in which Son indicated
    that the “wood” was “157” instead of “170.” Mr. Medina assured Son that he and his
    boss would give Son credit for the difference, and Son indicated that he should receive
    credit for the difference between 157 and “170,” as well as “three” from another time.
    Based on his experience and training, Trooper Boyd interpreted “wood” as
    referring to “marijuana” and believed that Son was telling Mr. Medina he had paid for
    170 pounds of marijuana but had received only 157 pounds and that Mr. Medina‟s
    response was assuring Son that he and his boss would credit Son for the shortages on the
    next delivery. Trooper Boyd stated that during this conversation with Mr. Medina—and
    thirty minutes before and after it—GPS tracking had placed Son‟s phone on Remuda
    Circle in Smyrna. Trooper Boyd believed that, when this conversation occurred, Son had
    “just finished weighing the marijuana received from the delivery on April 2, 2012.”
    Based on the above facts, Trooper Boyd stated in his affidavit his conclusion that
    Son was “utilizing 4571 Dugger Road, Culleoka, Tennessee to further his drug trafficking
    activities.” Trooper Boyd based this conclusion “specifically on intercepted calls and
    surveillance of [Son] that establish that [Son] utilized 4571 Dugger Road, Culleoka,
    Tennessee on March 16, 2012 and April 2, 2012 to receive shipments of marijuana in
    excess of 100 pounds from BIATO JARAMILLO AND CLETO MEDINA.”                            In
    paragraph eighteen of the fifty-two-paragraph affidavit, Trooper Boyd stated: “As further
    described below [Son] used this residence on March 16, 2012 and April 2, 2012 to off
    load shipments of marijuana in excess of 100 pounds.” However, nowhere in the
    affidavit did Trooper Boyd state that he, or any other law enforcement officer, had
    actually witnessed the offloading of drugs or Son receiving drugs at the 4571 Dugger
    Road property.
    Trooper Boyd also based his conclusion that evidence of drug trafficking would be
    found on the 4571 Dugger Road property on his own experience and training, gained
    from executing numerous search warrants in drug trafficking investigations and attending
    numerous training workshops and seminars, taught by both the DEA and private
    organizations. From this experience and training, Trooper Boyd had learned several
    “habits, characteristics, and practices of drug traffickers,” including, among others, the
    following:
    a.     Drug traffickers very often place their assets derived from their
    criminal activities in names of other persons or corporate entities other than
    their own names, or they will use false names and identities in order to
    -9-
    avoid detection of these assets by law enforcement agencies so as to avoid
    forfeiture of the same.
    b.     Drug dealers actually own and continue to use such assets derived
    from criminal activities and exercise dominion and control over this
    property, though it may be titled or recorded in the names of others.
    c.    Drug dealers who purchase larger amounts of controlled substances
    must maintain and have access to large amounts of cash in order to
    maintain and finance their on-going narcotics business.
    ....
    e.     Drug dealers very often will hide contraband, proceeds of drug sales
    and records of drug transactions in secure location[s] such as their own
    residences, locations which they control but which are titled in the names of
    others, residences of others who are participants in or aiders and abettors of
    the drug conspiracy, their businesses, and bank safe deposit boxes to
    conceal them from law enforcement officials.
    ....
    B. Suppression Hearing
    At the pretrial suppression hearing, the defendant argued that the affidavit failed to
    establish probable cause because it lacked sufficient facts to establish a nexus between
    the drugs and the defendantʼs residence on the 4571 Dugger Road property. The
    defendant insisted that the allegations of the affidavit actually indicated that the drugs
    were located at Son‟s Smyrna Remuda Circle residence. Furthermore, the defendant
    alleged that the facts aimed at establishing a nexus between the drugs and his residence
    on the 4571 Dugger Road property were stale, consisting only of the defendant‟s ten-
    year-old charges and convictions (including the search of the property preceding them)
    and Trooper Boyd‟s statement that, on two prior occasions, the most recent being three
    weeks before officers applied for the warrant, Son had allegedly used the property to
    receive shipments of drugs from agents of the DTO.
    In addition to challenging the facial sufficiency of the affidavit, the defendant
    attempted to impeach the affidavit by arguing that paragraphs eighteen and thirty-seven
    of the affidavit contained false information. In particular, the defendant claimed that
    paragraph eighteen falsely implied that Trooper Boyd, or another officer, had witnessed
    the offloading of marijuana in excess of 100 pounds at the defendant‟s “residence” on
    March 16 and April 2. The defendant pointed to the following statement in paragraph
    eighteen as supporting this claim: “As further described below [Son] used this residence
    - 10 -
    on March 16, 2012 and April 2, 2012 to off load shipments of marijuana in excess of 100
    pounds.” (Emphasis added.) The defendant also attacked the following portion of
    paragraph thirty-seven as false:
    At approximately 4:20 p.m. [Birmingham DEA Special Agent Shawn
    Steven] advised me [Trooper Boyd] that they received a cell phone GPS
    location of [Mr. Medina‟s] phone and it placed him on Dugger Road in
    Culleoka, Tennessee. [Special Agent] Steven was able to provide the
    numeric for that GPS query, they are as follows: 35.47379, -87.02369, the
    GPS location placed [Mr. Medina] on Dugger Road at 4:24 p.m. on April 2,
    2012. As described earlier in this affidavit [Son] was found at this same
    location during the surveillance that took place on March 16, 2012. Also as
    described earlier in this affidavit the 20th Judicial Drug Task Force
    executed a search warrant at 4571 Dugger Road, Culleoka, TN in
    connection with their investigation in 2000. During the search $112,000.00
    in cash was seized from the residence which at the time belonged to [Son‟s]
    father.
    According to the defendant, this statement falsely implied that the GPS coordinates
    placed Mr. Medina in the driveway of the defendant‟s mobile home, which was the
    “location” at which Son‟s vehicle was seen parked on March 16, 2012.
    To substantiate his assertion that paragraph thirty-seven contained false
    information, the defendant called Ben Sellers to testify at the suppression hearing. Mr.
    Sellers owned C.T.S., a company specializing in providing equipment to business clients
    which allows them to track the GPS whereabouts of their vehicles. Mr. Sellers said his
    company‟s equipment is accurate to within five meters. Using his company‟s equipment
    and his cell phone, Mr. Sellers visited the GPS coordinates listed in paragraph thirty-
    seven of the affidavit. He testified that these coordinates referred to a specific point on
    an unmarked dirt road, approximately 120 to 140 yards from the defendant‟s residence on
    the 4571 Dugger Road property but only fifty feet from a neighbor‟s house located at
    4585 Dugger Road. Mr. Sellers acknowledged, however, that the property to which the
    GPS coordinates referred was included in the nearly six-acre tract constituting the 4571
    Dugger Road property, for which the search warrant was issued.
    Nevertheless, Mr. Sellers stated that the driveway of the defendant‟s residence,
    where officers saw Son‟s truck parked on March 16th, would have different GPS
    coordinates than those listed in paragraph thirty-seven. But, Mr. Sellers conceded that,
    when the GPS coordinates listed in paragraph thirty-seven were typed into Google Maps,
    an internet service, Google Maps returned the location of the coordinates as 4571 Dugger
    Road, the address associated with the defendant‟s residence and the property for which
    the search warrant was issued.
    - 11 -
    Trooper Boyd also testified at the suppression hearing. He clarified that, while he
    had stated in paragraph thirty-seven that the GPS coordinates “placed [Mr. Medina] on
    Dugger Road . . . [and as] described earlier in this affidavit[,] [Son] was found at this
    same location . . . on March 16, 2012,” he had not meant “that it was at the exact same
    location that [Son‟s] truck was parked . . . . It was in the same area there, . . . [the] same
    location that he was seen at on March 16th.” Trooper Boyd acknowledged that the
    wording of the paragraph could have been more precise, could have specified that law
    enforcement officers had observed Son‟s truck parked in the driveway of the defendant‟s
    residence only after the suspected drug transfer had occurred, and could have provided a
    fuller explanation of the GPS coordinates. Trooper Boyd explained that he had failed to
    be more precise because he was “just tired.” Trooper Boyd reiterated that Google had
    returned the location of the GPS coordinates listed in paragraph thirty-seven as 4571
    Dugger Road.
    Trooper Boyd confirmed that neither he nor any other agent witnessed a drug
    transaction or transfer at the 4571 Dugger Road property. He described his use of the
    word “residenceˮ in paragraph eighteen as “probably miswording, more than anything”
    and emphasized that the statement reflected his belief, based on the available evidence,
    not his first hand observation, that Son was using the property to transfer drugs. He
    agreed that he should have used the more general word “property” instead of “residence.”
    Nevertheless, Trooper Boyd maintained that he had neither intentionally included false
    information in the affidavit nor attempted to mislead the judge into issuing the warrant.
    DEA Special Agent Shawn Steven also testified at the suppression hearing. He
    explained that, after learning from Trooper Boyd that officers were not able to maintain
    surveillance on Son and Mr. Medina for fear of being discovered, he had asked Sprint,
    pursuant to a warrant, to ping Mr. Medina‟s cell phone. Upon his request, Sprint sent a
    signal—a ping—to Mr. Medina‟s cell phone, which returned the latitude and longitude
    coordinates of the phone‟s location at the moment it was pinged. DEA Special Agent
    Steven explained that the accuracy of pinged locations varies from five meters to 1,000
    meters. Sprint informed Special Agent Steven that the pinged location of Mr. Medina‟s
    phone was accurate to within forty-one meters or 123 feet. Special Agent Steven
    understood that the coordinates referred to a location on Dugger Road and that both the
    defendant‟s property and a neighbor‟s property were within the forty-one-meter accuracy
    range, but that neither the exact coordinates nor the forty-one-meter accuracy range
    included the defendant‟s mobile home and driveway. Special Agent Steven shared the
    - 12 -
    GPS information with Trooper Boyd, who included the coordinates in his affidavit.
    Special Agent Steven acknowledged that it would be false to state that the ping of Mr.
    Medina‟s phone on April 2, 2012, occurred at exactly the same location where Son‟s
    truck was parked on March 16, 2012, because they were two different locations.
    Lieutenant William Doelle8 of the Maury County Sheriff‟s Department, who was
    present on April 24, 2012, when the search warrant was executed, also testified at the
    suppression hearing. He stated that the 4571 Dugger Road property consisted of
    approximately six acres and that the defendant‟s residence was situated near the road and
    a dirt path that ran along the back of the property. He confirmed that the GPS
    coordinates for Mr. Medina‟s phone were located on the 4571 Dugger Road property,
    although the coordinates did not refer to the defendant‟s residence. Lieutenant Doelle
    stated that the defendant‟s residence was not visible from the location of the GPS
    coordinates.
    After considering the testimony presented at the suppression hearing, the trial
    court denied the motion to suppress. The trial court concluded that paragraph thirty-
    seven did not contain false information. Given the range of accuracy of the GPS
    coordinates and the proof showing that Google had returned the location of the GPS
    coordinates as 4571 Dugger Road, the trial court “[was] inclined to grant some leniency
    relative to the [GPS] location of [the] [d]efendant‟s residence, and [found] that the
    [a]ffidavit otherwise describe[d] with sufficient particularity the location of the residence
    and the property to be searched.” As for paragraph eighteen, however, the trial court
    found that the statement, “[a]s further described below [Son] used [the defendant‟s]
    residence . . . on March 16, 2012[,] and April 2, 2012[,] to off[-]load shipments of
    marijuana in excess of 100 pounds,” was “false.” The trial court explained:
    Affiant, Trooper Shawn Boyd, . . . testified as follows: “I saw [Son‟s] . . .
    truck only on March 16, 2012[,] in the driveway of the trailer—pulled in
    behind the trailer.” Therefore, on that day only, March 16, 2012, he merely
    saw [Son‟s] truck pulled in behind the trailer on [the defendant‟s] property.
    The [a]ffidavit stated that further information would be included as to
    criminal activity [that] occurred on April 2, 2012[,] and March 16, 2012.
    8
    Lieutenant Doelle‟s surname is not spelled consistently in the record on appeal; however, this
    opinion uses the spelling that appears in the affidavit submitted in support of the forfeiture warrant, which
    Lieutenant Doelle signed.
    - 13 -
    There is nothing else in the [a]ffidavit relative to these dates and specific
    criminal activity actually observed on [the defendant‟s] property. Trooper
    Boyd testified that this was a “simple mistake.” There is nothing in the
    [a]ffidavit and there is no testimony of any marijuana or other narcotics
    being delivered, loaded[,] or off-loaded at [the defendant‟s address].
    Nevertheless, the trial court concluded that the false statement had not been made
    “with intent to deceive the [c]ourt” and, while important, the trial court could not “say it
    [was] a false statement „essential to the establishment of probable cause, recklessly
    made.‟” The trial court considered the “other facts and statements” in the affidavit,
    “including what else happened on March 16, 2012 and April 2, 2012,” and concluded that
    the affidavit had sufficiently established “a nexus between the criminal activity and [the
    defendant‟s] property,” and that the affidavit sufficiently established probable cause. The
    trial court explained:
    the specifics of the intercepted phone calls and information from wire taps
    from Texas to Alabama to Tennessee, and information received from the
    investigation of a drug trafficking operation based in Texas, involving
    [Son]; the surveillance of [Mr.] Medina and [Mr.] Biato traveling from
    Alabama to Tennessee and then to Columbia, exiting at 373 (Culleoka
    Highway), then meeting up with [Son]; the [a]ffiant‟s statement that he
    drove by [the defendant‟s] residence and located [Son‟s] Nissan Titan there
    on the morning of March 16, 2012, after surveillance was unable to be
    maintained, then observed [Son] pull onto Highway 373, then Highway 50
    and onto I-65; the GPS ping of [Mr.] Medina‟s phone on April 2, 2012,
    placing him on Dugger Road; the fact that [a]ffiant was familiar with the
    exact location of [the defendant‟s] residence through the 2000
    investigation; and the fact that the exact location of [the defendant‟s]
    residence is correctly described with great particularity, despite the wrong
    GPS numerics.
    As a result of these findings, the trial court denied the motion to suppress.
    A majority of the Court of Criminal Appeals reversed and concluded that the
    search warrant affidavit failed to establish a sufficient nexus between the defendant‟s
    residence and criminal activity, failed to establish the basis of knowledge and credibility
    of the information provided by Mr. Davis, an informant from the criminal milieu, and
    contained recklessly made false statements essential to establishing probable cause. State
    v. Tuttle, No. M2014-00566-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2015 WL 5251990
    , at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    Sept. 8, 2015).
    - 14 -
    C. Analysis
    1. Standards of Review
    Familiar standards govern our review of suppression issues. We uphold the trial
    court‟s findings of fact, unless the evidence preponderates against them. State v. Bell,
    
