United States v. Antwone Miguel Sanders
Citation106 F.4th 455
Date Filed2024-06-28
Docket21-5945
Cited34 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 24a0143p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
â
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
â
Plaintiff-Appellee, â
> No. 21-5945
â
v. â
â
ANTWONE MIGUEL SANDERS, â
Defendant-Appellant. â
â
On Petition for Rehearing En Banc.
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky at Lexington.
No. 5:20-cr-00009-1âJoseph M. Hood, District Judge.
Argued En Banc: October 18, 2023
Decided and Filed: June 28, 2024
Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; MOORE, CLAY, GIBBONS, GRIFFIN,
KETHLEDGE, STRANCH, THAPAR, BUSH, LARSEN, NALBANDIAN, READLER,
MURPHY, DAVIS, MATHIS, and BLOOMEKATZ, Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL
ARGUED EN BANC: Jarrod J. Beck, LAW OFFICE OF JARROD J. BECK, PLLC, Lexington,
Kentucky, for Appellant. Sofia M. Vickery, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON SUPPLEMENTAL BRIEF: Jarrod J. Beck, LAW OFFICE
OF JARROD J. BECK, PLLC, Lexington, Kentucky, for Appellant. Sofia M. Vickery, UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., Charles P. Wisdom, Jr., Lauren
Tanner Bradley, UNITED STATES ATTORNEYâS OFFICE, Lexington, Kentucky, for Appellee.
READLER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which SUTTON, C.J., and GIBBONS,
KETHLEDGE, THAPAR, BUSH, LARSEN, NALBANDIAN, and MURPHY, JJ., joined in full,
GRIFFIN, MATHIS, and DAVIS, JJ., joined in part and in the judgment, and STRANCH and
BLOOMEKATZ, JJ., concurred in the judgment. GRIFFIN, J. (pp. 28â30), delivered a separate
opinion concurring in the judgment and joining all but Section II.B.2.b. and Section III of the
majority opinion. MATHIS, J. (pp. 31â34), delivered a separate opinion concurring in the
judgment and joining the majority opinion in part, in which DAVIS, J., joined in full, and
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 2
STRANCH and BLOOMEKATZ, JJ., joined in parts I and II. STRANCH and BLOOMEKATZ,
JJ. (pp. 35â38), delivered a separate joint opinion concurring in the judgment, in which MATHIS,
J., joined in part, and GRIFFIN and DAVIS, JJ., joined in Section II. CLAY J. (pp. 39â60),
delivered a separate dissenting opinion in which MOORE, J., joined in full.
_________________
OPINION
_________________
CHAD A. READLER, Circuit Judge. A confidential informant notified officers that
Antwone Sanders was dealing drugs from a nearby apartment. The informant then engaged in two
controlled drug buys with Sanders. On both occasions, officers observed Sanders drive from the
buy location to the apartment in question. The officers detailed this information in an affidavit
submitted to a judge and secured a warrant to search the apartment. The search unearthed
contraband sufficient to support several federal gun and drug possession charges. Sanders moved
to suppress the discovered items. When his motion was denied, Sanders pleaded guilty, preserving
in part his right to appeal, which he then exercised.
Longstanding Fourth Amendment principles guide our review of the search warrantâs
propriety. One, we examine the underlying officer affidavit with the understanding that
demonstrating probable cause to justify a search does not require mathematical certainty. Two,
we owe deference to the judge who found sufficient cause to issue the warrant. Viewing Sandersâs
appeal in this way, we see no error in the district courtâs denial of the motion to suppress. Nor did
the district court err by denying Sandersâs discovery requests. Accordingly, we affirm.
I.
Lexington officer Brandon Hazlewood received a tip from a confidential informant that
Antwone Sanders was selling heroin and fentanyl from Apartment D of 2852 Yellowstone
Parkway. The informant also shared a description of Sanders. A search of a police database
located a subject with a matching name and description, a person the informant later confirmed
was the same Antwone Sanders who was the focus of the informantâs tip.
Hazlewood, along with another officer, arranged a controlled buy between the informant
and Sanders. To prepare for the buy, the officers searched the informant and the informantâs
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 3
vehicle, finding no contraband. Supplied with buy money, the informant proceeded to a
âpredetermined meet location.â There, officers saw the informant enter a silver Chrysler.
Moments later, the informant exited the vehicle. Sanders departed the scene in his Chrysler, with
officers tailing him from the buy location directly back to the Yellowstone apartment. The
informant meanwhile provided Hazlewood with the heroin and fentanyl purchased from Sanders.
No other contraband was discovered on the informant or in the informantâs car.
History would repeat itself. Within roughly a week, officers oversaw another controlled
buy between Sanders and the informant. The buy was largely identical to the first, save for the
fact that officers also surveilled Sanders before the buy, watching him leave the Yellowstone
apartment, get into his Chrysler, and then drive immediately to the buy location. When Sanders
arrived, he sold additional drugs to the informant and then returned to the apartment.
With this information, officers sought a warrant to search the Yellowstone apartment as
well as Sanders and his Chrysler for heroin, fentanyl, drug trafficking paraphernalia, and other
evidence (including â[m]oniesâ from drug crimes). To support the warrant application,
Hazlewood relayed law enforcementâs history with Sanders in an affidavit. A Kentucky state court
judge authorized the search. Execution of the warrant yielded a bevy of incriminating items in the
apartment, including roughly 30 grams of heroin and fentanyl, lesser amounts of cocaine, two
handguns, and hundreds of dollars in cash.
Based on those discoveries, a federal grand jury indicted Sanders for violating 21 U.S.C.
§ 841(a)(1) by possessing heroin with the intent to distribute,21 U.S.C. § 844
(a)(1) by possessing cocaine,18 U.S.C. § 924
(c)(1) by possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, and18 U.S.C. § 922
(g)(1) by possessing a firearm as a felon.
Sanders filed a number of pretrial motions. First, he sought supplemental discovery from
the government in the way of âcase reports and drug evidence relating to the two controlled buys
referenced in the search warrant affidavit.â Second, Sanders moved to suppress all evidence
resulting from the search of the apartment. In conjunction with that request, Sanders sought an
evidentiary hearing to explore the surveillance conducted before the second controlled buy. Each
request was denied. Sanders then pleaded guilty to three of the counts in the indictment (with the
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 4
government dropping the cocaine possession charge), preserving his ability to appeal threshold
issues. He was sentenced to 72 months and one day of imprisonment.
Sanders appealed. A divided panel held that the district court erred in denying Sandersâs
motion to suppress, and, accordingly, vacated Sandersâs conviction. See United States v. Sanders,
59 F.4th 232(6th Cir.), rehâg en banc granted, opinion vacated,68 F.4th 1030
(6th Cir. 2023). In
dissent, Judge Nalbandian concluded that the warrant affidavit established probable cause. Id. at
247 (Nalbandian, J., dissenting). The United States sought rehearing by the en banc court. We
voted in favor of full court review, which served to vacate the panel decision and judgment. See
6 Cir. R. 35(b).
II.
Before the en banc court, Sanders presses two issues: the denial of his motion to suppress
(with an embedded claim that the district court should have held an evidentiary hearing concerning
the veracity of the warrant); and the denial of his motion for supplemental discovery.
First, the motion to suppress. Sanders contends that the warrant used to search the
Yellowstone apartment violated the Fourth Amendmentâs command that warrants be issued only
upon âprobable cause.â U.S. CONST. amend. IV. In particular, Sanders faults the district court for
concluding that the warrant had a âprobable cause nexus.â That phrase of art reflects the
requirement that an affidavit in support of a search warrant sufficiently show that the âspecific
âthingsâ to be searched forâ (here, evidence of drug trafficking) are âlocated on the property to
which entry is soughtâ (here, the Yellowstone apartment). Zurcher v. Stanford Daily, 436 U.S.
547, 556(1978) (cleaned up); United States v. Carpenter,360 F.3d 591
, 594â95 (6th Cir. 2004)
(en banc) (recognizing the nexus requirement).
The probable cause determination takes place on the front lines when a judge is asked to
issue the warrant. If execution of the warrant leads to federal charges, the issuing courtâs decision
can be challenged in the district court by way of a suppression motion. The terms of review are
settled. The district court must employ âgreat deferenceâ when considering the issuing judgeâs
probable cause determination. United States v. Christian, 925 F.3d 305, 311â12 (6th Cir. 2019) (en banc) (quoting Illinois v. Gates,462 U.S. 213, 236
(1983)). Accordingly, the district court No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 5 should âoverturn that decision only if the [issuing judge] arbitrarily exercisedâ the judgeâs authority.Id.
at 311â12 (cleaned up). In other words, it is of no moment whether the district court would have likewise issued the same warrant. In the end, what matters is whether the issuing judge had a âsubstantial basis for concluding that a search would uncover evidence of wrongdoing.â Gates,462 U.S. at 236
(cleaned up).
On appeal, we review the district courtâs factual findings for clear error. See United States
v. Prigmore, 15 F.4th 768, 777(6th Cir. 2021). And we assess its legal determinations de novo.Id.
In so doing, we are mindful of the deference the district court was required to afford the issuing
judgeâs decision to authorize the warrant.
A.
Todayâs questionâwhat an officer must demonstrate to establish a probable cause nexus
justifying the issuance of a search warrantâis a familiar one. Unlike other legal settings, we
undertake this inquiry without a âneat set of legal rules.â Gates, 462 U.S. at 232. The standard for probable cause, the Supreme Court has observed, is âincapable of precise definition or quantification into percentages.â Maryland v. Pringle,540 U.S. 366, 371
(2003). So in describing the concept, the Supreme Court often speaks in generalities. âProbable cause,â it has explained, âexists when âthere is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.ââ United States v. Grubbs,547 U.S. 90, 95
(2006) (quoting Gates,462 U.S. at 238
). Or it requires âreasonable causeâ or âreasonable grounds to believeâ that contraband will be located on the property to be searched. Zurcher,436 U.S. at 556
& n.6 (quotation omitted). In the end, whatever nomenclature one uses to describe the concept, probable cause, at its core, âdepends on the totality of the circumstances.â Pringle,540 U.S. at 371
.
Our precedent thus reflects the fact-intensive nature of the probable cause inquiry. Every
lawful search warrant affidavit generally includes details about the timeliness of the information
presented, the nature of the crime involved, the objects to be seized, and the place to be searched.
See Wayne R. LaFave, 2 Search & Seizure § 3.7(d) (6th ed. 2024); United States v. Moore, 661
F.3d 309, 311 (6th Cir. 2011). But there are other time-honored markers in our Fourth Amendment
jurisprudence too, including tips to the police, controlled buys, trash pulls, police surveillance,
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 6
exploration of a suspectâs criminal history, and averments about an officerâs training and
experience.
It follows that there is no model fact pattern for establishing a fair probability that
contraband will be found at the place to be searched. Sometimes there is direct evidence, such as
a credible informantâs tip of criminal activity occurring in or directly outside of the location of the
search. See, e.g., United States v. Hines, 885 F.3d 919, 924(6th Cir. 2018); Moore,661 F.3d at 311
; United States v. Dyer,580 F.3d 386, 391
(6th Cir. 2009); United States v. Jones,159 F.3d 969, 974
(6th Cir. 1998). Or the search warrant affidavit might indicate that the proceeds of a crime will be found in the place to be searched. See, e.g., United States v. Brooks,594 F.3d 488, 495
(6th Cir. 2010); United States v. Rodriguez-Suazo,346 F.3d 637, 647
(6th Cir. 2003).
Other times, circumstantial evidence will do the trick. That is so where, for instance,
officers, after observing a person leave a location, soon find the individual possessing contraband,
possibly even engaging in a sale involving the contraband, suggesting that the illicit materials came
from the location. See, e.g., United States v. White, 990 F.3d 488, 490(6th Cir. 2021); Christian,925 F.3d at 310
; United States v. Crawford,943 F.3d 297, 309
(6th Cir. 2019). Other cases involve search warrants describing a controlled purchase of contraband followed by the defendant returning to the location sought to be searched, creating a reasonable inference that the defendant took the proceeds with him. See, e.g., United States v. Ellison,632 F.3d 347, 349
(6th Cir. 2011). Yet another set of cases involves a search warrant affidavit that adequately establishes both where a defendant resides as well as the defendantâs active engagement in certain criminal activity. In those circumstances, an inference can reasonably be made (especially when aided by an affiant- officerâs experience) that the âcriminal suspect keeps the âinstrumentalities and fruitsâ of his crime in his residence.â United States v. Williams,544 F.3d 683, 688
(6th Cir. 2008) (gun crimes); see also United States v. Elbe,774 F.3d 885, 890
(6th Cir. 2014) (child pornography); United States v. Carney,675 F.3d 1007, 1013
(6th Cir. 2012) (counterfeiting); United States v. Abboud,438 F.3d 554, 572
(6th Cir. 2006) (financial crimes). Instances of this nature involving drug crimes are sometimes described as âknown drug dealerâ cases. See, e.g., United States v. Miggins,302 F.3d 384
, 393â94 (6th Cir. 2002) (drug trafficking); United States v. Kenny,505 F.3d 458
, 461â62 (6th
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 7
Cir. 2007) (drug manufacturing). Many roads, in other words, can lead to a probable cause nexus,
given its fact-intensive foundation.
That is not to say there are no guidepostsâperhaps better described as âdo not enterâ
signsâto direct us along the way. See Gates, 462 U.S. at 238; Zurcher,436 U.S. at 556
. As an
en banc court, we identified two areas of caution five years ago when applying longstanding
principles of probable cause. See Christian, 925 F.3d at 310â11.
The first concerns the nature of the governmentâs burden. Because probable cause is not a
âhigh bar,â District of Columbia v. Wesby, 583 U.S. 48, 57(2018) (cleaned up), it follows that a warrantâs validity should not turn on whether it is supported by an âactual showingâ of criminal activity at the targeted location, Christian,925 F.3d at 311
. We instead ask whether officers provided direct or circumstantial support to create âmore than mere suspicionâ that contraband will be found at the location in question. United States v. King,227 F.3d 732, 739
(6th Cir. 2000) (citation omitted). Likewise, we do not ask whether other investigative methods were available to officers. See Christian,925 F.3d at 310
(recognizing that while the affidavit at issue could have been âmore precise,â we do not hold it to such an âexacting degree of specificityâ). Instead, our touchstone is simply whether the chosen means of investigation produced information that, as detailed in a warrant affidavit, adequately supports a finding of probable cause. In other words, we value the affidavit as we might those around us. We ask what good qualities it contains, not âwhat it lacks.â United States v. Allen,211 F.3d 970, 975
(6th Cir. 2000) (en banc).
We also addressed in Christian how to determine whether the issuing judge had a
substantial basis to think the government satisfied this burden. Critically, we do not scrutinize a
warrant affidavit in a âhypertechnicalâ or âline-by-lineâ manner. Christian, 925 F.3d at 311(quoting United States v. Woosley,361 F.3d 924, 926
(6th Cir. 2004)); see also Wesby, 538 U.S. at 61 (rejecting a âdivide-and-conquerâ approach to probable cause determinations (citation omitted)). The proper approach, rather, is a holistic one. We consider the ââtotality of the circumstancesâ constellationâ underlying probable cause, viewing each data point as a star in the collection. Christian,925 F.3d at 311
(citation omitted). No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page8 B. 1
. Measured by these settled principles, the supporting affidavit here cleared the modest
probable cause bar.
The controlled buys themselves justified a finding of probable cause. Take the second buy.
