NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 06a0797n.06
Filed: October 27, 2006
No. 05-6516
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, )
)
Appellee, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
TIMOTHY WAYNE KELLOGG, ) EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
)
Appellant. )
Before: MERRITT, SUTTON, and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges.
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. After a grand jury charged Timothy Kellogg with possession of
child pornography and after the district court denied his motion to suppress evidence discovered
during two searches, Kellogg entered a conditional plea of guilty. On appeal, Kellogg contests the
admissibility of evidence uncovered at a friend’s farm, a statement he made after his arrest and
evidence seized from a storage locker in Lexington, Kentucky. Because the district court correctly
rejected each of these arguments, we affirm.
I.
In March 2000, the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Police Department received a report
that Kellogg had sexually abused his teenage daughter. During an interview with state police,
No. 05-6516
United States v. Kellogg
Kellogg’s daughter revealed that “Kellogg [had] asked her to pose for nude photographs that were
to be taken with a digital camera,” JA 124, and that she had observed Kellogg viewing child
pornography on his computer. She also described several “plastic tubs” that had “lined the halls of
the residence” before she left. A subsequent search of Kellogg’s residence uncovered neither the
tubs nor any evidence of illegal conduct.
Not long thereafter, an acquaintance of Kellogg’s contacted the police to report that Kellogg
had “cleaned out” his residence in mid-March, that he was planning to store some guns at a friend’s
farm in Woodford County and that he had asked about local storage facilities. JA 157–58. The farm
owner, James White, told the police that Kellogg was a coworker and a friend. White also said that,
in mid-March, Kellogg had asked for permission to use White’s barn to work on his car, to which
White had responded, “Yeah, go down there and make yourself at home,” JA 185.
With White’s consent, the officers searched the barn, uncovering several weapons and eight
closed but unlocked containers bearing Kellogg’s name or initials. Among these eight containers
were two of the plastic tubs described by Kellogg’s daughter. White denied that he had given
Kellogg permission to use the barn as a storage facility, and he gave the officers permission to seize
the containers and everything inside them. The officers found computer hard drives inside an
ammunition box and dozens of compact disks and diskettes inside the two tubs. The police
recovered several thousand sexually explicit images of children from the hard drives, the compact
disks and the diskettes. Kellogg acknowledges that he owned these containers and their contents.
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By October 2003, Kellogg had moved to Columbus, Ohio, to live with his friend Mark
Weaver. On October 7, federal law enforcement officers arrested Kellogg at home. While escorting
Kellogg out of the house, the officers asked if they could search the car sitting in the driveway.
Kellogg responded, “I’d rather you not, you’re going to have enough to deal with in there” and
motioned towards the house. JA 137. During the arrest, Weaver gave the officers consent to search
the shared areas of the residence and assisted the officers by identifying two computers as Kellogg’s.
About two weeks later, on October 23, Weaver asked federal officers to remove Kellogg’s
computer equipment from the house and told them that Kellogg had stored additional equipment in
a local storage facility. The officers obtained a warrant the next day to search a storage facility in
Columbus after confirming with the facility’s manager that Kellogg had rented space there.
Although the search did not identify any incriminating evidence, the officers found a digital camera
that contained pictures of what appeared to be storage unit D360 at the Versailles Road Mini Storage
facility in Lexington, Kentucky. Also in the picture were several of the plastic tubs that had
disappeared from Kellogg’s house after Kellogg’s daughter had left in March of 2000.
At roughly the same time, Weaver called the Columbus police to report that he had received
a bill for Kellogg from the Versailles Road Mini Storage of Lexington. Federal officers contacted
the manager of the facility and confirmed that Kellogg had been renting unit D360 since March 9,
2000, just two weeks prior to the search of his Lexington home. The manager also notified the
officers that even after he had moved to Columbus, Kellogg would check on the items in the unit
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every two to three months. One month later, on November 19, federal agents obtained a warrant to
search the Lexington storage unit, where they found dozens of sexually explicit images of children.
A grand jury charged Kellogg with 39 counts of receiving child pornography, see 18 U.S.C.
§ 2252(a)(2), one count of conspiring to receive child pornography, see § 2251(b)(1), two counts of
possessing child pornography, see § 2252(a)(4)(B), and one count of permitting a minor to engage
in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing visual depictions for distribution in
interstate commerce, see § 2251(d).