    429 S.W.3d 524
    , 528 (Tenn. 2014) (citing State v. Climer, 
    400 S.W.3d 537
    , 556 (Tenn.
    2013); State v. Day, 
    263 S.W.3d 891
    , 900 (Tenn. 2008)). “Questions of credibility of the
    witnesses, the weight and value of the evidence, and resolution of conflicts in the
    evidence are matters entrusted to the trial judge as the trier of fact.” State v. Odom, 
    928 S.W.2d 18
    , 23 (Tenn. 1996). The party prevailing in the trial court “is entitled to the
    strongest legitimate view of the evidence adduced at the suppression hearing as well as
    all reasonable and legitimate inferences that may be drawn from [the] evidence.” 
    Bell, 429 S.W.3d at 529
    (citing State v. Echols, 
    382 S.W.3d 266
    , 277 (Tenn. 2012); 
    Day, 263 S.W.3d at 900
    ; 
    Odom, 928 S.W.2d at 23
    )). The application of law to facts is reviewed de
    novo, and the appellate court is not obliged to afford a presumption of correctness to the
    lower court‟s conclusions of law. State v. Walton, 
    41 S.W.3d 75
    , 81 (Tenn. 2001) (citing
    State v. Crutcher, 
    989 S.W.2d 295
    , 299 (Tenn. 1999); State v. Yeargan, 
    958 S.W.2d 626
    ,
    629 (Tenn. 1997)).
    An appellate court considering whether probable cause supported issuance of a
    search warrant, “may consider only the affidavit and may not consider other evidence
    provided to or known by the issuing magistrate or possessed by the affiant.” State v.
    Henning, 
    975 S.W.2d 290
    , 295 (Tenn. 1998); see also 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 432
    . The
    reviewing court‟s standard is whether the evidence viewed as a whole provided the
    magistrate with “a substantial basis for concluding that a search warrant would uncover
    evidence of wrongdoing.” 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 432
    (citing 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 236
    ;
    
    Spinelli, 393 U.S. at 419
    ).
    2. Probable Cause and the Preference for Warrants
    Under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution9 and article I,
    section 7 of the Tennessee Constitution10 search warrants may not be issued unless a
    9
    The Fourth Amendment, which applies to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment, see
    Mapp v. Ohio, 
    367 U.S. 643
    , 655 (1961), provides:
    - 15 -
    neutral and detached magistrate determines that probable cause exists for their issuance.
    
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 240
    ; 
    Henning, 975 S.W.2d at 294
    ; 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 431
    .
    “„Articulating precisely what probable cause means is not possible.‟” State v. Reynolds,
    
    504 S.W.3d 283
    , 300 (Tenn. 2016) (quoting Ornelas v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 690
    , 695
    1996) (quotation marks and alterations omitted)). “Probable cause is more than a mere
    suspicion but less than absolute certainty.” 
    Id. (internal citations
    and quotation marks
    omitted). “[T]he strength of the evidence necessary to establish probable cause . . . is
    significantly less than the strength of evidence necessary to find a defendant guilty
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Bishop, 
    431 S.W.3d 22
    , 41 (Tenn. 2014); see also
    Brinegar v. United States, 
    338 U.S. 160
    , 174 (1949) (discussing the differences between
    the probable cause standard and the standard for proving guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt). Probable cause, as its name implies, deals with probabilities. 
    Brinegar, 338 U.S. at 175
    ; 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 432
    . “These [probabilities] are not technical; they are the
    factual and practical considerations of everyday life on which reasonable and prudent
    men, not legal technicians, act.” 
    Brinegar, 338 U.S. at 175
    ; see also 
    Reynolds, 504 S.W.3d at 300
    (recognizing that the probable cause standard is practical and
    nontechnical).
    “Determinations of probable cause are extremely fact-dependent.” 
    Bell, 429 S.W.3d at 534-35
    (citing Ker v. California, 
    374 U.S. 23
    , 33 (1963)). Reviewing courts
    afford “great deference” to a magistrate‟s determination that probable cause exists.
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,
    against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall
    issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly
    describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
    U.S. Const. amend. IV.
    10
    Article I, section 7 provides:
    That the people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and possessions,
    from unreasonable searches and seizures; and that general warrants, whereby an officer
    may be commanded to search suspected places, without evidence of the fact committed,
    or to seize any person or persons not named, whose offences are not particularly
    described and supported by evidence, are dangerous to liberty and ought not to be
    granted.
    Tenn. Const. art. I, § 7.
    - 16 -
    
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 431
    -32; see also State v. Saine, 
    297 S.W.3d 199
    , 207 (Tenn.
    2009) (reiterating that appellate courts should afford deference to a magistrate‟s
    determination). “[I]n a doubtful or marginal case a search under a warrant may be
    sustainable where without one it would fall.” United States v. Ventresca, 
    380 U.S. 102
    ,
    106 (1965).
    The point of the Fourth Amendment . . . is not that it denies law
    enforcement the support of the usual inferences which reasonable men draw
    from evidence. Its protection consists in requiring that those inferences be
    drawn by a neutral and detached magistrate instead of being judged by the
    officer engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.
    
    Ventresca, 380 U.S. at 106
    (quoting Johnson v. United States, 
    333 U.S. 10
    , 13-14
    (1948)).
    3. The Role of and Requirements for Search Warrant Affidavits
    In Tennessee, probable cause for issuance of a warrant is established by presenting
    “a sworn and written affidavit” to the magistrate. 
    Saine, 297 S.W.3d at 205-06
    ; see also
    
    Henning, 975 S.W.2d at 294
    ; 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 432
    . “To ensure that the
    magistrate exercises independent judgment, the affidavit must contain more than mere
    conclusory allegations by the affiant.” 
    Henning, 975 S.W.2d at 294
    . The affidavit must
    include facts from which the neutral and detached magistrate may determine, upon
    examining the affidavit in a commonsense and practical manner, whether probable cause
    exists. State v. Smotherman, 
    201 S.W.3d 657
    , 662 (Tenn. 2006); 
    Henning, 975 S.W.2d at 294
    . When the affidavit seeks to establish probable cause for a search warrant, it must
    “set forth facts from which a reasonable conclusion might be drawn that the evidence is
    in the place to be searched.” State v. Smith, 
    868 S.W.2d 561
    , 572 (Tenn. 1993). In other
    words, the affidavit must demonstrate a nexus between the criminal activity, the place to
    be searched, and the items to be seized. 
    Saine, 297 S.W.3d at 206
    (citing State v. Reid,
    
    91 S.W.3d 247
    , 273 (Tenn. 2002); 
    Smith, 868 S.W.2d at 572
    ). “The nexus between the
    place to be searched and the items to be seized may be established by the type of crime,
    the nature of the items, and the normal inferences where a criminal would hide the
    evidence.” 
    Smith, 868 S.W.2d at 572
    .
    Additionally, in determining whether the nexus has been sufficiently established,
    courts may “„consider whether the criminal activity under investigation was an isolated
    event or a protracted pattern of conduct[,] . . . the nature of the property sought, the
    normal inferences as to where a criminal would hide the evidence, and the perpetrator‟s
    opportunity to dispose of incriminating evidence.‟” 
    Saine, 297 S.W.3d at 206
    (quoting
    
    Reid, 91 S.W.3d at 275
    ). Although a nexus between the place to be searched and the
    items to be seized must be established, unlike an affidavit in support of an arrest warrant,
    an affidavit seeking issuance of a search warrant need not implicate a particular person in
    - 17 -
    the crime under investigation. See Zurcher v. The Stanford Daily, 
    436 U.S. 547
    , 556
    (1978); United States v. Burney, 
    778 F.3d 536
    , 540 (6th Cir. 2015).
    “The time of the occurrence of the facts relied upon by the affiant is [also] a prime
    element in establishing probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant. If the
    information contained in the affidavit is too old, it is considered stale” and will be
    insufficient to establish probable cause. W. Mark Ward, Tennessee Criminal Trial
    Practice, § 4.11 (2016-17 ed.) [hereinafter Tennessee Criminial Trial Practice]; see also
    Everett v. State, 
    184 S.W.2d 43
    , 45 (Tenn. 1944); Welchance v. State, 
    114 S.W.2d 781
    ,
    782 (Tenn. 1938). Nevertheless, there is no hard and fast rule defining staleness, and
    “[w]hen the illegal activity described is ongoing, courts have generally held that [an]
    affidavit does not become stale with the passage of time.” State v. Thomas, 
    818 S.W.2d 350
    , 357 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991); see also State v. Norris, 
    47 S.W.3d 457
    , 470-71
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000); State v. McCary, 
    119 S.W.3d 226
    , 249 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    2003).
    An affidavit may include information that would not be admissible as evidence in
    a criminal trial, 
    Brinegar, 338 U.S. at 172-73
    , and an affidavit need not reflect the direct
    personal observations of the affiant. 
    Henning, 975 S.W.2d at 294
    ; 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 432
    . The reliability of hearsay information included in an affidavit is evaluated
    differently, however, depending upon its source. State v. Williams, 
    193 S.W.3d 502
    , 507
    (Tenn. 2006). If the source of the information is a law enforcement officer, “[n]o special
    showing of reliability is necessary.” 
    Smotherman, 201 S.W.3d at 663
    (citing 
    Ventresca, 380 U.S. at 111
    ). But this presumption of reliability applies only if the affidavit states
    that the “information [was] provided by other officers.” 
    Id. (citing United
    States v. Kirk,
    