Sanders left the apartment, got in his vehicle, and drove directly to the buy location. At that point,
the informant entered the car with buy money and left with heroin and fentanyl. Sanders then
returned to the apartment, parking his car outside before entering the building. On this record, the
informant could have obtained the drugs only from Sanders, who had traveled directly from the
apartment to meet the informant. Evidence that one leaves a âresidence, engage[s] in a drug
transaction, and then return[s] into the residenceâ âplainly demonstrate[s] a sufficient nexusâ with
the location. Ellison, 632 F.3d at 349; United States v. Jones,817 F.3d 489, 492
(6th Cir. 2016)
(âWhat matters is . . . that [the defendant] left [the location to be searched] and drove straight to a
drug deal in which he was the seller.â); see also Dissenting Op. at 46 (acknowledging that where
police âwitness[] a suspect leave his apartment, participate in a drug transaction, and then
immediately return to the apartment,â significant âindicia of probabilityâ bless a subsequent search
of that location).
This evidence alone would end the matter. Yet there is more. We have an earlier controlled
buy, with many features like the one just described. And the search warrant sought not just drugs,
but also the proceeds of drug trafficking. There was good reason for the officers to target those
latter items. Officers twice witnessed Sanders drive away from the meet location with buy money,
park his car, and go straight into the apartment. Other than reaching the unlikely conclusion that
Sanders left those amounts in his vehicle parked outside, it was fair for officers to assume based
on the evidence before them that the proceeds were taken into the apartment. See Christian, 925
F.3d at 311(asking whether the issuing judgeâs determination was arbitrary); see also United States v. Coffee,434 F.3d 887, 892
(6th Cir. 2006) (recognizing that warrant affidavits â[m]ust be tested and interpreted by magistrates and courts in a commonsense and realistic fashionâ (quoting United States v. Ventresca,380 U.S. 102, 108
(1965))).
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 9
The initial tip that Sanders was selling heroin and fentanyl from the apartment only adds
to what is already obvious. An informant who seemingly was known to the officersârecall that
the informant met with the officers in person and promptly engaged in two controlled buysâwas
immediately proven right twice over through those transactions. All of this suggests the
informantâs initial tip was quite credible. See United States v. May, 399 F.3d 817, 824â25 (6th Cir. 2005) (noting value of a known informantâs tip); Dyer, 580 F.3d at 391â92 (similar); see also United States v. Howard,632 F. Appâx 795, 802
(6th Cir. 2015) (recognizing reliability of an informant who engages in controlled buys); United States v. Moore,999 F.3d 993, 997
(6th Cir. 2021) (collecting cases holding that a confidential informantâs credibility can be corroborated with a controlled buy). And a sufficiently reliable tip can help establish probable cause. See Gates,462 U.S. at 233
.
The search warrant affidavit reflected all of these markers. On this record, a substantial
basis supported the issuing judgeâs conclusion that evidence of drug trafficking would be found at
the Yellowstone apartment.
2.a. Sanders faults the warrant affidavit in multiple respects, starting with the informantâs
tip. Specifically, he criticizes the affidavit for failing to address the informantâs basis of
knowledge, past relationship with law enforcement, or knowledge about the inside of the
apartment. The thrust of the dissenting opinion makes a similar point, questioning the specificity
of the informantâs statements. See Dissenting Op. at. 40â43, 50â52. These are fair critiques. Yet
none come close to being fatal. For one, the tip was not a vital component of the probable cause
equation. That sets Sandersâs case apart from United States v. Higgins, 557 F.3d 381, 389(6th Cir. 2009), a case emphasized by the dissenting opinion, where the warrant affidavit relied exclusively on an informantâs tip to show probable cause. For another, more broadly, a warrant affidavit need not discuss the basis for the informantâs tip. Gates,462 U.S. at 233
. Nor must it spell out background information about an informant, see Hines,885 F.3d at 924
, or provide detail about the place to be searched, see Massachusetts v. Upton,466 U.S. 727, 731
, 733â34 (1984) (per curiam) (upholding probable cause finding based on a tip, even though the tipster âdid not specifically state that she saw [the stolen items] in the motor homeâ). At dayâs end, we assess No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 10 what the affidavit said about the informantâs tip, not what it did not. Allen,211 F.3d at 975
. And
here, as discussed, there was ample evidence to infer that the tip was worth pursuing.
b. Sanders, echoed by the dissenting opinion, next maintains that the facts in a warrant
affidavit must show two things: one, that the residence to be searched was the suspectâs home,
and, two, that the home had been used in drug trafficking (for instance, that someone witnessed a
drug deal or drug paraphernalia in or near the residence). And, they add, the affidavit here flunks
that test, as it failed to include direct evidence that contraband was previously seen in or near
Sandersâs apartment. See Dissenting Op. at 41, 44â45 (criticizing the affidavit for lacking the âkey
detail[s]â that âSanders resided at the Yellowstone [] apartmentâ as well as evidence akin to
âpersonal observations of drug deals or drug paraphernalia in the residenceâ).
This shared view rests on a misunderstanding of our decisions involving so-called known
drug dealers. A few points of clarification are in order, for today and beyond. Customarily, known
drug dealer cases involve a search warrant affidavit indicating that a drug dealer lives at a certain
location. See United States v. Reed, 993 F.3d 441, 444(6th Cir. 2021). At the same time, the affidavit typically lacks âfacts indicating that the defendant was dealing drugs from his residence.â United States v. McCoy,905 F.3d 409, 418
(6th Cir. 2018). That record tees up the question whether a judge can infer that drug traffickers use their homes to store drugs and otherwise further their drug trafficking. See Reed, 993 F.3d at 450â52 (discussing intracircuit debate); United States v. Ardd,911 F.3d 348
, 351â52 (6th Cir. 2018) (same).
Historically, our cases have blessed the inference that âin the case of drug dealers, evidence
is likely to be found where the dealers live.â United States v. Davidson, 936 F.2d 856, 860(6th Cir. 1991) (citation omitted); see also Jones,159 F.3d at 975
(same). In taking this approach, we stand in good company. See, e.g., United States v. Feliz,182 F.3d 82
, 87â88 (1st Cir. 1999); United States v. Benevento,836 F.2d 60
, 70â71 (2d Cir. 1987), abrogated on other grounds by United States v. Indelicato,865 F.2d 1370
(2d Cir. 1989) (en banc); United States v. Whitner,219 F.3d 289
, 297â98 (3d Cir. 2000); United States v. Williams,974 F.2d 480
, 481â82 (4th Cir. 1992) (per curiam); United States v. Robins,978 F.2d 881, 892
(5th Cir. 1992); United States v. Zamudio,909 F.3d 172, 176
(7th Cir. 2018); United States v. Luloff,15 F.3d 763, 768
(8th Cir. 1994); United States v. Angulo-Lopez,791 F.2d 1394, 1399
(9th Cir. 1986); United States v. $149,442.43 in U.S. No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 11 Currency,965 F.2d 868, 874
(10th Cir. 1992); United States v. Joseph,709 F.3d 1082, 1100
(11th Cir. 2013), abrogated on other grounds by United States v. Ruan,56 F.4th 1291
(11th Cir. 2023); United States v. Cardoza,713 F.3d 656, 661
(D.C. Cir. 2013); see also LaFave, supra § 3.7(d)
(â[M]any courts have been disinclined to require such facts in the particular case to support that
inference. Rather, it is commonly held that this gap can be filled merely on the basis . . . that drug
dealers ordinarily keep their supply, records and monetary profits at home.â). And the inference,
it bears noting, is more than mere supposition. As now-Justice Kavanaugh keenly reminded us,
âdrug dealers donât tend to work out of office buildingsâ:
Common experience suggests that drug dealers must mix and measure the
merchandise, protect it from competitors, and conceal evidence of their tradeâsuch
as drugs, drug paraphernalia, weapons, written records, and cashâin secure
locations. For the vast majority of drug dealers, the most convenient location to
secure items is the home. After all, drug dealers donât tend to work out of office
buildings. And no training is required to reach this commonsense conclusion.
United States v. Spencer, 530 F.3d 1003, 1007 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (Kavanaugh, J.).
Invoking a thin strand of cases, Sanders and the dissenting opinion contend that a probable
cause nexus can never be satisfied by a warrant affidavit that establishes only that a defendant is a
known drug dealer who lives at a certain location, see, e.g., United States v. Brown, 828 F.3d 375, 383â84 (6th Cir. 2016); United States v. Frazier,423 F.3d 526, 533
(6th Cir. 2005); Dissenting Op. at 41 (describing Brown as âcontrol[ling] this caseâ). To the extent we have ever suggested as much, the weight of our case law, as it does in so many probable cause contexts, rejects such a bright-line rule. See United States v. Sheckles,996 F.3d 330, 342
(6th Cir. 2021). We do so again
today.
Yet in rejecting one categorical rule, we should not be understood to erect a different one,
this time pointing in the opposite direction. That the known drug dealer âinference can be drawn
permissibly in some casesâ does not mean that probable cause is necessarily satisfied whenever
the home of someone connected to a drug trafficking crime is identified. See United States v.
McPhearson, 469 F.3d 518, 524 (6th Cir. 2006). When it comes to probable cause, it bears
repeating, there are few absolutes.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 12
As before, probable cause to search a known drug dealerâs residence is established where
the dealer is engaged in ââcontinual and ongoing operationsâ typically involving large amounts of
drugs.â See Sheckles, 996 F.3d at 342. Not every warrant will demonstrate as much, as our cases have shown. A warrant deemed deficient in this setting generally either fails to establish that a given location was where the dealer lived or fails to provide recent evidence of active drug trafficking by the accused dealer. See, e.g., United States v. Grant, No. 21-3686,2023 WL 119399
, at *3 (6th Cir. Jan. 6, 2023); United States v. Ward,967 F.3d 550
, 555â57 (6th Cir. 2020); McCoy,905 F.3d at 417
, 419 & n.5; Brown, 828 F.3d at 383â84; Higgins,557 F.3d at 390
; McPhearson, 469 F.3d at 524â25; United States v. Hython,443 F.3d 480, 486
(6th Cir. 2006). Contrary to
Sandersâs belief, however, a warrantâs shortcomings have not been due to the lack of direct
evidence about the happenings inside the residence. Remember, if the evidence plainly establishes
drug dealing at oneâs home, there is no need for an inference as to whether evidence of drug dealing
will be found inside. So Sandersâs suggestion that the warrant affidavit here had to include direct
evidence of drug trafficking within the apartment simply misunderstands our case law.
Using the appropriate lens for our known drug dealer case law, then, Sandersâs and the
dissenting opinionâs preferred approach is off base. This is not a known drug dealer case, as that
phrase is understood by the weight of our case law. Nothing in the affidavit suggests that Sanders
lived at the apartment. Nor does the propriety of the warrant depend on the inference that known
drug dealers are likely to keep evidence of drug trafficking where they reside. Instead, the warrant
affidavit established a probable cause nexus with the apartment through the totality of the
information included thereinânamely, two controlled buys with direct connections to the
apartment along with a credible tip. Outside of stray suggestions in the known drug dealer context,
we have never required âprior, actual observation of all the items listed in a search warrantâ to
establish a probable cause nexus; circumstantial evidence that contraband might be found at the
place to be searched suffices. Jones, 159 F.3d at 974. As a result, criticism that the affidavit in
this case failed to include a statement that, in the officerâs view, drug traffickers tend to store
evidence in their homes is a nonstarter.
Equally unavailing is Sandersâs argument that the warrant only âestablishesâ that evidence
of drug trafficking occurred in Sandersâs Chrysler, distinguishing between his car and the
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 13
apartment. That is an odd way to think about probable cause. All seem to agree that there was a
near certainty that drug trafficking evidence existed in the Chrysler, in light of the two controlled
drug buys. Whether such evidence also existed in the apartment was perhaps less certain. But we
do not diminish the evidence suggesting drugs would be found in the apartment by comparing it
to the probability of the same in the vehicle. See United States v. Stearn, 597 F.3d 540, 560(3d Cir. 2010) (recognizing that âeven if another location is an equally likely repository of evidence, a magistrate may infer probable cause to searchâ a residence based on circumstantial evidence establishing a âfair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular placeâ) (citation omitted). Nor, it bears repeating, is certainty the touchstone for probable cause. Wesby,583 U.S. at 57
; White,990 F.3d at 492
(âProbable cause does not demand resolving each
jot and tittle of metaphysical doubt.â). Relatedly, Sanders offers no support for his suggestion that
probable cause to search his car negates probable cause to search the apartment. One could conjure
up a world where Sanders limited his drug dealing to his vehicle. But â[a]n issuing judge need not
eliminate every alternative explanation to find a âfair probabilityâ that contraband will be present.â
White, 990 F.3d at 492â93. Given the evidence connecting Sandersâs drug trafficking with the
apartment, the judge did not arbitrarily issue the search warrant.
c. Sandersâs remaining criticisms of the affidavit merit little discussion. He points to cases
where, unlike here, the warrant affidavit included details about suspects carrying items that might
indicate drug activity (e.g., a white plastic bag) from the place to be searched. See, e.g., Crawford,
943 F.3d at 308â09; United States v. Miller, 850 F. Appâx 370, 374 (6th Cir. 2021). But none of those cases hinged on such a fact, let alone suggested that probable cause is limited to cases involving less careful criminals. See Crawford,943 F.3d at 309
(discussing the observation of a âduffle bagâ as one of several facts supporting probable cause determination). Nor do we agree with Sanders that the affidavit relied on stale information. The tip arrived roughly a week before the officer submitted his affidavit. In these circumstances, information even twice as old customarily is not considered stale. See Moore,999 F.3d at 998
. The tip here thus falls well short
of any proposed expiration date.
In the end, Sanders casts little doubt on the decision to issue the warrant used to search the
Yellowstone apartment.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 14
C.
Apart from whether the search warrant satisfied the Fourth Amendmentâs probable cause
requirement, there is an independent reason why the evidence unearthed at the Yellowstone
apartment need not be suppressed: the officers acted in good faith in securing the warrant. See
Christian, 925 F.3d at 312 (addressing good faith after concluding probable cause existed).
Consider some background principles underlying this well-tilled legal terrain. Excluding
unlawfully seized evidence in criminal proceedings is not required by the Constitution. Instead,
the exclusionary rule is a judicially crafted remedy for Fourth Amendment violations. Utah v.
Strieff, 579 U.S. 232, 237(2016). The ruleâs sole purpose is to deter police misconduct. Davis v. United States,564 U.S. 229
, 236â38 (2011). To achieve that aim, a court will suppress evidence obtained through an officerâs âdeliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent conduct, or in some circumstances recurring or systemic negligence.â Herring v. United States,555 U.S. 135, 144
(2009). But if an officer acts with an objectively âreasonable good-faith beliefâ that her conduct is lawful, exclusion is unwarranted. Davis,564 U.S. at 238
(citation omitted).
This latter command informs how the exclusionary rule applies when a warrant falls short
of establishing probable cause. In its seminal decision, United States v. Leon, the Supreme Court
held that suppression is not an available remedy when officers conduct a search in good faith
reliance on a judicially authorized warrant. 468 U.S. 897, 909, 922(1984). In that instance, any error in the probable cause calculus likely belongs to the judicial officer issuing the warrant, not the law enforcement officer seeking it, thereby undermining the grounds for exclusion based on misconduct. Davis,564 U.S. at 239
. Nor do we customarily expect an officer to second guess a judgeâs probable cause determination, given both the nature of the inquiry and the judicial officerâs role in undertaking it. Leon,468 U.S. at 921
.
That is the thrust of Leonâs exception to the exclusionary rule. But it is not the end of the
road. For the Leon exception has its own exceptions. And Sanders invokes two of them for our
consideration.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 15
1. Bare Bones Affidavit.
a. Sanders leads with Leonâs exception for a warrant that is âbased on an affidavit âso
lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely
unreasonable.ââ 468 U.S. at 923(quotation omitted). By relying on a so-called âbare-bones affidavit,â an officer does not act in objectively reasonable good faith and thus remains blameworthy for conducting the search, despite having a warrant. Reed,993 F.3d at 450
. When,
then, is a search warrant affidavit so deficient that it not only fails to establish a âprobable cause
nexus,â but is also âbare bonesâ?