Kellogg filed a suppression motion on June 10, 2004, claiming that the search at White’s
farm violated his Fourth Amendment rights and that the warrant to search the Lexington storage unit
lacked sufficient evidence of probably cause to support the search. On July 15, 2004, the district
court held a hearing on Kellogg’s motion. At that time, Kellogg did not present any evidence that
White had permitted him to store his property in the barn but instead argued that Kellogg’s
expectation of privacy arose because the boxes were opaque and “secure.” JA 240. The court
denied Kellogg’s motion.
Kellogg renewed his motion to suppress on October 29, 2004. At the motion hearing on
December 13, Kellogg testified about what happened at White’s farm: “I had problems with my
vehicle . . . I had some stuff in my car and I asked him if I could leave it in his barn. . . . He said I
could. They were up in the loft attic or loft area, it’s a second floor of his hay barn. We put them
behind some stuff so his kids wouldn’t get in them.” JA 225–26. Kellogg admitted that he had no
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direct evidence that White was coerced into allowing the police on his property and stated that he
was “[n]ot at all” surprised “to know that Mr. White was just interviewed . . . and [White stated] that
what [Kellogg] ha[d] claimed here in court and in [his] motion is incorrect[.]” Mot. Hr’g Tr. at 12,
Dec. 13, 2004. The district denied the renewed motion.
On May 6, 2005, Kellogg filed yet another motion to suppress, reiterating his previous claims
and adding a Miranda claim. In response, the government filed a declaration signed by Detective
Ann Gutierrez, who had participated in the search of White’s farm. Attached to the declaration was
the transcript of a tape-recorded conversation, dated November 9, 2004, between Gutierrez and
White—a conversation that she declared to be accurate under penalty of perjury. In pertinent part,
the transcript reads:
Gutierrez: . . . [W]e had heard through some other sources that he had maybe
stored some things on your farm. And so we had gone out to your
farm.
White: Yes, ma’am. I . . . I remember that very well.
Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. I had spoken recently . . . the case is actually getting ready
to go to trial, we’re hoping this month. So, we’re just trying to touch
base with everybody again and make sure that, kind of everything’s,
the facts are all straight. And we had heard that there were some
things that were being presented that were slightly different from the
way I remember it. So I wanted to touch base with you. When all of
that happened, were you aware that there were things being stored on
your farm?
White: No, ma’am. Like I said, things that were being stored there, he did
not have my permission to put there.
Gutierrez: Ok. They’re presenting a document to the court that’s saying that you
were allowing him to store things. So that is not true?
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White: No.
Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. I didn’t think so. I thought I remember you stating that . . .
White: I allowed him to go out to my farm and work on his vehicle. He came
out there, and like I said, I had no idea what was going on behind the
scenes.
Gutierrez: Ok.
White: Like I said, you know, he, stayed home from work. He said, “Hey,
my car’s broke down.” I said, “Yeah, go down there and make
yourself at home.” Because, you know, he is a co-worker, twenty
years retired from the Marines.
Gutierrez: Yeah. Yeah.
White: You know, had to have a security clearance to work where we work.
Gutierrez: Right.
White: Never dreamed of anything like that. So . . .
Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. So he was going to work on his car. And as far as you
knew, that was it.
White: Right. Like I said, when you guys went down there we found,
weapons.
Gutierrez: Right.
White: And stuff like that. Yeah.
Gutierrez: And you had no idea that any idea that any of that was, was there at
the time?
White: No, ma’am.
Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. Well, I . . . I thought that’s what I recalled, but it looks like
they were trying to submit some documents.
The district court denied Kellogg’s third motion to suppress. It held that White had
consented to the search of his barn, that Kellogg lacked standing to contest the search and that
Kellogg’s statement in Columbus did not violate his Miranda rights because he had not given the
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statement in response to interrogation. Any misleading or inaccurate statements in the search-
warrant affidavit, the court found, were not made intentionally or recklessly, and the evidence of
continuing criminal activity contained in the affidavit sufficed to sustain a finding of probable cause.
