FILED
United States Court of Appeals
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Tenth Circuit
FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT December 22, 2017
_________________________________
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v. No. 16-6221
(D.C. No. 5:15-CR-00093-M-1)
DARYL LEE INGRAM, a/k/a Black, a/k/a (W.D. Okla.)
Clacc, a/k/a Ninety Black, a/k/a BJ,
Defendant - Appellant.
_________________________________
ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
_________________________________
Before HARTZ, PHILLIPS, and MORITZ, Circuit Judges.
_________________________________
This appeal is one of two in which Daryl Lee Ingram challenges the drug and
money-laundering convictions that landed him concurrent life-without-release
sentences in federal prison. Here, Ingram disputes the district court’s denial of two
pre-trial motions: (1) a motion to suppress evidence discovered during a search of his
home and (2) a motion for a Franks v. Delaware hearing.
At bottom, Ingram makes a single contention: that the Fourth Amendment
required the suppression of the evidence seized from his home. (A Franks hearing,
after all, is just another way to gain the protection of the Fourth Amendment’s
*
This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines
of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for
its persuasive value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
exclusionary rule.) Yet after reviewing the search warrant and underlying affidavit,
we conclude that even if the affidavit failed to prove that criminal activity was afoot
at Ingram’s home, law enforcement was entitled to rely on the warrant in good faith,
to search the house, and to seize the evidence found there. Exercising jurisdiction
under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we thus affirm.
BACKGROUND
In November 2014, Detective Matthew McRorie of the Oklahoma City Police
Department submitted to the Oklahoma County District Court a probable-cause
affidavit requesting authority to search a house located at 11009 North Miller
Avenue, where Ingram and his girlfriend allegedly resided, for evidence of a drug-
trafficking conspiracy run by the Rollin’ 90’s gang. This affidavit was only a piece of
“Operation Rollin’ Rock,” a multi-agency investigation into the gang. See R. Vol. 2
at 503. But the affidavit led to a search warrant, and the execution of that search
warrant culminated in the seizure of (among other things) $10,388.25 in cash, a
handwritten ledger itemizing $48,200 in drug debts, tax returns in the name of
Ingram’s girlfriend, and paperwork from the Oklahoma Department of Corrections in
Ingram’s name.
The government, in turn, used this (and much other) evidence at two jury trials
(the first in June 2015, the second in April 2016), eventually securing Ingram’s
convictions for one count of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base, one
count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine base, one count of
aiding and abetting the manufacture of cocaine base, one count of conspiracy to
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launder money, and two counts of aiding and abetting money laundering. And in July
2016, the district court sentenced Ingram to two concurrent life-without-release
prison terms, one for the possession-with-intent-to-distribute charge and one for the
conspiracy-to-possess-with-intent-to-distribute charge, plus concurrent, term-of-
months sentences on the remaining charges.1
Ingram now challenges Detective McRorie’s affidavit—its sufficiency and
truthfulness—in an attempt to suppress the evidence seized at 11009 North Miller
and, ultimately, win the reversal of his convictions. The affidavit therefore lies at the
heart of this appeal, so we thoroughly review its contents.
The affidavit begins by identifying the single-family home at 11009 North
Miller Avenue in Oklahoma City. It then asserts the presence, inside the house, of
items subject to seizure under Oklahoma’s drug laws, specifically:
“Documents related to a conspiracy to distribute Controlled Dangerous
Substances to include but not limited to letters for coconspirators,
photographs depicting coconspirators, telephone records.” R. Vol. 2 at
424.
“Items associated with membership in the 90’s street gang to include but
not limited to blue bandanas, blue clothing, University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill apparel, letters from other 90 [sic] gang members, photographs
with other 90’s gang members.” Id.