Leon identified a trio of skeletal affidavits. 468 U.S. at 915. One was the affidavit at issue in a Prohibition era case, Nathanson v. United States,290 U.S. 41
(1933). Bare hardly begins to describe the document thereâit consisted solely of a statement that the affiant âhas cause to suspect and does believeâ that illicit liquor âis now deposited and containedâ at the location to be searched.Id. at 44
. Next was the affidavit supporting an arrest warrant in Giordenello v. United States,357 U.S. 480
(1958). That submission simply indicated that named witnesses alleged that the defendant âdid receive [and] conceal . . . heroin hydrochlorideâ in violation of federal law.Id. at 481
. Last was the affidavit from Aguilar v. Texas,378 U.S. 108
(1964). It informed the judge only that officers had âreceived reliable information from a credible personâ that allowed them to âbelieve that heroin, marijuana, barbiturates and other narcotics and narcotic paraphernalia [were] being kept atâ the place to be searched.Id.
at 109 & n.1. Together, these âprototypesâ give a sense, but âdo not represent the universe of unacceptable affidavits.â United States v. White,874 F.3d 490, 499
(6th Cir. 2017).
In line with these examples, we have reserved the moniker âbare bonesâ for affidavits that
are either âcompletely devoid of any nexus betweenâ the illegal activity and the place to be
searched or the item to be seized, Carpenter, 360 F.3d at 595â96, or âmerely state[] suspicions, or
conclusions, without providing some underlying factual circumstances regarding veracity,
reliability, and basis of knowledge,â Christian, 925 F.3d at 312(cleaned up). Put another way, bare bones affidavits nakedly assume or vaguely conclude, without attempting to demonstrate why, probable cause has been satisfied. See United States v. Baker,976 F.3d 636, 647
(6th Cir. 2020); see also United States v. Gilbert,952 F.3d 759, 765
(6th Cir. 2020); White, 874 F.3d at No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 16 498â99. In those circumstances an officer has not acted in âobjectively reasonable good faithâ in relying on such a warrant, thereby justifying application of the exclusionary rule. See White,874 F.3d at 497
. On the other hand, where an affidavit presents a âmodicum of evidence, however slight,â showing âsome connection, regardless of how remote it may have beenâ between the âcriminal activity at issueâ and location of the search,id.
(cleaned up), there exists a âminimally sufficient nexusâ necessitating application of the good faith rule, see Carpenter,360 F.3d at 596
. Collectively, our bare bones affidavit case law sets a bright out-of-bounds marker governing officer conduct. See United States v. Watson,498 F.3d 429
, 431â32 (6th Cir. 2007); Reed,993 F.3d at 452
.
b. Did the affidavit here entirely fail to connect the evidence of wrongdoing (drug
trafficking) to the place to be searched (the apartment)? No. The affidavit detailed three separate
ties between Sandersâs drug dealing and that location. One, the first controlled buy, followed by
Sanders returning to the apartment. Two, the second controlled buy, which mirrored the first and
added that Sanders came to the second buy from the apartment. And three, the informantâs tip that
Sanders was trafficking in drugs from the apartment. In other words, the affidavit did not blindly
guess that evidence of drug trafficking would be discovered at the apartment. It had more than âa
modicum of evidence.â Indeed, much more.
At bottom, we see no indication that the officers were on clear notice that Hazlewoodâs
affidavit was so deficient that they acted deliberately, recklessly, or grossly negligent in not
second-guessing the judgeâs decision. Nor has there been a showing of ârecurring or systemic
negligence.â See Herring, 555 U.S. at 144. The affidavit here is far more informative from the triumvirate of paradigmatic bare bones affidavits cited in Leon. Our prior cases point in the same direction. Hazlewoodâs affidavit is in line with others in which we found the existence of a minimally sufficient nexus. See, e.g., Higgins,557 F.3d at 391
(applying Leon to uphold a warrant procured through an affidavit supported by an untested informantâs assertion that he had just purchased drugs at the home to be searched); United States v. Van Shutters,163 F.3d 331, 336
(6th Cir. 1998) (minimally sufficient nexus established by an experienced officerâs allegation, based on his personal knowledge, that rooms within a residence were âavailableâ to a person engaging in a counterfeiting scheme); United States v. Schultz,14 F.3d 1093, 1098
(6th Cir. 1994) (refusing No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 17 to exclude evidence from a search of a bank safety deposit box supported by affidavit that hinged on averments that the officerâs training and experience led him to believe that evidence would be located there); United States v. Savoca,761 F.2d 292, 298
(6th Cir. 1985) (concluding officers
reasonably relied on a warrant to search a hotel room for evidence concerning a bank robbery
based solely on the fact that the robbers were previously seen in the room more than once). All in
all, the warrant affidavit here was not bare bones.
Sanders disagrees. In most respects, his Leon-based challenges are indistinguishable from
his challenges to the probable cause finding. For instance, he again criticizes the affidavit for
failing to explain better the informantâs tip, Sandersâs relationship with the apartment, or the nature
of the drug trafficking occurring there. But we have repeatedly cautioned against conflating the
separate skeletal affidavit and probable cause standards. See White, 874 F.3d at 497; Gilbert,952 F.3d at 763
(citing Christian,925 F.3d at 318
(Thapar, J., concurring)). At a broad level, of course, whether an affidavit lacks probable cause or can be described as bare bones both depend on how much evidence connects the underlying criminal activity with a person, place, or item. But the similarities end there. The probable cause inquiry, remember, focuses on the probability that evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place. Grubbs,547 U.S. at 95
. Leonâs bare bones exception, on the other hand, concerns the officerâs objective blameworthiness. See Davis,564 U.S. at 239
. Sandersâs critique of the finer points of the affidavit, in other words, are the province of probable cause, not Leon good faith. See Gates,462 U.S. at 232
.
Sanders resurrects other points as well. Many are premised on strands of our known drug
dealer jurisprudence. We have already explained how Sanders misunderstands those decisions.
And even then, given the previously conflicting conclusions in that line of cases, we have
repeatedly forgiven officers on good faith grounds for failing to appreciate our precedential
nuances. See Ardd, 911 F.3d at 351â52; Reed, 993 F.3d at 452.
In something akin to a negligence inquiry, Sanders next posits that no âreasonable
officer[]â would have relied on Hazlewoodâs affidavit without seeking additional corroboration.
Sanders questions why the officers did not further surveil the apartment, conduct a trash pull, or
separately engage in more extensive public records searches to determine whether Sanders lived
at the apartment. But this sort of Monday morning reasonableness assessment has no home in our
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 18
bare bones affidavit case law. See, e.g., White, 874 F.3d at 497. Why would we require an officer to undertake an exhaustive investigation to confirm the probable cause that, to his mind, already existed? See Allen,211 F.3d at 976
. Especially when, as here, officers were in a time-sensitive
pursuit of a fentanyl dealer, one who ended up possessing over 30 grams of the substance, a few
milligrams of which are potentially fatal. See U.S. Drug Enfât Admin., Facts About Fentanyl,
https://perma.cc/DTA9-BP5U (last visited June 27, 2024).
Lastly, Sanders attempts to distinguish two cases where we held that Leon did apply:
United States v. Washington, 380 F.3d 236(6th Cir. 2004), and our en banc decision in Carpenter. Even if these cases are distinguishable, but see Sanders,59 F.4th at 254
(Nalbandian, J., dissenting), we do not ask nonlawyer officers to discern the fine legal distinctions between one case and the next, let alone take heed from those distinctions that the affidavit here was out of bounds, as the dissenting opinion would do. Reed,993 F.3d at 452
(reserving Leonâs bare bones exception to âobviousâ cases); see Dissenting Op. at 53â54 (comparing this case to other applications of the good faith rule). Washington, in fact, did not even render a holding on probable cause,380 F.3d at 240
, making it a particularly poor guide. Cf. Salazar v. Molina,37 F.4th 278, 286
(5th Cir. 2022) (observing that a case âcannot clearly establish the law [when] the court found
no Fourth Amendment violationâ).
2. Franks.
Leonâs good faith exception likewise âdoes not apply when the supporting affidavit
contained knowing or reckless falsity in violation ofâ Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154(1978). United States v. Abernathy,843 F.3d 243, 257
(6th Cir. 2016) (cleaned up). Franks set forth a regimented process for establishing such a knowing or reckless falsity. We start from the premise that warrant affidavits have âa presumption of validity,â438 U.S. at 171
, making Sandersâs task of seeking exclusion under Franks a tall one. He must first make a âsubstantial preliminary showingâ that the affidavit contains a knowing, intentional, or reckless falsehood.Id.
at 155â56. He must likewise show that the affidavit would not have established probable cause without the falsity, as Franks does not extend to immaterial falsehoods.Id.
at 171â72. Assuming these initial burdens are met, the district court would hold an evidentiary hearing to determine if Sanders can further support his allegations by a preponderance of the evidence.Id. at 156
, 169â70. Only if No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 19 Sanders shoulders this âheavy burdenâ would the evidence derived from the search warrant be suppressed. United States v. Bennett,905 F.2d 931, 934
(6th Cir. 1990).
Sanders maintains that one part of the warrant affidavitâthe assertion that he traveled from
the apartment to the site of the second buyââmay violate Franks.â Appellantâs Br. at 36. Why?
Because of an audio recording in an unrelated case. In that recording, an officer refers to a fellow
officerâone who was later involved in the surveillance of Sanders before the second buyâas
unethical. Based on this audio alone, Sanders believes that the district court should have conducted
an evidentiary hearing to gauge the veracity of the search warrant affidavit as it concerned the
purportedly unethical officer and, in turn, excluded any tainted evidence derived from the search.
Sandersâs basis for exclusion under Franks is underwhelming. He does not establish a
falsehood in the warrant affidavit regarding the second controlled buy, let alone one that was made
with the requisite intent. Indeed, Sanders fails to provide any evidence suggesting that he did not
go directly from the apartment to the buy site. See Franks, 438 U.S. at 171(âAffidavits or sworn or otherwise reliable statements of witnesses should be furnished [to support an allegation of a falsehood], or their absence satisfactorily explained.â). Instead, he merely points to the recording, which says nothing about the Sanders investigation and contains only general references to a single officerâs lax ethics, without reference to any specific investigative shortcoming. This vague, conclusory assertion falls well short of a âsubstantial preliminary showingâ that the affidavit contains a knowing, intentional, or reckless falsehood. See United States v. Young,847 F.3d 328
, 348â49 (6th Cir. 2017) (recognizing that a defendant must do more than make a bald allegation that an officer was intending to mislead the issuing judge); United States v. Damrah,412 F.3d 618, 625
(6th Cir. 2005) (rejecting a ânon-specific and unsupportedâ Franks attack). Nor, for that matter, does it come close to showing that Hazlewood, the affiant, knew (or recklessly disregarded the fact) that false information was conveyed to him by the supposedly unethical officer. See Leon,468 U.S. at 923
; see also United States v. OâNeill,94 F.4th 531
, 539â40 (6th Cir. 2024)
(recognizing that an officer must, at a minimum, consciously harbor doubt about the accuracy of
her affidavit to trigger exclusion under Franks).
Sanders also fails on Franksâs materiality prong. Keep in mind that the purportedly
unethical officer in question added one ingredient to the probable cause mixture: he observed
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 20
Sanders exit the apartment and enter his vehicle before the second buy. Yet the warrant affidavit
continues. It says that â[o]fficersâ then âfollowed the vehicle from [the apartment] uninterrupted
to theâ buy location. In other words, beyond the officer in question, at least one other officer,
whom we must presume supplied truthful information to the affiant, also saw Sanders drive
directly from the apartment to the second controlled buy. Excising any taint from one officer thus
does not undermine the probable cause determination. And then consider the officersâ
observations regarding the first controlled buy, which more than sealed the deal. In the end, two
controlled buys and a credible informantâs tip all linked Sandersâs drug dealing to the apartment.
As a result, Sanders did not deserve a Franks hearing, let alone exclusion.
* * * * *
The district court did not err in refusing to suppress the evidence resulting from the search
of the Yellowstone apartment.
III.
Sandersâs final argument concerns his motion for supplemental discovery under Federal
Rule of Criminal Procedure 16. As a starting point, discovery in criminal cases customarily is
modest when compared with civil litigation. The Constitution affords a criminal defendant no
general right to discovery. See Weatherford v. Bursey, 429 U.S. 545, 559(1977). Grounds for discovery accordingly are targeted. The Constitution provides one of them: due process prohibits the government from suppressing material evidence that is favorable to the defense. See Brady v. Maryland,373 U.S. 83, 87
(1963); see also Giglio v. United States,405 U.S. 150
, 154â55 (1972) (extending Brady to evidence that could be used to impeach the credibility of a government witness). Congress provided another in the Jencks Act. Under that law, the government, on the motion of a defendant, typically must produce statements or reports it âpossess[es]â made by its witnesses that ârelate[] to the subject matter as to which the witness has testified.â18 U.S.C. § 3500
(b).
Beyond those relatively narrow avenues, âRule 16 is the primary means of discovery in
criminal cases.â United States v. Llanez-Garcia, 735 F.3d 483, 493(6th Cir. 2013); United States v. Presser,844 F.2d 1275
, 1285 n.12 (6th Cir. 1988) (discussing Brady, the Jencks Act, and Rule
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 21
16 as generally constituting the âuniverse of discovery to which the defendant is entitledâ). Rule
16 identifies categories of information the government must disclose to a defendant
â[u]pon . . . request.â See, e.g., Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(A) (defendantâs oral statements made
before or after arrest); id. 16(a)(1)(B) (relevant written or recorded statements by defendant); id.
16(a)(1)(F) (results or reports of any physical or mental examinations or any scientific test); id.
16(a)(1)(G) (expert witnesses). Relevant here is the provision requiring disclosure of government
documents and objects that are âmaterial to preparing the defense;â âintend[ed]â for âuseâ in the
governmentâs âcase-in-chief at trial;â or were âobtained from or belong[] to the defendant.â Id.
16(a)(1)(E)(i)â(iii).
Invoking Rule 16(a)(1)(E), Sanders sought disclosure of two categories of documents
relating to the controlled buys discussed in the search warrant affidavit. The first was a category
of information he loosely described as âcase reports.â Sanders offered several justifications for
why he needed those reports, which he generally tied to his objections to the issuance of the search
warrant. The district court, however, was unmoved. It denied Sandersâs request on the basis that
the âcase reportsâ were âtoo attenuated to be material [to preparing the defense] under Rule
16(a)(1)(E)(i).â
Sanders also sought discovery into the drugs exchanged during the controlled buys. Again,
he encountered resistance. The district court denied this request, too, holding that Sandersâs
proposed disclosures would not be material to his defense.
We review those decisions for an abuse of discretion. United States v. Jordan, 544 F.3d
656, 667(6th Cir. 2008). In practice, that means we will leave them untouched unless we have âa definite and firm conviction that the district court committed a clear error of judgment.â United States v. Ramirez-Figueredo,33 F.4th 312, 318
(6th Cir. 2022) (citation omitted). On balance, we
see no abuse of discretion in denying Sanders additional discovery under Rule 16(a)(1)(E).
A.
Begin with whether Rule 16 required the government to disclose âcase reportsâ regarding
the investigation leading to the search warrant. Sandersâs request poses a threshold inquiryâwhat,
in his mind, is a case report? By and large, production of that category of information appears to
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 22
be in tension with Rule 16(a)(2)âs prohibition on the disclosure of âreports, memoranda, or other
internal government documents made byâ a government agent âin connection with investigatingâ
a case. Perhaps Sanders has something else in mind. But that was for him to say, which he failed
to do. So his request appears to falter from the start.
Assuming there is an identifiable body of âcase reportsâ that falls outside of Rule 16(a)(2)âs
prohibition, Sanders still must show how the Rule validates his demand. To his mind, production
of the reports is authorized by Rule 16(a)(1)(E)(i), which allows for the disclosure of an âitemâ
that âis material to preparing the defense.â He believes that is so for two reasons.