    781 F.2d 1498
    , 1505 (11th Cir. 1986)). A presumption of reliability also applies to
    citizen informants, so long as the affidavit identifies the source of the information as a
    citizen informant. 
    Williams, 193 S.W.3d at 507
    .
    By contrast, no presumption of reliability applies to information supplied by an
    unknown informant or an informant from the “criminal milieu.” 
    Smotherman, 201 S.W.3d at 662
    (citing 
    Williams, 193 S.W.3d at 507
    ; 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 436
    ). In
    such circumstances, the affidavit must establish both the criminal informant‟s basis of
    knowledge and his or her veracity or credibility. 
    Williams, 193 S.W.3d at 507
    (citing
    
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 436
    ; State v. Cauley, 
    863 S.W.2d 411
    , 417 (Tenn. 1993)).
    This two-pronged test derives from two United States Supreme Court decisions—
    Aguilar v. Texas, 
    378 U.S. 108
    (1964) and Spinelli v. United States, 
    393 U.S. 410
    (1969).
    However, in 1983 the United States Supreme Court abandoned the Aguilar/Spinelli test
    and adopted a totality-of-the-circumstances analysis for determining whether an affidavit
    that includes information from a criminal informant establishes probable cause. 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 238-39
    . Six years after Gates, however, this Court declined to follow Gates
    and chose to retain the Aguilar/Spinelli test as a matter of Tennessee constitutional law.
    - 18 -
    
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 436
    . In the order granting the State‟s application for permission
    to appeal in this case, we directed the parties to brief and argue the issue of “whether this
    Court should revisit the continuing vitality of State v. Jacumin, 
    778 S.W.2d 430
    (Tenn.
    1989).” We now take this opportunity to do so.
    4. Aguilar/Spinelli Analysis vs. Gates Analysis
    In Aguilar, the United States Supreme Court held that the magistrate reviewing a
    search warrant affidavit “must be informed of some of the underlying circumstances from
    which the informant concluded that the narcotics were where he claimed they were, and
    some of the underlying circumstances from which the officer concluded that the
    informant, whose identity need not be disclosed . . . was „credible‟ or his information
    
    „reliable.‟” 378 U.S. at 114
    . Five years later, in Spinelli, the Supreme Court reiterated
    these requirements, but added that these prongs could be established through
    corroborating 
    evidence. 393 U.S. at 415-16
    . Therefore, under the Aguilar/Spinelli test
    the affidavit must include facts from which the magistrate may determine the informant‟s
    “basis of knowledge” and “veracity” or credibility, and if the information provided fails
    to establish either prong, corroborating evidence may make up the deficit. 
    Aguilar, 378 U.S. at 114
    ; 
    Spinelli, 393 U.S. at 415-16
    ; 
    Smotherman, 201 S.W.3d at 662
    ; 
    Cauley, 863 S.W.2d at 417
    ; 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 432
    , 436.
    The first prong of the Aguilar/Spinelli test—“„basis of knowledge‟ . . . is
    concerned with the question, „How did the informant get the information?‟ Its purpose is
    to prevent warrants from being issued based on conjecture or rumors. Generally
    speaking, facts and circumstances indicating that the information came from an informant
    who had obtained the information first[-] hand or by personal observation will satisfy this
    prong.” Tennessee Criminal Trial Practice at § 4:10. This prong may also be satisfied
    when the informant provides “highly detailed” information “such that the magistrate
    could know that the informant was relating something more than casual rumor or
    reputation.” 
    Id. The second
    prong of the test, veracity or credibility, “may be satisfied
    either by (1) demonstrating the informant‟s credibility or (2) by showing that the
    information is reliable.” 
    Id. In other
    words, “the affiant must provide some concrete
    reason why the magistrate should believe the informant,” although the “requisite volume
    or detail of information needed to establish the informant‟s credibility is not particularly
    great.” State v. Lowe, 
    949 S.W.2d 300
    , 305 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996). Nevertheless,
    “each prong represents an independently important consideration that must be separately
    considered and satisfied or supplemented in some way.” 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 436
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also 
    Smotherman, 201 S.W.3d at 662
    (recognizing that each prong must be separately satisfied to establish probable
    cause).
    - 19 -
    The Gates Court rejected the proposition (embraced by Jacumin) “that these
    elements should be understood as entirely separate and independent requirements to be
    rigidly exacted in every case . . . .” 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 230-31
    & nn.5-6. The Gates Court
    held that Aguilar and Spinelli had been misinterpreted and applied in an overly rigid
    fashion. The Supreme Court declared that “[r]igid legal rules” are “ill-suited” to evaluate
    informants‟ tips, which, “„like all other clues and evidence coming to a policeman on the
    scene[,] may vary greatly in their value and reliability.‟” 
    Id. at 232
    (quoting Adams v.
    Williams, 
    407 U.S. 143
    , 147 (1972)). The Gates Court commented that the
    Aguilar/Spinelli test “ha[d] encouraged an excessively technical dissection of informants‟
    tips, with undue attention being focused on isolated issues that cannot sensibly be
    divorced from the other facts presented to the magistrate.” 
    Id. at 234-35.
    The Gates Court theorized that “the type of scrutiny some courts ha[d] deemed
    appropriate” under the Aguilar/Spinelli test could actually discourage police officers from
    attempting to obtain warrants and encourage them to “resort to warrantless searches, with
    the hope of relying on consent or some other exception to the warrant clause that might
    develop at the time of the search.” 
    Id. at 236.
    As a result, the Gates Court posited that
    the Aguilar/Spinelli test had served to frustrate the Court‟s preference for the warrant
    process, which was reflected in the standard of appellate review—whether the magistrate
    had a substantial basis for concluding that a search would uncover evidence of
    wrongdoing. 
    Id. “The rigorous
    inquiry” and “complex superstructure of evidentiary and
    analytical rules” that had developed around the two-pronged test could not be reconciled
    with the reality that “many warrants are—quite properly—issued on the basis of
    nontechnical, commonsense judgments of laymen applying a standard less demanding
    than those used in more formal legal proceedings.” 
    Id. at 235-36
    (internal citations
    omitted).
    The Gates Court also opined that the Aguilar/Spinelli test, when applied rigidly,
    “poorly serve[d]” the government‟s most basic function of providing for the security of
    individual citizens and property because an “anonymous tip seldom could survive a
    rigorous application” of the two-pronged test, even though “such tips, particularly when
    supplemented by independent police investigation, frequently contribute to the solution
    of otherwise „perfect crimes.‟” 
    Id. at 237-38.
    “While a conscientious assessment of the
    basis for crediting such tips is required by the Fourth Amendment, a standard that leaves
    virtually no place for anonymous citizen informants is not.” 
    Id. at 238.
    The Gates Court emphasized, however, “that an informant‟s „veracity,‟
    „reliability‟ and „basis of knowledge‟” remain “highly relevant in determining the value
    of his report” under the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis but “should be understood
    simply as closely intertwined issues that may usefully illuminate the commonsense,
    practical question whether there is „probable cause‟ to believe that contraband or
    evidence is located in a particular place.” 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 230
    .
    - 20 -
    The task of the issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical,
    commonsense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the
    affidavit before him, 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. And
    the duty of a reviewing court is simply to ensure that the magistrate had a
    substantial basis for concluding that probable cause existed.
    
    Id. at 238-39
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The Gates Court was
    “convinced that this flexible, easily applied standard” would “better achieve the
    accommodation of public and private interests” required by the Fourth Amendment. 
    Id. at 239.
    Nevertheless, the Gates Court cautioned that, “[s]ufficient information must be
    presented to the magistrate to allow that official to determine probable cause; his action
    cannot be a mere ratification of the bare conclusions of others. In order to ensure that
    such an abdication of the magistrate‟s duty does not occur,” the Gates Court reiterated
    that courts should conscientiously review affidavits and strike as insufficient “„bare
    bones‟ affidavits” containing conclusions rather than facts. 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 239
    . The
    Gates Court emphasized “the value of corroboration of details of an informant‟s tip by
    independent police work” to the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis, 
    id. at 241,
    and did
    not discount the value of corroboration of innocent conduct, explaining, “[i]t is enough,
    for purposes of assessing probable cause, that „corroboration through other sources of
    information reduced the chances of a reckless or prevaricating tale,‟ thus providing „a
    substantial basis for crediting the hearsay.‟” 
    Id. at 244-45
    (quoting Jones v. United
    States, 
    362 U.S. 269
    , 271 (1960)).
    5. The Jacumin Decision
    In declining six years later to follow Gates, the Jacumin Court characterized the
    totality-of-the-circumstances test as “inadequate as a test of probable cause.” 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 435
    . The Jacumin Court conceded that “the task of the issuing magistrates
    and the duty of the reviewing court[s] . . . are the same under either the Gates standard or
    the Aguilar[/]Spinelli standard.” 
    Id. at 435
    n.2. Nevertheless, the Jacumin Court held that
    the Aguilar/Spinelli standard, “if not applied hypertechnically,” provides “a more
    appropriate structure for probable cause inquiries incident to the issuance of a search
    warrant than does Gates,” 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 436
    , and concluded that the
    Aguilar/Spinelli standard is “more in keeping with the specific requirement of [a]rticle I,
    [s]ection 7 of the Tennessee Constitution that a search warrant not issue „without
    evidence of the fact committed,‟” 
    id. (quoting Tenn.
    Const. art. I, § 7). The Jacumin
    Court acknowledged that article I, section 7 of the Tennessee Constitution had previously
    been interpreted as “identical in intent and purpose” with the Fourth Amendment and that
    the Court of Criminal Appeals had already applied Gates in several decisions. Jacumin,
    - 21 
    - 778 S.W.2d at 435
    . The Jacumin Court justified its decision to part company with Gates
    by referring to prior Tennessee decisions interpreting the open fields doctrine under the
    state constitution as “somewhat more restrictive than federal cases,” 
    id. (citing State
    v.
    Lakin, 
    588 S.W.2d 544
    , 549 (Tenn. 1979)), and by pointing out that courts in a few other
    states, specifically Alaska, Massachusetts, Washington, and New York, also had declined
    to adopt the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis on state constitutional law grounds,
    describing it as “unacceptably shapeless and permissive,” 
    id. at 435-36,
    and “nebulous,”
    
    id. at 436
    (internal quotations marks omitted). Nevertheless, in subsequent decisions
    applying the Aguilar/Spinelli standard, this Court, like the Gates Court, has emphasized
    the role of corroboration:
    The credibility of the informant‟s information may also be buttressed by
    independent corroboration of its details. However, it is not necessary to
    corroborate every detail of the informant‟s information, or to “directly link
    the suspect to the commission of the crime.” Corroboration of “only
    innocent aspects of the story” may suffice.
    