Kellogg entered a conditional plea of guilty on all counts, and the court sentenced him
(conditionally) to 120 months in prison. On appeal, Kellogg challenges the district court’s
suppression rulings.
II.
“When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress evidence, the appellate court must
consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the government.” United States v. Erwin, 155
F.3d 818, 822 (6th Cir. 1998) (en banc). In the light of the evidence presented to the district court,
it did not clearly err in denying Kellogg’s motion to suppress.
A.
Kellogg first argues that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the containers he
stored in White’s barn and that the district court erred in concluding that he lacked standing to
challenge the search. See Rakas v. Illinois, 439 U.S. 128, 140, 143 (1978); see also Katz v. United
States, 389 U.S. 347, 353 (1967). In support of this contention, Kellogg notes that White gave him
consent to store his containers there and that White helped him hide them in the loft. In one sense,
Kellogg may be right—at least as a legal matter. If indeed Kellogg had White’s permission to store
his containers in the barn, then he may have had a reasonable expectation of privacy at stake in the
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search, though we need not reach the issue. See United States v. Carnes, 309 F.3d 950, 959–60 (6th
Cir. 2002); cf. United States v. Waller, 426 F.3d 838, 844 (6th Cir. 2005).
The more salient point is that the district court did not credit Kellogg’s testimony. It instead
credited White’s repeated statements that he had never given Kellogg general permission to store
property in his barn. JA 184 (“Gutierrez: . . . When all that happened, were you aware that there
were things being stored on your farm? White: No ma’am. Like I said, things that were being stored
there, he did not have my permission to put there.”); id. (“Gutierrez: Ok. They’re presenting a
document to the court that’s saying that you were allowing him to store things. So that is not true?
White: No. Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. I didn’t think so.”); JA 184–85 (“White: I allowed him to go out
to my farm and work on his vehicle . . . I had no idea what was going on behind the scenes.”); JA
185 (“Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. So he was going to work on his car. And as far as you knew, that was it.
White: Right. Like I said, when you guys went down there we found[] weapons . . . [a]nd stuff like
that. Yeah. Gutierrez: And you had no idea that any of that was, was there at the time? White: No,
ma’am. Gutierrez: Ok. . . . I thought that’s what I recalled . . . .”). Kellogg offers no reasoned
explanation why the district court committed clear error in crediting the one piece of evidence
(White’s statements) over the other (his own).
Even if we uphold the district court’s decision to credit White’s testimony, Kellogg persists
that White’s consent to let him work on his car in the barn and to “make [him]self at home”
amounted to a general invitation to use the barn at will. But the district court properly rejected this
argument by recognizing the essential context in which the statement was made. Kellogg did not
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ask to live in the barn, to sleep there or even to store anything in the barn. He asked only if he could
work on his car there, giving him authority at most to “make himself at home” in working on his car,
not in using the barn as his own storage facility. Even if Kellogg subjectively construed White’s
reply to mean that he could treat the barn as his own, that does not mean a reasonable person would
do so. And we agree with the district court that Kellogg’s construction of the remark was not a
reasonable one, which removes this case from the orbit of the case law upon which Kellogg relies.
Compare Carnes, 309 F.3d at 959–60 (finding no reasonable expectation of privacy in an audio tape
left at girlfriend’s mobile home for several months without her knowledge or consent), with United
States v. Jeffers, 342 U.S. 48, 50–52 (1951) (finding a reasonable expectation of privacy in a room
in which the defendant had access “at will”).
To the extent Kellogg means to challenge the process by which the district court rejected this
motion to suppress, we disagree. Kellogg challenged the admissibility of this evidence through a
motion to suppress on three occasions (or more technically through one suppression motion and two
attempts to renew the motion). The district court gave Kellogg several opportunities to present
evidence, and the only evidence Kellogg presented was his own testimony. While a subpoena
apparently was issued for White to testify at the hearing on Kellogg’s second motion, it was never
served on him, see Mot. Hr’g Tr. at 58–59, Dec. 13, 2004, and Kellogg never asked for an
adjournment or another opportunity to present White as a witness on the issue, including most
conspicuously in connection with his third motion to suppress. He instead reserved only the right
to call White at trial, a trial that never occurred in view of his conditional guilty plea. Id. In the end,
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Kellogg never gave the district court any evidentiary reason (other than his own testimony) not to
believe White’s statements. And at no point in his appeal does Kellogg argue that the district court
committed reversible error by declining to give him another suppression hearing or by declining to
permit him to introduce evidence in support of his motion.