1. To start, Sanders says the reports would aid him in challenging the warrant authorizing
the search of the apartment. Underlying Sandersâs assertion is the belief that the term âdefenseâ
in Rule 16(a)(1)(E)(i) allows for the disclosure of any item that can materially help Sanders in any
way against the prosecution. The government, on the other hand, views âdefenseâ as referring
only to a defense on the merits of the various possession chargesâa definition that the government
says the evidence Sanders seeks does not meet.
However one might resolve this debate as an initial matter, we must take heed of holdings
from the Supreme Court. And here, the Supreme Court has answered this question in the
governmentâs favor. Consider United States v. Armstrong, 517 U.S. 456(1996). Confronted with an earlier (but substantively indistinguishable) version of Rule 16, Armstrong interpreted âdefenseâ to mean the âdefendantâs response to the Governmentâs case in chief.âId. at 462
. In so doing, the Supreme Court cabined discovery in this setting to âshieldâ claimsâthat is, evidence that ârefute[s] the Governmentâs arguments that the defendant committed the crime charged.âId.
And it contrasted that circumstance with one in which the defendant seeks to use the discovery as a âswordââfor example, in Armstrong, to challenge the âprosecutionâs conduct of the case.âId.
In that way, the Supreme Court opted against a more expansive reading of the term âdefense,â one that would have encompassed any evidence pertaining to a claim that âresults in nonconviction.âId.
at 462â63.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 23
Our cases following Armstrong have imposed similar limits. We have uniformly held that
Rule 16(a)(1)(E)(i) allows for production of only those items that would âhelp [the defendant]
combat the governmentâs case against him as to one of the charged crimes.â United States v.
Harney, 934 F.3d 502, 508(6th Cir. 2019) (citing Armstrong,517 U.S. at 462
); see United States v. McCaleb,302 F. Appâx 410, 415
(6th Cir. 2008) (interpreting Armstrong as limiting Rule 16(a)(1)(E)(i) discovery to materials that help the defendant âcontradict[] the Governmentâs caseâ). Said differently, Rule 16 âapplies only to shield claims that refute the Governmentâs arguments that the defendant committedâ the offenses in the indictment. United States v. Pirosko,787 F.3d 358, 367
(6th Cir. 2015) (cleaned up); United States v. Semrau,693 F.3d 510, 529
(6th Cir. 2012) (similar). In line with this understanding, we have rejected the argument that Rule 16 requires unlimited âdisclosure of the governmentâs investigative practices[.]â United States v. Warshak,631 F.3d 266, 327
(6th Cir. 2010).
This understanding forecloses Sandersâs argument. Armstrong required disclosure under
Rule 16 for evidence that ârefute[s] the Governmentâs arguments that the defendant committed the
crime charged.â 517 U.S. at 462. But Sanders instead makes a vague request for evidence related
to âlaw enforcementâs investigative methods, the timing of the alleged controlled buys, and the
nature and extent of [police] surveillanceâ to âgauge the âcaliber of the investigation,ââ with no
explanation of how that evidence would refute the governmentâs case-in-chief. He does not
meaningfully challenge his possession of the contraband in his apartment or even the validity of
the controlled-buy evidence underpinning the search warrant. Although it is conceivable that in
another case investigatory materials, including documents related to a search warrant, could
materially help a defendant refute the governmentâs case-in-chief, Sanders has not demonstrated
as much here. So we need not explore the full scope of Armstrongâs limits on Rule 16 discovery.
It is enough to conclude, contrary to the dissenting opinion, that simply asserting that âdiscovery
. . . could . . . vitiate[] the governmentâs caseâ is insufficient to trigger Rule 16âs discovery
obligations. See Dissenting Op. at 58 (emphasis added).
Seeing things otherwise, Sanders returns to Rule 16âs use of the term âdefense.â See Fed.
R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(E)(i) (allowing for disclosure of an âitem [that] is material to preparing the
defenseâ). Were we starting from a blank slate, Sandersâs reading of the term might carry the day.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 24
After all, in the abstract, a defendantâs defense can âtake many formsâ beyond a âsimple response
to the Governmentâs case in chief.â See Armstrong, 517 U.S. at 471â72 (Breyer, J., concurring in
part and concurring in judgment). But as a ââmiddle managementâ court, we must follow the
Supreme Courtâs precedent.â Knight v. Metro. Govât of Nashville & Davidson Cnty., 67 F.4th 816,
832 (6th Cir. 2023).
Sanders also directs us to the Ninth Circuitâs decision in United States v. Soto-Zuniga, 837
F.3d 992(9th Cir. 2016). There, the Ninth Circuit interpreted Rule 16(a)(1)(E)(i) to entitle a defendant to discovery regarding a warrantless car search at a vehicle checkpoint.Id.
at 1000â02. But the unique circumstances there are worlds apart from Sandersâs request. Indeed, Soto-Zuniga seemed to align with the general understanding that a defendant may be âentitled to certain discoveryâ to support a motion to suppress evidence gathered from a warrantless search. See 6 LaFave, supra, § 11.2(d); cf. United States v. Thompson,16 F. Appâx 340, 344
(6th Cir. 2001) (per
curiam) (recognizing that an evidentiary hearing may be required to address the propriety of a
warrantless search). For that reason, the Ninth Circuit did not grapple with whether Rule 16 limits
discovery into the circumstances supporting a search warrant.
2. Sanders also seeks discovery of the case reports for use as âbackground evidenceâ at
trial to question the investigationâs credibility. This argument has its own faults. Chief among
them, the requested information is not material to Sandersâs defense on the merits.
For Sanders to demonstrate an entitlement to the information sought, he must show that it
is âmaterialâ to the case he intends to make at trial. See Rule 16(a)(1)(E)(i) (allowing disclosure
where âthe item is material to preparing the defenseâ). That is, he must establish âthat the pre-trial
disclosure of the disputed evidence would enable [him] significantly to alter the quantum of proof
in . . . [his] favor.â 2 Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 254 (4th ed.
Apr. 2023 Update); see also United States v. Lykins, 428 F. Appâx 621, 624(6th Cir. 2011) (per curiam) (similar); United States v. Thompson,758 F. Appâx 398
, 405 (6th Cir. 2018)
(understanding materiality to mean that the undisclosed information âwould exculpate [the
defendant] or undermine the governmentâs case against himâ).
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 25
Yet Sandersâs arguments as to why these reports would have aided his defense are poorly
developed. By and large, he merely speculates that the reports contain information that casts doubt
on the validity of the warrant or would otherwise help him âexploreâ or âdiscreditâ other parts of
the investigation. Those âconclusoryâ assertions are insufficient. See Harney, 934 F.3d at 507â
08 (explaining that materiality requires âmore than conclusory argumentsâ that the information
will help the defense); see also United States v. Phillip, 948 F.2d 241, 250â51 (6th Cir. 1991); United States v. Conder,423 F.2d 904, 910
(6th Cir. 1970). Instead, to demonstrate an entitlement
to discovery, Sanders needed to address how the additional evidence might show, in a material
sense, that he did not possess the guns or narcotics found at the apartment. Put more simply, he
must offer âsome evidenceâ as to what discovery might yield. Harney, 934 F.3d at 507â08
(citation omitted). His unsubstantiated theories are not enough.
Sandersâs most pointed suggestion is that the case reports might clarify his statement to
officers at the time of the search that he had âreturned to drug trafficking.â But why further
information on that confession might help fend off the charges at trial is anyoneâs guess. Sandersâs
included, it seems, as he does not explain what clarification he hoped to achieve, let alone how it
would help his defense. This assertion too falls short of justifying discovery. See Lykins, 428 F.
Appâx at 624.
3. There is yet one more hill Sanders has failed to climb. Even assuming he had a
justifiable and material basis for requesting the case reports, Sanders still cannot show that his
failure to obtain those materials affected his substantial rights, thereby overcoming the harmless
error standard. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a) (harmless error); see also United States v. Clark, 385
F.3d 609, 619(6th Cir. 2004) (reviewing Rule 16 challenges under Rule 52(a)). An error would have altered Sandersâs substantial rights if it â[a]ffect[ed] the outcome of the district court proceedings.â See United States v. Olano,507 U.S. 725, 734
(1993). While the government bears the burden to show an error is harmless, Sanders at the outset must âput the question in issueâ by identifying potential ways he was harmed. See United States v. Johnson,837 F. Appâx 373
, 379 (6th Cir. 2020) (citing United States v. Montgomery,969 F.3d 582, 583
(6th Cir. 2020) (order)); see also United States v. Jensen,608 F.2d 1349
, 1357â58 (10th Cir. 1979) (recognizing that
although âdefendants are often at a disadvantage because they cannot know with certainty what
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 26
information the government has,â Rule 52(a) prevents reversal of âa conviction on mere
speculation that favorable information exists which, if produced [under Rule 16], might
conceivably result in an acquittal on the charges.â).
Sanders all but forfeits the point. While rather fulsome in suggesting that the discovery
denials violated his constitutional rights, Sanders offers little to demonstrate how those denials
affected his odds of defeating the prosecution. And it is otherwise hard to imagine how that is so.
For instance, even if discovery proved that one officer lied about the surveillance before the second
buy, that falsehood, for reasons already discussed, would not be material under Franks or
otherwise render the warrant affidavit so deficient as to make Leon inapplicable. Equally true, the
requested investigatory background material is unlikely to be a game changer in Sandersâs favor.
In practice, background information is âoften . . . far more prejudicial to the defendant than useful
in determining guilt of the charged offense.â Cf. 1 Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick,
Federal Evidence § 4:33 (4th ed. Aug. 2023 Update). Nor has Sanders shown otherwise.
Considering that officers discovered narcotics and two firearms in Sandersâs bedroom, it is
difficult to see how background information about the investigation would entirely tilt the playing
field in Sandersâs favor. See United States v. Hadley, 431 F.3d 484, 507 (6th Cir. 2005) (holding
that dominion and control over oneâs own bedroom is sufficient to find constructive possession).
All told, the district court did not err in denying Sandersâs request for the case reports, nor was any
purported error prejudicial.
B.
That leaves Sandersâs request for supplemental discovery regarding the âdrug evidenceâ
related to the controlled buys. Unlike his earlier request, this one proceeds under Rule
16(a)(1)(E)(iii), which affords Sanders access to an âitemâ that was âobtained from or belongs to
the defendant.â Assuming that the drug evidence so qualifies, here again Sanders falls short at the
harmless error stage. See Clark, 385 F.3d at 619(reviewing an assumed Rule 16 violation for harmless error). As Judge Nalbandian recognized in his panel dissent, Sanders failed to show how his inability to inspect the drugs affected his âsubstantial rights.â Sanders,59 F.4th at 254
n.3 (Nalbandian, J., dissenting). The governmentâs case, recall, rested on the drugs and guns found at the apartment, not items exchanged during the controlled buy. So it is not easy to visualize how No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 27 the âoutcome of this case would have changed if [Sanders] had inspectedâ the drugs he sold to the informant.Id.
Accordingly, any error tied to Sandersâs inability to access the drug evidence was
harmless.
* * * * *
We affirm the judgment of the district court.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 28
__________________
CONCURRENCE
__________________
GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I concur in the judgment, join Section II of the concurrence of Judges Stranch and
Bloomekatz, and concur in the remaining portions of the majority opinion except Section III and
the âknown drug dealersâ discussion. I write to explain my objection to Section II.B.2.b, which
misstates Fourth Amendment jurisprudence and is acknowledged dicta.
The Fourth Amendment provides:
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. âThe Amendment was in large part a reaction to the general warrants and
warrantless searches that so alienated the colonists and had helped speed the movement for
independence.â Chimel v. California, 395 U.S. 752, 761(1969); see also Weeks v. United States,232 U.S. 383
, 389â91 (1914); Boyd v. United States,116 U.S. 616
, 624â30 (1886).
The Fourth Amendment requires probable cause, not just mere suspicion, for a police
officer to obtain a search warrant. U.S. Const. amend. IV; see also Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213,
239(1983); Brinegar v. United States,338 U.S. 160, 175
(1949). The officerâs supporting âaffidavit must provide the magistrate with a substantial basis for determining the existence of probable cause,â i.e., that âthere is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.â Gates,462 U.S. at 238
.
As our en banc court held in United States v. Carpenter, â[t]o justify a search, the
circumstances must indicate why evidence of illegal activity will be found in a particular place.
There must, in other words, be a nexus between the place to be searched and the evidence sought.â
360 F.3d 591, 594â95 (6th Cir. 2004) (en banc) (internal quotation marks omitted). Moreover, âit No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 29 cannot followâ that, âsimply from the existence of probable cause to believe a suspect guilty, that there is also probable cause to search his residence.â United States v. Savoca,761 F.2d 292, 297
(6th Cir. 1985) (citation omitted).
Accordingly, a âdefendantâs status as a drug dealer, standing alone,â cannot âgive[] rise to
a fair probability that drugs will be found in his home.â United States v. Frazier, 423 F.3d 526,
533(6th Cir. 2005); see also United States v. Brown,828 F.3d 375, 383
(6th Cir. 2016) (â[W]e
have required some reliable evidence connecting the known drug dealerâs ongoing criminal
activity to the residence; that is, we have required facts showing that the residence had been used
in drug trafficking, such as an informant who observed drug deals or drug paraphernalia in or
around the residence.â).
In the present case, the majority opinion correctly holds that â[t]he controlled buys
themselves justified a finding of probable cause.â Defendantâs actions of leaving the apartment
immediately before the buy and promptly returning to it afterward gave credence to the initial tip
that he was selling heroin and fentanyl from the apartment. Those facts established probable cause
to search the apartment, and that is all we need to resolve this issue.
But the majority opinion goes on a tangent endorsing caselaw finding probable cause to
search the homes of âknown drug dealersâ (whatever that undefined term means) based solely on
a purported inference that âevidence is likely to be found where the dealers live.â (Quoting with
approval United States v. Davidson, 936 F.2d 856, 860 (6th Cir. 1991)). I cannot join this aspect
of the majority opinion for three reasons.
First, as the majority opinion readily admits, âthis is not a known drug dealer case.â
Simply, there is no occasion to opine on the scope of that caselaw. See Wright v. Spaulding,
939 F.3d 695, 701(â[A] conclusion that does nothing to determine the outcome is dictum and has no binding force.â). This case is not one where the affidavit lacks âfacts indicating that the defendant was dealing drugs from his residence,â United States v. McCoy,905 F.3d 409, 418
(6th Cir. 2018), so it is not one where we should consult, and unnecessarily endorse, such
inapposite caselaw.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 30
Second, the majority opinion suggests that, without any direct or circumstantial evidence
connecting a home with criminal activity, a search warrant may be issued because âa judge can
infer that drug traffickers use their homes to store drugs and otherwise further their drug
trafficking.â In my view, this is antithetical to our liberties secured by the Fourth Amendment of
the Bill of Rights. See Carpenter, 360 F.3d at 594â95; Frazier, 423 F.3d at 533; Brown,828 F.3d at 383
.
The majorityâs disclaimer that police officers wonât ânecessarilyâ have probable cause to
search a residence âwhenever the home of someone connected to a drug trafficking crime is
identifiedâ does little to assuage my concerns. Indeed, that statement lays bare what the majority
is doing: suggesting that probable cause to search a home could be based solely on the fact that a
âknown drug dealerâ lives there.
Finally, I question the reasonableness of an inference that a person suspected of distributing
illegal drugs stores drugs in his home. It is equally plausible that the more successful a drug dealer
becomes, the less likely he will keep tools of the drug-trafficking trade at his personal residence
as a way to avoid detection. See, e.g., United States v. Rosales, 990 F.3d 989, 996(6th Cir. 2021) (âThat no typical evidence of drug dealing was found at Rosalesâ house does not undermine the jury verdict because the government also provided testimony that drug dealers often use stash houses to conceal their activity.â); see also United States v. Taylor,85 F.4th 386
, 390â91 (6th Cir.
