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- July 1990
-
-
- ANTICIPATORY SEARCH WARRANTS
-
- By
-
- A. Louis DiPietro, J.D.
- Special Agent and Legal Instructor, FBI Academy
-
-
- The fourth amendment to the U. S. Constitution requires that
- search warrants be based on a showing of probable cause. The
- probable cause requirement is satisfied when a law enforcement
- officer sets forth facts which indicate a fair probability that a
- crime has been committed and that evidence of that crime is
- presently located at a particular location. (1)
-
- Sometimes, however, law enforcement officers only have
- information that evidence will be in a particular location at
- some future time, but have no reliable information about the
- present location of that evidence. For example, an officer might
- receive reliable source information indicating that contraband
- will be delivered to a particular address the next day. If the
- officer waits until the delivery is made to obtain a warrant to
- search that location, the officer runs the risk that the evidence
- will be moved or destroyed before the warrant can be executed.
- As an alternative, the officer might conduct a warrantless search
- of the premises immediately upon delivery of the contraband and
- attempt to justify that search under the emergency exception (2) to
- the warrant requirement. The risk the officer runs by this
- course of action is that a court may find probable cause lacking
- or fail to recognize the emergency, and accordingly, suppress the
- evidence under the provisions of the exclusionary rule. (3)
-
- The law provides a solution to this dilemma. Rather than
- risking either loss or suppression of the evidence, the officer
- can use an anticipatory or prospective search warrant. An
- anticipatory search warrant is based on a showing of probable
- cause that at some future time (but not presently) certain
- evidence of crime will be located at a specific place. Where
- officers have probable cause to believe that evidence or
- contraband will arrive at a certain location within a reasonable
- period of time, they need not wait until delivery before
- requesting a warrant. Instead, officers may present this
- probable cause to a magistrate prior to the arrival of that
- evidence, and the magistrate can issue an anticipatory search
- warrant based on probable cause that the evidence will be found
- at the location to be searched at the time the warrant is
- executed.
-
- The purpose of this article is to acquaint law enforcement
- officers with the uses and requirements for anticipatory
- warrants. After reviewing the general judicial acceptance of
- anticipatory warrants, the article discusses numerous court
- decisions involving various investigative applications for
- anticipatory search warrants. The article also offers several
- recommendations for avoiding potential constitutional
- challenges to the use of anticipatory warrants.
-
- JUDICIAL ACCEPTANCE OF ANTICIPATORY WARRANTS
-
- Although the Supreme Court has never directly addressed the
- issue of anticipatory warrants, (4) numerous lower courts have
- ruled that it is constitutionally permissible to obtain such a
- warrant. Challenges to the constitutionality of prospective
- search warrants often involve claims that the fourth amendment
- probable cause requirement is not satisfied, because at the time
- of the warrant's issuance, there is no probable cause to believe
- that the items to be seized are presently at the place to be
- searched.
-
- However, the vast majority of State and Federal courts that
- have considered this question have concluded that anticipatory
- warrants are constitutional and consistent with the longstanding
- preference that whenever possible, police obtain judicial
- approval before searching. Judicial acceptance of the
- anticipatory warrant also encourages police to use the warrant
- process rather than taking warrantless action. Moreover, privacy
- interests are better protected by permitting law enforcement
- officers to obtain warrants in advance if they can show probable
- cause to believe that the object of the search will be located on
- the premises at the time the search takes place.
-
- INVESTIGATIVE APPLICATIONS OF ANTICIPATORY WARRANTS
-
- For purposes of this article, court decisions involving
- various investigative applications of anticipatory warrants have
- been categorized according to the degree of police control over
- the delivery of the evidence to the place to be searched as
- follows: 1) Mail deliveries; 2) controlled delivery by
- cooperating witness; and 3) delivery uncontrolled by the
- government.
-
- Mail Deliveries
-
- The anticipated mail delivery of packages containing items
- subject to seizure is the most common use for anticipatory
- warrants. (5) For example, in United States v. Goodwin, (6) and
- United States v. Dornhofer, (7) the U. S. Postal Inspection
- Service set up a child pornography reverse sting operation to
- locate and prosecute individuals who receive child pornography
- through the mail.