    Bishop, 431 S.W.3d at 38
    (quoting State v. Melson, 
    638 S.W.2d 342
    , 355 (Tenn. 1982))
    (internal citation omitted).
    6. Reconsideration of Jacumin
    The overwhelming majority of states now apply the Gates totality-of-the-
    circumstances analysis for determining whether an affidavit establishes probable cause
    for issuance of a search warrant.11 Indeed, Tennessee is one of only a handful of states
    11
    See State v. Clayton, 
    155 So. 3d 290
    , 295-96 (Ala. 2014); State v. McCall, 
    677 P.2d 920
    , 929
    n.2 (Ariz. 1983) (en banc); Thompson v. State, 
    658 S.W.2d 350
    , 352 (Ark. 1983); People v. Camarella,
    
    818 P.2d 63
    , 67-68 (Cal. 1991) (en banc); People v. Quintana, 
    785 P.2d 934
    , 938 (Colo. 1990) (en banc);
    State v. Barton, 
    594 A.2d 917
    , 926-27 (Conn. 1991); Gardner v. State, 
    567 A.2d 404
    , 409 (Del. 1989);
    State v. Butler, 
    655 So. 2d 1123
    , 1125 (Fla. 1995); State v. Stephens, 
    311 S.E.2d 823
    , 826 (Ga. 1984);
    State v. Lang, 
    672 P.2d 561
    , 562 (Idaho 1983); People v. Tisler, 
    469 N.E.2d 147
    , 157 (Ill. 1984); State v.
    Bousman, 
    387 N.W.2d 605
    , 610 (Iowa 1986), subsequently modified by statute as explained in State v.
    Myers, 
    570 N.W.2d 70
    , 73-74 (Iowa 1997); State v. Abu-Isba, 
    685 P.2d 856
    , 860 (Kan. 1984); Beemer v.
    Commonwealth, 
    665 S.W.2d 912
    , 915 (Ky. 1984); State v. Ruffin, 
    448 So. 2d 1274
    , 1278 (La. 1984);
    State v. Knowlton, 
    489 A.2d 529
    , 533 (Me. 1985); Potts v. State, 
    479 A.2d 1335
    , 1340 (Md. 1984);
    People v. Levine, 
    600 N.W.2d 622
    , 626, 629 (Mich. 1999); State v. Zanter, 
    535 N.W.2d 624
    , 633 (Minn.
    1995); McCommon v. State, 
    467 So. 2d 940
    , 941 (Miss. 1985); State v. Hosier, 
    454 S.W.3d 883
    , 892 n.6,
    894 (Mo. 2015) (en banc); State v. Jensen, 
    704 P.2d 45
    , 47 (Mont. 1985); State v. Ildefonso, 634 N.W.2d
    - 22 -
    that still applies the two-pronged Aguilar/Spinelli test as a matter of state statutory or
    constitutional law.12 Having now reconsidered both tests, we conclude that the time has
    come to abandon the rigid Aguilar/Spinelli test and adopt the Gates totality-of-the-
    circumstances analysis.
    Overruling Jacumin and adopting the Gates totality-of-the-circumstances test is
    warranted for several reasons. First, the Aguilar/Spinelli test is often applied too rigidly.
    The decision of the intermediate appellate court in this appeal exemplifies the type of
    hypertechnical application that this Court warned against in Jacumin. For example, Mr.
    Davis, the criminal informant, described the DTO with which Son was involved,
    explained the basis of his own knowledge by admitting that he, too, had been involved
    with the same DTO, described the type and amount of drugs and the frequency of
    shipments to Son, identified Son from his driver‟s license photograph, provided law
    enforcement with Son‟s nickname, “Red,” described Son‟s vehicle, described the area
    where Son resided near Nashville, and stated that Son‟s whole family was involved in
    drug trafficking. Rather than seeking a search warrant based solely on the information
    Mr. Davis provided, law enforcement officials corroborated, in some fashion, almost
    every aspect of the information, including Mr. Davis‟s involvment with the DTO, the
    DTO‟s Tennessee client known as Red, the type of vehicle Son drove, the location of his
    residence, Son‟s meetings with agents of the DTO near the 4571 Dugger Road property,
    252, 261-62 (Neb. 2001); Barrett v. State, 
    775 P.2d 1276
    , 1277 (Nev. 1989); State v. Carroll, 
    552 A.2d 69
    , 73-74 (N.H. 1988); State v. Novembrino, 
    519 A.2d 820
    , 836 n.11 (N.J. 1987); State v. Hughes, 
    539 S.E.2d 625
    , 628 (N.C. 2000); State v. Ringquist, 
    433 N.W.2d 207
    , 212 (N.D. 1988); State v. George, 
    544 N.E.2d 640
    , 643-45 (Ohio 1989); Langham v. State, 
    787 P.2d 1279
    , 1280-81 (Okla. Crim. App. 1990);
    Commonwealth v. Gray, 
    503 A.2d 921
    , 925-26 (Pa. 1985); State v. Pratt, 
    641 A.2d 732
    , 736 (R.I. 1994);
    State v. Jones, 
    536 S.E.2d 675
    , 678-79 (S.C. 2000); State v. Raveydts, 
    691 N.W.2d 290
    , 293 (S.D. 2004);
    Green v. State, 
    736 S.W.2d 218
    , 219 (Tex. App. 1987); State v. Espinoza, 
    723 P.2d 420
    , 421 (Utah 1986);
    Derr v. Commonwealth, 
    410 S.E.2d 662
    , 666 (Va. 1991); State v. Adkins, 
    346 S.E.2d 762
    , 773-74 (W.
    Va. 1986); State v. Robinson, 
    786 N.W.2d 463
    , 471-72 n.11 (Wis. 2010); Bonsness v. State, 
    672 P.2d 1291
    , 1293 (Wyo. 1983).
    12
    State v. Jones, 
    706 P.2d 317
    , 322-24 (Alaska 1985); Carlisle ex rel. State v. Ten Thousand
    Four Hundred Forty-Seven Dollars in U.S. Currency ($10,447.00), 
    89 P.3d 823
    , 830 n.9 (Haw. 2004);
    Commonwealth v. Upton, 
    476 N.E.2d 548
    , 556 (Mass. 1985); State v. Cordova, 
    784 P.2d 30
    , 36 (N.M.
    1989); People v. DiFalco, 
    610 N.E.2d 352
    , 353 n.1 (N.Y. 1993); State v. Coffey, 
    788 P.2d 424
    , 426 n.4
    (Or. 1990); State v. Goldberg, 
    872 A.2d 378
    , 381 (Vt. 2005); State v. Jackson, 
    688 P.2d 136
    , 141-43
    (Wash. 1984) (en banc).
    - 23 -
    at which Son had previously concealed cash derived from the illegal drug trade, and even
    his family‟s previous involvement in Son‟s earlier drug trafficking activities.
    The intermediate appellate court majority correctly acknowledged that the
    affidavit was “replete” with corroboration of the information Mr. Davis provided
    implicating Son in drug trafficking activities, but it held the affidavit insufficient because
    it lacked facts connecting or implicating the defendant in Son‟s drug trafficking activities.
    In reaching this conclusion, the intermediate appellate court dissected and parsed Mr.
    Davis‟s statement and considered in isolation each aspect of the information, as well as
    the independent corroboration, searching for direct corroborating evidence of each detail,
    even though this Court has previously explained that it is not necessary to corroborate
    every detail of an informant‟s information. 
    Bishop, 431 S.W.3d at 38
    . The intermediate
    appellate court also apparently failed to recognize that information implicating the
    defendant in the underlying crime was not necessary to establish probable cause for
    issuance of a search warrant for a certain property, so long as the affidavit included facts
    establishing a nexus between the 4571 Dugger Road property and the drugs. See
    
    Zurcher, 436 U.S. at 556
    (“The critical element in a reasonable search is not that the
    owner of the property is suspected of crime but that 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.”)
    Second, unlike the Jacumin Court, we have the benefit of years of experience
    applying Jacumin and have had the opportunity to review numerous cases from other
    jurisdictions applying Gates. Time has proven that the totality-of-the-circumstances
    analysis is not inadequate or too nebulous as a test for determining probable cause.
    Under Gates, “an informant‟s „veracity,‟ „reliability,‟ and „basis of knowledge‟” remain
    “highly relevant in determining the value of his report,” 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 230
    . But by
    ensuring that these factors are not viewed as entirely separate prerequisites to probable
    cause, requiring rigid, formulistic, and technical analysis, Gates actually improves upon
    the Aguilar/Spinelli test. 
    Id. at 230-31.
    Moreover, as the Gates Court explained, the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis
    is much more consistent with the nontechnical, commonsense approach courts already
    apply when determining whether probable cause exists. 
    Id. Indeed, although
    the
    Jacumin Court retained the Aguilar/Spinelli test, it expressly embraced the manner in
    which the Gates Court described the role of the magistrate in assessing probable cause,
    
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 435
    n.2, and we have reaffirmed this standard as the governing
    law in Tennessee, see, e.g. 
    Saine, 297 S.W.3d at 206
    (stating that the task of the
    magistrate is to read the affidavit “in a commonsense and practical manner”); State v.
    Carter, 
    160 S.W.3d 526
    , 533 (Tenn. 2005) (same); 
    Henning, 975 S.W.2d at 294
    (same).
    - 24 -
    Finally, it is certainly true, as the Jacumin Court recognized, that this Court has
    the authority to interpret the Tennessee Constitution differently than the federal
    constitution and has recognized that textual differences between federal and state
    constitutional provisions may support doing so. State v. Watkins, 
    362 S.W.3d 530
    , 554-
    55 (Tenn. 2012); State v. Vineyard, 
    958 S.W.2d 730
    , 733-34 (Tenn. 1997). It is also true,
    as the Jacumin Court pointed out, that the text of article I, section 7 differs from the text
    of the Fourth Amendment by precluding issuance of a warrant “without evidence of the
    fact committed.” Tenn. Const. art. I, § 7. However, the Jacumin Court failed to
    recognize that the Fourth Amendment has also been interpreted as precluding issuance of
    a warrant unless facts, rather than conclusions, are presented to a magistrate to establish
    probable cause. See, e.g., Lo-Ji Sales, Inc. v. New York, 
    442 U.S. 319
    , 325 (1979)
    (finding search warrant affidavit containing only conclusory statements of the police
    investigator without supporting facts insufficient to establish probable cause under the
    Fourth Amendment). Indeed, the Gates Court expressly reaffirmed this principle, stating,
    “[s]ufficient information must be presented to the magistrate to allow that official to
    determine probable cause; his action cannot be a mere ratification of the bare conclusions
    of others.” 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 239
    . Therefore, over time the Fourth Amendment has
    been interpreted by federal courts in a manner that is entirely consistent with the text of
    article I, section 7.
    Ironically, despite concluding that the text of article I, section 7 required adoption
    of a test distinct from that applied under the Fourth Amendment, the test the Jacumin
    Court adopted as the appropriate standard for the Tennessee Constitution derived from
    decisions of the United States Supreme Court interpreting the Fourth Amendment. The
    Jacumin Court actually acknowledged that the test it adopted did not derive from any
    settled development of Tennessee constitutional law founded in the text of article I,
    section 7. 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 435
    (“[I]t is perhaps significant that amicus does not
    point to a settled development of state constitutional law in the area of probable cause to
    support a search warrant analogous to the „open fields‟ doctrine.”). The Jacumin Court
    also acknowledged that article I, section 7 had long been interpreted as “identical in
    intent and purpose” to the Fourth Amendment, with federal cases interpreting the Fourth
    Amendment regarded as particularly persuasive. 
    Jacumin, 778 S.W.2d at 435
    (citing
    Sneed v. State, 
    423 S.W.2d 857
    , 860 (Tenn. 1968)). We have recently reiterated these
    principles. See, e.g., State v. Willis, 
    496 S.W.3d 653
    , 719 (Tenn. 2016); State v. Davis,
    
    484 S.W.3d 138
    , 143 (Tenn. 2016). We are not convinced that the textual difference
    between article I, section 7 and the Fourth Amendment ever supported departing from
    these general principles.
    For all these reasons, we overrule Jacumin, insofar as it retained the
    Aguilar/Spinelli test, and adopt the Gates totality-of-the-circumstances analysis, which is,
    in our judgment and that of the vast majority of courts in other states, a sufficiently
    definite standard for assessing probable cause and much better suited to evaluating the
    practicalities that underlie the probable cause inquiry. We reiterate that, under the
    - 25 -
    totality-of-the-circumstances analysis, the informant‟s basis of knowledge and veracity or
    credibility remain highly relevant considerations. Rather than separate and independent
    considerations, they “should [now] be understood simply as closely intertwined issues
    that may usefully illuminate the commonsense, practical question whether there is
    „probable cause‟ to believe that contraband or evidence is located in a particular place.”
    