“Documents related to the distribution of illegal drugs to include but not
limited to: records, ledgers, address books, telephone books, telephone
1
Ingram had three prior convictions for felony drug offenses. Thus, because
the jury in this case found that Ingram conspired to possess (and possessed) with the
intent to distribute at least 280 grams of “a mixture or substance containing a
detectable amount of cocaine base,” R. Vol. 1 at 353, federal law required that he be
sentenced to “a mandatory term of life imprisonment without release” on each
conviction. 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A)(iii).
3
bills, telephone records, rent receipts, rental car agreements, mini-storage
receipts, cellular telephone agreements, pager rental agreements, bills and
receipts related to cellular telephones and pagers, and any property and/or
U.S. currency being proceeds of or related to the distribution of illegal
narcotics.” Id.
“Also ledgers containing quantity of narcotics possessed, ledgers of money
owed to the suspects for narcotics they have provided to co-conspirators,
ledgers of money owed by the suspects to their suppliers, transportation and
distribution instructions for the narcotics being sold, and other types of
documentation regarding the sale of narcotics.” Id.
“Cellular phones, sim cards, and devices capable of storing digital media
(to include but not limited to smart phones, personal data assistants, hard
drives and USB drives).” Id.
“Financial documents related to the distribution of controlled dangerous
substances to include but not limited to stored value cards, wire transfer
receipts, bank account statements, bank deposit slips, documents showing
purported income.” Id.
“And articles of personal property tending to establish the identity of the
person or persons in control or possession of the place or vehicle, including,
but not limited to, utility company receipts, rent receipts, canceled mail
envelopes, vehicle registration, credit card receipts, repair bills,
photographs, keys, and articles of clothing[.]” Id.
Next, the affidavit lays out the facts supporting these assertions.
First, the affidavit describes Detective McRorie’s background as an Oklahoma
City police officer, including his training and experience related to “[c]riminal
[s]treet [g]angs,” id. at 426, and “[d]rug [o]rganizations,” id. at 428. Based on his
participation in other investigations, he knew, for instance, that “drug dealers
maintain books, records, receipts, notes, ledgers, money orders, and other papers
relating to the transportation, ordering, sale and distribution of controlled
substances.” Id. at 428. And “[t]he most likely place for documents associated with
4
drug trafficking” to be found, according to the detective, “is at the primary residence
of the person involved in the trafficking.” Id. at 430.
Second, the affidavit provides an overview of the organization that law
enforcement dubbed the “90’s Street Gang Drug Conspiracy.” Id. at 432. From the
late 1980s, when the gang began operating in Oklahoma City, through the present
day, Detective McRorie claims that gang members have been involved in drug
distribution. Id. Furthermore, at the time of the affidavit, the gang’s leadership
comprised Ingram and his several “lieutenants.” Id.
Third, the affidavit provides the details of Detective McRorie’s investigation,
starting with the statements of three cooperating witnesses, two of whom were gang
members and all of whom were convicted felons either trading information for
money or hoping to receive “consideration” on pending charges. Id. at 433–35. (The
non-gang member, Detective McRorie noted, had provided information in the past
that had led to the arrest and felony-charging of five people.) Between March and
October 2014, all three informants had told police, based on their personal
observations, that Ingram headed the gang and distributed “kilogram quantities” of
cocaine base in Oklahoma City. Id. at 434–35. One of the informants, a gang member
who asserted that Ingram “call[ed] the shots” for the gang, also claimed to have
observed Ingram and a lieutenant in a car with “more crack in the center console . . .
than [the informant] had ever seen at one time.” Id. at 434–35. And the other gang
member–informant, who had “a close personal relationship” with Ingram and “an
intimate knowledge of the inner working of Ingram’s drug organization,” professed
5
to have seen Ingram give another gang member two ounces of cocaine at a mall
where, the informant said, Ingram “often” sold drugs. Id. at 435–6.
The affidavit then discusses law enforcement’s independent investigation into
the informants’ statements, primarily surveillance of cars tied to Ingram and other
members of the gang, as well as a known “stash apartment.” Id. at 437–39. “Almost
every day” after police installed a pole camera outside the stash apartment in October
2014, police saw a car parked nearby that Ingram had previously been seen driving.