Nor can Kellogg tenably argue that the district court erred in relying on White’s statements
to the police because White was not available for cross-examination. As the Supreme Court has long
made clear, a court may rely on hearsay evidence, otherwise inadmissible at trial, in ruling on a
motion to suppress. See United States v. Raddatz, 447 U.S. 667, 679 (1980); Brinegar v. United
States, 338 U.S. 160, 173–74 (1949). Such hearsay evidence, like all admitted evidence, must have
some probative value, and a district court would clearly err if its decision were based solely on
evidence that was not “competent and credible.” Fields v. Bagley, 275 F.3d 478, 485 n.5 (6th Cir.
2001). But that was not the case here. The district court had before it two contradictory pieces of
evidence: White’s statements to the police that he did not give Kellogg general permission to store
items in his barn, and Kellogg’s testimony that he did. The district court had an opportunity to assess
Kellogg’s demeanor during his live testimony and obviously chose not to credit his testimony, an
assessment that receives deference on appeal. And while White’s statements were hearsay, there was
no reason not to rely upon them: They were consistent with what White had told police officers at
the time of the search; Officer Gutierrez declared under penalty of perjury that the transcript was
accurate; and there is no reason to think that White, who had consented to the search in the first
instance, suddenly had a reason to dissemble to the police. In ultimately choosing to credit White’s
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statements, see JA 196 (crediting “evidence that Mr. White did not permit the defendant to store
items on the property, other than his vehicle” in “find[ing] that the defendant had no reasonable
expectation of privacy”), we cannot say that the district court committed clear error.
B.
Kellogg next argues that under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966), the district court
should have suppressed the statement he made after his arrest in Columbus, namely his response to
a request to search his car: “I’d rather you not, you’re going to have enough to deal with in there”
as he motioned to the house. At the time of the statement, it is true, Kellogg was in custody, and the
police had not yet given him Miranda warnings. But the critical point is that he did not make the
statement in response to an interrogation, and accordingly it need not be excluded. See Oregon v.
Elstad, 470 U.S. 298, 317 (1985).
Rhode Island v. Innis, 446 U.S. 291 (1980), charts our path. For Miranda purposes, Innis
held that interrogation “extend[s] only to words or actions on the part of police officers that they
should have known were reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response.” Id. at 302. The
officers in this instance requested consent only to search Kellogg’s vehicle. They did not ask what
was in the vehicle or for that matter what was in the house. When the officers asked permission to
search the car, they thus could not have reasonably expected that their request would elicit anything
more than a “yes” or “no,” which by itself would not have been an incriminating statement. See
United States v. Cooney, 26 F. App’x 513, 523 (6th Cir. Jan. 22, 2002), cert. denied, 535 U.S. 1118;
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see also United States v. McCurdy, 40 F.3d 1111, 1118 (10th Cir. 1994) (“An officer’s request to
search a defendant’s automobile does not constitute interrogation invoking a defendant’s Miranda
rights.”); United States v. Glenna, 878 F.2d 967, 971 (7th Cir. 1989) (same).
Contrary to Kellogg’s contention, this Circuit has never held otherwise. Two of Kellogg’s
citations, Abela v. Martin, 380 F.3d 915 (6th Cir. 2004), and United States v. Salvo, 133 F.3d 943
(6th Cir. 1998), simply have no material bearing on the question at hand. See Abela, 380 F.3d at 925
(noting that “the parties do not dispute that [defendant] was . . . subject to custodial interrogation”);
Salvo, 133 F.3d at 948–53 (examining whether defendant was “in custody” for purposes of
Miranda); id. at 953–55 (examining whether consent to search was voluntary for Fourth Amendment
purposes). And the inquiry in United States v. Crowder, 62 F.3d 782 (6th Cir. 1995)—asking the
defendant to clarify an earlier statement—is several degrees removed from the inquiry here. While
a request to clarify an earlier statement is reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response, id.
at 786, a request to search a house is not. The district court did not err in rejecting Kellogg’s motion
to suppress this statement.
