United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 20-2024
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
v.
KADEEM PIMENTEL,
Defendant, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Patti B. Saris, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Howard, Chief Judge,
Lipez and Gelpí, Circuit Judges.
Jessica P. Thrall, Assistant Federal Public Defender, on
brief for appellant.
Nathaniel R. Mendell, Acting United States Attorney, and
Donald C. Lockhart, Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for
appellee.
February 17, 2022
GELPÍ, Circuit Judge. On August 31, 2018, around 2:30
a.m., officers of the Haverhill Police Department ("HPD") executed
a no-knock search warrant for "88 Fountain St. 2nd floor,"
following reports of shots discharged hours before. The police
found two shotguns and related paraphernalia in the bedroom of
defendant-appellant Kadeem Pimentel ("Pimentel"), which was on the
third floor of the building. Pimentel filed a motion to suppress,
arguing, inter alia, that the police exceeded the scope of the
warrant by searching his third-floor bedroom. The district court
denied Pimentel's motion, finding that the good-faith exception to
the exclusionary rule applied. Pimentel subsequently pleaded
guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of
18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) and was sentenced to a term of imprisonment
of 26 months, followed by a three-year supervised release term.
He appeals the denial of his suppression motion, contending that
the search violated the Fourth Amendment and fell outside of the
good-faith exception articulated in United States v. Leon, 468
U.S. 897 (1984). We affirm.
I. Background1
The HPD received a phone call on the evening of August
30, 2018, indicating that shots had been fired at Pimentel close
1"[W]hen we review a challenge to a district court's denial
of a motion to suppress, we are to 'view the facts in the light
most favorable to the district court's ruling' on the motion."
United States v. Rodríguez-Pacheco, 948 F.3d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 2020)
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to 88 Fountain Street. Pimentel reported to the police arriving
at the scene that, while he was sitting in a truck, a man in a
passing car shot him. Pimentel had bloody bruises on his right
thigh and the right leg of his shorts was shredded. While he
received medical treatment, however, a neighbor approached the
officers and provided a video of the incident indicating that the
gunshot was in fact fired from the same truck in which Pimentel
had been sitting. Confronted about the video, Pimentel revised
his original account and claimed instead that he had been shot
through the front side window by another passenger of the truck.
The police subsequently questioned the owner of the truck, who
stated that Pimentel himself had fired the shot and that he
regularly carried a long gun in his waistband. The officers also
noted that Pimentel's injuries were consistent with a downward
shot fired from his waist. Based on the truck owner's description,
the police also determined that the weapon was likely a sawed-off
shotgun.
That evening, an HPD officer applied for and received a
no-knock search warrant for 88 Fountain Street to look for shotguns
and related property, including "any items that pertain to firearms
(quoting United States v. Camacho, 661 F.3d 718, 723 (1st Cir.
2011)). Therefore, we have "narrate[d] the facts based upon the
district court order and any other reliable evidence in the motion
to suppress record." United States v. Manubolu, 13 F.4th 57, 60
n.1 (1st Cir. 2021). Here, the parties appear to agree on the
relevant facts, but dispute their legal implications.
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and proof of residency." Regarding the person, place, or location
to be searched, the warrant specified that "88 Fountain St. 2nd
floor is a 3 story, multi-unit building, with a basement, numbered
88 on the left side of the front deck . . . which is occupied by
and/or in possession of Kadeem Dashawn Pimentel, Maya Garrow
[Pimentel's girlfriend], Diana Pimentel [Pimentel's aunt], and
Phebe Pimentel [Pimentel's grandmother]." The notation "2nd
floor" was not included in the original warrant application;
rather, it was added in handwriting at the request of the issuing
judge's clerk, who had sought clarification regarding where in the
building Pimentel lived. This notation was based on HPD records
of Pimentel's residence based on prior police encounters with him.
The affidavit supporting the warrant application similarly stated
that Pimentel lived on the second floor and specified that the HPD
requested a warrant for "88 Fountain St, 2nd floor." The approved
warrant also authorized a search for property "on the person or in
the possession of . . . Kadeem Dashawn Pimentel, Maya Garrow,
Diana Pimentel, and Phebe Pimentel."