2023) (detailing a drug dealerâs storage of kilograms of cocaine and fentanyl at his girlfriendâs
residence). Indeed, the Sentencing Guidelines provide for an enhancement when a defendant
maintains a premises, such as a stash house, âfor the purpose of manufacturing or distributing a
controlled substance,â suggesting that a fair number of defendants maintain drug houses separate
from their residences. See U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(b)(12).
For these reasons, I respectfully disagree with, and do not join, the dicta contained in the
âknown drug dealersâ portion of Section II.B.2.b. of the majority opinion. I concur in the
judgment, join Section II of the concurrence of Judges Stranch and Bloomekatz, and join the
remaining portions of the majorityâs opinion except Section III.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 31
__________________
CONCURRENCE
__________________
MATHIS, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment. I agree with
the dissent that officers with the Lexington Police Department lacked probable cause to search the
Yellowstone apartment. And I agree with the majority that the good-faith exception operates to
save the search of the apartment. I also agree that the district court did not err in denying Antwone
Sandersâs motion for supplemental discovery for the reasons stated in Judge Stranch and Judge
Bloomekatzâs concurrence. I write separately to provide my understanding of why the search
warrant affidavit in this case is not a bare-bones affidavit.
I.
The key facts related to the suppression issue come from the search warrant affidavit that
supported the issuance of the search warrant for the Yellowstone apartment. The affidavit makes
three points to suggest that probable cause exists to search the apartment.
First, on April 17, 2019, a confidential informant advised Officer Brandon Hazlewood that
Sanders was selling âHeroin/Fentanylâ from the Yellowstone apartment. The affidavit does not
explain the basis for the confidential informantâs statement about Sanders selling drugs from the
apartment.
Second, at some point between April 10 and April 24, Officer Hazlewood monitored a
controlled buy between Sanders and a confidential informant at an unspecified location. After the
controlled buy, Sanders drove directly to the Yellowstone apartment.
Third, sometime between April 22 and April 24, officers monitored another controlled buy
between Sanders and a confidential informant. Officers observed Sanders exit the Yellowstone
apartment, get in his vehicle, and drive directly to the âpre-determined meet locationâ to participate
in the controlled buy. Sanders then returned directly to the apartment.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 32
The affidavit mentions nothing about the credibility, reliability, or veracity of the
confidential informant(s). But based on the information it did contain, Officer Hazlewood sought
a warrant to search the Yellowstone apartment for drugs, drug paraphernalia, cellphones, and any
other property that would indicate that Sanders sold drugs.
II.
The Fourth Amendment guarantees the âright of the people to be secure in their . . . housesâ
against âunreasonable searches and seizures.â U.S. Const. amend. IV. It also requires law
enforcement officers to have âprobable causeâ to obtain a search warrant. Id. The exclusionary
rule gives teeth to the amendment by prohibiting the government from using evidence procured in
violation of the Fourth Amendment at trial. Herring v. United States, 555 U.S. 135, 139(2009). The Supreme Court has explained that âthe exclusionary rule serves to deter deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent conduct, or in some circumstances recurring or systemic negligence.âId. at 144
.
Many times, there are exceptions to the rules. In Leon, the Supreme Court held that the
exclusionary rule does not apply to evidence seized in good faith by law enforcement even if
probable cause did not support the search. 468 U.S. at 922(concluding âthat the marginal or nonexistent benefits produced by suppressing evidence obtained in objectively reasonable reliance on a subsequently invalidated search warrant cannot justify the substantial costs of exclusionâ). Thus, â[t]he good-faith exception is a judicially created exception to th[e] judicially createdâ exclusionary rule. Davis v. United States,564 U.S. 229, 248
(2011). The good-faith exception applies when officers âact with an objectively reasonable good-faith belief that their conduct is lawfulâ or their conduct amounts to âisolated negligence.âId. at 238
(internal quotation marks
omitted).
Sometimes there are exceptions to the exceptions. As we have said, an officer cannot rely
on a âsubsequently invalidated search warrantâ in the following four circumstances:
(1) the magistrate was misled by information in the affidavit that the affiant knew
was false or would have known was false except for his reckless disregard of the
truth; (2) the magistrate abandoned his judicial role or neutrality; (3) the warrant
was so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 33
existence unreasonable; or (4) the warrant was so facially deficient that it could not
reasonably be presumed valid.
United States v. Helton, 35 F.4th 511, 521 (6th Cir. 2022) (internal quotation marks omitted).
I address the applicability of the third circumstance. A warrant so lacking in indicia of
probable cause is considered a bare-bones affidavit. As a recent decision of our en banc court
noted, a bare-bones affidavit âmerely states suspicions, or conclusions, without providing some
underlying factual circumstances regarding veracity, reliability, and basis of knowledge.â United
States v. Christian, 925 F.3d 305, 312(6th Cir. 2019) (en banc) (internal quotation marks omitted). With a bare-bones affidavit, a reasonable officer would view the affidavit as âwoefully deficientâ at establishing probable cause.Id.
In determining whether an affidavit is bare bones, courts look at the affidavit âholisticallyâ and consider âthe totality of the circumstances.â United States v. Ward,967 F.3d 550, 554
(6th Cir. 2020).
Just because a search warrant affidavit lacks probable cause does not mean that it is bare
bones. United States v. White, 874 F.3d 490, 497(6th Cir. 2017). â[T]o avoid the bare-bones designation,â the search warrant affidavit must âestablish a âminimally sufficient nexus between the illegal activity and the place to be searched.ââ Christian,925 F.3d at 313
(quoting United States v. Brown,828 F.3d 375, 385
(6th Cir. 2016)). This does not require a heavy liftâthe affidavit must show âsome connection . . . between the criminal activity at issue and the place to be searched.â United States v. Reed,993 F.3d 441, 451
(6th Cir. 2021) (quoting United States v. McCoy,905 F.3d 409, 416
(6th Cir. 2018)). This is âa less demanding showing than the substantial basis threshold required to prove the existence of probable cause.â Helton,35 F.4th at 522
(internal
quotation marks omitted).
The search warrant affidavit in this case is not bare bones. It provides a connection between
Sandersâs drug trafficking and the Yellowstone apartment. Specifically, the affidavit indicates that
between April 22 and April 24, 2019, officers observed Sanders leave the apartment, drive to a
location to participate in the controlled buy with a confidential informant, and then return to the
apartment. And the affidavit identifies another controlled buy with a confidential informant where
Sanders travelled directly to the buy from the apartment and then returned directly to the apartment.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 34
Thus, although the affidavit failed to establish probable cause for the search, the officers executing
the search warrant acted in good faith when they relied on it.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 35
__________________
CONCURRENCE
__________________
JANE B. STRANCH and RACHEL S. BLOOMEKATZ, Circuit Judges, concurring in the
judgment.
I.
This case mainly presents a Fourth Amendment question about the legality of the search
of an apartment. The good-faith exception to the warrant requirement saves the fruits of the search
from suppression. See United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 922(1984). We join Sections I and II of Judge Mathisâs concurrence explaining why the warrant here did not rest on a bare bones affidavit, and we agree with the majority that Antwone Sanders was not entitled to a hearing to show that the affidavit contained false information because he did not satisfy Franksâs materiality requirement. See Franks v. Delaware,438 U.S. 154
, 171â72 (1978). These narrow grounds resolve the Fourth Amendment question without requiring us to address probable cause, so we donât. See United States v. Ardd,911 F.3d 348, 351
(6th Cir. 2018) (we need not decide the
probable cause question when the good-faith exception applies). We write separately to address
the Rule 16 question as to the investigatory materials Sanders requested.
II.
We join the majority in concluding that Antwone Sanders was not entitled to the requested
discovery under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16(a)(1)(E). As the majority concludes,
âsimply asserting that âdiscovery . . . could . . . vitiate[] the governmentâs caseâ is insufficient to
trigger Rule 16âs discovery obligations.â Maj. Op. at 23 (quoting Dissenting Op. at 58). Sanders
was required to show that the evidence he requested âcould materially helpâ him ârefute the
governmentâs case-in-chief,â and he âhas not demonstrated as much here.â Id. That conclusion
resolves the Rule 16 issue and renders the majorityâs discussion of Rule 16(a)(2) and harmless
error unnecessary.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 36
Prior to pleading guilty, Sanders moved to suppress the evidence found in the Lexington,
Kentucky apartment at issue in this case. A magistrate judge authorized a search of that apartment
after reviewing an affidavit signed by a police officer who attested that other police personnel had
observed Sanders traveling to and from the apartment in connection with two drugs sales. Sanders
sought discovery that he believed would undermine the affidavitâs validity by showing that one
detective involved in the surveillance lied. In support, he proffered only general statements from
other officers in a different case questioning that detectiveâs âethic[s].â Appellantâs Br. 9. The
government refused to disclose the evidence he requested, and the district court denied Sandersâs
motion to compel discovery.
Under Rule 16(a)(1)(E), the government âmustâ disclose certain documents and items that
are âmaterial to preparing the defense.â Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(E)(i). The scope of discovery
under this provision, therefore, depends on the meaning of âmaterialâ and âdefenseâ in this context.
First, âmaterial.â As the majority opinion recognizes, for the discovery to be âmaterialâ to
the defense, there must be some âpreliminary showing,â United States v. Armstrong, 517 U.S. 456,
473(1996) (Breyer, J., concurring), that it could âsignificantly [] alter the quantum of proofâ in the defendantâs favor, Maj. Op. at 24 (quoting 2 Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 254 (4th ed.)). That is indeed the consensus among our sister circuits.1 Next, âdefense.â Armstrong defined âdefenseâ for Rule 16 purposesâalbeit in a different contextâto mean the âdefendantâs response to the Governmentâs case in chief.â517 U.S. at 462
.
Combining these definitions, an evidentiary item is âmaterial to preparing the defenseâ when the
defendant makes a âpreliminary showingâ that the discovery could âsignificantly [] alter the
1
Although â[m]ateriality under Rule 16 has not been authoritatively defined in this Circuit,â United States v.
Lykins, 428 F. Appâx 621, 624(6th Cir. 2011) (per curiam), it has been uniformly defined in other circuits. See United States v. Stevens,985 F.2d 1175, 1180
(2d Cir. 1993) (quoting United States v. Maniktala,934 F.2d 25, 28
(2d Cir. 1991)) (â[T]here must be some indication that the pretrial disclosure of the disputed evidence would have enabled the defendant significantly to alter the quantum of proof in his favor.â); United States v. Caro,597 F.3d 608, 621
(4th Cir. 2010); United States v. Buckley,586 F.2d 498, 506
(5th Cir. 1978); United States v. Baker,453 F.3d 419, 425
(7th Cir. 2006); United States v. Marshall,532 F.2d 1279, 1285
(9th Cir. 1976); United States v. Cates,73 F.4th 795
, 812 (10th Cir. 2023); United States v. Jordan,316 F.3d 1215, 1251
(11th Cir. 2003); United States v. Marshall,132 F.3d 63, 68
(D.C. Cir. 1998); see also United States v. Soto-Zuniga,837 F.3d 992, 1003
(9th Cir. 2016) (quoting United States v. Hernandez-Meza,720 F.3d 760, 768
(9th Cir. 2013)) (âMateriality is a âlow threshold; it is satisfied so long
as the information . . . would have helpedâ to prepare a defense.â).
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 37
quantum of proofâ in the defendantâs favor with respect to their âdefense against the Governmentâs
case in chief.â
We echo the majorityâs conclusion that âin another case,â the requested âinvestigatory
materials, including documents related to a search warrant,â could meet this standard. Maj. Op. at
23. But Sanders has not met it here because he has not made a preliminary showing that the
materials he requested would undermine the veracity of the search warrant, leading to the
suppression of evidence the government might use in its case in chief. As the majority analyzes
in Section II.C.2, the district court found that multiple officers observed the same conduct as the
purportedly unethical detective, so any potential âtaintâ on the investigation makes little
difference. Maj. Op. at 20. Sanders does not even suggest that the other officers who witnessed
the same trips to and from the controlled buys were unethical, that there is any basis for doubting
their observations, or any other reason to question the officersâ recounting of the controlled buys.
Thus, his conclusory allegations that such discovery would be material to his defense fall flat.
Based on this reasoning, the majorityâs additional Rule 16 analysis is unnecessary. As the
majority and dissenting opinions reflect, our courtâs en banc review is focused on Fourth
Amendment questions; indeed, the panel majority did not even discuss Rule 16 and the panel
dissent only did so in a footnote. United States v. Sanders, 59 F.4th 232, 254 n.3 (6th Cir. 2023)
(Nalbandian, J., dissenting). Therefore, we would not speculate, as the majority here does, as to
whether the requested material counts as a discoverable âreportâ under Rule 16(a)(2), and how to
reconcile that provision with Rule 16(a)(1)(E). Maj. Op. at 21â22. The government does not even
argue as much.
Nor would we speculate that if there were a discovery error, that it was âharmless.â Maj.
Op. at 25â26. Because the government never disclosed the requested material (even in camera to
the court), we do not know the contents of such discovery. It could have revealed errors or
evidence unrelated to the purportedly unethical officer. To be sure, Sanders was not entitled to the
requested documents because he did not make the preliminary showing of materiality needed to
open the door to Rule 16(a)(1)(E)(i) discovery. But that failure tells us nothing about the impact
the undisclosed materials might have had on the case. We are aware of no other contexts in which
our court deems harmless the failure to disclose, introduce, or admit evidence while blind to its
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 38
contents. The majority cites none. The majorityâs citation to United States v. Clark is inapposite
because there the requested evidence was disclosed at trial, so the defendant, the district court, and
our court all knew what it contained. 385 F.3d 609, 619â20 (6th Cir. 2004). By dismissing this alleged error as harmless, the majority overlooks the infamous dilemma âposed by Chief Justice Marshall more than two centuries ago: âNow, if a paper be in possession of the opposite party, what statement of its contents or applicability can be expected from the person who claims its production, he not precisely knowing its contents?ââ Wright & Miller, supra, § 254 (quoting United States v. Burr,25 F. Cas. 187, 191
, No. 14,694 (Cir. Ct. Dist. Va. 1807)). Chief Justice
Marshall raised this concern with requiring a preliminary showing to obtain discovery; its
cautionary message applies with even more force when we are evaluating harmlessness.
These discussions are unnecessary. We would decide the Rule 16 question only on
materiality as described above.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 39
_________________
DISSENT
_________________
CLAY, Circuit Judge, dissenting. Law enforcement twice watched Antwone Sanders
conduct a drug deal out of a car, drive some distance from the drug deal to an apartment building,
and then enter a residence. On this evidence alone, the state magistrate issued a warrant to search
the residence, which law enforcement executed, despite this paltry surveillance hardly reachingâ
let alone clearingâthe constitutional requirement of probable cause. Our precedent has never
condoned such a poor excuse for probable cause, particularly when the sanctity of the home is at
issue. Yet the majority and concurrences sanction the search of any homeâeven one with no other
ostensible connection to a suspectâso long as a person suspected of a crime merely enters it
following a drug buy. Because the Fourth Amendment demands more, I respectfully dissent.
I. Probable Cause
The Constitution requires warrants to be supported by probable cause, mandating that âno
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.â U.S. Const. amend.
IV. This command is no mere formality. Rather, it is the very bulwark between citizens and an
overzealous, capricious government power. The use of illegally seized evidence amounts to âa
denial of the constitutional rights of the accused.â Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643, 648(1961) (citation omitted). As a result, courts have imposed the exclusionary rule as a âdeterrent safeguard without insistence upon which the Fourth Amendment would have been reduced to a form of words.âId.
(citation omitted). The probable cause requirement âseek[s] to safeguard citizens from rash and unreasonable interferences with privacy and from unfounded charges of crime . . . . To allow less would be to leave law-abiding citizens at the mercy of the officersâ whim or caprice.â Brinegar v. United States,338 U.S. 160, 176
(1949). And it is courts like ours that must identify,
condemn, and remedy a Fourth Amendment violation when it occurs.