Id. at 437. And throughout October and early November, cars associated with gang
members traveled to and from the stash apartment and other locations affiliated with
the gang. On October 30, for example, one gang member’s car left the stash
apartment, drove to 11009 North Miller, and returned to the stash apartment. Four
days later, police watched as Ingram and two others left a motel room in the
“Meridian corridor,” a place associated with “rampant drug activity.” Id. at 439.
In addition, the affidavit lists and describes six other search warrants
associated with the case that were executed between April and October 2014. At each
of the places searched, police found drugs and ties to the gang (such as photographs
depicting members, including Ingram, displaying gang hand signs). Often, officers
found large amounts of cash, and sometimes guns, too. In listening to jail phone calls
following the searches, police also heard several incarcerated gang members ask
people on the outside whether Ingram would bail them out.
Finally, the affidavit notes eight earlier drug arrests involving gang members,
four involving Ingram. The earliest occurred on September 20, 1998, when the police
6
“made contact” with Ingram and two other gang members sitting in a car. Id. at 443.
Officers arrested one of the other gang members on a gun charge, and an inventory
search of the car turned up 26.5 grams of cocaine base, 5.5 grams of marijuana, and
“one marijuana blunt.” Id. Then, about six years later, Ingram arrived by cab at a
house where officers had just detained his girlfriend. Inside the house, officers had
seized 3.4 grams of cocaine base, baking soda, a bowl coated with cocaine HCl
residue, three pistols, and close to $50,000. Ingram tried to speed away when the
officers approached but was eventually stopped and arrested. Similarly, law
enforcement seized “a large amount of cocaine,” dishes and a hand-mixer with
“residue,” and over $20,000 in cash from a hotel room where Ingram had been
staying. Id. at 444. This incident happened only three months after police found
Ingram, several other gang members, and 13.6 grams of crack inside a house, as well
as a pistol in a car parked outside. The remaining searches (the most recent in
February 2012) turned up similar amounts of cash, drugs, and guns, as well as Rollin’
90’s members other than Ingram.
After summarizing these facts, the affidavit states,
[Y]our affiant believes there has been an ongoing conspiracy by
members of the 90’s street gang to distribute controlled dangerous
substances since at least September 20, 1998. . . . Leadership of the
gang is responsible for taking actions to further the goals of the drug
conspiracy such as bonding members out of jail and contributing monies
to incarcerated members [sic] inmate trust accounts. Despite
incarceration of various members of the conspiracy, the conspiracy has
been able to thrive. Id. at 446.
7
Under the heading, “Nexus to 11009 North Miller,” the affidavit then attempts
to connect the Rollin’ 90’s gang’s criminal activity to the house at 11009 North
Miller and to Ingram. Id. at 446. Citing the informants’ statements and law
enforcement’s “independent investigation,” the affidavit claims that Ingram headed
the gang’s drug conspiracy. Id. Then, the affidavit recites the following facts linking
Ingram to 11009 North Miller: (1) paperwork placed the house’s utilities in the name
of Ingram’s girlfriend, (2) an informant asserted that the house was Ingram’s primary
residence, and (3) an officer observed a car that Ingram was known to drive parked
inside the garage. Based on these facts, the affidavit concludes that 11009 North
Miller was Ingram’s primary residence. Id.
The affidavit then repeats Detective McRorie’s belief that “the most likely
place for a drug trafficker to keep records pertaining to their [sic] criminal activity
and conspiratorial evidence is at their [sic] primary residence.” Id. at 446. In support
of this conclusion, the affidavit notes, among other things, that (1) “to thwart law
enforcement” from tying them to contraband, “[h]igh level drug traffickers” typically
don’t keep drugs in their homes but that (2) at the same time, traffickers typically
don’t destroy documentary evidence of drug distribution unless they think that a
search is imminent, both because such evidence is necessary for their business’s
continued operation and because the traffickers think that it’s less incriminating than
“readily apparent contraband,” such as drugs. Id. at 446–47. Finally, “[a]ll reasonable
inferences [as] to where a criminal would likely keep such evidence,” based on the
8
“hundreds” of searches that the detective had conducted, pointed to the drug
trafficker’s primary residence. Id. at 447–48.