88 Fountain Street is a three-story building that is
jointly owned by Pimentel's grandfather and great-uncle. For most
of his life, Pimentel had lived at 88 Fountain Street. Shortly
prior to the search, he moved from the second floor of the building
to the third floor, where his aunt Diana and her boyfriend also
resided. At the time of the search, Pimentel's great-uncle resided
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on the first floor, while other members of Pimentel's family,
including Pimentel's mother and grandmother, resided on the second
floor. Each floor receives its own utility bill and is equipped
with a separate living space, accessible through a door with a
lock, located off a common hallway or stairwell. At some point in
the past, the Pimentels had rented out the third floor to a
different family who attended their church. A common staircase at
the back of the building also connects the floors via rear doors,
which are not always kept locked. The exterior of the building
has three doorbells and mailboxes corresponding to the three floors
of the building, although Diana Pimentel's name remained listed on
the second-floor mailbox despite her residence on the third floor.
Around 2:30 a.m. on August 31, approximately ten HPD
officers executed the search warrant, breaching both the front
door of the building and the locked entrance door of the second
floor. The officers secured the residents of the second floor,
apart from Pimentel's bedridden great-grandmother, in the second-
floor living room. Subsequently, an HPD officer entered the back
stairwell of the building through an open door in the second-floor
kitchen. The officer encountered Pimentel halfway between the
second and third floors, heading downstairs. Pimentel informed
the officer that his girlfriend, Garrow, was also upstairs. The
officer then directed Pimentel to join the others in the second-
floor living room. HPD officers proceeded to enter the third floor
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and brought Garrow and two other residents (Diana Pimentel and her
boyfriend) to the second floor. After being advised of his Miranda
rights, Pimentel acknowledged that he had two shotguns in his
bedroom, which the officers understood to be on the third floor
based on the stairwell encounter with him and Garrow's presence
there. Subsequently, officers searched the third floor and
recovered two shotguns and related paraphernalia from Pimentel's
bedroom. None of the residents of the third floor had a firearms
license, and none consented to a search of the third floor.
Pimentel was subsequently indicted in federal court for
being a felon in possession of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 922(g)(1). Thereupon, he moved to suppress the items seized in
the third-floor search, arguing that the search warrant had
authorized only a search of the unit's second floor, and that the
officers had violated the Fourth Amendment by searching the third
floor.2 Pimentel did not dispute that the police had established
probable cause, or otherwise assert that the warrant was facially
deficient.
The district court denied the motion. It agreed with
Pimentel's argument that the second- and third-floor apartments
were distinct units, but nevertheless found that the officers acted
in good faith in searching the third-floor bedroom, relying on the
2Pimentel also sought suppression of incriminating statements
he made under questioning. This issue is not before us on appeal.
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reasoning of this court in United States v. Woodbury, 511 F.3d 93
(1st Cir. 2007). In so finding, the court bypassed what it called
the "complex issue" of whether the warrant exclusively authorized
a search of the second floor. Rather, it determined that, even if
the warrant was so limited, the officers nevertheless acted in a
good-faith belief that the same authorized them to search
Pimentel's third-floor bedroom.
II. Discussion
On appeal, Pimentel challenges the denial of his
suppression motion, arguing that the third-floor search was
unauthorized by the warrant and that the good-faith exception to
the exclusionary rule is inapplicable. Upon close examination, we
hold otherwise. On the record before us, the context in which the
search was conducted -- combined with the textual ambiguity present
on the face of the warrant -- is sufficient to conclude that the
search was carried out in good faith within the purview of Leon.
A. Standard of Review
When reviewing a district court's denial of a motion to
suppress, we assess factual findings for clear error and evaluate
legal issues de novo. United States v. Tiru-Plaza, 766 F.3d 111,
114–15 (1st Cir. 2014). "In assessing these legal conclusions,
however, we also give appropriate weight to the inferences drawn
by the district court and the on-scene officers, recognizing that
they possess the advantage of immediacy and familiarity with the
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witnesses and events." Id. at 115. Moreover, "we will uphold a
district court's decision to deny a suppression motion provided
that any reasonable view of the evidence supports the decision."
United States v. Ferreras, 192 F.3d 5, 10 (1st Cir. 1999) (citing
United States v. García, 983 F.2d 1160, 1167 (1st Cir. 1993)).