To do so, we look to whether there existed âreasonable grounds for belief, supported by
less than prima facie proof but more than mere suspicion that there is a fair probability that
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 40
contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.â United States v. King, 227
F.3d 732, 739(6th Cir. 2000) (cleaned up). Affidavits prepared by officers seeking a warrant must show a likelihood of two things: âfirst, that the items sought are âseizable by virtue of being connected with criminal activityâ; and second, âthat the items will be found in the place to be searched.ââ United States v. Church,823 F.3d 351, 355
(6th Cir. 2016) (quoting Zurcher v. Stanford Daily,436 U.S. 547
, 555 n.6 (1978)). In other words, the Fourth Amendment requires a ânexus between the place to be searched and the evidence sought.â United States v. Carpenter,360 F.3d 591, 594
(6th Cir. 2004) (en banc) (citation omitted). And this connection between the residence and the evidence of criminal activity must be specific and concrete, not âvagueâ or âgeneralized.âId. at 595
. Further, when an affidavit contains hearsay information from a confidential informant, we consider whether the affidavit sets out the â(1) veracity; (2) reliability; and (3) basis of knowledgeâ of the informantâs tip. United States v. Gunter,551 F.3d 472, 479
(6th Cir. 2009).
Based on these familiar, constitutionally required background principles, the police lacked
probable cause here. The affidavit included precious few facts that support a nexus between the
drug evidence that the officers sought and the Yellowstone Parkway apartment that the officers
searched. The affiant stated that he received a tip from a confidential informant (the âCIâ) that
â[Defendant] was selling Heroin/Fentanyl from [the Yellowstone Parkway apartment].â Aff., R.
25-3, Page ID #159. Next, pertaining to the first controlled purchase, officers observed Sanders
drive from the controlled purchase location to the Yellowstone Parkway apartment. Finally,
pertaining to the second controlled purchase, officers observed Sanders exit the apartment and
drive to the controlled purchase location, and then drive back from that location to the apartment,
which Sanders then entered. Officer Hazlewood then submitted an affidavit stating these scant
facts to the state court magistrate, who issued a warrant.
Our case law demonstrates that these facts alone are insufficient to support probable cause.
In two similar cases, United States v. Higgins, 557 F.3d 381, 390(6th Cir. 2009), and United States v. Brown,828 F.3d 375, 383
(6th Cir. 2016), this Court determined there was an insufficient nexus between criminal activity and the place to be searched to support the search warrant. In Higgins, an informant identified the defendantâs residence as the site of a drug operation.557 F.3d at 385
. No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 41 However, the police did not establish the informantâs reliability, and the affidavit did not âassert that the informant had been inside [the defendantâs] apartment, that he had ever seen drugs or other evidence inside [the defendantâs] apartment,â or that âthe informant had seen drugs or other evidence in or around [the defendantâs] apartment.âId. at 390
. Similarly, in Brown, although the
defendantâs car was registered to the defendantâs residence and tested positive for narcotics during
a canine search, the affidavit did not suggest that âa reliable confidential informant had purchased
drugsâ at the defendantâs residence or that âthe police had ever conducted surveillanceâ there. 828
F.3d at 382â83.
Brown and Higgins control this case. Like the affidavits in those cases, Officer
Hazlewoodâs affidavit contains an insufficient nexus to support the search warrant. The
informantâs tip is the lone connection between Sandersâ drug activity outside the Yellowstone
Parkway apartment and purported drug activity inside, and like the affidavit in Higgins, the tip
contained no statement that the informant had personally bought drugs in the apartment from
Sanders. Further, Officer Hazlewood did not state that he relied on or worked with the informant
on prior occasions, or that the informant had proved reliable in the past. Crucially, he did not
assert any belief concerning the reliability or veracity of the informantâs tip, let alone provide any
factual basis by which the issuing magistrate could assess its reliability or veracity. See United
States v. Helton, 314 F.3d 812, 822(6th Cir. 2003) (explaining that, under Sixth Circuit precedent, an affidavit âmust contain a statement about some of the underlying circumstances indicating the informant was credible or that his information was reliableâ (citation omitted)); see also Higgins, 557 F.3d at 389â90 (finding insufficient nexus where the affidavit did not attest to the informantâs reliability, even though the informant was known to the affiant and the issuing magistrate). Even had Officer Hazlewood asserted that the informant was reliable, his statement must be coupled with supporting evidence, as â[c]ourts do not accept an affiantâs unsupported assertion that an informant is reliable.â United States v. Helton,35 F.4th 511, 519
(6th Cir. 2022) (citation omitted).
Further, the affidavit fails to set forth the informantâs basis of knowledge, i.e., âthe
particular means by which an informant obtained his information.â United States v. Smith, 182
F.3d 473, 477(6th Cir. 1999) (citing Illinois v. Gates,462 U.S. 213, 228
(1983)). Instead, the affidavit baldly states that the âaffiant received information from a Confidential Informant (CI) No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 42 that a subject by the name of Antwone Sanders was selling Heroin/Fentanyl from 2852 Yellowstone Parkway Apartment D, Lexington, KY 40517.â Aff., R. 25-3, Page ID #159. This statement does nothing to establish the basis of knowledge of the informant, such as indicating that the informant purchased drugs at the Yellowstone Parkway apartment or observed drugs within the apartment. See Helton,314 F.3d at 822
(â[A] tip [that] was sparse in relevant detail . . . loses persuasive value.â). Without any showing of the informantâs reliability, and without any statement of firsthand knowledge about the alleged criminal activity at the apartment, the informantâs tip carries little weight in the probable cause analysis.Id.
at 821â22; Higgins,557 F.3d at 390
.
Nonetheless, an affidavit that fails to establish an informantâs reliability, veracity, and basis
of knowledge might âsupport a finding of probable cause, under the totality of the circumstances,
if it includes sufficient corroborating information.â United States v. Woosley, 361 F.3d 924, 927(6th Cir. 2004) (citation omitted). In other words, â[w]hat an informant and her tip lack in intrinsic indicia of credibility, however, police must make up for in corroboration.â United States v. Howard,632 F. Appâx 795, 804
(6th Cir. 2015) (citation omitted). But the corroboration in this case was as deficient as the tip itself. The primary piece of purportedly corroborating evidence is the officersâ surveillance of Sandersâ one-and-a-half trips between the controlled purchase locations and the Yellowstone Parkway apartment. However, Sandersâ entering and exiting of an apartment, alone, provides no indication of criminal activity within the apartment. In fact, it suggests the opposite: that Sanders sought to keep his criminal activity and the Yellowstone Parkway apartment separate, contrary to what the CI reported. And officersâ observation of two controlled buysâboth of which were a driving distance away from the apartmentâactually undermines the informantâs claim that drug activity occurred in the apartment. The indolent lack of corroboration in this case is all the more condemnable when one considers how easy it would have been to properly verify this tip. See Helton,35 F.4th at 520
(âWe have warned that one of the dangers of law enforcementâs âfailure to corroborate all that can be easily corroboratedâ is that âa warrant will not issue where it should.ââ (quoting United States v. Allen,211 F.3d 970, 987
(6th
Cir. 2000) (en banc))).
The tip was therefore uncorroborated and did not have the required reliability, veracity, or
basis of knowledge in order to support a finding of probable cause. Without any of those elements
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 43
and without corroboration, the information in the affidavit fell well short of the constitutional
minimum. The majority disregards this well-settled precedent to state that none of the omissions
in the tip âcome close to being fatalâ because âthe tip was not a vital component of the probable
cause equation.â Maj. Op. at 9. But the majorityâs misapprehension of what we require of an
informantâs tip exposes its misunderstanding of the totality of the circumstances analysis. See
Gates, 462 U.S. at 233(âInstead, [veracity and basis of knowledge] are better understood as relevant considerations in the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis that traditionally has guided probable cause determinations: a deficiency in one may be compensated for, in determining the overall reliability of a tip, by a strong showing as to the other, or by some other indicia of reliability.â). And the majorityâs own cited support disproves its claim that neither corroboration nor reliability nor the informantâs basis of knowledge are required for the tip to confer probable cause. In each of the majorityâs cited cases, other indicia of reliability made up for an issue with the tip. See, e.g., United States v. Hines,885 F.3d 919, 925
(6th Cir. 2018) (âSo even though the
affidavit did not address in detail the reliability of CS1 and CS2, it gave appreciable attention to
the bases of their knowledge.â). But in this case, we have no reason to credit the tip. Given the
totality of the circumstances analysis, if a tip is wanting on all of these fronts, as the instant one
was, it should not be used.
The evidence presented to the issuing magistrate whittles down to Sandersâ movements
over a few hours on two particular days and an unreliable tip. Even considered together, these
facts did not establish a nexus between the alleged criminal activity and the residence. See District
of Columbia v. Wesby, 583 U.S. 48, 56â60 (2018) (analyzing probable cause based on the totality of the circumstances). Thus, probable cause did not exist, and the issuing magistrate had no âsubstantial basisâ for concluding that it did. Gates,462 U.S. at 236
.
The majority does not persuade otherwise. First, the majority cites several cases that
involve significantly more indicia of probable cause than found in this case. Maj. Op. at 6. Many
of those cases, unlike this case, involved a credible, detailed tip from one or more informants who
either observed or engaged in drug activity in the residence to be searched. See, e.g., Hines, 885
F.3d at 922(two informants had personal knowledge of the defendant storing drugs at the residence to be searched); United States v. Moore,661 F.3d 309
, 311â12 (6th Cir. 2011) (informant had No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 44 observed the defendant âstoring and selling cocaineâ at the residence); United States v. Dyer,580 F.3d 386
, 388 n.1 (6th Cir. 2009) (informant had observed the defendant engaging in a drug deal and the storage of a large amount of drugs at residence). By contrast, the unidentified, unverified informant in the instant case stated that Sanders was dealing from the Yellowstone Parkway apartment, but provided no specific statements that he or she had personally seen drugs in the apartment or had bought drugs there. In fact, the informantâs statement lacks any modicum of evidence that the informant was ever in the apartment, given its vagueness and law enforcementâs contrary observations. Because the panels in Hines, Moore, and Dyer found the informantsâ detailed, first-hand statements to provide the basis of knowledge necessary to create the fair probability that the drugs would be found in the residence, see Hines,885 F.3d at 924
; Moore,661 F.3d at 312
; Dyer,580 F.3d at 392
, the noticeably absent information in the instant case is easily
distinguishable.
The majority then cites cases that involve what the majority deems âcircumstantial
evidence.â Maj Op. at 7. Conveniently, however, none of the âcircumstantial evidenceâ that the
majority highlights in those cases exists here. Law enforcement did not establish that Sanders
resided at the Yellowstone Parkway apartment, so officers had no grounds to believe that Sanders
might store evidence there. See United States v. Williams, 544 F.3d 683, 685(6th Cir. 2008); United States v. Elbe,774 F.3d 885, 887
(6th Cir. 2014); United States v. Carney,675 F.3d 1007, 1012
(6th Cir. 2012); United States v. Abboud,438 F.3d 554, 572
(6th Cir. 2006). Without that
key detail, law enforcement cannot rely on the inference that this Court has sometimes invoked
when accompanied by additional indicia of probable cause: that evidence is likely to be found in
drug dealersâ homes. Any holdings that rely in part on the crucial fact that the defendant lived at
the residence to be searched therefore have no bearing on this case.
By the same token, the majority admits that âthis is not a known drug dealer case,â so its
aside concerning such cases, which likewise require that law enforcement establish that a residence
belongs to a defendant, is both gratuitous and inapplicable. Maj. Op. at 12. Even setting to one
side the majorityâs failure to define who is a âknown drug dealer,â we âhave never held . . . that a
suspectâs status as a drug dealer, standing alone, gives rise to a fair probability that drugs will be
found in his home.â Brown, 828 F.3d at 383(citation omitted). Instead, our precedent requires No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 45 âfacts showing that the residence had been used in drug trafficking,â such as an affiant attesting to personal observations of drug deals or drug paraphernalia in the residence.Id.
The majority therefore far exceeds the bounds of our existing precedent by implying in dicta that a showing that a residence belongs to a âknown drug dealerââwhich the majority conveniently does not defineâ may be enough on its own to satisfy probable case. Maj. Op. at 12. But our case law has never so flagrantly disregarded the Fourth Amendment, which requires a showing over and above the mere fact that a person is suspected of wrongdoing to search their home. See Brown,828 F.3d at 383
.
More damning, the facts of this case do not require such a statement. No informant stated that he
or she had personally bought drugs in the apartment, and no affiant stated that Sanders resided at
the Yellowstone Parkway apartment. While such evidence is neither a necessary nor sufficient
condition for probable cause to believe drug activity occurred inside the home, the utter lack of
such evidence here renders the majorityâs reliance on âknown drug dealerâ case law inapposite,
and makes the dearth of probable cause all the more apparent.
In pointing out the inapplicability of the majorityâs tangent regarding âknown drug dealerâ
cases, this opinion does not, as the majority alleges, assert a categorical rule by which all warrant
affidavits must claim that a defendant lives in a particular residence. The only categorical rule we
urge today is that demanded by the Fourth Amendment: â[t]o justify a search, the circumstances
must indicate why evidence of illegal activity will be found in a particular place.â Carpenter, 360
F.3d at 594. A showing that a defendant lives in a particular residence is one of many details that
could appear in an affidavit that might contribute to a nexus between the criminal activity and the
place to be searched, and one of many details that was lacking in this case. That a defendant lives
in the residence to be searched is therefore no panacea for probable cause, as the majorityâs tangent
appears to suggest. This opinion points out the affidavitâs failure to establish that this was Sandersâ
residence only to underscore that law enforcement was not entitled to any favorable inference that
might accompany such a showing.
Perhaps in recognition of the inapplicability of the âknown drug dealerâ cases, the majority
points to several cases that upheld searches where officers observed a person leave or return to a
location before or after a sale of contrabandâimplying that, because a similar chain of events
happened in this case, the search of the apartment was legal. Maj. Op. at 6 (citing United States v.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 46
White, 990 F.3d 488, 490(6th Cir. 2021); United States v. Christian,925 F.3d 305, 310
(6th Cir. 2019); United States v. Crawford,943 F.3d 297, 309
(6th Cir. 2019); United States v. Ellison,632 F.3d 347, 349
(6th Cir. 2011)). But, again, the majority reaches for inapposite cases with significantly more indicia of probability than the meager affidavit in this case to bless a search the Fourth Amendment cannot tolerate. In White, one of the drug sales occurred in the searched residence, which was the defendantâs home. 990 F.3d at 489â90. In Christian, multiple informants claimed to have purchased drugs several times from the defendant in the defendantâs residence.925 F.3d at 309
. In Ellison, the police witnessed a suspect leave what police knew to be his apartment, participate in a drug transaction directly outside the apartment, and then immediately return to the apartment.632 F.3d 347, 349
(6th Cir. 2011). And in Crawford, not only did officers thoroughly corroborate the tip, unlike in this case, but the affidavit included additional information that the informant âtold officers that Crawford kept his supply of cocaine in a duffle bagâ something officers observed right before the controlled buy when Crawford left his apartment carrying a duffle bag.â943 F.3d at 302, 309
.
The majority waves away these important factual distinctions, boldly claiming that ânone
of those cases hinged onâ particular facts. Maj. Op. at 13. But each of these cases found probable
cause precisely because of particular facts that are missing in this case. Indeed, there is a clear
common thread throughout our case law to which the majority conveniently turns a blind eye. By
generalizing cases that are composed of specific facts noticeably absent from this appeal, the
majority claims that we have previously held that merely returning to a location after a drug buy
provides a sufficient nexus, satisfying the probable cause inquiry. Not so. Crucially, every single
one of the majorityâs cited cases involved a more substantial connection between the defendant
and the place to be searched, a plainer tie between the location and criminal activity, or a reliable
tip that an informant bought drugs at the residence in question. Comparing such facts to the instant
case makes the majorityâs arguments unconvincing at best and outright misleading at worst, and
further supports the conclusion that probable cause was lacking in this case.