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 230
    . Thus, we will apply the Gates test to determine whether the
    affidavit sufficiently established probable cause for issuance of the warrant.
    7. False Information in the Affidavit
    Before applying the totality-of-the circumstances analysis in this case, we must
    first review the Court of Criminal Appealsʼ ruling that Trooper Boyd recklessly included
    false statements in paragraphs eighteen and thirty-seven of the affidavit. This ruling, if
    upheld, would require us to exclude the information in those paragraphs when assessing
    whether the affidavit sufficiently established probable cause.
    “[T]here are two circumstances that authorize the impeachment of an affidavit
    sufficient on its face[:] (1) a false statement made with intent to deceive the Court,
    whether material or immaterial to the issue of probable cause[;] and (2) a false statement,
    essential to the establishment of probable cause, recklessly made.” State v. Little, 
    560 S.W.2d 403
    , 407 (Tenn. 1978). “Allegations of negligence or innocent mistakes are
    insufficient to invalidate the search warrant.” State v. Yeomans, 
    10 S.W.3d 293
    , 297
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1999) (citing Franks v. Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
    , 171 (1978)). The
    defendant bears the burden of proving the allegation of falsity by a preponderance of the
    evidence. 
    Id. (citing Franks,
    438 U.S. at 156).
    As already noted, the defendant here alleged that false statements were included in
    paragraphs eighteen and thirty-seven of the affidavit. The trial court agreed with the
    defendant as to paragraph eighteen, concluding that the following statement in that
    paragraph falsely indicated that Trooper Boyd had observed the offloading of marijuana
    at the defendant‟s residence: “As further described below [Son] used this residence on
    March 16, 2012 and April 2, 2012 to off load shipments of marijuana in excess of 100
    pounds.” But the trial court concluded that Trooper Boyd‟s description of the GPS ping
    of Mr. Medina‟s cell phone as the same “location” where Son‟s truck had been observed
    three weeks earlier was not false. Furthermore, the trial court concluded that, while
    paragraph eighteen included a false statement, the statement had not been recklessly
    made and was not material to probable cause. The Court of Criminal Appeals disagreed,
    concluding that both statements were false, were recklessly made, and were material to
    establishing probable cause. We are of the opinion that neither statement was false.
    Nowhere in paragraph eighteen did Trooper Boyd state or imply that he, or anyone
    else, had observed the offloading of marijuana at the defendant‟s residence. Rather, he
    merely expressed his belief, “[a]s further described below” that Son “had used the
    - 26 -
    residence on March 16, 2012 and April 2, 2012 to off load shipments of marijuana in
    excess of 100 pounds.” Furthermore, in the portions of the affidavit that followed this
    statement of his belief, Trooper Boyd did not state, suggest, or imply that he or anyone
    else had actually observed drugs being offloaded on the property or at the defendant‟s
    residence. The magistrate was free to review the description Trooper Boyd provided and
    either agree or disagree with Trooper Boyd‟s belief regarding Son‟s use of the
    “residence” to offload drugs.
    During his testimony at the suppression hearing Trooper Boyd agreed that he
    should have used “property” rather than “residence” in paragraph eighteen, because he
    did not actually believe the drugs had been offloaded at the defendant‟s “residence.” We,
    too, believe “property” would have been a better word choice, given that the property in
    question comprised nearly six acres. However, “affidavits for search warrants . . . must
    be tested and interpreted by magistrates and courts in a commonsense and realistic
    fashion. They are normally drafted by nonlawyers in the midst and haste of a criminal
    investigation. Technical requirements of elaborate specificity . . . have no proper place in
    this arena.” 
    Ventresca, 380 U.S. at 108
    ; see also 
    Norris, 47 S.W.3d at 468
    (explaining
    that an affiant‟s words should be given their ordinary meaning and interpretation).
    Hypertechnical judicial review of affidavits “„tends to demean our system of justice and
    to weaken society‟s confidence in it.‟” 
    Bishop, 431 S.W.3d at 38
    (quoting State v. Moon,
    
    841 S.W.2d 336
    , 342 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992)). Tested against this standard, we have
    no hesitation in concluding that the language in paragraph eighteen, although admittedly
    imprecise and perhaps resulting from negligence, does not constitute a false statement.
    The same is true of the language in paragraph thirty-seven. As the trial court
    recognized, GPS has a range of accuracy. All of the testimony at the suppression hearing
    indicated that Google identified the location of the GPS coordinates listed in paragraph
    thirty-seven as 4571 Dugger Road. In reversing the trial court, the intermediate appellate
    court appears to have interpreted “location” in paragraph thirty-seven as denoting a
    particular spot on the driveway outside the defendant‟s residence where Son‟s truck had
    been observed three weeks earlier. This interpretation is simply overly technical and
    unrealistic. Trooper Boyd did not say that the GPS coordinates placed Mr. Medina‟s cell
    phone on the driveway where Son‟s vehicle was parked. He said only that the GPS ping
    placed it at the same “location” where the Son‟s vehicle had been seen three weeks
    earlier. The proof at the suppression hearing established that the GPS coordinates
    included in paragraph thirty-seven accurately reflected where the drug transaction
    occurred on the 4571 Dugger Road property. Accordingly, while the record establishes
    that Trooper Boyd could have chosen more precise language, it fails to establish that he
    recklessly included false information in the affidavit. At most, he made two innocent
    mistakes in wording the affidavit—mistakes that are typical when nonlawyers draft
    affidavits “in the midst and haste of a criminal investigation.” 
    Ventresca, 380 U.S. at 108
    . Having so concluded, we turn next to consider whether the affidavit sufficiently
    established probable cause.
    - 27 -
    8. Sufficiency of Trooper Boyd’s Affidavit under the Gates Standard
    Applying the previously discussed standards, we conclude that Trooper Boyd‟s
    affidavit provided the magistrate with a substantial basis for concluding from the totality
    of the circumstances that a search warrant for the almost six-acre 4571 Dugger Road
    property would uncover evidence of wrongdoing. The affidavit explained how the
    investigation began, recited the information Mr. Davis had provided, including: that an
    out-of-state DTO, represented by Mr. Medina, was delivering large quantities of
    marijuana to Son in Tennessee multiple times each month; that Son drove a white Nissan
    Truck and went by the nickname Red; and that Son‟s whole family was involved in
    trafficking drugs. The affidavit also described the ways in which law enforcement
    officials had corroborated Mr. Davis‟s information, including confirming his involvement
    with the same DTO. The affidavit explained that Son had pleaded guilty in 2002 to
    criminal offenses arising from his involvement in drug trafficking activities and that Son
    had concealed cash derived from his earlier drug trafficking activities at the defendant‟s
    residence located on the 4571 Dugger Road property. The affidavit detailed how
    wiretaps and surveillance had confirmed that the DTO with which Mr. Medina was
    affiliated had been transporting large shipments of marijuana from other states into
    Tennessee and that the DTO had previously dealt with Mr. Davis. The affidavit also
    relayed how wiretaps and surveillance had confirmed that Son was working with Mr.
    Medina‟s DTO and that Son was known as Red. The affidavit described how law
    enforcement officials had observed Son meeting with agents of the DTO twice at markets
    just off Interstate 65 and near the 4571 Dugger Road property and had observed the DTO
    agent follow Son onto a rural road leading to the 4571 Dugger Road Property. The
    affidavit explained that officers were unable to follow Son and the DTO agent onto the
    rural road, but on the first occasion, later observed Son‟s vehicle parked in the driveway
    of the defendant‟s residence on the 4571 Dugger Road property, and on the second
    occasion, a GPS ping of Mr. Medina‟s cellphone indicated that the phone was located on
    the 4571 Dugger Road property. Additionally, the affidavit listed a great deal of
    information that Trooper Boyd had learned from his own experience and training about
    how drug traffickers function, including the typical locations that are used to conceal
    drugs and proceeds from drug trafficking.
    When the totality of the circumstances detailed in the affidavit are viewed in a
    commonsense and practical manner, we have no hesitation in concluding that the
    affidavit provided the magistrate with a substantial basis for determining that a search of
    the 4571 Dugger Road property would uncover evidence of wrongdoing. In reaching this
    conclusion, we necessarily reject the defendant‟s argument that the affidavit failed to
    provide a sufficient nexus between the drugs and the 4571 Dugger Road property and his
    assertion that the facts purporting to do so were stale. In our judgment, a sufficient nexus
    between the drugs and the property was established because the officers twice observed
    Son and an agent of the DTO meeting near the 4571 Dugger Road property and driving
    onto a rural road leading to the property. Although officers were unable to follow them
    - 28 -
    onto the rural road for fear of discovery, on one occasion officers observed Son‟s truck
    parked in the driveway of the defendant‟s residence, and on the second occasion, officers
    obtained a GPS ping placing Mr. Medina‟s cell phone on the property.
    Although it is true that officers waited until April 23, 2012, three weeks after Son
    met Mr. Medina on April 2, 2012, to seek a search warrant, the affidavit included
    subsequently obtained information establishing that Son‟s drug trafficking activities with
    Mr. Medina were ongoing. For example, the affidavit quotes portions of an April 11,
    2012 conversation between Son and Mr. Medina in which Son is complaining that he had
    received only 157 pounds of marijuana when he had paid for 170 pounds, and Mr.
    Medina assuring Son that he would receive credit for the shortage, which Trooper Boyd
    interpreted, based on his experience, as meaning that Son would receive credit in future
    shipments. This conversation occurred only twelve days before the officers sought the
    warrant. As already noted, “[w]hen the illegal activity described is ongoing, courts have
    generally held that [an] affidavit does not become stale with the passage of time.”
    