B. The Good-Faith Exception
The Fourth Amendment's prohibition of "unreasonable
searches and seizures" protects against unwarranted government
intrusions into one's person and property. U.S. Const. amend. IV.
The exclusionary rule provides that evidence seized in violation
of the Fourth Amendment is ordinarily remedied by suppression.
See United States v. Brunette, 256 F.3d 14, 19 (1st Cir. 2001).
However, because suppression can impose a significant social
burden, the exclusionary rule is not ironclad. Leon, 468 U.S. at
907. Instead, courts must consider "the flagrancy of the police
misconduct at issue" in deciding whether the exclusionary rule
applies. Id. at 911. "For exclusion to be appropriate, the
deterrence benefits of suppression must outweigh its heavy costs."
Davis v. United States, 564 U.S. 229, 237 (2011). As the Supreme
Court has made clear in a line of cases beginning with Leon, this
cost-benefit analysis is not satisfied when an officer acts in
"objective good faith" such that any "marginal or nonexistent
benefits produced by suppressing evidence . . . cannot justify the
substantial costs of exclusion." Leon, 468 U.S. at 920, 922.
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As a threshold matter, the parties dispute whether the
Leon good-faith exception applies to an allegation that the
execution of a search warrant exceeded the warrant's scope. In
questioning Leon's applicability, Pimentel relies in part on a
footnote in Leon in which the Court noted that its "discussion of
the deterrent effect of excluding evidence obtained in reasonable
reliance on a subsequently invalidated warrant assumes, of course,
that the officers properly executed the warrant . . . ." Id. at
918 n.19. But subsequent caselaw makes clear that the good-faith
exception also applies "across a range of cases," including where
the alleged error derives from the police rather than the warrant's
issuing magistrate. Davis, 564 U.S. at 238; see also Herring v.
United States, 555 U.S. 135, 147 (2009) (holding that the good-
faith exception may apply "when police mistakes are the result of
negligence . . . rather than systemic error or reckless disregard
of constitutional requirements").
Accordingly, Pimentel's claim that the HPD exceeded the
scope of the search warrant does not itself foreclose the
application of the good-faith exception. See, e.g., Maryland v.
Garrison, 480 U.S. 79, 86 (1987) (applying the good-faith exception
to "a search that turned out to be ambiguous in scope"); see also
Rawlings v. Kentucky, 448 U.S. 98, 110 (1980) ("[W]hile the
officer's belief about the scope of the warrant they obtained may
well have been erroneous . . . the conduct of the police here does
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not rise to the level of conscious or flagrant misconduct requiring
prophylactic exclusion of petitioner's statements."); United
States v. Grisanti, 943 F.3d 1044, 1051 (7th Cir. 2019) (relying
on Rawlings to conclude that the good-faith exception applied where
"the agents did not unreasonably exceed the scope of the
warrant").3
In questioning the applicability of Leon, Pimentel also
points to cases in which courts have declined to apply the
exception to searches that went beyond the scope of a warrant. To
this end, Pimentel highlights dicta in United States v. Fuccillo,
808 F.2d 173 (1st Cir. 1986), where we stated that "[t]he good
faith exception [] will not be applied unless the officers
executing search warrants, at the very minimum, act within the
scope of the warrants and abide by their terms." Id. at 177.
However, the good-faith exception did not apply in Fuccillo because
the facts did not support a finding of good faith, not because it
Pimentel attempts to distinguish Rawlings on the ground that
3
the case specifically addressed the exclusion of statements that
the defendant had made following an allegedly illegal detention,
rather than suppression of evidence seized as the fruit of an
improperly executed warrant. Rawlings, 448 U.S. at 109–10.
However, the officers' belief about the scope of the warrant
directly related to the propriety of the detention, and the Court
saw fit to emphasize that the officers' possible error in this
regard was not, under the circumstances, sufficiently grave to
mandate exclusion of the incriminating statements. We thus agree
with the Seventh Circuit that Rawlings provides persuasive
authority for the analogous inquiry into whether evidence should
be suppressed when seized pursuant to an alleged scope violation.
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would have been categorically impermissible to apply the exception
to a warrant's execution. Crucially, the warrant in Fuccillo was
unambiguous in its scope, and there was no question that the
officers' conduct went well beyond what had been authorized. Id.
at 177–78 (noting that "agents seized, in addition to the
authorized cartons of women's clothing, racks of clothing, empty
boxes, and, most disturbingly, two racks of men's clothing").