C.
Kellogg lastly challenges the sufficiency of the warrant prepared in connection with the
search of the Lexington storage facility, claiming that the affidavit failed to establish probable cause
when modified by several necessary redactions and additions. This claim, too, fails because Kellogg
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has not shown that the affidavit’s “remaining content is insufficient to establish probable cause.”
United States v. Trujillo, 376 F.3d 593, 604 (6th Cir. 2004).
As an initial matter, Kellogg cannot prevent the information uncovered during the search of
White’s barn from being included in the affidavit—as he lacked standing to suppress it. That search
uncovered two plastic tubs that contained thousands of sexually explicit images of children. When
combined with other incriminating evidence that Kellogg has not challenged, this evidence sufficed
to permit a magistrate to find probable cause to search the Lexington storage facility. Even without
the other evidence that Kellogg claims should have been excluded from the affidavit, the affidavit
included the following evidence: that Kellogg had tried to produce sexually explicit photos of his
daughter; that Kellogg’s Kentucky residence had contained numerous plastic tubs that were not
found in the March 23, 2000 search of his house; that two of those tubs were found in White’s barn
and each contained sexually explicit images of children; that Kellogg had asked a friend about local
storage facilities at the time; and that Kellogg had maintained a storage unit at the Lexington facility
since March 9, 2000. Even without the other contested evidence, such as the digital image of one
of Kellogg’s plastic tubs outside the Lexington storage unit, the affidavit sufficiently linked
Kellogg’s criminal activities to the Lexington unit. See United States v. Smith, 182 F.3d 473, 477
(6th Cir. 1999) (noting that probable cause “requires only a probability or substantial chance of
criminal activity, not an actual showing of such activity”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
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III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
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GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge, concurring in part, and dissenting in part.
I join in Section II.B. of the majority opinion and in the result of Section III.C. However, I
disagree with the statement of facts (Section I) and respectfully dissent with regard to Section II.A.
Based on the present record, I would hold that the district court clearly erred in its ruling on
defendant’s third motion to suppress the evidence found in the closed containers. Accordingly, I
respectfully concur in part and dissent in part. I would remand for further proceedings.
I.
On June 10, 2004, defendant first moved to suppress the evidence discovered in the closed
containers stored in James White’s barn. At a hearing held on July 15, 2004, the district court
engaged in a colloquy with counsel, but rendered no findings of fact. An order summarily denying
the motion to suppress was entered July 15, 2004.
Defendant’s second motion to suppress was filed October 29, 2004. At the conclusion of a
hearing held December 13, 2004, the court denied the motion, ruling as follows:
I have heard nothing to indicate that Mr. White didn’t give his permission for these
officers to look through that stuff. Mr. White clearly had as much right to access to
that. It was not under lock and key. It was just left there. Yeah, granted they hid it,
according to Mr. Kellogg, to keep the children from getting in it. But that doesn’t
mean that Mr. White couldn’t have gotten in it. He knew where it was, knew exactly
where it was. And he showed the officers and said that they could look at it. Like
I said the first time, I don’t see there is any problem with him giving consent to look
at that stuff.
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Once they have a right to find stuff that is incriminating, they have got a right to seize
it and anything that looks like it might have incriminating evidence, including hard
drives, computer disks and other things. So that seizure doesn’t bother me at all.
(Emphasis added.)
Defendant’s third motion to suppress was filed May 6, 2005. Although a hearing was
originally scheduled, the court cancelled the hearing, and in a written opinion and order dated
May 20, 2005, denied defendant’s motion. In opposition to defendant’s third motion to suppress,
the government filed an unsworn written statement of Detective Ann Gutierrez dated May 18, 2005.
The statement was not an affidavit, and Gutierrez was not under oath when she wrote “I declare
under the penalty of perjury that the statements set forth below are true and correct to the best of my
knowledge.” Detective Gutierrez’s unsworn declaration attached as Exhibit B an unauthenticated
transcript of a recorded telephone conversation she purportedly had with James White on
November 9, 2004. Kellogg was not afforded an opportunity to respond or rebut these hearsay
statements filed by the government only two days before the court’s May 20, 2005, order.