    Thomas, 818 S.W.2d at 357
    . This rule applies here, where the affidavit included facts
    indicating that the illegal drug trafficking was ongoing.
    Accordingly, we hold that the affidavit sufficiently established probable cause,
    reverse the decision of the Court of Criminal Appeals holding otherwise, and reinstate the
    judgment of the trial court denying the defendant‟s motion to suppress.
    III. Sufficiency of the Trial Evidence
    We next consider whether the Court of Criminal Appeals erred in concluding that
    the evidence was legally insufficient to support the defendant‟s convictions for
    conspiracy to possess over 300 pounds of marijuana with intent to sell it and conspiracy
    to commit money laundering.
    A. Trial Proof
    At trial, Trooper Boyd testified consistently with his April 23, 2012 affidavit and
    his testimony at the pretrial suppression hearing, as previously set forth. He further
    explained that, in addition to the search warrant for the 4571 Dugger Road property, he
    also had obtained warrants for two other places Son frequented: an apartment in Antioch
    and the Remuda Circle address in Smyrna. All three search warrants were executed at
    approximately the same time on April 24, 2012. During the search of the Antioch
    apartment officers recovered less than a pound of marijuana and approximately $11,000.
    At the Remuda Circle address officers seized approximately eighty-five pounds of
    marijuana, packaged in gallon-sized plastic bags, that were stored inside plastic storage
    bins. Other items seized included more than $100,000 cash, Son‟s white Nissan Titan
    truck, a drug ledger, and a suitcase, because suitcases were used to transport the
    marijuana from Alabama to Tennessee on March 16, 2012, and April 2, 2012. Four or
    - 29 -
    five cell phones also were seized from the Remuda Circle address, but no text messages
    or voice mails were discovered between the defendant and Son regarding drug
    trafficking. Trooper Boyd also knew of no communications between the defendant and
    Mr. Medina or any other Hispanic drug dealers. Additionally Son‟s drug ledger, located
    at the Remuda Circle address, did not mention the defendant. Trooper Boyd noted that it
    would have been unnecessary for the defendant to talk with anyone except Son if their
    agreement entailed the defendant keeping Son‟s money at the 4571 Dugger Road
    property and allowing Son to receive shipments of marijuana on that property. Trooper
    Boyd pointed out that they could have agreed to communicate about their illegal
    activities in person, which would explain why officers found no incriminating text
    messages or cell phone calls between them. Furthermore, Trooper Boyd testified that the
    marijuana discovered at the Remuda Circle address had the same packaging, the same
    compressed texture, and was of the same Mexican type as that found at the 4571 Dugger
    Road property. Trooper Boyd admitted that, while the plastic bags, material used to
    package the marijuana, and even the suitcases at the Remuda Circle address smelled of
    axle grease, which drug traffickers often use to conceal the scent of the marijuana, no
    axle grease was found on the packaging or marijuana discovered at the 4571 Dugger
    Road property. Trooper Boyd also conceded that no law enforcement officer had actually
    seen any drugs during the investigation and had only seen suitcases being unloaded and
    loaded. He explained, however, that it was not unusual for officers not to see drugs
    during an investigation because drugs are ordinarily concealed.
    Adrian Breedlove, a Brentwood police officer assigned to Nashville DEA, testified
    that, on March 16, 2012, he conducted surveillance on a maroon Ford Expedition and
    relayed information to other officers and agents conducting surveillance. He observed
    the Expedition leave Interstate 65 at exit 37 and stop at a nearby gas station, and he
    noticed that the driver of the vehicle was a Hispanic male, later identified as Mr.
    Jaramillo. Officer Breedlove discontinued surveillance and left the gas station when
    another member of the surveillance team arrived. Not long after leaving the gas station,
    Officer Breedlove drove past the 4571 Dugger Road property and saw a white Nissan
    Titan truck parked in the driveway of residence. He entered the tag number of the
    vehicle into a computer database and learned that the truck was registered to Son. Officer
    Breedlove admitted that he had not seen Son or the defendant on March 16, 2012, only
    Son‟s vehicle.
    Officer Breedlove also participated in the search of the 4571 Dugger Road
    property on April 24, 2012, along with about a dozen other officers from various
    agencies. He testified as follows about statements the defendant made on the day the
    warrant was executed and about items that were discovered during the search. The
    defendant told officers that he had guns in the house, and officers discovered a loaded .45
    semiautomatic pistol under the couch cushions in the den and an unloaded nine
    millimeter pistol under the couch. They also found a rifle inside a case in a bathroom and
    a bolt-action rifle underneath a bed. In the master bedroom, officers found four more
    - 30 -
    rifles, rifle magazines, three shotguns, a .50 caliber muzzle loader, and a revolver. On the
    top shelf of the closet in the master bedroom officers also found a large electronic scale,
    capable of weighing items up to thirteen pounds, and, on top of this scale, officers
    discovered a bag containing marijuana. A second plastic bag containing smaller Ziploc
    bags of marijuana was also found in this closet. In this same closet, near the marijuana
    and scales, officers found between $20,000 and $22,000 cash inside a jacket pocket.
    Officers discovered a smaller scale capable of weighing items up to two pounds inside a
    drawer and a small plastic bag of marijuana. In the master bedroom dresser drawer,
    officers discovered a plastic bag containing cocaine and $75,000 in cash, comprised of
    $100 and $50 dollar bills. A second small bag of cocaine was found inside a roll top desk
    in the den. A third bag of cocaine was discovered on a kitchen shelf above the
    refrigerator. Based on the amount of cocaine in the bags, Officer Breedlove opined that it
    was likely for personal use. Officers also found a money counting machine, other small
    bags of marijuana, a metal grinder commonly used to grind marijuana into a powder,
    several butts of marijuana cigarettes, and two pipes that smelled strongly of marijuana.
    Officer Breedlove testified that some of the marijuana found at the defendant‟s
    residence was still “bricked up”—meaning tightly compressed for easier transport—and
    had not been processed for sale. No intact bricks of the marijuana were discovered at
    Son‟s Remuda Circle Smyrna address. Nevertheless, Officer Breedlove asserted that the
    marijuana found at both places had “similar packaging and pressing techniques.” He also
    noted that the marijuana found at Son‟s Remuda Circle address and that found at the
    defendant‟s residence had the same stems and seeds present. Officer Breedlove
    explained that the more marijuana is “bricked up,” the closer it is to the initial source. He
    also stated that when prepared for retail dealers and end users, marijuana is divided into
    smaller quantities.
    According to Officer Breedlove, the defendant told officers that the marijuana and
    drugs inside his home belonged to him and had come “from Mexicans.” The defendant
    denied that Son had anything to do with the marijuana found inside his residence when
    Officer Breedlove pointed out that the marijuana found at the defendant‟s residence was
    very similar to the marijuana found at Son‟s Remuda Circle address.
    Outside the defendant‟s residence, officers found an Igloo cooler containing
    several marijuana plants in black trash bags. Inside the trunk of a Honda Civic parked
    directly in front of the defendant‟s residence, officers located a large ammunition can,
    eleven firearms—some of them semiautomatic—and ammunition for these weapons.
    Inside the ammunition can, officers found $1,000,300 cash, all in one hundred dollar
    bills. Officers also located numerous other items of personal property, including vehicles
    and farming equipment.
    When the defendant saw the officers discover the items in the Civic‟s trunk, he
    remarked, “They found my money.” The defendant told officers the ammunition can
    - 31 -
    contained about a million dollars and said that he had earned the money cutting hay. As
    for the weapons, the defendant claimed that he had them for protection because rumors
    had circulated for years that he had $1,000,000 buried on his property, and numerous
    trespassers had attempted to steal his money. The defendant denied that the ammunition
    can containing the money had ever been buried and said that he had placed it in the trunk
    of the Civic a year earlier, in 2011, when he purchased the vehicle. The defendant said
    that he had stored the money in the Civic near his residence so he could more easily
    watch it. The defendant insisted that the money belonged to him, not to Son. When
    asked about Son‟s truck being seen at his home on March 16, 2012, the defendant replied
    that he had not seen Son or any Hispanics near his home that day but conceded that he
    could have been at work. Officer Breedlove acknowledged that no drug ledgers or other
    documents connecting the defendant to the drug trade were found at the defendantʼs
    residence.
    Jimmy Mann, an officer with the Dickson police department assigned to DEA
    Nashville, testified that he had assisted with surveillance in this case. On April 2, 2012,
    Officer Mann drove to exit 32, the Culleoka exit, and waited at a Citgo gas station. At the
    time, he knew that he was looking for a white Nissan Titan truck and a Lincoln
    Navigator. Neither of these vehicles was present when he arrived, so Officer Mann
    parked next to the building and waited. Five minutes later, a white Nissan Titan truck
    pulled next to the gas pumps, and Son exited the vehicle and began pumping gas.
    Approximately fifteen minutes later, a Navigator pulled into the gas station and parked in
    front of him. Officer Mann identified the driver of the Navigator as Mr. Medina. Son
    and Mr. Medina went inside the store together, came back out, and got into their vehicles.
    They left the store at the same time, travelling in the direction of the 4571 Dugger Road
    property, with Son‟s truck in the lead. Other officers picked up surveillance on the
    vehicles when they left the gas station. Officer Mann acknowledged that the defendant
    was not in either of the vehicles that he observed on April 2, 2012.
    Joel Rowney, a detective with the Nashville Police Department assigned to the
    20th Judicial District Drug Task Force, testified that he arrived at 4571 Dugger Road on
    April 24, 2012, while the search warrant was being executed, but after the defendant‟s
    residence had been searched. The defendant and his wife answered a few questions but
    then refused to speak with him further. Detective Rowney stated that most of the cash
    seized on the property was discovered in the ammunition can found in the trunk of the
    Civic. Detective Rowney said the can was covered in dirt, which suggested it had been
    buried. The cash in the ammunition can consisted entirely of $100 bills, which had been
    issued before the year 2000. Rubber bands used to bundle the cash had adhered to
    money. Based on the condition of the ammunition can, the rubber bands, and the
    issuance dates of the bills, Detective Rowney concluded that the money had been buried
    or concealed for over twelve years.
    - 32 -
    Detective Rowney stated that he did not issue a written notice of seizure to the
    defendant on the date the cash was seized. Instead, his secretary sent the notice of seizure
    to the defendant by certified mail at a later date that Detective Rowney could not recall.
    Detective Rowney explained that it had been his practice for eleven years to list the date
    of delivery of the notice of seizure as the date the property was seized, regardless of the
    date the notice of seizure was actually delivered. Detective Rowney explained that when
    a large amount of cash is seized, the standard procedure is for officers to deliver the cash
    to a bank, so that it can be counted and the total verified. Thereafter, officers send the
    owner a notice of seizure via certified mail, listing the accurate and verified total of the
    cash seized. The bank had closed by the time officers finished executing the search
    warrant on April 24, 2012. Therefore, Detective Rowney informed the defendant that he
    would receive a notice later via certified mail. Detective Rowney acknowledged that,
    although the currency had been issued before the year 2000, someone could have
    removed and used cash from the stockpile without replacing it with newer bills.
    Lieutenant Doelle testified that officers seized approximately eight pounds of
    marijuana and nearly a half ounce of cocaine from the 4571 Dugger Road property.
    Officers seized approximately eighty-five pounds of marijuana from Son‟s Remuda
    Circle Smyrna address. Several other items of personal property believed to have been
    derived from the sale of illegal drugs were also seized from the 4571 Dugger Road
    property, including vehicles and farming equipment. He testified that when the warrant
    was executed on April 24, 2012, the defendant already had a felony conviction.
    Proof showed that Tammy A. Tuttle worked in a non-skilled position at a medical
    laboratory preparing specimens and earned between $15,000 and $17,000 annually from
    2007 to 2012. Additionally, tax records indicated that Ms. Tuttle had income of $15,075
    in 2007 and $15,427 in 2008. Income tax records indicated the defendant, a farmer, had a
    net loss of $194 in 2007 and income of only $1613 in 2008. In 2011, the defendant had
    received Social Security benefits of $5,928. The defendant and his wife had
    approximately $20,000 in savings and checking accounts.              Lieutenant Doelle
    acknowledged that the defendant had earned some income from cutting hay, but
    Lieutenant Doelle found no evidence of earned income, checks, or lottery winnings
    sufficient to explain how the defendant had accumulated the more than one million
    dollars found on the 4571 Dugger Road property.
    Chris Hill, an employee with the Board of Probation and Parole, testified that Son
    was continuously incarcerated from August 5, 2000, until his release on June 23, 2011.
    Cleto Medina, who had already entered guilty pleas to his participation in the
    activities giving rise to this case, testified that he had never seen the defendant nor
    conducted any drug deals with the defendant. Nevertheless, Mr. Medina confirmed that,
    in March and April 2012, marijuana had been transported from Alabama to Tennessee
    and delivered to a man known as “Red” or “Rojo,” whom Mr. Medina identified as Son.
    - 33 -
    Mr. Medina stated that two deliveries were made to other locations in middle Tennessee
    prior to March 16, 2012, Mr. Medina stated that his brother delivered marijuana to Son in
    a maroon Ford Expedition on March 16, 2012, and that he had delivered marijuana to
    Son on April 2, 2012, in his Lincoln Navigator to the 4571 Dugger Road property. Mr.
    Medina stated that the marijuana was packaged in blocks, covered in axle grease, and
    placed in suitcases for the deliveries. Each of the pre-March 16, 2012 deliveries
    consisted of 100 pounds of marijuana, as did the delivery on March 16, 2012. However,
    the April 2, 2012 delivery was supposed to consist of 170 pounds of marijuana, although
    Son later informed him that the marijuana had weighed only 157 pounds.
    Mr. Medina described the transaction on April 2, 2012, in which he had
    participated, stating that Son had instructed him to call when he reached exit 32 off
    Interstate 65. When Mr. Medina did so, Son gave him directions to a gas station ten to
    fifteen minutes away. They met at the gas station, and Mr. Medina followed Son to a
    wooded area on the 4571 Dugger Road property, where he delivered the marijuana to
    Son. According to Mr. Medina, the marijuana was priced at $675 per pound, and Son
    paid cash for the delivery, mostly in $100 bills.
    Following the drug transaction, Mr. Medina returned to the Interstate via the route
    he had previously taken. Mr. Medina never met with Son again, because he was arrested
    two or three weeks after the April 2, 2012 drug transaction.
    After his arrest, Mr. Medina viewed an aerial photograph of the 4571 Dugger
    Road property and marked on it the narrow dirt road location where the transaction
    occurred. Mr. Medina stated that the defendant‟s mobile home was not visible from that
    location. Mr. Medina also directed Officer David Stanfield along the route Son had
    driven from the gas station to the wooded area of the 4571 Dugger Road property.
    B. Standards for Evaluating the Sufficiency of the Evidence
    “Appellate courts evaluating the sufficiency of the convicting evidence must
    determine „whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt.‟” State v. Wagner, 
    382 S.W.3d 289
    , 297 (Tenn. 2012)
    (quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979)). A guilty verdict removes the
    presumption of innocence and replaces it with a presumption of guilt; thus, on appeal a
    defendant bears the burden of demonstrating why the evidence is insufficient to support
    the conviction. 
    Id. (citing State
    v. Parker, 
    350 S.W.3d 883
    , 903 (Tenn. 2011)). On
    appeal, the State is afforded the strongest legitimate view of the evidence presented at
    trial and any reasonable and legitimate inferences that may be drawn from the evidence.
    