-
- Postal inspectors mailed to the defendants child pornography
- catalogs summarizing available material in graphic terms. After
- receiving orders from the defendants for this material, postal
- inspectors obtained anticipatory search warrants to search those
- locations where the material was to be delivered. In both cases,
- the postal inspectors affirmed in their search warrant
- affidavits that through their efforts, pornographic materials
- would be delivered by mail to the particular locations to be
- searched. Government agents, thereafter, observed the
- anticipated deliveries and then executed the search warrants and
- recovered the delivered pornography, as well as other sexually
- explicit material.
-
- In both cases the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth
- Circuit upheld the constitutionality of these anticipatory
- warrants. The court concluded there was probable cause to issue
- a search warrant, even though at the time of the warrant's
- issuance the evidence had not yet been delivered to the location
- to be searched.
-
- Controlled Delivery by Cooperative Witness
-
- In United States v. Garcia, (8) two U.S. military servicemen,
- Hooks and Oliver, were caught by U. S. Customs agents in Miami
- trying to smuggle cocaine into the country from Panama. After
- being flown to New York to meet with Drug Enforcement
- Administration (DEA) agents, Hooks and Oliver agreed to cooperate
- and proceed with a controlled delivery of the cocaine. They
- telephoned the defendant and made arrangements to bring the
- cocaine to the apartment where she was then located. Before
- delivery, DEA agents applied for and received an anticipatory
- search warrant for that apartment. With the cocaine still in
- their duffel bags, Hooks and Oliver went to the apartment under
- observation of DEA agents. After being admitted and given
- permission to wait for the defendant, Hooks and Oliver sat down
- in the living room and placed the duffel bags next to them. Five
- to 10 minutes later, while Hooks and Oliver were still waiting
- and before the defendant or anyone else had taken possession of
- the duffel bags, DEA agents entered and executed the search
- warrant.
-
- The U. S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld the
- validity of the anticipatory search warrant and concluded as
- follows:
-
- ``The fact that contraband is not `presently located at the
- place described in the warrant' is immaterial, so long as
- `there is probable cause to believe that it will be there
- when the search warrant is executed.' '' (9)
-
- In rejecting the defendant's claim that the agents acted
- prematurely when they entered and searched the apartment before
- the cocaine was transferred personally to the defendant, the
- court stated that the warrant was valid upon delivery of cocaine
- to the apartment and did not require that anyone take possession
- prior to execution of the warrant.
-
- Delivery Uncontrolled by the Government
-
- In some cases, anticipatory warrants have been used where
- officers do not have control over the delivery of evidence to the
- location to be searched. For example, in United States v.
- Goff, (10) DEA agents in Seattle developed probable cause to
- believe that Goff and Jacobson were making a 36-hour round trip
- to Miami to purchase a large quantity of cocaine. After airline
- personnel confirmed that the defendants had boarded the nonstop
- return flight to Seattle, the agents applied for an anticipatory
- warrant that was issued while the plane was in flight.
-
- In approving the subsequent search that occurred when the
- defendants disembarked from the plane in Seattle, the U. S. Court
- of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that there was probable
- cause to believe that the persons searched would arrive within
- the district in a reasonable time and that the warrant could not
- be executed until their arrival. The court concluded that
- issuing a warrant in anticipation of these events created no
- danger that the property seized would be other than the property
- sought in the warrant; anticipating future events did not detract
- from probable cause which must exist at the time of the
- search. (11)
-
- In another uncontrolled delivery case, Commonwealth v.
- Reviera, (12) an undercover officer went to a certain address,
- knocked on the door, and told the defendant who answered the
- door that he wished to buy one ounce of cocaine. The defendant
- said he was waiting for delivery, which would occur at
- approximately 10:00 p.m., and directed the undercover officer to
- return after 10:00 p.m., at which time he could purchase cocaine
- for $1,300 per ounce. Several other persons also approached the
- defendant about buying cocaine and were similarly told to return
- after 10:00 p.m. Based on these facts and additional informant
- information, an anticipatory warrant was obtained. The
- Pennsylvania Superior Court upheld the validity of this
- anticipatory warrant on the grounds there was a fair probability
- that contraband and evidence would be found at the particular
- location to be searched at the time the warrant would be
- executed.
-
- POTENTIAL CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGES
-
- The fourth amendment mandates that all search warrants,
- including anticipatory warrants, be based on facts establishing
- probable cause and must particularly describe the place to be
- searched and the person or things to be seized. The warrant must
- be issued by a neutral and detached magistrate. Anticipatory
- warrants can also be challenged on constitutional grounds if the
- search warrant affidavit lacks adequate facts indicating that the
- evidence to be seized is on a ``sure course'' to the location to
- be searched, or if there is inadequate judicial control of the
- warrant execution.