The affidavit then states, “Based on the above information, in [Detective
McRorie’s] opinion, there is probable cause to believe that [Ingram, his girlfriend,
and others] are involved in illegal activities, such as drug trafficking” and that “the
aforementioned objects” (presumably, the evidence discussed at the beginning of the
affidavit) could be found at 11009 North Miller. Id. at 448. The affidavit thus
requests a search warrant for the house.
Detective McRorie presented the affidavit to the Oklahoma County District
Court on November 6, 2014. The court issued it that same day, and police executed it
the next. As mentioned above, they found the predicted documentary evidence,
including large amounts of cash, a drug ledger, and paperwork linking Ingram and his
girlfriend to the house.
Ingram moved to suppress this evidence, to set a Franks v. Delaware hearing,
and to suppress an arrest warrant issued by the Oklahoma County District Court. The
federal district court denied all three requests, concluding that (1) the search-warrant
affidavit contained sufficient probable cause, (2) the items seized from Ingram’s
house should not be suppressed, and (3) Ingram’s motion to suppress the arrest
warrant was moot because the warrant was never executed (police arrested Ingram
during a traffic stop).
Ingram now argues that the district court erred in refusing to suppress the
evidence discovered at 11009 North Miller.
9
DISCUSSION
In arguing that the evidence discovered during the search of 11009 North
Miller should have been suppressed, Ingram attacks both the sufficiency and the
truthfulness of Detective McRorie’s affidavit. As to sufficiency, Ingram claims that
the affidavit failed to provide a nexus between the suspected criminal activity (drug
trafficking) and the place to be searched (11009 North Miller). And as for
truthfulness, Ingram contends that Detective McRorie misled the Oklahoma County
District Court by failing to mention (1) that Ingram had spent eight of the nine years
leading up to the search in prison and (2) that simultaneously, two other members of
the alleged drug-trafficking conspiracy had also been imprisoned for considerable
periods. In response, the government defends the state court’s probable-cause
determination and, in the alternative, contends that the good-faith exception to the
exclusionary rule should apply.2
On review of a district court’s suppression ruling, we accept the court’s factual
findings unless they are clearly erroneous and review questions of law de novo.
United States v. Gonzales, 399 F.3d 1225, 1228 (10th Cir. 2005). The pertinent
questions here—Was the search warrant supported by probable cause? Did the good-
faith exception apply?—are both questions of law. Id. But if we determine that the
good faith exception applies, then we need not decide whether the search-warrant
2
In an alternative to its alternative argument, the government urges us to hold
that any error in admitting the evidence seized from 11009 North Miller was
harmless given the overwhelming weight of evidence against Ingram. Because we
resolve the good-faith issue in the government’s favor, we don’t reach this alternative
argument.
10
was supported by probable cause. Thus, we have discretion to skip the probable-
cause question and proceed directly to good faith. Id. We choose to follow that path
here, so we evaluate Ingram’s claims under the good-faith exception to the
exclusionary rule.
In United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 918 (1984), the Supreme Court held
that the “suppression of evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant should be ordered
only on a case-by-case basis and only in those unusual cases in which exclusion will
further the purposes of the exclusionary rule.” When an officer acts in objective good
faith in obtaining a search warrant from a detached, neutral magistrate, and then acts
within the scope of that warrant, no police illegality occurs that the exclusionary rule
would deter. Leon, 468 U.S. at 920–21. Thus, evidence seized through such means
shouldn’t be suppressed. Id. at 921; accord United States v. Nolan, 199 F.3d 1180,
1184 (10th Cir. 1999).