In denying defendant’s motion to suppress, the district court relied upon this unsworn,
unauthenticated transcript that was apparently transcribed by the police. Rejecting defendant’s
motion, the court stated the following in its May 20, 2005, written order:
First, as to the evidence seized at the White Farm, the Court finds that the property
owner, Mr. White, provided the police with valid consent to search the barn on Mr.
White’s property. (Pl.’s Resp. to First Mot. to Suppress, Ex. A.) The defendant did
not present any credible evidence that Mr. White was coerced into signing the
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consent form, other than mere speculation that it occurred. The government, on the
other hand, presented evidence that Mr. White did not permit the defendant to store
items on the property, other than his vehicle. (Pl.’s Resp. to Third Mot. to Suppress,
Ex. A.) Thus, the Court finds that the defendant had no reasonable expectation of
privacy as to the evidence seized at the White Farm. As such, the defendant may not
contest the search of the White Farm. United States v. Gillis, 358 F.3d 386, 391 (6th
Cir. 2004).
The majority inaccurately states: “White denied that he had given Kellogg permission to use
the barn as a storage facility.” However, White’s statement, when viewed literally, means the
opposite. At a minimum, it is ambiguous. The telephone transcript states, in pertinent part, the
following:
Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. I had spoken recently . . . the case is actually getting ready
to go to trial, we’re hoping this month. So, we’re just trying to touch
base with everybody again and make sure that, kind of everything’s,
the facts are all straight. And we had heard that there were some
things that were being presented that were slightly different from the
way I remember it. So I wanted to touch base with you. When all of
that happened, were you aware that there were things being stored on
your farm?
White: No, ma’am. Like I said, things that were being stored there, he did
not have my permission to put there.
Gutierrez: Ok. They’re presenting a document to the court that’s saying that you
were allowing him to store things. So that is not true?
White: No.
(Emphasis added.)
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White’s answer of “No” can be construed as stating that he did not allow Kellogg to store
personal property on his premises only if his answer of “No” is deemed as a “Yes.” The question
was, “So that [Kellogg’s statement] is not true?” The answer of “No” literally means that it was true,
and, therefore, he allowed Kellogg to store “things” on his premises.
In addition, the questions and answers are ambiguous. White was not asked whether he had
granted permission to Kellogg to use the barn as a storage facility. Rather, he was asked whether
he was “aware that there were things being stored on your farm?” (Emphasis added.) White’s
answer can reasonably be interpreted to mean that he never granted Kellogg the right to store illegal
“things” on his property, such as child pornography or guns. However, from the question and
answer, it is unclear whether White granted permission for Kellogg to store legal items on the
property.
Further questions and answers suggest that the consent White refused to give pertained to
“weapons” and “stuff like that”:
White: I allowed him to go out to my farm and work on his vehicle. He came
out there, and like I said, I had no idea what was going on behind the
scenes.
Gutierrez: Ok.
White: Like I said, you know, he, stayed home from work. He said, “Hey,
my car’s broke down.” I said, “Yeah, go down there and make
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yourself at home.” Because, you know, he is a co-worker, twenty
years retired from the Marines.
Gutierrez: Yeah. Yeah.
White: You know, had to have a security clearance to work where we work.
Gutierrez: Right.
White: Never dreamed of anything like that. So . . .
Gutierrez: Ok. Ok. So he was going to work on his car. And as far as you
knew, that was it.
White: Right. Like I said, when you guys went down there we found,
weapons
Gutierrez: Right.
White: And stuff like that. Yeah.
Gutierrez: And you had no idea that any idea that any of that [weapons and
“stuff like that”] was, was there at the time?
White: No, ma’am.
(Emphasis added.)
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When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress evidence, we consider the evidence in the
light most likely to support the district court’s decision. United States v. Dillard, 438 F.3d 675, 680
(6th Cir. 2006), cert. denied, – U.S. – , 2006 W.L. 2233240 (U.S. Oct. 2, 2006). Further, we will
not reverse the factual findings by the district court unless such factual findings are clearly erroneous.
Id. For purposes of a suppression hearing, a district court may rely on hearsay evidence, but only
if the evidence is “credible and competent.” Fields v. Bagley, 275 F.3d 478, 485 n.5 (6th Cir. 2001).