-
- Evidence on a ``Sure Course'' to Delivery
-
- Although the vast majority of Federal and State courts that
- have considered anticipatory warrants have approved their use,
- some courts have required a showing that the contraband or
- evidence to be seized is on a ``sure course'' to its destination.
- For example, in United States v. Hendricks, (13) a Customs officer
- inspected a cardboard box arriving from Brazil, which was
- addressed to Hendricks in Tucson, Arizona, but shipped in such a
- manner that Hendricks was required to pick it up personally in
- Tucson. Inside the box was a suitcase in which the inspector
- found hidden 5 to 7 pounds of cocaine. The box was sent on to
- Tucson where it was turned over to the DEA. While holding the
- box, DEA agents developed additional incriminating evidence and
- applied for a search warrant to search Hendricks' residence.
-
- The magistrate issuing the warrant knew that the suitcase
- was then in the DEA's possession and not at the Hendricks
- residence, and accordingly, inserted a provision in the warrant
- specifying that it was to be executed only upon the condition
- that the box is brought to the Hendricks residence. However,
- since at the time the warrant was issued, Hendricks had not
- picked up the box, there was no assurance that he would pick it
- up, or even if he did, that he would ever take the box to the
- house. Therefore, the court found there was not a sufficient
- nexus or connection between the box and the residence. The court
- held that unless the suitcase was on a sure course to the house
- (as for example in mail addressed to the house), no probable
- cause would exist to believe it would arrive there. (14)
-
- The ``sure course'' language of Hendricks has been cited
- with approval by several other courts. (15) To help ensure that a
- warrant will withstand subsequent attack based on lack of
- sufficient nexus between the place to be searched and the things
- to be seized, prudent investigators should attempt to develop
- facts indicating that the evidence is on a sure and irreversible
- course to its destination prior to applying for an anticipatory
- warrant.
-
- Ensuring Adequate Judicial Control of Warrant Execution
-
- The element of time may be highly relevant to the validity
- of a search warrant and its execution. The reason many courts
- require traditional search warrants to be executed ``forthwith''
- is to ensure that measure of judicial control over the search
- which the warrant procedure is intended to accomplish. Passage
- of an undue amount of time between issuance and execution raises
- the danger that the described property will no longer exist at
- the premises to be searched. The danger of loss of judicial
- control might be as great in the case of a warrant issued to take
- effect some time in the future as in the case of a stale
- warrant. (16)
-
- An anticipatory warrant is based on a magistrate's
- determination that sufficient probable cause exists to believe
- that at some future time (but not presently), certain evidence
- will be located at a particular place. A potential
- constitutional problem with such warrants is that the issuing
- magistrate abdicates to the officers executing the warrant an
- important judicial function, namely, the determination that
- probable cause exists to believe that the objects are currently
- in the place to be searched.
-
- While it is logical to assume that officers will not be
- disposed to undermine the success of their investigative efforts
- by the premature execution of an anticipatory warrant, it is
- nonetheless preferable to deal with time limitations as to
- execution explicitly in the warrant application process. (17)
- In that regard, some courts prefer the issuing magistrate to
- protect against premature execution by defining the circumstances
- and/or conditions that must be present prior to its execution. (18)
- For example, the issuing magistrate could delete the forthwith
- command found preprinted on many warrant forms and insert a
- directive that execution occur only upon the happening of a
- specific event, such as delivery of the evidence. This ensures
- judicial control because if the critical future event never
- occurs, the warrant may not be executed. (19)
-
- To guard against successful challenges to the validity of
- anticipatory warrants based on an alleged loss of judicial
- control in their execution, officers should place reasonable
- limiting language in their warrant affidavits specifying that
- execution will not occur in the absence of a particular
- contingency, such as: 1) A scheduled time for delivery; 2) a
- given event; 3) police surveillance confirming that the package
- has been delivered; or 4) a particular method that allows
- executing officers to know that the items are in the place to be
- searched. Such language in the affidavit may save an otherwise
- defective warrant if the magistrate merely fails to include
- that limiting language in the warrant itself.