But our deference to warrants isn’t “boundless.” Leon, 468 U.S. at 914. In
Leon, 468 U.S. at 923–24, the Supreme Court described four exceptional instances
when an officer can’t rely on a warrant in good faith. Two of those are at issue here.
A. The “Bare Bones” Exception to the Exclusionary Rule
First, Ingram contends that the search-warrant affidavit was completely devoid
of probable cause because it lacked any information suggesting that illegal activity
(specifically, “drug trafficking or drug storage”) was afoot at 11009 North Miller.
Appellant’s Opening Br. at 20. So, he contends, the police shouldn’t have been able
to rely on the search warrant in good faith.
11
An officer doesn’t manifest objective good faith in relying on a search warrant
based on an affidavit “so lacking in indicia of probable cause”—so “bare bones”—as
to render official belief in the existence of probable cause “entirely unreasonable.”
Leon, 468 U.S. at 915, 923 (quoting Brown v. Illinois, 422 U.S. 590, 610–11 (1975)
(Powell, J., concurring in part)). The question isn’t the legal sufficiency of the
affidavit—the issuing court has already made that determination, and we owe it
deference. United States v. Cardall, 773 F.2d 1128, 1133 (10th Cir. 1985). The
question is “whether a ‘reasonably well trained officer would have known that the
search was illegal despite the [court’s] authorization.’” Gonzales, 399 F.3d at 1230
(quoting Leon, 468 U.S. at 922 n.23). In this context, that means asking whether
officers’ reliance on the underlying documents was “wholly unwarranted.” Cardall,
773 F.2d at 1133. Only then is good faith absent. Id.; Gonzales, 399 F.3d at 1230.
In practice, we’ve used this standard to suppress evidence seized with a
warrant that contained “nothing more than a hunch.” See, e.g., United States v.
Cordova, 792 F.3d 1220, 1226 (10th Cir. 2015) (“Boiled down, the affidavit at issue
here indicated nothing more than that a high-volume drug delivery was set to be
made to a vehicle parked in front of Cordova’s former home nearly two years before
officers sought a warrant for his current home and that one party to that drug deal
was present at Cordova’s current residence on one occasion four months before the
warrant was executed.”); Gonzales, 399 F.3d at 1230–31 (concluding that an affidavit
whose only attempt at connecting the suspect to the criminal activity was a
detective’s assertion that “in his experience, ‘firearm [sic] are often kept at the
12
residence,’” didn’t set forth even a minimal nexus to criminal activity (alteration in
original)).
Here, Detective McRorie’s affidavit may have provided only a tenuous nexus
between the Rollin’ 90’s gang’s criminal activity and 11009 North Miller, but it
amounted to more than a hunch. As we have often stated, it’s “merely common sense
that a drug supplier will keep evidence of his crimes at his home.” United States v.
Sanchez, 555 F.3d 910, 914 (10th Cir. 2009); see also, e.g., United States v. Windrix,
405 F.3d 1146, 1153 (10th Cir. 2005); United States v. Sparks, 291 F.3d 683, 689–90
(10th Cir. 2002); accord 2 Wayne R. LaFave & David C. Baum, Search & Seizure
§ 3.7(d) (5th ed., Oct. 2017 update) (“[I]t is commonly held that this gap [between
probable cause that a person has committed a crime on the street and probable cause
that evidence of the crime exists at his house] can be filled merely on the basis of the
affiant-officer's experience (or, for that matter, the magistrate’s own common-sense
judgment) that drug dealers ordinarily keep their supply, records and monetary
profits at home.”). And Detective McRorie’s affidavit provided ample evidence that
Ingram dealt drugs, including the three informants’ statements, the police’s
surveillance of Ingram, and Ingram’s history of drug activity and arrests. When
combined with the assertion, based on the detective’s training and experience, that a
high-level drug trafficker like Ingram probably kept incriminating records at his
primary residence, this evidence warranted good-faith reliance from the officers who
executed the search.