The majority claims that arguments to the contrary employ a âhypertechnicalâ approach
that focuses too much on what an affidavit âlacksâ rather than what âgood qualities it contains.â
Maj. Op at 7. But we consistently consider what an affidavit lacksâoften by way of comparison
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 47
to prior affidavits and decisionsâto determine whether an affidavit contains sufficient indicia of
probable cause. See, e.g., Helton, 35 F.4th at 519(â[T]he affidavit lacks the necessary indicia of both veracity and reliability for the [confidential informantâs] tips.â); United States v. Waide,60 F.4th 327, 336
(6th Cir. 2023) (âThe affidavit lacks any additional information that might support either sourceâs credibility.â); United States v. McPhearson,469 F.3d 518, 527
(6th Cir. 2006) (finding the affidavit in question âso lacking in indicia of probable causeâ); United States v. Rose,714 F.3d 362, 367
(6th Cir. 2013) (evaluating whether an affidavit âlack[ed] probable causeâ); Brown,828 F.3d at 382
(â[T]he search warrant affidavit contained no evidence that Brown distributed narcotics from his home, that he used it to store narcotics, or that any suspicious activity had taken place there.â); United States v. Laughton,409 F.3d 744, 747
(6th Cir. 2005) (âThe
warrant in this case failed to make any connection between the residence to be searched and the
facts of criminal activity that the officer set out in his affidavit.â). Rather than award a gold star
to an affidavitâs âgood qualities,â it is this Courtâs prerogative, if not our sworn duty, to consider
whether an affidavit lacks probable cause in order to determine compliance with the Fourth
Amendment. A thorough review of what the affidavit lacksâparticularly if what it lacks is the
very probable cause that the Constitution requiresâis necessary to carry out our judicial role.
The majority further errs in speculating that âit was fair for officers to assume . . . that the
proceeds [of the controlled buys] were taken into the apartment.â Maj. Op. at 8. The nexus
requirement demands more than what it is âfair to assume.â See Laughton, 409 F.3d at 747(no nexus between criminal activity and place to be searched where affidavit averred only that a CI claimed there were drug stashes in the residence); Carpenter,360 F.3d at 594
(affidavit that described marijuana field near house to be searched âfall[s] short of establishing required the nexusâ); United States v. Van Shutters,163 F.3d 331
,336â38 (6th Cir. 1998) (no probable cause where warrant affidavit failed to state a nexus between the place to be searched and the criminal activity); Schultz,14 F.3d at 1097
(no probable cause for warrant where affidavit lacked an
âevidentiary nexus . . . between the [place to be searched] and the criminal activityâ). Simply
relying on assumptions, rather than facts, in the probable cause context swallows the totality of the
circumstances rule altogether. For example, one could assume just as easily that Sanders stored
drug paraphernalia or proceeds in his car, or that he intentionally did not store such incriminating
items in the apartment, given law enforcementâs observations.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 48
But such concerns are of no moment to the majority, which fills in the glaring holes in the
affidavit through post-hoc rationalization. And the majorityâs lackadaisical analysis would allow
governmental intrusion into any home that a suspected drug dealer happened to enter following an
alleged drug sale. This consequence vastly outstrips the bounds of our precedent. As already
stated, this Court has not upheld a similar warrant so lacking in allegations of criminal activity to
be found at the place to be searched. Further, the majorityâs new regime nullifies the distinction
between probable cause to arrest a suspect for alleged wrongdoing and the showing required for
police to cross the threshold of the home, rendering the homes of friends and family vulnerable to
the whims of law enforcement once a suspected criminal enters the home.
Readers should therefore not be misled by the majorityâs profession that it is simply
applying existing law to an uncomplicated and unproblematic search. To the contrary, the majority
is actually manipulating our precedent to rubberstamp a deficient warrant. Such a holding violates
the well-established principle that a search warrant application must show more than that a person
connected with a property is suspected of a crime, Zurcher, 436 U.S. at 556, and renders the Fourth Amendmentâs warrant requirement âan inconsequential formality and a mere form of words.â Allen,211 F.3d at 987
(Clay, J., dissenting) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). When
presented with similar factual circumstances, this Court has rightfully reversed the denial of a
motion to suppress. The majority therefore erodes the protections of the Fourth Amendment under
the dubious contention of purported application of existing law. Because selectively quoting from
inapposite case law to effectively nullify a vital constitutional protection does not change the fact
that no probable cause existed to support this search, I would have reversed the district courtâs
denial of Sandersâ motion to suppress.
II. The Good Faith Exception
The majority, after erroneously concluding that the search was supported by probable
cause, still perplexingly conducts a similarly flawed good faith exception analysis, despite the fact
that this Court should reach the good faith exception only after concluding that the warrant in
question was not supported by probable cause. See, e.g., United States v. Pinson, 321 F.3d 558,
565(6th Cir. 2003) (âBecause we find that the warrant was issued upon probable cause, we need not decide whether the good-faith exception . . . applies.â); United States v. Reed,993 F.3d 441
, No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 49 451 (6th Cir. 2021) (âLeonâs exception applies only when an affidavit falls short of probable cause.â). The majorityâs probable cause conclusion should have precluded it from ever reaching the good faith exception inquiry.2 Aside from unnecessarily reaching this question, the majority arrives at the wrong answer. This search cannot be saved by the âgood faithâ exception to the exclusionary rule announced in United States v. Leon,468 U.S. 897
(1984).
In Leon, the Supreme Court held that the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule does not
apply when police officers rely in good faith on a warrant that is ultimately determined to lack
probable cause. Id. at 913. In determining whether police acted in good faith, the âinquiry is confined to the objectively ascertainable question whether a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the search was illegal despite the magistrateâs authorization.âId.
at 922 n.23. To aid courts in resolving this question, Leon outlined four circumstances in which an officerâs reliance would not be objectively reasonable: (1) when the affidavit supporting the search warrant contains information âthat the affiant knows (or is reckless in not knowing) contains false information;â (2) when the magistrate who issued the search warrant abandoned his or her âneutral and detached role;â (3) âwhen the affidavit is so lacking in indicia of probable cause that a belief in its existence is objectively unreasonable;â or (4) âwhen the warrant is so facially deficient that it cannot reasonably be presumed to be valid.â Laughton,409 F.3d at 748
(citing Leon, 468 U.S.
at 914â23).
At issue in this case is the third limitation on the good faith exception, which may be
triggered by a âbare bonesâ affidavit. Id.A bare bones affidavit is one that merely âstates only âsuspicions, beliefs, or conclusions, without providing some underlying factual circumstances regarding veracity, reliability, and basis of knowledge.ââ United States v. White,874 F.3d 490, 496
(6th Cir. 2017) (quoting Laughton,409 F.3d at 748
). In contrast, an affidavit is not bare bones
2
The majorityâs approach is legally incorrect. The good faith exception is available only in the absence of
probable cause. Reed, 993 F.3d at 451. The judges who join the concurrence by Judges Stranch and Bloomekatz make a similar mistake in concluding that the good faith exception can apply without first performing the probable cause analysis and determining that probable cause is lacking as required by law. See Leon,468 U.S. at 907
(establishing the good faith exception to rescue âtangible evidence obtained in reliance on a search warrant issued by a detached and neutral magistrate that ultimately is found to be defective.â (emphasis added)). A contrary approach that never determines whether the warrant is defective is not only legally unsound, but it also stymies the development of our probable cause jurisprudence, a disservice to lower courts and parties alike. No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 50 if it âcontain[s] a minimally sufficient nexus between the illegal activity and the place to be searched.â See Carpenter,360 F.3d at 596
. For the exception to apply, âthe officerâs reliance on the magistrateâs probable-cause determination . . . must be objectively reasonable.â Leon,468 U.S. at 922
.
Even acknowledging the modest bar for warrants to be salvaged under the good faith
exception, the evidence in this case was not enough to provide the âmodicum of evidenceâ required
between the criminal activity at issue and the place to be searched. Reed, 993 F.3d at 451(citation omitted). The good faith exception requires some âunderlying factual circumstances regarding veracity, reliability, and basis of knowledge.â White,874 F.3d at 496
. The mere observation of Sanders entering a home after a drug dealâalong with a deficient tipâis insufficient. As discussed, Officer Hazlewoodâs affidavit gave no indication of the veracity or reliability of the information obtained from the informant, or the factual basis underlying the informantâs knowledge. Cf. Higgins,557 F.3d at 385, 391
(applying the good faith exception to a search of
defendantâs home address where the informant told the officers that he had personally purchased
drugs from the defendant at the defendantâs address earlier the same day, and the tip was
corroborated in multiple ways). As a result, Officer Hazlewoodâs reliance on a deficient tip cannot
be deemed reasonable.
The majority does not just err in reaching the opposite conclusion. Even worse, the
majority applies a lower standard for the good faith exception than that established by our or
Supreme Court precedent. Instead of properly analyzing whether the officerâs reliance on the
warrant in question was reasonable, the majority would require the officers to be on âclear notice
that Hazlewoodâs affidavit was so deficient that they acted deliberately, recklessly, or grossly
negligent in not second-guessing the judgeâs decision.â Maj. Op. at 16. But rather than excuse all
misconduct absent âclear notice,â the good faith exception inquiry âis confined to the objectively
ascertainable question whether a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the search
was illegal despite the magistrateâs authorization.â Leon, 468 U.S. at 922n.23. And if an affidavit fails to âprovid[e] some underlying factual circumstances regarding veracity, reliability, and basis of knowledge,â then an officerâs reliance will not be deemed reasonable. White,874 F.3d at 496
.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 51
When viewed under these correct standards, it is clear that no reasonable officer would have relied
on this deficient warrant.
First, because a reasonable officer would know that the informantâs tip should be given
little weight, if any, due to its minimal trustworthiness and reliability, no reasonable officer would
believe that the affidavit established probable cause to search the Yellowstone Parkway apartment.
Helton, 314 F.3d at 821â822, 824 (concluding that an unreliable informantâs tips âdo not merit
much weight in the probable cause determinationâ and finding the informantâs tip too defective to
apply the good faith exception). â[A]t a minimum, a reasonable officer would have sought to
corroborate [the tip] further.â Id. at 824; see also Frazier, 423 F.3d at 532 (â[I]n the absence of
any indicia of the informantsâ reliability, courts insist that the affidavit contain substantial
independent police corroboration.â). In this case, the independent investigation did little to
corroborate the tip or support the otherwise unreliable allegation that drugs would be found in the
Yellowstone Parkway apartment.
Pointing out just how flawed the police investigation was here is not âMonday morning
reasonableness.â Maj. Op. at 17. And Sandersâ reliance on cases in which law enforcement
officers conducted routine police work to establish the necessary facts to provide the âminimally
sufficient nexusâ does not mean that his argument boils down to requiring that officers utilize any
particular technique. Cf. United States v. McClain, 444 F.3d 556, 566(6th Cir. 2005) (applying the good faith exception because â[t]here was indeed nothing more that [the officer] could have or should have done under these circumstances to be sure his search would be legalâ (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). Indeed, in cases where probable cause is obvious, it may be true that no additional police work is needed. Allen,211 F.3d at 976
. However, where probable cause is dubious or lacking, we have also held that further police work could furnish the necessary nexus. See, e.g., McPhearson,469 F.3d at 527
(noting that âheavy traffic to and from the residenceâ is a hallmark of drug dealing); United States v. Abernathy,843 F.3d 243
, 251â52 (6th
Cir. 2016) (holding that drug paraphernalia recovered from a trash pull outside of the home
supports a finding of probable cause when combined with other evidence of the residentâs
involvement in drug crimes).
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 52
Contrary to this precedent, the majorityâs consistent fallback position that the Fourth
Amendment does not require any particular type of police investigation masks the dangerous
conclusion that anything will suffice to make reliance on a warrant reasonable. But additional law
enforcement efforts are unnecessary only when probable cause exists or when there is enough
indicia of reliability that reliance on a tip is reasonable. Neither condition is present here. The
answer to the majorityâs rhetorical question of â[w]hy would we require an officer to undertake an
exhaustive investigation to confirm the probable cause that, to his mind, already existed?â is clear:
because the Constitution requires it. Regardless, the inquiry is not about whether officers believed
they had probable cause but rather whether their belief was reasonable. And our precedent
establishes that reasonable officers corroborate unverified tips. Helton, 314 F.3d at 824; Frazier,423 F.3d at 532
. When such corroboration is easily done, the failure to conduct a basic
investigation cannot, and should not, be so easily excused.
Second, beyond the uncorroborated tip, the affidavit lacked any factual allegations tying
the apartment to criminal activity. A reasonable officer knows that a suspectâs infrequent travel
between an apartment and locations where drug dealing occurs falls short of establishing probable
cause that the apartment contains evidence of a crime. Cf. United States v. Savoca, 761 F.2d 292,
297(6th Cir. 1985) (â[A] suspectâs mere presence or arrest at a residence is too insignificant a connection with that residence to establish that relationship necessary to a finding of probable cause.â (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). Further, a reasonable officer knows that a defendant exiting and entering an apartment on a few occasions does not establish that the defendant lives at that apartment. In considering the reasonableness of the officersâ reliance on the warrant, it is impossible to ignore the ease with which officers could have uncovered Sandersâ connection to the Yellowstone Parkway apartment. âA simple public records inquiry, further research into the name on the utilities accounts registered at the address, or additional surveillance would have provided clear evidenceâ of whether Sanders actually lived at the Yellowstone Parkway apartment. United States v. Washington,380 F.3d 236, 251
(6th Cir. 2004) (Moore, J.,
dissenting).
Any reasonable officer would have known that it is illegal to search a residence when it is
not clear that the suspect resides there and conducts illegal drug activity there, because there is not
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 53
a high probability that the desired evidence or contraband will be uncovered at that location. In
Mills v. City of Barbourville, a qualified immunity case that applied the identical good faith
analysis, the affidavit at issue lacked any information meaningfully linking the place to be searched
to the defendant, and was not supported by a statement from the informant that âidentified the
residence as the place of the drug purchase or . . . the home ofâ the defendant. 389 F.3d 568, 576â
77 (6th Cir. 2004). Accordingly, we determined that probable cause did not exist, and the deficient
affidavit could not be saved by the good faith exception. Using this guidance, law enforcementâs
mere observation of Sanders entering an apartment following a drug deal is insufficient to confer
âsome connectionâ between drug dealing and the residence. Otherwise, the good faith exception
would always apply to any deficient warrant to search any building that any suspected criminal
entered following a crime. But a civil society cannot tolerate such intrusions into the homes of its
citizens.
Undaunted, the majority contends that this affidavit âis in line with others in which we
found the existence of a minimally sufficient nexus.â Maj. Op. at 16.3 But, much like in its
erroneous discussion of probable cause, the majority depends on cases in which this Court has
applied the good faith exception to affidavits with more evidence than found in this case. In
Higgins, as discussed, this Court applied Leon where the informant told the officers that he had
personally purchased drugs from the defendant at the defendantâs address earlier the same day,
and the tip was corroborated in multiple waysâa strikingly more detailed, relevant, and reliable
tip than the informantâs statements in this case. In Van Shutters, this Court applied the good faith
exception to a warrant that âdescribe[d] the premises with particularized detailâ and âidentifie[d]
the items to be seized in an equally detailed fashion.â 163 F.3d at 336. The affidavit was so
3
The majority chastises Sanders for basing his Leon challenges on the same grounds as his probable cause
arguments. While the majority is correct that the good faith exception âconcerns the officerâs objective
blameworthiness,â the analysis as to whether an affidavit was âbare bonesâ will necessarily inquire into the level of
detail of the affidavit. The two inquiries are distinct, McPhearson, 469 F.3d at 526, but they also ask overlapping questions: whether the warrant was deficient (probable cause) and whether the warrant was so deficient that a reasonable officer would not have relied on it (good faith exception). Further, unlike todayâs majority, courts typically approach the good faith exception inquiry only when probable cause is wanting. Thus, an affidavit that is so lacking in a sufficient nexus will fail to meet both the probable cause inquiry and the good faith exception. The majority contradicts itself in this regard, identifying âthree separate tiesâ between Sandersâ drug dealing and the apartment. Maj. Op. at 16. This is the same evidence that the majority held was sufficient for probable cause. The majority therefore commits the same error of which it accuses Sanders. No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 54 detailed, in fact, that we remarked that âonly a police officer with extraordinary legal training would have detected any deficienciesâ in it and that the level of detail gave rise to the âcommon sense inference . . . that the affiant visited the premises himself and presumably either observed [the defendant] in the residence, or determined through investigation that [the defendant] frequented the premises.âId.
at 337â38. And Schultz likewise involved diligent corroboration of
the informantâs tip, extensive law enforcement investigation of a sophisticated drug-trafficking
operation, as well as evidence that the safe deposit box belonged to the defendant and was likely
connected to the at-issue criminal activity. See 14 F.3d at 1097â98. The level of detail found in
Van Shutters and the level of corroboration found in Schultz are simply not present in this case.