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- The anticipatory or prospective search warrant is obtained
- in advance of the anticipated time for delivery of evidence to
- the place to be searched so police may promptly execute the
- search when delivery is made. When police are confronted with
- the need for quick action, anticipatory warrants provide a
- practical alternative to proceeding with no warrant and risking
- suppression of the evidence. If police delay applying for a
- warrant until the evidence arrives at the place to be searched,
- they increase the risk that the evidence will be lost before the
- search can be made. Officers applying for anticipatory warrants
- should ensure that their search warrant affidavits meet
- traditional fourth amendment requirements, and also reflect that
- the items are on a ``sure course'' to the place to be searched.
- Officers should also include appropriate limiting language in the
- affidavit to prevent loss of judicial control.
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- (1) See New York v. P.J. Video, 106 S.Ct. 1610 (1986);
- Andresen v. Maryland, 427 U.S. 463 (1976).
-
- (2) See Sauls, ``Emergency Searches of Premises,'' FBI Law
- Enforcement Bulletin, vol. 56, Nos. 3-4, March and April 1987.
-
- (3) See Fiatal, ``The Judicial Preference for the Search
- Warrant: The Good Faith Warrant Exception to the Exclusionary
- Rule,'' FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, vol. 55, No. 7, July 1986.
-
- (4) In Berger v. New York, 388 U.S. 41 (1967), the Supreme
- Court indirectly acknowledged such a possibility when it
- indicated that it could be constitutionally permissible to obtain
- a warrant authorizing the seizure (through the use of electronic
- surveillance) of oral communications which will not exist until
- vocalized by the participants to that conversation at some future
- time.
-
- (5) 2 W.R. LaFave, Search and Seizure sec. 3.7(c) at 94 (2d
- ed. 1987).
-
- (6) 854 F.2d 33 (4th Cir. 1988).
-
- (7) 859 F.2d 1195 (4th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 107 S.Ct.
- 1639 (1989).
-
- (8) 8882 F.2d 699 (2d Cir. 1989).
-
- (9) Id. at 702.
-
- (10) 681 F.2d 1238 (9th Cir. 1982).
-
- (11) The court also rejected a challenge to the warrant under
- Rule 41(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which
- requires a Federal search warrant be issued in the district where
- the person or property sought is located. The court stated the
- rule does not require that in every circumstance, the evidence
- sought must be physically in existence within the district at the
- time the warrant issues. Although the warrant cannot be executed
- until the object of the search is in the district, the rule is
- not violated when the affidavit clearly demonstrates that the
- objects of the search will exist in the district within the time
- allowed for execution.
-
- (12) 563 A.2d 1252 (Pa. Super. 1989).
-
- (13) 743 F.2d 653 (9th Cir. 1984), cert. denied, 470 U.S. 1006
- (1985).
-
- (14) Although the warrant was invalid for lack of probable
- cause, the agents' good faith reliance on it was held to be
- reasonable, and therefore, the evidence was nevertheless
- admissible.
-
- (15) See, e.g. United States v. Hale, 784 F.2d 1465 (9th Cir.
- 1986), cert. denied, 107 S.Ct. 110; Goodwin, supra note 6;
- Dornhofer, supra note 7.
-
- (16) United States ex rel Beal v. Skaff, 418 F.2d 430 (7th
- Cir. 1969).
-
- (17) LaFave, supra note 5, at 98.
-
- (18) Commonwealth v. Soares, 424 N.E. 2d 221 (Mass Sup. Ct.
- 1981). In Garcia, supra note 8 at 702, the Second Circuit Court
- of Appeals held:
-
- ``When a government official presents independent evidence
- indicating that delivery of contraband will, or is likely
- to, occur, and when the magistrate conditions the warrant
- on that delivery, there is sufficient probable cause to
- uphold the warrant.''
-
- (19) Although desirable, the absence of contingencies is not
- necessarily fatal where premature execution is unlikely. See,
- Reviera, supra note 12.
-
-
- ____________
-
- Law enforcement officers of other than Federal jurisdiction
- who are interested in this article should consult their legal
- adviser. Some police procedures ruled permissible under Federal
- constitutional law are of questionable legality under State law
- or are not permitted at all.
-
-
- Author's Note
-
- On May 1, 1990, the U.S. Supreme Court sent to Congress
- proposed amendments to Rule 41(a) of the Federal Rules of
- Criminal Procedure. The first amendment would permit warrants
- to search where the person or property is outside the
- jurisdiction when the warrant is issued, but within the district
- by the time the warrant is executed. A second amendment would
- permit the issuance, by Federal magistrates only, of search
- warrants for property or persons who are within the district
- when the warrant is issued, but might move outside the district
- before the warrant is executed.