Bradley v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 4, 2019
Docket554, 2017
StatusPublished

This text of Bradley v. State (Bradley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. State, (Del. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

KAREEM BRADLEY, § § No. 554, 2017 Defendant Below, § Appellant, § Court Below: Superior Court § of the State of Delaware v. § § Cr. ID. No. 1602015338A (N) STATE OF DELAWARE, § § Plaintiff Below, § Appellee. § § §

Submitted: November 28, 2018 Decided: February 4, 2019

Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and VAUGHN, Justices.

ORDER

On this 4th day of February 2019, upon consideration of the parties’ briefs and

the record on appeal, it appears that:

(1) The appellant, Kareem Bradley, appeals from a jury verdict finding him

guilty of Possession of a Firearm By a Person Prohibited and Possession of

Ammunition by a Person Prohibited. The firearm involved was found in a garage

possessed by Bradley. He makes one claim on appeal. He claims that the Superior

Court committed plain error by allowing into evidence items obtained from a

warrantless and invalid search of the garage. His claim is set forth in three subparts. First, he contends that the search of the garage violated his rights under the Fourth

Amendment and Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution. In support of this

contention, he argues that the application for the warrant authorizing the search of

the garage contained information obtained from a prior warrantless, unlawful entry

into the garage. He further argues that the inevitable discovery rule does not apply.

Second, he contends that even if the inevitable discovery rule applies (or the warrant

was otherwise valid), the warrant was constitutionally defective because the warrant

application lacked particularity. It lacked particularity, he argues, because it did not

establish a nexus between the garage and his unlawful activity and failed to specify

the places within the garage the police intended to search. Finally, he contends that

the officers exceeded the scope of the warrant by searching a vehicle in the garage

because the vehicle was not identified in the application for the warrant.

(2) In November of 2015, Detective Barnes of the Wilmington Police

Department and FBI Agent Haney received information from a trusted and past-

proven reliable, confidential informant that Bradley was involved in marijuana

distribution in Wilmington. The informant told the officers that Bradley possessed

multiple firearms, including a handgun with an extended magazine and an AK-47-

style assault rifle. The informant also told the officers that Bradley lived in

Southbridge and frequented a garage in the area of 13 th and Locust Streets.

Furthermore, “the informant advised that s/he observed Bradley illegally purchase a

2 gun from someone while inside the shop in the area of 13 th and Locust streets.”1

The informant also supplied the officers with a text message from Bradley that

indicated he was engaged in trafficking marijuana.

(3) The police began surveillance of Bradley in January 2016.

Surveillance continued for approximately two months. During this period, the

police observed him meeting with subjects and engaging in what appeared to be

hand-to-hand drug transactions. They also observed that he frequently visited three

locations: his residence at 317 Townsend Street, his mother’s residence at 2303

Thatcher Street, and a garage on the 1200 block of Locust Street. Officers observed

him driving a red Dodge Challenger and a black Chrysler 300. “There were also

several occasions where, while Bradley was at 317 Townsend or the garage in the

1200 block of Locust Street, subjects would respond to these locations and enter/exit

same within a few minutes or less”—activity consistent with drug dealing according

to Detective Barnes’s training and experience.2 The police searched a trash can at

the curb directly in front of Bradley’s residence and found “numerous pieces of drug

paraphernalia,” including “numerous empty, small, torn, knotted plastic sandwich

bags commonly used to package drugs for sale,” and a “small piece of marijuana

blunt.”3 In the fourth week of February, the police stopped an individual after he

1 App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A22, ¶ 12. 2 Id. at A16, ¶ 14. 3 Id. at A16, ¶ 14. 3 had engaged in one of the observed hand-to-hand transactions with Bradley and

found that he possessed marijuana.

(4) On February 22, 2016, the police secured a search warrant for Bradley’s

residence, the Chrysler, and Bradley’s person (the “first warrant”). At 5:09 p.m.

that same day, Bradley was stopped in his black Chrysler and arrested; he was found

in possession of several individually packaged bags of marijuana, a large sum of

money, and a key ring with numerous keys. The officers then searched his

residence pursuant to the first warrant and found more individually packaged bags

of marijuana and another large sum of money. When the officers asked Bradley

about the Locust Street garage, he denied any knowledge of it.

(5) At around 6:30 p.m. that night, Detective Barnes and Agent Haney

arrived at and opened the locked garage on Locust Street with the keys recovered

from Bradley. According to Detective Barnes’s testimony at the preliminary

hearing, they walked in after unlocking the garage and observed a parked car, but

did not attempt to open it. After the officers determined that the keys found on

Bradley’s person fit the locks to the garage, Officer Barnes asked Bradley if he

leased the garage. He responded by saying he leased the garage with a friend to

work on cars.

(6) Detective Barnes left to get a search warrant for the garage (the “garage

warrant”), while Agent Haney remained with other officers to secure the location.

4 The garage warrant was obtained at 8:30 p.m. The application for the warrant

included the same facts supporting the first warrant, except the affiant added that the

officers found individually packaged bags of marijuana and large sums of money on

Bradley’s person and in his residence while executing the first warrant, that the keys

recovered from Bradley fit the locks to the garage, that Bradley admitted to leasing

the garage after the keys were confirmed to fit the locks, and that the informant had

previously informed the officers that he or she observed Bradley illegally purchase

a gun from someone while inside the garage. The affiant also changed the address

of the garage from “1200 block of Locust Street” to “1203 Locus Street.” 4

According to Detective Barnes’s training and experience, Bradley’s actions were

consistent with maintaining several caches of drugs in different locations to facilitate

drug dealing. Although the affidavit did not mention the vehicle in the garage, the

garage warrant authorized the search of a “[o]ne story brick garage building with a

white front door and a mailbox to the right marked 1203,” including “[a]ny/all

curtilages.”5

(7) At some point, the officers discovered that one of the keys recovered

from Bradley unlocked the car.6 Agent Haney observed a zipped, cloth lunchbox

4 Compare id. at A16, ¶ 14 (first warrant affidavit), with id. at A24, ¶ 16 (garage warrant affidavit). 5 Id. at A18. 6 The record is unclear as to precisely when the car in the garage was unlocked. Appellant’s Opening Br. at 7 n.2. Compare App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A43-44 (Detective Barnes testifying at the preliminary hearing that the car was not unlocked until after he returned with the garage warrant), with App. to Appellee’s Answering Br.

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Bradley v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-state-del-2019.