    Id. (citing State
    v. Bland, 
    958 S.W.2d 651
    , 659 (Tenn. 1997)). “The credibility of the
    witnesses, the weight to be given their testimony, and the reconciliation of conflicts in the
    proof are matters entrusted to the jury as the trier of fact.” State v. Campbell, 245 S.W.3d
    - 34 -
    331, 335 (Tenn. 2008) (citing Byrge v. State, 
    575 S.W.2d 292
    , 295 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1978)). “This Court neither re-weighs the evidence nor substitutes its inferences for those
    drawn by the jury.” 
    Wagner, 382 S.W.3d at 297
    (citing 
    Bland, 958 S.W.2d at 659
    )).
    Circumstantial and direct evidence are reviewed under the same standards. 
    Id. (citing State
    v. Dorantes, 
    331 S.W.3d 370
    , 379 (Tenn. 2011)). Circumstantial evidence is alone
    a sufficient basis to support a conviction, and circumstantial evidence need not exclude
    every reasonable hypothesis except that of guilt. 
    Id. (citing Dorantes,
    331 S.W.3d at
    381).
    C. Application of the Legal Standards
    We agree with the State that the evidence presented at trial is sufficient to support
    the defendant‟s conviction of conspiracy to possess over 300 pounds of marijuana with
    the intent to sell it.
    The offense of conspiracy is committed if two (2) or more people, each
    having the culpable mental state required for the offense that is the object of
    the conspiracy, and each acting for the purpose of promoting or facilitating
    commission of an offense, agree that one (1) or more of them will engage
    in conduct that constitutes the offense.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-12-103. The relevant offense to this appeal is defined as
    “knowingly . . . [p]ossess[ing] a controlled substance with intent to . . . sell the controlled
    substance,” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-417(a)(4), and the controlled substance is “[t]hree
    hundred pounds (300 lbs.) (136,050 grams) or more of any substance containing
    marijuana,” 
    id. § 39-17-417(j)(13).
    In this case, the prosecution offered both direct and circumstantial evidence
    establishing that Son met with an agent of the DTO and then drove toward the 4571
    Dugger Road property on which the defendant resided, with the DTO agent following
    him. After the first meeting on March 16, 2012, officers observed Son‟s vehicle parked
    in the defendant‟s driveway, and after the second meeting on April 2, 2012, officers
    obtained a GPS ping indicating that Mr. Medina‟s phone was located on the 4571 Dugger
    Road property. Mr. Medina testified at trial that he and Son had conducted the April 2,
    2012 drug transaction on that property.
    The prosecution also presented circumstantial evidence establishing that the
    defendant was aware of Son‟s drug trafficking activity and aided him with it. For
    example, officers discovered eight pounds of marijuana in the defendant‟s residence, and
    it was packaged in a manner very similar to the marijuana discovered at Son‟s Remuda
    Circle Smyrna address. The defendant admitted that this marijuana belonged to him,
    although he denied Son had anything to do with it. Some of the marijuana had been
    processed while some of it remained compressed or “bricked up.” Some of the marijuana
    - 35 -
    had already been packaged into smaller Ziploc baggies in a manner that would facilitate
    resale, and between $20,000 to $22,000 cash was discovered next to this marijuana.
    Officers discovered scales and a grinder in defendant‟s residence—equipment used to
    prepare and process compressed marijuana for resale to end users. Officers also located a
    money-counting machine, which would have aided the defendant in keeping account of
    the proceeds of drug sales. Viewed in a light most favorable to the State, we conclude
    that this evidence was sufficient to support the defendant‟s conviction for conspiracy to
    possess over 300 pounds of marijuana with the intent to sell it.
    In concluding that the proof was insufficient to support the defendant‟s conviction,
    the Court of Criminal Appeals pointed out that no witnesses had observed Son and the
    defendant conspiring together and that the proof established only that Son and the
    defendant both were engaged in drug trafficking, not that they were working together in
    the illegal drug trade. This analysis might be appropriate were the Court of Criminal
    Appeals tasked with resolving factual issues and deciding the defendant‟s guilt or
    innocence in the first instance. However, those tasks are reserved for the jury, not
    reviewing appellate courts. Here, the evidence is sufficient to support the jury‟s
    determination that Son and the defendant were conspiring together in the marijuana drug
    trafficking operation.
    The proof also is sufficient to support the defendant‟s conviction for conspiracy to
    commit money laundering. Money laundering is defined in pertinent part as follows:
    It is an offense to knowingly use, conspire to use or attempt to use
    proceeds derived directly or indirectly from a specified unlawful activity to
    conduct or attempt to conduct a financial transaction or to make other
    disposition with the intent to conceal or disguise the nature, location,
    source, ownership or control of the criminally derived proceeds.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-14-903(a)(1). Here, the State offered proof to show that the
    combined income of the defendant and his wife would not have accounted for the large
    amounts of cash found in the defendant‟s possession. Ms. Tuttle had income of $15,000
    to 17,000 per year during the relevant time, and tax records indicated that the defendant
    had a loss in one year and income of $1,613 in another year. Yet, officers found $20,000
    to $22,000 cash inside a jacket pocket in the master bedroom closet, next to the marijuana
    and one of the electronic scales. Officers found $75,000 more in cash inside a dresser
    drawer in the bedroom and located an ammunition can in the trunk of the Civic outside
    containing $1,000,300 cash. The ammunition can was surrounded by semiautomatic
    weapons. From this proof, the jury could have rationally concluded, beyond a reasonable
    doubt, that the money, in whole or in part, derived from the drug trafficking conspiracy in
    which the defendant and Son were engaged.
    - 36 -
    IV. Forfeiture
    A. Post-Trial Forfeiture Hearing Proof
    The day after the jury returned its verdict, the trial court held a hearing on the
    forfeiture count of the indictment. At the beginning of this hearing, the State announced
    that the trial court had heard “90 percent of the proof” related to the forfeiture during the
    trial, but the State elected to present two additional witnesses.
    Phillip Taylor, a state investigator with the 20th Judicial District Drug Task Force,
    testified about his participation in the 2000 investigation into Son‟s drug trafficking
    activities, explaining that Son was stopped in February 2000, while in possession of drug
    records and $30,000 cash. Son‟s wife was stopped the same day and also had $30,000
    cash in her vehicle. In July 2000, law enforcement authorities linked Son to a rental truck
    containing 2,600 pounds of marijuana through statements of co-conspirators and Son‟s
    wife. In August 2000, law enforcement authorities also seized 2,200 pounds of marijuana
    from a van in Son‟s possession, and during the arrest, seized $25,000 cash from Sonʼs
    person. After officers seized the van in August 2000, they searched the defendantʼs
    residence pursuant to a warrant and found an ammunition can containing a plastic bag
    with $112,000 cash. Written on the outside of the bag were “C.T. $200,000.” The
    ammunition can was caked with mud. Law enforcement authorities had heard that more
    money was buried on the 4571 Dugger Road property, but they were unable to locate it
    during the 2000 search. As a result of that investigation, however, the defendant pled
    guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to sell more than
    seventy pounds of marijuana. Son also pled guilty to multiple charges and was
    incarcerated as a result of those convictions until June 2011.
    Lieutenant Doelle testified about several items of personal property that were
    seized during the April 24, 2012 search of the 4571 Dugger Road property. The trial
    court had instructed him not to mention any of these seized items, all purchased before
    2004, in his trial testimony. The items included a car, trucks, and two tractors.
    Lieutenant Doelle acknowledged that he had no evidence that any of this property was
    acquired by the defendant in violation of any statute. He also stated that smaller items of
    personal property, in addition to those mentioned at trial, had been seized as well, as had
    two of the defendant‟s bank accounts—one containing approximately $20,000 and the
    other approximately $27,000. When questioned about monthly Social Security checks
    that had been deposited into the account containing $27,000 and the defendant‟s earnings
    from his hay business, Lieutenant Doelle expressed his belief that the account contained
    drug proceeds comingled with legitimate monies, but he was not able to track any drug
    funds to that account. Although he believed all of the personal property officers seized
    had been purchased or maintained with proceeds from the sale of illegal drugs, he was
    unable to identify any specific drug transactions from which the proceeds derived. He
    - 37 -
    described the ammunition can found in the Civic as covered in dirt and appearing to have
    been buried in the ground, much like the ammunition can officers seized in 2000.
    Lieutenant Doelle conceded that he did not know when the defendant acquired or
    received the cash, nor did he know of any specific drug transactions that resulted in the
    defendant acquiring the currency. However, he stated that the defendant had not acquired
    the cash found in the Civic within the last five years, although it appeared the defendant
    had placed the ammunition can in the Civic during that time so he could more readily
    access the money. While he acknowledged that the money found in the Civic was
    comprised entirely of bills issued before the year 2000, he was unsure whether the money
    found inside the defendant‟s residence was also comprised of currency issued before
    2000. Lieutenant Doelle opined that it would take an entire lifetime to save $1,000,000
    from social security or farming revenue, even for a person with no expenses.
    B. Court Action
    The trial court denied forfeiture of “all personal property acquired before 2007”
    and the money seized from the defendant‟s bank accounts but ordered forfeiture of all
    other personal property, including the $1,098,050 cash discovered on the 4571 Dugger
    Road property. The trial court found that the items were “directly or indirectly, acquired
    by or received in violation of the drug statutes [and] subject to judicial forfeiture.”
    The Court of Criminal Appeals unanimously affirmed the trial court‟s ruling
    directing forfeiture of the $1,098,050 cash. The intermediate appellate court concluded
    that the defendant‟s 2002 guilty pleas to conspiracy to commit money laundering and
    possession of drugs with intent to distribute supported the forfeiture. Although the Court
    of Criminal Appeals acknowledged that the seizure had not occurred within five years of
    the termination of the conduct on which the defendant‟s 2002 guilty pleas were based, it
    concluded that the defendant‟s concealment of the money tolled the five-year forfeiture
    statute of limitations.
    C. Analysis
    The defendant challenges the Court of Criminal Appeals‟ decision affirming the
    trial court‟s order of forfeiture of the $1,098,050 cash found on the 4571 Dugger Road
    property. He argues that the forfeiture of this cash was barred by the five-year statute of
    limitations contained in the forfeiture statute, Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-708(d) (2010),
    and also by the State‟s failure to provide him with notice of the seizure on the day of the
    seizure.
    The defendant raised these arguments in a pretrial motion to dismiss the forfeiture
    count of the indictment and during the post-trial forfeiture hearing. The trial court
    acknowledged that the proof was “undisputed that the bills seized . . . were minted prior
    - 38 -
    to 2000,” but stated, when ruling on the pretrial motion to dismiss, that “since the money
    had been dug up after so long, it is reasonable that money was either used, or going to be
    used, in furtherance of the now on-going drug operation.” In response to these arguments
    at the post-trial forfeiture hearing, the trial court ruled that the cash had been “directly or
    indirectly[] acquired by or received in violation of the drug statutes” and was “subject to
    judicial forfeiture.” Additionally, the trial court found that, although the defendant was
    not provided a notice of seizure on the day of the seizure, the notice later provided by
    certified mail satisfied “the requirement under [Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-11-
    707(b)] that „the seizing agency or official shall cause to be delivered . . . notice of
    seizure to the . . . owner.‟”
    By the time the Court of Criminal Appeals addressed the defendant‟s challenges to
    the trial court‟s forfeiture order, it had set aside the defendant‟s conspiracy convictions.
    The intermediate appellate court noted that, “none of the [defendant‟s] remaining
    convictions . . . appear to qualify as convictions from which criminal proceeds are subject
    to forfeiture” and commented that, were it “concerned merely with the [defendant‟s]
    [remaining] current offenses as predicates for forfeiture, [it] would vacate the forfeiture
    order.” However, the Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that the defendant‟s 2002
    convictions could serve as predicates for the 2012 forfeiture, despite the five-year statute
    of limitations, because the cash had derived from the activities for which the defendant
    was convicted in 2002, and the defendant‟s “concealment of the proceeds from his 2002
    conspiracy convictions tolled the applicable limitations period.” To reach this
    conclusion, the Court of Criminal Appeals, as a matter of first impression, adopted and
    applied the doctrine of equitable tolling to the five-year forfeiture statute of limitations,
    even though it contains no tolling provision.
    In this Court, the defendant challenges the Court of Criminal Appeals‟ adoption
    and application of the doctrine of equitable tolling to uphold the forfeiture. The State, in
    response, urges this Court to uphold in all respects the Court of Criminal Appeals‟
    decision. However, having already reinstated the defendant‟s conspiracy convictions, we
    deem it unnecessary to address these arguments. As explained below, we agree with the
    trial court that the State satisfied its burden of establishing by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the cash was subject to forfeiture based on the defendant‟s conspiracy
    convictions arising from the 2012 drug trafficking activities. We also agree with the
    - 39 -
    courts below that the notice of seizure provided the defendant by certified mail satisfied
    statutory requirements.13
    “Forfeiture is defined as „[t]he divestiture of property without compensation.‟”
    State v. Sprunger, 
    458 S.W.3d 482
    , 492 (Tenn. 2015) (quoting Black‟s Law Dictionary
    722 (9th ed. 2009) (Forfeiture)). Here, as in many cases, forfeiture proceedings are
    instituted along with criminal charges. 
    Id. But forfeiture
    proceedings are not criminal in
    nature and are instead in rem actions—actions regarding the seized property for which
    forfeiture is sought. 
    Id. Although forfeiture
    actions often proceed “parallel to criminal
    prosecutions and are „based upon the same underlying events,‟ they are civil in nature.”
    