Moreover, the probative value of unauthenticated hearsay evidence is diminished by its lack of
reliability. See generally United States v. Matlock, 415 U.S. 164, 175-77 (1974) (reliable hearsay
is admissible on motions to suppress); United States v. Merritt, 695 F.2d 1263, 1270 (10th Cir. 1982)
(considering factors of reliability and corroboration); United States v. Schaefer, 87 F.3d 562, 570
(1st Cir. 1996) (“[A] judge presiding at a suppression hearing may receive and consider any relevant
evidence, including affidavits and unsworn documents that bear indicia of reliability.”) (emphasis
added); JOHN W. STRONG ET AL., MCCORMICK ON EVIDENCE § 353 (4th ed. 1992) (evaluating
hearsay evidence in administrative proceedings).
While the trial court is the primary judge of the credibility of witnesses, here, the district
judge did not rely on live testimony or the demeanor of any witness in ruling that White had not
granted Kellogg permission to store personal property on the premises. Rather, the court relied
heavily on an unsworn, unauthenticated transcript of a conversation White allegedly had with
Detective Gutierrez. When viewed literally, White’s statement supports defendant’s position that
he had been granted permission to store personal property on the premises. At a minimum, White’s
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statement is ambiguous. Furthermore, it appears that the district court’s findings of fact with regard
to defendant’s second and third motions to suppress are contradictory. In particular, if White helped
Kellogg hide the containers and knew where they were, it is reasonable to infer that he granted
Kellogg permission to store the containers.
At oral argument, defense counsel represented to the court that White had been subpoenaed
for the suppression hearings but failed to attend. The government’s telephone transcript is unclear
whether the subpoenas issued for White were for the suppression hearings, trial, or both:
White: Never have spoke with them [defense counsel]. Like I say, I got that
letter back in July of this year.
Gutierrez: Ok.
White: And I have been, I don’t know how many times I have been served a
subpoena . . .
Gutierrez: Yeah.
White: To show up in court and it get postponed.
The November 9, 2004, telephone conversation occurred after the first July 15, 2004,
suppression hearing but before the second December 13, 2004, hearing. The district court’s
December 13, 2004, order denying defendant’s second motion to suppress provides: “The
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defendant’s oral motion for the Clerk to reissue subpoenas for January 13, 2005, at 9:00 a.m. is
hereby GRANTED and the clerk shall reissue the defendant’s subpoenas for the new trial date.”
Regarding the subpoenas, I find it noteworthy that, in the telephone interview, White advised
Detective Gutierrez that he had “a problem” complying with them because of his new job in
Huntsville, Alabama:
White: Now, now I got, I got a problem.
Gutierrez: Ok.
White: I got a new job in Huntsville, Alabama.
Gutierrez: Ok.
White: You know, I don’t have the luxury of getting time off and everything.
Gutierrez: Sure. Well, it was funny because when we stopped past your house
we saw the signs that you all were trying to sell. And, I thought, oh,
shoot . . . I hope we didn’t completely miss you. And then your son
said, “Well, he’s moving . . . you know he’s working down there, but
he comes home on the weekends.” And I thought, Oh, shoot . . . he’s
is [sic] just . . .
White: (Unin)
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Gutierrez: I’ll tell you what. I will, I will pass that information on to the
prosecutor and make sure that he understands that you are in
Huntsville and . . .
White: Yeah. I’m, I’m down here working full time.
In summary, I conclude that the district court clearly erred in placing great weight on the
unsworn, unauthenticated, and ambiguous statements allegedly made by James White to Detective
Gutierrez. Despite our deferential standard of review, the present record does not contain reliable
evidence supporting the ruling of the district court. For this reason, I would remand for further
proceedings.
II.
With regard to the search of the Lexington storage facility, I agree with the majority that,
even without the contested evidence discovered in the barn, sufficient probable cause existed for the
issuance of the search warrant. Furthermore, I agree with the learned district judge that the good
faith exception of Leon applies and validates the search. United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897 (1984).
Finally, I join in Section II.B. of the majority opinion rejecting defendant’s Fifth Amendment claim
of a Miranda violation.
For these reasons, I respectfully concur in part and dissent in part. I would remand for further
proceedings.
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