OPINION OF THE COURT
The question presented on this appeal is whether police violated defendant’s rights under the Constitution of the United States (US Const 4th Amend) or the Constitution of the State of New York (NY Const, art I, § 12) by conducting a warrantless "canine sniff” outside the door of his apartment. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that defendant’s rights against unreasonable search and seizure were not violated.
On appeal, defendant contends that the court erred in denying his motion to suppress without a hearing. Defendant also contends that the first warrant was improperly issued because it was based in part on the positive result of a warrantless "canine sniff” conducted in the common hallway outside defendant’s Hamburg apartment, and because the balance of the information contained in that warrant application failed to establish probable cause to search the apartment. Although defendant’s challenges are directed at the first warrant, if the first warrant fails, so must the second.
The relevant facts are gleaned from the affidavits of the investigating officer, New York State Police Investigator Joseph Gramaglia, and the dog handler, United States Customs Service Canine Enforcement Officer Leon Senecal, submitted in support of the first warrant application. Those-affidavits reveal that the Magistrate had the following information before him when he issued the first warrant:
New York State Police Sergeant Kenneth Gellart resides in an apartment adjacent to defendant’s Hamburg apartment. On numerous occasions Gellart observed defendant go to the apartment, stay a short time, and leave carrying a bag or briefcase, without ever staying overnight. Gellart never observed defendant move furniture into the apartment. On certain occasions when defendant was at the apartment, including one occasion 2Vz weeks prior to the search, Gellart
Jeffrey Osgood, the maintenance man at the apartment complex, entered defendant’s apartment approximately 3 Vi months before the search. Osgood, who is familiar with marihuana and cocaine and their use, saw white powder and chunks of white rocks on a cutting board, on a rolling pin, on a triple beam scale, and on the floor of the apartment. Osgood tasted the powder and determined that it was cocaine. Osgood also saw plastic bags, marihuana roaches, and sticks of incense. He smelled the strong odor of marihuana emanating from a closed bedroom closet. Osgood observed that the apartment contained only a table, that defendant was seldom at the apartment, and that he always came and went carrying bags and packages.
Approximately three months prior to the search, Osgood again went to defendant’s apartment. When defendant answered the door, Osgood observed that he appeared to be under the influence of cocaine and that he had a white powdery substance around one nostril. Osgood observed that a second man (evidently codefendant Hill) had been coming to the apartment in a Mustang.
Gramaglia had been assigned to the Narcotics Unit for four years and had conducted hundreds of investigations involving narcotics. He and fellow officers had investigated defendant’s activities and had conducted surveillance of his apartment for four months. During that time, Gramaglia had acquired the aforementioned information from Gellart and Osgood. From a leasing agent, he learned that defendant had leased the Hamburg apartment since April 1987. He also learned that, on September 24, 1986, cocaine, marihuana and hashish had been, seized from a car in which defendant was a passenger. Finally, he learned that defendant had been convicted in New Jersey of possessing 22 pounds of marihuana.
During surveillance of the apartment, police had observed defendant and the codefendant enter and leave on numerous occasions. Police determined the identity of codefendant Henry Hill by stopping his vehicle on March 7, 1988. They also ascertained that Hill resided at 57 Suffolk Street in Buffalo. On May 12, 1988, the day of the search, police
Earlier that day, Gramaglia had requested the assistance of Officer Senecal and his dog Amber. Senecal had been a Canine Enforcement Officer for 14 years and was certified to utilize the dog, with whom he had worked since October 1987, in the detection of marihuana, cocaine, hashish, heroin and crack. The dog is certified and annually evaluated by the Canine Training Center and is trained to scratch when she detects controlled substances. The dog had correctly "alerted” on prior occasions, most recently on March 17, 1988, when she discovered a quantity of marihuana in the trunk of a vehicle.
At approximately 2:25 p.m. on May 12, Gramaglia, Senecal and Amber entered defendant’s apartment building and proceeded to the hallway on the second floor where defendant’s apartment was located.1 Senecal had Amber "check out the doorway” of defendant’s apartment. Amber headed directly to the door of defendant’s apartment and, in Senecal’s opinion, showed a "strong alert” by scratching the lower right corner of the door. Based on their prior information and the dog’s alert, Gramaglia and Senecal opined that there were drugs on the premises, that defendant and codefendant were using the apartment to store, cut, and package cocaine and marihuana, and that they were using their vehicles to transport the drugs.
Based on the affidavits of Gramaglia and Senecal, the Magistrate issued a warrant to search defendant’s person and apartment. Police immediately executed the warrant, with the results indicated supra. Defendant was arrested when he returned to the apartment while the police were executing the warrant.
