United States v. David Baca

480 F.2d 199
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 1973
Docket72-1838
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 480 F.2d 199 (United States v. David Baca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. David Baca, 480 F.2d 199 (10th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

ORIE L. PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.

An indictment was returned in the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico, charging that David Baca, hereinafter called the defendant, “did possess” on July 13, 1972, “with intent to distribute a quantity of heroin, a schedule I narcotic drug controlled substance” in violation of 21 U. S. C.A. § 841(a)(1).

The sole ground urged as error was the overruling of a motion to suppress “all physical and testimonial evidence seized from Defendant on or about July 13, 1972,” on the ground that it was seized under an illegal search warrant issued on July 12, 1972, on an affidavit sworn to by Detectives C. Brown, J. Parra, and A. Cordova, and by an unlawful search.

The parts of the affidavit here material are set out in Note 1 hereto. 1

*201 The search warrant was issued on July 12, 1972. The pertinent parts thereof are set out in Note 2 hereto. 2

It will be noted that the search warrant says first, “on the person of” David Baca and Juan Baca; and second, “and on the premises described as The house designated 1927½” and does not state “on the person of David Baca and Juan Baca” at such house “Heroin in an unknown quantity and Marijuana in an unknown quantity * * We mention this, because of the contention made that the search of the person was limited to the house designated as 1927½.

It will further be observed that at no place in the affidavit or search warrant is the residence at 1927½ stated to be or referred to as the home of the defendant. Rather, it is described as the place where the defendant and Juan Baca carried on their alleged business as dealers and distributors of narcotics, and in nowise limited the possession of narcotics on their persons to that particular place.

It will further be observed that the affidavit described David Baca by his correct name. He was well known, and that was a sufficient description of him for the officers to recognize the individual, the person of whom they were authorized to search.

It will be further observed that the search warrant recited three places of concealment; one on the person of the defendant; one on the person of Juan Baca; and one at the house designated *202 as 1927½. It in nowise expressly or impliedly required that the search of the persons take place at the house designated as 1927½.

On July 13, 1972, Cody Prestwood was employed as a Detective in the Sheriff’s Department of Bernalillo County, New Mexico. Edward Tanuz was a Detective in the Police Department of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and A. C. Rodriguez was a State Policeman. On that day, they were engaged in the execution of such search warrant. Tanuz had physical possession of the warrant. On that day, Prestwood observed the defendant running from a point where a Dodge automobile was parked to a house numbered 1927 Second Street. The Dodge was parked on the premises where such house was located. Prestwood immediately advised his fellow officers that he had observed the defendant running from such point to such house. Prestwood had been acquainted with the defendant for at least four years and had no difficulty in recognizing him. The officers proceeded to the house and knocked on the door. Jeanette Baca responded to the knocking and opened the door. She was reputed to be the defendant’s wife. The officers advised her that they had a search warrant for the person of David Baca. She denied that he was in the house. Prestwood told her he saw David Baca enter the house. She refused permission for the officers to enter the house. After considerable discussion and the exercise of much patience, because she was pregnant and they did not want to unduly excite her, the officers entered through the open door without her consent.

Prestwood knew the plan of the inside of the house, and immediately went to the nearest bedroom. He observed the defendant on the bed, with a sheet covering only a small portion of his body, and that he was dressed in shorts and a white T-shirt. He had observed that the defendant wore a white T-shirt when he ran from the point near the automobile to the house.

There were two mattresses on the bed. As Prestwood entered the bedroom, the defendant made a quick motion to insert his left hand between the mattresses. Prestwood grabbed the defendant’s left hand, told him he was a police officer and that he had a warrant to search his person, and directed him not to move. Rodriguez, who was close behind Prestwood, entered the room and assisted Prestwood in preventing the defendant from inserting his left hand between the two mattresses. Prestwood grabbed his hand, because he had knowledge of the caliber of person the defendant was, and because he feared the defendant was reaching for a weapon or other means of doing him bodily harm.

Prestwood lifted up the top mattress. On the bottom mattress he observed a .22 caliber six-shot repeating revolver. In it were four loaded cartridges and two empty shells. The revolver was near the edge of the bottom mattress, close to the point where Baca was about to insert his hand, and close to the revolver was a cellophane bag containing 14 plastic packets, which the officers reasonably believed to contain heroin. Prestwood’s testimony as to where the revolver and bag of plastic packets were located was not denied.

The officers seized the revolver and bag of plastic packets, placed identifying marks on them, and identified them at the trial. They were introduced into evidence at the trial, and it was established that heroin was contained in the plastic packets.

After seizing the revolver and the bag of plastic packets, the officers searched the defendant, but found nothing incriminating immediately on his person. It plainly appears from Prestwood’s evidence that the gun and the bag of plastic packets, while they were between the two mattresses, were within the immediate reach and control of the defendant.

Defendant contends that the affidavit was insufficient to support a finding of probable cause for the search of the defendant’s person, because it was based *203 on information furnished by unnamed informers.

Information obtained by the maker of an affidavit for a search warrant from a confidential informant is sufficient to establish probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant, where the informant has previously proved to be reliable. 3

That is especially true, where the information from the anonymous informer is strongly corroborated by other evidence. 4 Here, the affidavit set forth facts obtained from the Albuquerque Metro Squad, that it had received complaints from nearby residents of the large amount of traffic to and from the house at 1927½, and that during a month of surveillance such Squad had met known addicts going to and from such house; that such addicts were interviewed as they left the house; that their arms bore many needlemarks, and that such addicts told the Squad that they had purchased heroin from David and Juan Baca at the house at 1927%.

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Bluebook (online)
480 F.2d 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-david-baca-ca10-1973.