13
In reaching this conclusion, we note that this case differs from cases like
Sanchez, Windrix, and Sparks insofar as the affidavits in those cases asserted the
presence of illegal drugs at the suspected dealer’s house, while the affidavit here did
not. See Sanchez, 555 F.3d at 913, Windrix, 405 F.3d at 1153, Sparks, 291 F.3d at
690–91. Even Professor LaFave’s gap-filling shortcut, which recognizes that
experience and common sense can sometimes substitute for “definite proof,”
presumes either (1) that “the seller keeps his supply at his residence” or (2) that “the
on-the-street dealer has his necessary packaging and weighing equipment at home.”
See LaFave, supra, § 3.7(d). But according to Detective McRorie, Ingram was no on-
the-street dealer; he was a high level drug trafficker. Detective McRorie thus
expressed doubt that Ingram kept illegal drugs at his primary residence. And the
pieces of evidence that the detective sought to find there—ledgers, cash, evidence of
gang-membership—were not themselves contraband. Instead, police sought the listed
items as evidence of Ingram’s criminal activity, ledgers reflecting drug debts, cash
from drug sales, and gang-affiliation evidence tied to the drug-trafficking conspiracy
and Ingram’s role in it.
But while we do not announce a broad rule making a suspected drug dealer’s
house fair game for searches absent evidence of contraband there, we can’t say that
the affidavit in this case was so devoid of factual support as to render police reliance
on the state-court judge’s determination of probable cause objectively unreasonable.
Cf. Nolan, 199 F.3d at 1185 (concluding that an affidavit establishing (1) that the
defendant dealt crack, (2) that he “was careful not to sell drugs to anyone from his
14
residence,” and (3) “that drug dealers sometimes maintain records and quantities of
drugs in easily accessible locations” wasn’t so bare bones as to make officers’
reliance on the search warrant unreasonable).
Accordingly, we reject Ingram’s contention that the affidavit was so bare
bones as to subject the evidence seized at 11009 North Miller to the exclusionary
rule. And we turn from Ingram’s sufficiency attack to his truthfulness attack.3
B. The Franks v. Delaware Exception to the Exclusionary Rule
Ingram claims that Detective McRorie deliberately lied (or acted with reckless
disregard for the truth) when he omitted Ingram’s and his alleged co-conspirators’
incarceration from the search-warrant affidavit. These omissions, according to
Ingram, were material to the Oklahoma District Court’s probable-cause finding. He
says that if the detective had stated that Ingram and his co-conspirators were in state
custody from 2005 until 2013, then the judge wouldn’t have believed that “Ingram
had been involved in a continuous drug-trafficking conspiracy for the last [sixteen]
years [i.e., since 1998].” Appellant’s Opening Br. at 56.
3
Ingram also challenges Detective McRorie’s reliance on the statements of the
three confidential informants, but he does so only in the context of arguing that the
affidavit lacked probable cause. Because we resolve this appeal on the basis of the
exclusionary rule’s good-faith exception, we don’t delve into the existence of
probable cause and, therefore, need not address the informants’ veracity. Even so, the
same concerns that throw probable cause into doubt may do the same to good faith.
Accordingly, we note that the district court found the informants’ statements reliable,
both because the informants corroborated each other and because other evidence
(including surveillance) supported their assertions. Cf. United States v. Mathis, 357
F.3d 1200, 1204 (10th Cir. 2004) (concluding that an officer’s obligation to
corroborate information received from an informant requires only that the officer
“have knowledge of other matters that reasonably corroborate the informant’s
statements”). The district court’s findings in this context weren’t clearly erroneous.
15
Suppression remains an available remedy if the affiant misled the judge
issuing the warrant with information “that the affiant knew was false or would have
known was false except for his reckless disregard of the truth.” Leon, 468 U.S. at 923
(citing Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154 (1978)). But Franks announced a tough-to-
meet test for affiants’ alleged lies. First, Franks cloaks affidavits in “a presumption
of validity.” Franks, 438 U.S. at 171. Establishing a lack of good faith based on the
omission of information from an affidavit requires proof that the affiant acted
intentionally or recklessly, not with mere negligence or by an innocent mistake.