Following indictment, defendant moved to suppress the tangible evidence. In support of that motion, defendant submitted his affidavit and that of his attorney, who averred that the warrant application was insufficient on its face to justify issuance of the warrant. Counsel also argued that the war
The court denied defendant’s motion. Without addressing whether the dog sniff constituted an illegal warrantless search, and assuming for the purpose of its discussion that the results of the dog sniff were improperly included in the warrant application, the court nevertheless concluded that the remaining information was sufficient to establish probable cause.
Shortly before trial, defendant’s new counsel renewed the suppression motion, specifically requesting a hearing "as to the sources of information and evidence upon which the court granted and issued a search warrant”. On the return date, defense counsel also argued for the first time that, at the time of the canine sniff, the police were unlawfully present in the common hallway outside the apartment. The court denied the request for a hearing, holding that there were no factual questions to be determined but only the legal question whether the written warrant application and affidavits set forth a sufficient basis for issuance of the warrant. Defendant’s trial and conviction followed.
The first question for our consideration is whether defendant was entitled to a hearing on his motion to suppress. A suppression hearing is required only where the defendant has raised an issue of fact in his motion papers (People v Glen, 30 NY2d 252, 256, 262, cert denied sub nom. Baker v New York, 409 US 849; People v Solimine, 18 NY2d 477, rearg denied 21 NY2d 1041). Although a challenge to the veracity of the affiant or to the validity of the information contained in the application presents a factual issue requiring a hearing (People v Glen, supra, at 262; People v Alfinito, 16 NY2d 181, 184-186; see generally, Franks v Delaware, 438 US 154), a challenge to the facial sufficiency of a written warrant application presents an issue of law which does not require a hearing and which the court properly decides by reviewing the affidavits alone in order to determine whether they establish probable cause (People v Glen, supra, at 256, 262; People v Solimine, supra, at 480).
We thus turn to defendant’s primary contention, that the warrant was improperly issued insofar as it was based on the result of the canine sniff outside defendant’s apartment. Defendant makes two contentions in support of that claim: first, that at the time the canine sniff was conducted, the officers and the dog were unlawfully present in the common hallway of defendant’s building; second, that the canine sniff itself constituted a warrantless search. Defendant’s first contention is not preserved for our review. His initial challenge to the warrant made no reference to the presence of the police in the common hallway. Similarly, the papers submitted on defendant’s second application failed to allege the illegality of the officers’ presence in the building. Only in his oral remarks on the return date of the motion did defendant’s counsel argue that the hallway was not a public place. If defendant had raised that contention in his original papers, a hearing would have been conducted and the People could have shown, as they later demonstrated at trial, that entry was effected with a passkey obtained from the maintenance man, who was cooperating with the investigation. It is also possible that the People could have shown that the investigators were permitted to enter the building by defendant’s neighbor, Sergeant Gellart. Such proof would have established that the officers were lawfully in the building at the time the canine sniff was
Defendant’s second contention presents the more interesting and difficult issue. That issue is whether, given reasonable suspicion of criminality,2 and assuming (as we must in this procedural posture) that police were lawfully present in the common hallway, the police violated the rights of the absent defendant by conducting a warrantless canine sniff outside his apartment for the purpose of detecting narcotics inside the apartment. Numerous Federal and State cases, including landmark decisions of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals, discuss the Fourth Amendment ramifications of nonrandom canine sniffs of various objects or places (see, e.g., United States v Place, 462 US 696; People v Price, 54 NY2d 557).3 The Price decision also discusses the validity of a
In upholding canine sniffs and in concluding that they do not constitute searches, the cases generally rely on one or more of four distinct but overlapping rationales. First, the courts have noted that the procedure involves no intrusion into the item or place being sniffed because the dog does nothing more than detect odors emanating therefrom. The courts have recognized that there can be no reasonable expectation of privacy in the air surrounding the item or place being sniffed (People v Price, supra, at 561-562; see, United States v Lovell, supra; United States v Lewis, supra; United States v Goldstein, 635 F2d 356; United States v Solis, supra, at 881). Second, in applying that "plain smell” doctrine, the courts generally have been unconcerned with the sensory enhancement problem, i.e., the fact that a dog’s superior senses have been employed to detect narcotics where a human’s lesser developed sense of smell might prove unavailing. The courts have analogized the use of a dog to enhance an officer’s sense of smell to the use of search lights and binoculars to enhance an officer’s vision, and have distinguished use of the dog’s sense of smell from the impermissible use of more technologically sophisticated devices, such as a magnetometer or X-ray machine (People v Price, supra, at 562-563; United States v Beale, supra, at 1291; United States v Lewis, supra; Horton v Goose Creek Ind. School Dist., supra, at 477; United States v Solis, supra, at 882; United States v Bronstein, supra, at 462). Third, the courts have noted that, even when the defendant is present during the dog sniff, but especially when he is not, canine sniffs are quickly and reliably accomplished in an inoffensive and unobtrusive manner and, for that reason, can actually spare the suspect the embarrassment and inconvenience of a full-blown search. Where the sniff is con