By inappropriately stretching these cases beyond their specific facts, the majority continues to
hollow out the Fourth Amendment under the flimsy rationale that the affidavit could have been
worse.
Despite its claims to the contrary, the majority, and Judge Mathisâ concurrence, fail to
identify any case in which this Court, or any other court, has applied the good faith exception in
reliance on a warrant supported by information as sparse as the information in the affidavit in this
case. Cf. Washington, 380 F.3d at 242â43 (applying the good faith exception where the
defendantâs car was registered to the address of the house, and affiant described his training and
experience and why that caused him to believe that evidence would be found at the house). Judge
Mathisâ concurrence, which several of my fellow judges have joined for the conclusion that the
affidavit meets the good faith exception, fails to even cite a case for the proposition that this
affidavit was not âbare bones.â That this conclusion is unsupported only strengthens the
contention that, under our precedent, the good faith exception cannot and should not salvage this
affidavit.
For its part, the majority sweeps imperative factual distinctions between this case and
others under the rug, stating that âwe do not ask nonlawyer officers to discern the fine legal
distinctions between one case and the next.â Maj. Op. at 18. This specious claim is at odds with
well-established precedent that we expect officers to act reasonably, Leon, 468 U.S. at 922â23,
and we expect reasonable officers to corroborate confidential tips, Helton, 314 F.3d at 824. In
effect, the majority wants to have its precedential cake and eat it too. It tries to invoke inapposite
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 55
cases to argue that its holding today is merely a faithful application of existing case law. Yet when
Sanders points out key factual distinctions between those cases and his own, or cites this Courtâs
binding precedent that weighs in his favor, the majority scolds him for expecting too much of the
officers tasked with investigating crime. It is not Sanders who imposes this burden, but rather the
Fourth Amendment.
In sum, a reasonable officer would have known that an unreliable tip merited little, if any,
weight, see Helton, 314 F.3d at 821â822, and that Sandersâ travel to a residenceâwhich the
officers did not know or even suspect to be hisâdid not establish probable cause to believe that
the residence would contain evidence of a crime. In considering the reasonableness of the officersâ
reliance on the warrant, it is inescapable that officers could have easily corroborated the alleged
âtipâ by conducting some independent investigation. The affidavit failed to draw any âplausible
connectionâ to the apartment, Brown, 828 F.3d at 385, so the good faith exception should not apply
to save the fruits of this illegal search. Because the majority, and Judge Mathisâ concurrence, hold
differently, one must wonder what would not meet the minimally sufficient nexus, under their
ever-lowering standards? The unfortunate truth is that a majority of this Court would uphold
virtually any search under the good faith exceptionâno matter how at odds with our precedent,
the Fourth Amendmentâs constitutional mandate, or even the original intent behind Leon.
When Leon was decided in 1984, the Supreme Court thought it was applying an exception
to the exclusionary rule that would apply in a limited number of cases. Leon, 468 U.S. at 916 n.
14 (â[W]e are not convinced that this is a problem of major proportions.â). Instead, the seemingly
innocuous good faith exception has proven to be an exception that swallows the rule. More and
more, courts forgive the admission of illegally obtained evidence under the auspices of the good
faith exception, blessing even the most alarming cases of police misconduct. A recent study
analyzing a representative sample of Fourth Amendment suppression cases found that the good
faith exception is applied in 77% of federal cases in which it is discussed.4 Matthew J. Tokson &
Michael Gentithes, The Reality of the Good Faith Exception, 113 Georgetown L.J. (forthcoming
4
This percentage was calculated by dividing the total number of federal cases in the study applying the good-
faith exception (123) by the total number of federal cases in the study discussing the good-faith exception (159). The
authors of this study took a representative sample of every case âmentioning the Fourth Amendment or a motion to
suppress during the months of July 2015, July 2018, and July 2021.â
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 56
2025). In a staggering three-quarters of cases, judges excuse constitutional violations by finding
an officerâs actions in subverting the Fourth Amendment reasonable. Twenty years ago, Judge
Boyce F. Martin, Jr. wrote in dissent that â[r]egrettably, we have descended further down that
slippery slope of post-hoc rationalization, where everything that the police do becomes acceptable
when viewed in retrospect.â Carpenter, 360 F.3d at 604 (Martin, J., dissenting). Two decades
later, the problem has only gotten worse, as courts have effectively lowered the probable cause
standard, required by the Fourth Amendment, to a âminimally sufficient nexusââwhich this
affidavit does not even meet.
It is not as if no one saw this coming. Indeed, Justice Brennanâs prescient dissent in Leon
predicted that â[s]ince in close cases there will no longer be any incentive to error on the side of
constitutional behavior, police would have every reason to adopt a âletâs-wait-until-itâs-decidedâ
approach in situations in which there is a question about a warrantâs validity or the basis for its
issuance.â Leon, 468 U.S. at 955(Brennan, J., dissenting). Rather than limit the good faith exception to cases in which deterrence is allegedly impossible, as Leon professed to do, Leon instead created a system in which officers have little incentive to investigate more, to ensure their warrants are supported by probable causeâin other words, to comply with the Constitution. Instead, an officerâs mistake, in the best case scenario, and misconduct, in the worst, will have âvirtually no consequence,â as the unconstitutionally-seized evidence will be admitted either way.Id. at 956
. What was predicted then has been proven now, especially by the majorityâs decision
and the concurrencesâ tolerance of this new regime. This Court has continually sent a message to
law enforcement that it no longer needs to worry about the sufficiency of a search warrant
affidavitâa nexus can be so minimal as to be non-existent. And no officer will face accountability,
in the form of suppressed evidence or otherwise, for flagrantly violating the Constitution. All of
this is true under the framework endorsed by the majority and concurrences. But I refuse to
participate in this movement to obliterate the Fourth Amendmentâs protections for all individuals,
including and especially those suspected of wrongdoing.
Aside from the inevitable admission of illegally-seized evidence, todayâs decision has the
unfortunate and avoidable consequence of lowering the bar for police entry into the most sacred
of places: the home. Time and time again, we have seen the disastrous results when police, as in
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 57
this case, depend on unreliable tips without conducting proper surveillance to confirm
a residenceâs connection with criminal activity. See, e.g., William K. Rashbaum, Woman
Dies after Police Mistakenly Raid Her Apartment, N.Y. Times (May 17,
2003), https://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/17/nyregion/woman-dies-after-police-mistakenly-raid-
her-apartment.html (police broke down the door of a 57-year-old womanâs apartment based on a
drug dealer informantâs tip that his supplier stored guns and drugs there); Radley Balko, Still
Waiting for Justice after SWAT Team Member Kills Innocent Grandfather, Wash. Post (Jan. 6,
2015), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2015/01/06/still-waiting-for-justice-
after-swat-team-member-kills-innocent-grandfather/ (police shot and killed a 68-year-old
grandfather during a drug raid at his home after two confidential informants alleged they had
purchased drugs from the grandfatherâs stepson); Ernie Suggs, City to Pay Slain Womanâs Family
$4.9 Million, Atlanta. J.-Const. (Aug. 16, 2010), https://www.ajc.com/news/local/city-pay-slain-
woman-family-million/GWqsgDArzmOhvpb7iPY6FI/ (police shot and killed a 92-year-old
woman while executing a warrant on her home using information provided by an informant who
claimed to have purchased drugs in her house). It is little consolation that police found drugs at
the Yellowstone Parkway apartment and that, thankfully, no one was hurt. Todayâs decision makes
it easier for law enforcement to enter anyoneâs home, so long as there is a tenuous connection to
someone suspected of wrongdoing. Permitting the police, armed with weapons, to cross the
threshold of the home is a serious breach of a constitutionally protected area with a potential for
violent consequences. But the majority fails to grapple with the fact that its holding makes such
grave situations more likely, making todayâs decision all the more dangerous.
III. Rule 16
Because I would reverse the district courtâs denial of Sandersâ motion to suppress on the
grounds that the search was not supported by probable cause and cannot be saved by the good faith
exception, I would not reach the Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16 evidentiary issue. Even
if I did, I would not come to the same conclusion as the majority, because I believe that the
majorityâs analysis bestows an insurmountable burden upon criminal defendantsâa particularly
perplexing result given that, at the Rule 16 stage, criminal defendants are merely seeking discovery
with respect to the governmentâs evidence against them.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 58
Sanders sought discovery of evidence pertaining to the controlled purchases underlying the
search warrant to âassess the circumstances leading to the search of his homeâ and âmeaningfully
challenge the validity of the search warrant affidavit on those grounds.â Def.âs Br., ECF No. 23,
15. In his view, the information was material to his defense because it may have exposed
deficiencies in the search warrant affidavit such that he could prevail on a motion to suppress. The
district court denied Sandersâ discovery motion, finding that the sought-after informationâs
connection to the governmentâs case-in-chief was âtoo attenuated to be material under Rule
16(a)(1)(E)(i).â Op. and Order, R. 31, Page ID #197. The majority, in affirming the district court,
adds additional requirements to Rule 16 that neither the text of the rule nor our precedent demands.
First, the majority unnecessarily interprets Rule 16(a)(1)(E)(i) and misreads United States
v. Armstrong, 517 U.S. 456(1996), as preventing a criminal defendant from seeking discovery related to the search warrant used to seize the evidence being introduced against him because such evidence is not sufficiently related to his âdefense.â Claiming that Armstrong requires such a result, the majority holds that Sanders has not made an adequate showing that the evidence he seeks will combat the governmentâs case-in-chief. But Armstrong held only that criminal defendants cannot use Rule 16 to seek discovery of evidence to aid a selective prosecution claim because, the Supreme Court reasoned, Rule 16 can be used only as a âshieldâ mechanism to attack the governmentâs case-in-chief, as opposed to a âswordâ mechanism to challenge the prosecutionâs conduct of the case. Armstrong, 517 U.S. at 462â63. This reasoning does not foreclose Sandersâ arguments. The type of discovery Sanders soughtâthat related to the search warrant used to seize the evidence being introduced against himâfits squarely in the âshieldâ definition. The government relied on the seized evidence in pursuing a conviction, and suppression of that evidence would certainly harm the governmentâs case-in-chief. That is, unlike a selective prosecution claimââthat the prosecutor has brought the charge for reasons forbidden by the Constitution,âid.
at 463âwhich is entirely collateral to the case against the defendant, here the
discovery Sanders sought could have vitiated the governmentâs case against him.
Second, the majority, and the concurrence that focuses on Rule 16, too narrowly interprets
âmaterialityâ to put discovery out of reach for the vast majority of, if not all, criminal defendants.
The majority states that Sanders must make a threshold showing that discovery will establish that
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 59
âhe did not possess the guns or narcotics found at the apartment.â Maj. Op. at 25. But Armstrong
says no such thing. 517 U.S. at 463(observing that Rule 16 requires only that a defendant seek âdocuments material to the preparation of their defense against the Governmentâs case in chiefâ). There are myriad ways to make such showing beyond the majorityâs apparent misunderstanding that âmaterialâ means directly âexculpatory.â In contrast to the majorityâs impossibly high bar, our precedent solely requires âan indication that pre-trial disclosure would have enabled the defendant to alter the quantum of proof in his favor.â United States v. Lykins,428 F. Appâx 621, 624
(6th Cir. 2011) (citation omitted).
Sanders easily meets that standard. If Sanders were able to obtain evidence that supported
his arguments that the evidence from the apartment was seized illegally, allowing him to suppress
the most inculpatory evidence against him, then that would certainly alter the quantum of proof in
his favor. This basic arithmetic of a criminal trial seems to elude the majority, which instead
stubbornly maintains that the evidence Sanders seeks would not change the fact that law
enforcement discovered drugs and firearms in Sandersâ bedroom. But â[i]n assessing materiality,
we consider the logical relationship between the information withheld and the issues in the case,
as well as the importance of the information in light of the evidence as a whole.â Lykins, 428 F.
Appâx at 624. Sanders was convicted of crimes based on evidence law enforcement found in the
apartment. The method and procedures by which law enforcement collected that evidenceâ
including the controlled buys and the information provided in the warrant affidavitâis of the
utmost importance to his case. And depriving Sanders of discovery in this manner cannot be
deemed mere harmless error. If he were able to access information during discovery that would
conclusively determine that the evidence was illegally obtained such that it should be suppressed,
then the gun and drugs found in the apartment would not be able to be introduced against him.
Instead of appreciating this commonsense conclusion, the majority seems to hold that, unless a
defendant makes a highly specific discovery request that would produce evidence that would fully
exonerate him or her, the Rule 16 request must be denied.
It is also worth noting that interpreting âmaterialâ and âdefenseâ as two separate prongs is
a concept newly fashioned by the majority rather than an application of existing precedent. Rule
16 requires that defendants seek discovery that is âmaterial to preparing the defense.â Fed. R.
No. 21-5945 United States v. Sanders Page 60
Crim. P. 16(a)(2)(E)(i). Consistent with this text, Lykins implies that if a defendant shows that
discovery is relevant to his defense, then it is material. 428 F. Appâx at 624. But the majority
reinterprets Rule 16 to separate âmaterialâ from âdefense,â and sets too high a bar for each prong.
The law requires neither of these results. Rather, the operative definitions of what qualifies as a
âshieldâ or âmaterialityâ are relatively untrodden ground for us. When given the opportunity to
allow criminal defendants, already vulnerable to the Goliath-like powers of the state in an adverse
proceeding, to merely seek relevant information about the case against them, this Court should
rule in their favor. Instead, this Court continues to chip away at any right or remedy criminal
defendants may have. Criminal defendants who seek discovery to defend against the governmentâs
case against them already face an impossible task: they must make a substantial showing that they
are entitled to discovery under the confines of Rule 16, but they are frequently unable to make
such a showing without the benefits of discovery. Todayâs decision only exacerbates the problem.
By the majorityâs counter-intuitive approach, criminal defendants need discovery to show that they
need discovery. This misinterprets the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, unduly preventing
criminal defedants from having a fair opportunity to defend against the charges of the state.
CONCLUSION
The majority finds that probable cause supported the search of an apartment based on the
scant evidence that a suspect with no confirmed connection to the residence entered it after two
controlled buys away from the residence. Nothing in our precedent demands this result, and the
Constitution forbids it. Todayâs decision is yet another in a long line of cases that reaches for any
excuse to bless a deficient warrant and allow unconstitutionally seized evidence in the courtroom.
The Fourth Amendment, drafted to protect against general warrants and the capricious authority
of the state, could and should have prevented such a result. But rather than actually constrain
police power, the Fourth Amendment has suffered a death by a thousand cuts at the hands of this
Court, which renders this key constitutional safeguard a nullity while professing otherwise.
Defendants, and, in fact, anyone who wishes to be secure against the arbitrary whims of a
tyrannical government, deserve better. I therefore respectfully dissent.