Gonzales, 399 F.3d at 1229. Second, Franks doesn’t extend to “immaterial
omissions.” Stewart v. Donges, 915 F.2d 572, 583 (10th Cir. 1990). If “a warrant
would have issued in a but-for world where the attesting officer faithfully represented
the facts,” then we can dismiss the contested omission as immaterial. United States v.
Herrera, 782 F.3d 571, 575 (10th Cir. 2015).
Here, Ingram can’t overcome even the first hurdle, the presumption of validity.
Rather than hide Ingram’s eight-year incarceration, Detective McRorie’s affidavit
suggested that Ingram had served time. According to the affidavit, police had arrested
Ingram on drug charges four times between 1998 and 2005 (just over nine years
before the warrant’s execution). Though the affidavit didn’t provide charging or
sentencing information about these incidents, the amounts of drugs and guns seized
augured prison time. Further, the affidavit expressly described the gang’s ability to
“thrive” despite the incarceration of its members, by contributing money to
incarcerated members’ inmate trust accounts and bonding members out of jail. At
16
worst, Detective McRorie might have acted negligently by not specifying the dates of
Ingram’s incarceration. At best, the affidavit read as a whole shows the conclusory
nature of Ingram’s assertion. Either way, Ingram can’t show the kind of deliberate or
reckless falsity that would entitle him to relief under Franks.4
But even if Detective McRorie had acted with deliberate or reckless disregard
for the truth in omitting Ingram’s and his alleged co-conspirators’ periods of
incarceration, the omission wasn’t material. Nothing in the affidavit suggests that
Ingram was on the streets when in fact he was in prison or that he was in prison when
in fact he was on the streets. Instead, the bulk of the drug-trafficking described in the
affidavit happened in 2014, when Ingram was, by his own admission, out of prison.
Thus, even if Detective McRorie had included Ingram’s and his co-conspirators’
incarceration periods in the affidavit, it wouldn’t have undermined the Oklahoma
County District Court’s probable-cause finding. Herrera, 782 F.3d at 575; cf.
Stewart, 915 F.2d at 581–83 (concluding that a detective’s failure to disclose that the
victim had recanted his accusation and admitted to an insurance scam was “highly
material” because “the affidavit would not support probable cause if it were modified
so as to include that exculpatory evidence”).
4
On appeal, Ingram argues both that the district court erred in refusing to
grant him a hearing on his Franks claim and, more generally, that under Franks, law
enforcement couldn’t rely on the search warrant in good faith. Our analysis doesn’t
differentiate between the preliminary showing needed to get a Franks hearing and the
preponderance-of-the-evidence showing needed to obtain suppression because, under
either standard, Ingram isn’t entitled to relief. See United States v. Corral-Corral,
899 F.2d 927, 933 (10th Cir. 1990) (describing the standard at each stage); see also
Herrera, 782 F.3d at 576 (“A Franks hearing sometimes may be a matter of grace
rather than right.”).
17
Accordingly, we conclude that the state-court judge’s probable-cause
determination wasn’t based on a deliberate or reckless omission by Detective
McRorie, so we decline to apply Franks to defeat the Leon good-faith exception.
Instead, we affirm the district court’s refusal to grant Ingram a Franks hearing.
* * *
Applying Leon’s generous standard, the police in this case acted in good faith
in executing the search warrant on 11009 North Miller. And because no exception to
the good-faith exception applies, we conclude that this is not one of “those unusual
cases in which exclusion will further the purposes of the exclusionary rule” and
decline to suppress the evidence seized during the search. See Leon, 468 U.S. at 918.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s refusal either to suppress the
evidence seized from 11009 North Miller or to hold a Franks v. Delaware hearing.
Entered for the Court
Gregory A. Phillips
Circuit Judge
18