United States v. Garey, Ikeitz

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 2003
Docket02-2680
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Garey, Ikeitz (United States v. Garey, Ikeitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Garey, Ikeitz, (7th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 02-2680 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

IKEITZ GAREY, Defendant-Appellant. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 01 CR 108—David F. Hamilton, Judge. ____________ ARGUED DECEMBER 5, 2002—DECIDED MAY 15, 2003 ____________

Before BAUER, DIANE P. WOOD, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. BAUER, Circuit Judge. Defendant-Appellant Ikeitz Garey, who pleaded guilty to illegally possessing a firearm, challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence of weapons seized from his residence in violation of the Fourth Amendment. Because we agree with the district court’s conclusion that police seized the weapons from Garey’s residence in good-faith reliance upon a validly issued search warrant, we affirm the dis- trict court’s ruling. 2 No. 02-2680

BACKGROUND During the course of an arson investigation in November 1998, law enforcement agents in Indianapolis interrogated Patrick Henry, who reeked of gasoline at the time of his detention near the crime scene. Initially denying any involvement, Henry eventually admitted to throwing two Molotov cocktails into the firebombed building. According to Henry, he was living in the garage of an individual whom he knew only as “Keith” or “Batch” when Batch and another individual woke him and drove him, at gun- point, to a building which they then forced him to fire- bomb under cover—or coercion—of gunshots. Henry de- scribed to investigators the house adjacent to the garage where he had been sleeping on Carrollton Avenue as “the one that’s at, I hope that’s the right address, that 1617, it’s a white double. One side is boarded up, the other side is not. . . . It’s, matter of fact it’s on the east end side of the street, there’s a parking lot next to it, I mean an empty lot next to it.” Following Henry’s interrogation, Detective Michael L. Mack of the Indiana Police Department prepared a prob- able cause affidavit stating, inter alia, that Henry had informed police that a man whom Henry knew as “Batch,” and with whom Henry was then living in a residence located “at 1615 North Carrollton Avenue and as described in the attached Search Warrant,” coerced Henry at gun- point to throw the Molotov cocktails.1 On the basis of

1 Mack appears to have determined that Henry, despite his uncertainty as to the address number, was in fact describing the residence at 1615, rather than 1617, North Carrollton Avenue, and included the correct address in his affidavit. Al- though Garey contends that the discrepancy—insofar as it calls Henry’s credibility into question—betrays the objective unreason- (continued...) No. 02-2680 3

Mack’s affidavit, Marion County Superior Court Judge Gary Miller found probable cause and issued a search warrant which, by its terms, incorporated Mack’s affidavit.2 The search warrant authorized police to enter the north half of a two story double family residence with white siding and a stone and brick front porch. The resiodence [sic] has two doors on the west side, two doors on the east side and one door on the north side. The south half of the duplex is vacant and boarded. There is also a white cinder block, one car detached garage at the rear east side of the residence. There is a partial numbered address affixed to the front of the residence. The first and third numbers are “1”, and [sic] the second and fourth numbers are missing. The residence is directly south of the duplex to the north, which bares [sic] the address of 1617/1619 N. Carrollton. The search warrant further authorized police to search for any materials that may have been used to make Molotov cocktails, specifically gasoline and “Big Bear” brand, 40 ounce beer bottles as alleged by the confiden- tial source as the type that were utilized in a recent arson/ firebombing . . . . Further, several firearms that were utilized by the subjects during the commission of this arson/firebombing, to include [sic] an AK-47

1 (...continued) ableness of the police officer’s belief that probable cause existed to search the residence, we regard it as trivial in light of Henry’s thorough physical description of the house and the fact that the house was missing several numbers. 2 It appears that Mack also prepared the search warrant which, along with the affidavit, Judge Miller read prior to issuing the search warrant. 4 No. 02-2680

type assault rifle, and blue steel and chrome-plated semi-automatic handguns[,] are believed to be within this residence. Though Judge Miller signed the search warrant, no signed copy of the affidavit was found on file with the Marion County court clerk.3 Approximately twenty-four hours after detaining Henry, officers executing the search warrant encountered Joseph Wooten and Defendant-Appellant Ikeitz Garey sleeping inside the residence at 1615 North Carrollton. In addi- tion to an assault rifle, a Molotov cocktail, and “miscella- neous drugs” seized from the house, police recovered two handguns from the bed in which Garey slept. In September 2001, Garey was indicted on two counts of possession of an unregistered firearm and two counts

3 With respect to his issuance of the search warrant, Judge Miller would eventually testify before the district court as follows: Prosecution: Sir, on the day that this search warrant was signed are you sure that you read the affidavit for probable cause? Miller: Oh, I’m quite certain. Prosecution: And, sir, can you tell the Court did you intend to sign the search warrant? Miller: Yes. Prosecution: And did you intend to provide to Detective Mack a valid search warrant for the residence that is indicated in the State’s Exhibit Num- ber Two? Miller: Yes. Prosecution: Did you find probable cause for the search warrant that day? Miller: Yes. No. 02-2680 5

of firearm possession by a felon.4 Garey then filed—and the district court denied—a motion to suppress evidence seized from 1615 North Carrollton, asserting that the search violated his Fourth Amendment rights insofar as the police lacked probable cause, the search warrant notwithstanding. Without making any determination as to probable cause, the district court concluded that the search and seizure fell within the scope of the good- faith exception to the exclusionary rule as articulated in United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897 (1984). Reserving his right to appeal the district court’s ruling on his motion to suppress, Garey entered a conditional plea of guilty to one count of firearm possession by a felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) (2003), and was sentenced to 84 months’ imprisonment and three years of supervised release. Garey now appeals the district court’s denial of his mo- tion to suppress evidence seized from the residence at 1615 North Carrollton Avenue.

ANALYSIS In Leon, the United States Supreme Court established an exception to the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule— which remedies Fourth Amendment violations through the exclusion from the prosecution’s case-in-chief of evi- dence obtained as a result thereof—in cases where law enforcement officers have acted in objectively reasonable reliance on a search warrant issued by a neutral and detached magistrate. 468 U.S. at 927 (BLACKMUN, J.,

4 State arson charges were dismissed after the state court granted Garey’s motion to suppress evidence seized from 1615 North Carrollton Avenue. Garey subsequently pleaded guilty to federal arson charges and was sentenced to 60 months’ imprison- ment, but his conviction was vacated after the district court awarded him post-conviction relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C.

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