    Id. (quoting United
    States v. Ursery, 
    518 U.S. 267
    , 274 (1996)). As a result, “[t]he State
    has a less onerous burden—that of proving only by a preponderance of the evidence that
    the property is subject to forfeiture.” Stuart v. State Dep‟t of Safety, 
    963 S.W.2d 28
    , 33
    (Tenn. 1998). The forfeiture statutes at issue in this appeal expressly provide for this
    lesser burden of proof. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-708(d) (“The state shall establish
    by a preponderance of the evidence that the property is subject to forfeiture under this
    part.”). Additionally, because the trial judge decided this forfeiture action without the
    intervention of a jury, we review the trial court‟s findings of fact “de novo upon the
    record of the trial court, accompanied by a presumption of the correctness of the finding,
    unless the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise.” Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); see also
    
    Sprunger, 458 S.W.3d at 498
    n.26. Legal conclusions are reviewed de novo with no
    presumption of correctness. 
    Sprunger, 458 S.W.3d at 498
    . We note as well that, although
    the trial court held a post-trial forfeiture hearing, in determining whether the State
    satisfied its burden of proving the property was subject to forfeiture, the trial court was
    entitled to consider all “evidence already in the record.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-
    708(d).
    Forfeitures are generally disfavored by the law and policy of Tennessee, so courts
    typically strictly construe forfeiture statutes. 
    Sprunger, 458 S.W.3d at 494
    . As for the
    forfeiture statutes at issue in this appeal, “[i]t is the intent of the [G]eneral [A]ssembly,
    consistent with due process of law, that all property acquired and accumulated as a result
    of criminal offenses be forfeited to the [S]tate, and that the proceeds be used to fund
    13
    The defendant has also argued in this Court that the forfeiture count of the indictment failed to
    provide him with adequate notice of the grounds for forfeiture. However, this issue was not raised in the
    courts below and is therefore waived. 
    Bishop, 431 S.W.3d at 43
    .
    - 40 -
    further law enforcement efforts in this [S]tate.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-701(b).          To
    effectuate this intent, the General Assembly has declared that
    [a]ny property, real or personal, directly or indirectly acquired by or
    received in violation of any statute or as an inducement to violate any
    statute, or any property traceable to the proceeds from the violation is
    subject to judicial forfeiture, and all right, title, and interest in any such
    property shall vest in the state upon commission of the act giving rise to
    forfeiture.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-703(a). Furthermore, “any property used as an instrumentality
    in or used in furtherance of” certain criminal offenses, including “[a] conviction for a
    violation of § 39-17-417(i) or (j),” “shall be subject to judicial forfeiture.” Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 39-11-703(b). In turn, Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-17-417(a) provides,
    in relevant part, that it is an offense to deliver a controlled substance, sell a controlled
    substance, or possess a controlled substance with the intent to deliver or sell it. Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 39-17-417(a)(1)-(4). Marijuana is specifically listed as a controlled
    substance. 
    Id. § -417(i)(13),
    (j)(13). In the indictment at issue here, the State alleged that
    the defendant‟s property was subject to forfeiture because it was directly or indirectly
    acquired by a violation of either Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-17-417,
    possession of a controlled substance with intent to sell it, or Tennessee Code Annotated
    section 39-14-903, money laundering.
    We agree with the trial court that the State satisfied its burden of proving by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the defendant‟s seized cash was being “used in
    furtherance” of the drug trafficking operation spearheaded by Son and Mr. Medina in the
    spring of 2012, and “directly or indirectly acquired by or received” in violation of
    statutory drug offenses. The proof in the record establishes that some of the seized cash
    was found in the defendant‟s bedroom, near marijuana and an electronic scale.
    Additionally, the proof showed that Son was released from prison on June 23, 2011, and
    by no later than March 2012, Son was spearheading a major marijuana trafficking
    operation involving hundreds of pounds of the illegal drug. Mr. Medina testified that Son
    paid $675 per pound for the marijuana, used cash to pay, and paid mostly in $100 bills.
    The $1,000,300 found in the trunk of the Civic was in $100 bills. Mr. Medina testified
    that he and Son conducted their drug deals on the property where this cash was located.
    It is true, as the defendant points out, that the condition of the ammunition can, the
    issuance dates of the currency, and the condition of the rubber bands binding the currency
    all indicated that the money had been buried for an extended period of time prior to its
    seizure. However, the defendant admitted that he had placed the money in the Civic in
    2011, only one year before its seizure and the same year Son was released from prison.
    Considered together, the proof in the record supports and does not preponderate against
    the trial court‟s finding that the State satisfied its burden of proving that the money was
    subject to forfeiture because it was acquired directly or indirectly in violation of statutes
    - 41 -
    or was being used in furtherance of the 2012 drug trafficking conspiracy, for which the
    defendant was convicted. As a result, the forfeiture action is not barred by the five-year
    statute of limitations, as the defendant contends, because it was charged within five years
    of the termination of the 2012 conduct—“the conduct giving rise to forfeiture.” Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 39-11-708(d).
    We also agree with the trial court and the Court of Criminal Appeals that the
    notice of seizure provided the defendant by certified mail complied with the forfeiture
    statute. Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-11-707(b) provides, in pertinent part, that
    [u]pon seizure of property for forfeiture under this part, the seizing agency
    or official shall cause to be delivered a written receipt and notice of seizure
    to the . . . owner . . . . The notice shall list and describe generally the
    property seized, the agency or official responsible for the seizure and shall
    state the procedure for obtaining return of the property. . . .
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-707(b).
    The defendant argues that the words “upon seizure of property” require the State
    to deliver the notice of seizure on the same day the seizure occurs. We disagree. As the
    State points out, the statute contains no language mandating same-day delivery of the
    notice of seizure. If the General Assembly had intended to impose a same-day delivery
    requirement, it could have done so expressly. Indeed, a temporal deadline is expressly
    provided in the very next subsection of this statutory provision. See Tenn. Code Ann. §
    39-11-707(c) (“Upon the seizure of personal property for forfeiture, the seizing agency
    shall within five (5) working days, apply ex parte for a forfeiture warrant from a judge
    authorized to issue a search warrant.”).
    We reaffirm the importance of providing adequate notice of a pending forfeiture to
    those with an interest in the property subject to forfeiture. Redd v. Tennessee Dep‟t of
    Safety, 
    895 S.W.2d 332
    , 335 (Tenn. 1995) (“One of the essential elements of due process
    in the confiscation and forfeiture of private property is adequate notice to all interested
    parties.”). We also reiterate that the State bears the burden of proving by a
    preponderance of the evidence that it complied with the procedural and substantive
    requirements established by forfeiture statutes. 
    Sprunger, 458 S.W.3d at 499-500
    . We
    simply conclude, as did the trial court and the Court of Criminal Appeals, that the State
    satisfied its burden in this case. The forfeiture statute at issue here does not mandate
    same-day delivery of the notice of seizure. The defendant has never claimed that he did
    not receive the notice of seizure sent by certified mail, and this record demonstrates that
    the defendant had sufficient time, with the assistance of counsel, to contest the forfeiture,
    beginning with a pretrial motion to dismiss the forfeiture count of the indictment and
    continuing through the post-trial forfeiture hearing. Furthermore, here officers could not
    have delivered a notice on the day of the seizure listing and describing the property
    - 42 -
    seized as section 39-11-707(b) requires, because officers needed the assistance of a bank
    to obtain an accurate count of the large amount of cash that was seized, and the bank had
    closed for the day.
    For all these reasons, we agree with the trial court and the Court of Criminal
    Appeals that the State complied with the procedural and substantive requirements of the
    applicable forfeiture statutes when it delivered the notice of seizure by certified mail after
    obtaining an accurate count of the cash that had been seized rather than on the day of
    seizure.14
    V. Conclusion
    Based upon the foregoing analyses, we reverse the portion of the Court of
    Criminal Appeals‟s decision invalidating the search warrant and vacating the defendant‟s
    convictions but affirm, on different grounds, the intermediate appellate court‟s decision
    upholding the forfeiture order. We otherwise affirm and reinstate in all respects the
    judgment of the trial court. Costs of this appeal are taxed to the defendant, Jerry Lewis
    Tuttle, for which execution may issue if necessary.
    _____________________________________
    CORNELIA A. CLARK, JUSTICE
    14
    The officer did not accurately list the date the notice was provided, but as the courts below
    concluded, the record indicates that this was at most an honest mistake and in no way impeded the
    defendant‟s ability to contest the forfeiture.
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