We recognize that, because this case concerns a canine sniff of the exterior of defendant’s apartment, the cases cited supra apply here only by analogy. To our knowledge, the sole decision that addresses the validity of a "residential sniff” is that of the Second Circuit in United States v Thomas (757 F2d 1359 [2d Cir], cert denied sub nom. Wheelings v United States, 474 US 819; but see, United States v Dicesare, supra, at 897-899 [upholding sniff of trunk of car, while avoiding question whether sniff of suitcase located within suspect’s home, as distinct from the police entry of the home, was a search]; see also, United States v Young, 745 F2d 733, 744, 756-758 [2d Cir], cert denied sub nom. Myers v United States, 470 US 1084 [upholding warrant that was based in minor part upon canine sniff of door of apartment, without deciding validity of sniff]). In Thomas, the police obtained a warrant to search defendant’s apartment based partially on information obtained by means of a canine sniff conducted outside the apartment. The Second Circuit concluded that the canine sniff constituted a warrantless search in violation of the Fourth Amendment and that, therefore, the dog’s alert could not be used to support the warrant. The Thomas court distinguished Place (supra) and other canine sniff cases, reasoning that a defendant has a greater expectation of privacy in the contents of his apartment than in the contents of luggage that has been placed in the custody of a common carrier. The court disregarded the rationale employed by the Supreme Court in Place, concluding that, even if the canine sniff is more discriminating and less offensive than other detection methods, it nevertheless consti
Our task is to decide whether to apply the rationale of Thomas (supra), that a canine sniff of a suspect’s apartment door constitutes a search of the premises, or the holding of Place (supra) and numerous other cases that a canine sniff is not a search. The Thomas decision certainly has simplicity to recommend it because it relies primarily on the distinction between a residence and other items or places. We cannot fault the Thomas court’s postulation, shared by the dissent here, that a person’s expectation of privacy is strongest when it concerns activities inside his dwelling (see, United States v Knotts, 460 US 276, 282, 285; United States v Taborda, 635 F2d 131 [2d Cir]; see generally, United States v Karo, 468 US 705, reh denied 468 US 1250; Payton v New York, 445 US 573, 589-590; United States v United States Dist. Ct., 407 US 297, 313; People v Levan, 62 NY2d 139, 144). Nevertheless, we find the Thomas decision unpersuasive because it contradicts or disregards the reasoning that has led numerous courts to conclude that a canine sniff of the exterior of an item or place does not constitute a search. In terms of the rationales employed by the courts that have examined the issue of canine sniffs, there is no distinction in principle between a suspect’s residence and other items or places. Therefore, contrary to the reasoning of Thomas, we conclude that, if a sniff of a suitcase is not a search, neither is a sniff outside an apartment.
First, a search occurs only when the State infringes upon an expectation of privacy that society considers reasonable (United States v Jacobsen, supra, at 112). A suspect has no greater or more reasonable expectation of privacy in the public atmosphere outside his residence than in the public air outside his belongings.4 It is well recognized that many illegal drugs give off distinctive odors that are detectable by trained canines and that, depending on the drug, may also be discernible to humans (see, United States v Lovell, supra). Clever criminals recognize that fact, as can be seen by their frequent attempts to mask the odor of narcotics with talcum powder, mothballs, coffee, perfume, and other substances (see, e.g.,
Second, the sensory enhancement issue presents no greater problem in the context of a residential sniff than in other uses of these dogs. Especially where, as here, the particular drugs detected by the dog include marihuana, which can be detected by humans (see, United States v Lovell, supra), the use of a dog constitutes a permissible enhancement of the officers’ own senses and represents no greater invasion of defendant’s privacy than would an officer’s sniff of the atmosphere (People v Price, supra, at 562-563; Horton v Goose Creek Ind. School Dist., supra, 690 F2d, at 477; United States v Goldstein, supra; United States v Solis, supra, at 882; United States v Bronstein, supra, 521 F2d, at 461-462). As the Supreme Court has stated in another context, "[njothing in the Fourth Amendment prohibits] the police from augmenting the sensory faculties bestowed upon them at birth with such enhancement as science and technology afford” (United States v Knotts, supra, 460 US, at 282). To the extent that United States v Thomas (supra, at 1367) suggests otherwise, it runs counter to the stream of authority.
Finally, a canine sniff of the exterior of a residence, like a sniff of an item of personalty, "discloses only the presence or absence of narcotics, a contraband item” and reveals nothing else about the contents of the suspect’s apartment or his activities therein (United States v Place, supra; United States v Colyer, supra, at 474-475; United States v Beale, supra, 736 F2d, at 1291; United States v Bronstein, supra, 521 F2d, at 463; cf., United States v Jacobsen, supra, at 124, n 24). Society has decided "to treat the interest in 'privately’ possessing (narcotics) as illegitimate” (United States v Jacobsen, supra, at 123). Thus, the limited nature of the information revealed by a canine sniff compels the conclusion that such technique interferes with no legitimate expectation of privacy (United States v Colyer, supra, at 474; United States v Beale, supra, at 1290-1292). That analysis calls into question the correctness of the Thomas court’s conclusion that a suspect has a legitimate expectation of privacy with respect to the presence of narcotics in his dwelling (United States v Colyer, supra, at 475). In sum, we conclude that the canine sniff of the exterior of defendant’s apartment did not infringe upon any legitimate and reasonable expectation of privacy and thus did not constitute a search within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment of the US Constitution or NY Constitution, article I, § 12.
In view of our determination, it is unnecessary for us to
Accordingly, the judgment should be affirmed.
1.
The warrant application does not indicate how entry to the building was accomplished, but the trial evidence reveals that the building has an outer security door for which the officers obtained a passkey from Osgood, the maintenance man.
2.
The issue whether police must have a certain quantum of suspicion before conducting a canine sniff of an unattended item or place is not directly raised in this case, although defendant’s argument asserting a warrant requirement implies that a sniff must be supported by probable cause. We have been unable to find any case that holds that a dog sniff must be based upon probable cause; conversely, many cases hold that probable cause is not required (see, e.g., United States v Place, 462 US 696, 706-707; United States v Colyer, 878 F2d 469 [DC Cir]). Indeed, certain cases hold or suggest that police need not have any articulable suspicion before resorting to a canine sniff (United States v Colyer, supra, at 477; United States v Lovell, 849 F2d 910 [5th Cir]; United States v Goldstein, 635 F2d 356, 361 [5th Cir], cert denied 452 US 962). On the other hand, the majority of courts that have addressed the issue have held or assumed that the police must have articulable or reasonable suspicion (United States v Place, supra; United States v Carrasquillo, 877 F2d 73, 77-78 [DC Cir]; United States v Quinn, 815 F2d 153 [1st Cir]; United States v Williams, 726 F2d 661 [10th Cir], cert denied 467 US 1245). The former view is consistent with the conclusion that a canine sniff of an object or place is not a search at all; the latter view is consistent with the requirement that use of the dog not be indiscriminate. In most cases, the approach taken by the court can be understood by examining whether the sniff was conducted in defendant’s presence or whether the object or place sniffed was seized, detained, or occupied, even temporarily, thus resulting in interference with defendant’s possessory interest or with his freedom of movement (compare, United States v Place, supra, and United States v Stone, 866 F2d 359 [10th Cir], with United States v Lovell, supra, and United States v Beale, 736 F2d 1289 [9th Cir], cert denied 469 US 1072). In this case, it is sufficient to note that probable cause is not required. Beyond that, we decline to decide what quantum of suspicion is required for a canine sniff, and merely note that, based on their knowledge concerning defendant’s drug activities, police had reasonable suspicion (cf., United States v Stone, supra; United States v Williams, supra).
3.
To be distinguished is the situation, not before us, in which narcotics-*83detecting dogs are indiscriminately employed to sniff individuals or items in their possession (see generally, United States v Jacobsen, 466 US 109, 138 [Brennan, J., dissenting]; Doe v Renfrow, 451 US 1022, 1025-1026 [Brennan, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari from 631 F2d 91 (7th Cir)]; Horton v Goose Creek Ind. School Dist., 690 F2d 470, 477-479 [5th Cir], cert denied 463 US 1207).
4.
We reiterate that, in this procedural posture, we must assume that the police were lawfully in the common hallway outside defendant’s apartment and thus conclude that, for the purpose of our analysis, the hallway was a public place.
5.
Were we to consider that claim, we would agree with our concurring and dissenting colleagues that, without the positive result of the canine sniff, the information in the warrant is stale and hence insufficient to establish probable cause. We would not agree with the dissent’s comments with respect to the asserted lack of reliability of the information acquired by means of the firsthand observations of the informants, a police officer and a named citizen.