Fuccillo shows that searches clearly exceeding the scope of an
unambiguous warrant cannot be saved by the good-faith exception.
It does not indicate, however, that defendants can make an end-
run around Leon simply by alleging a scope violation or another
defect in a warrant's execution.
The upshot is that when we have found that an improperly
executed warrant fails to satisfy the good-faith exception, we
have done so only "[i]n view of the facts before us . . . ." Id.
at 178. We have not bypassed the inquiry into good faith
altogether. See id. at 177 ("Applying [Leon's] principles to the
searches and seizures at [issue] . . . it is clear to us that the
agents executing the warrants did not act in good faith as that
term was explained in Leon.").4 As the good-faith exception only
4Pimentel also relies on two Tenth Circuit cases, United
States v. Angelos, 433 F.3d 738 (10th Cir. 2006) and United States
v. Medlin, 798 F.2d 407 (10th Cir. 1986), which suggest that Leon
does not apply to an improperly executed warrant. However, neither
case involved a situation similar to the one before us, where there
was an ambiguity on the face of the warrant such that the officers
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saves searches "that it was reasonable to believe were covered by
the warrant," Leon, 468 U.S. at 918 n.19, our inquiry here turns
on whether the HPD officers' belief that the search warrant covered
the third floor was objectively reasonable under the
circumstances.
C. The Third-Floor Search
"Whether a search exceeds the scope of a search warrant
is an issue we determine through an objective assessment of the
circumstances surrounding the issuance of the warrant, the
contents of the search warrant, and the circumstances of the
search." United States v. Hitchcock, 286 F.3d 1064, 1071 (9th
Cir.), amended on other grounds, 298 F.3d 1021 (9th Cir. 2002).
Determinations of good faith similarly do not follow a bright-line
test, but are made "when government agents rely on a warrant in
objective good faith and in the interest of justice suppression is
generally inappropriate." United States v. Woodbury, 511 F.3d 93,
might have reasonably believed they were following the warrant's
terms. See Angelos, 433 F.3d at 746 (finding that the warrant was
"without ambiguity" and that, accordingly, "the agents executing
the warrant . . . reasonably should have noticed its limited
scope" and "cannot be said to have acted reasonably"); Medlin, 798
F.2d at 411 (acknowledging that the government's seizures went
beyond the clear scope of the warrant but remanding to assess
whether the seizures were lawful under the plain view doctrine,
and if not, whether any misconduct was so "flagrant" as to justify
suppression of all the evidence). These cases demonstrate that
the Leon exception will not apply when -- on the facts of the case
-- officers clearly or unreasonably exceed the scope of a warrant.
However, they do not show that Leon is categorically inapplicable
whenever the propriety of a warrant's execution is disputed.
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99 (1st Cir. 2007). Upon close examination of the language of the
warrant and the overall circumstances of the search, we hold that
the HPD officers reasonably believed that the warrant authorized
them to search the third floor, and thus the Leon good-faith
exception applies.5
The government argues on appeal that the language of the
warrant itself, coupled with the discoveries made by the officers
on the scene, generated a degree of ambiguity in the warrant's
scope. The warrant described the place to be searched as follows:
"88 Fountain St. 2nd floor is a 3 story, multi-unit building, with
a basement, numbered 88 on the left side of the front deck. The
building is colored white with white trim and red shutters and a
red [] asphalt roof." The following line of the warrant, in
reference to the place to be searched, added the phrase "which is
occupied by and/or in possession of" Pimentel, his girlfriend, his
aunt, and his grandmother. Separately, the warrant specified that
the property to be searched includes "any items that pertain to
firearms and proof of residency," without referencing the second
5 We do not base this conclusion, as the government suggests,
on the district court's finding that "the officers made a
reasonable mistake in seeking a warrant that authorized a search
of the second floor." The parties do not dispute the validity of
the warrant itself, and the Fourth Amendment's particularization
and probable cause requirements are not at issue in this case. As
such, the HPD officers' reasonable -- if ultimately incorrect --
belief that Pimentel lived on the second floor does not bear on
the propriety of their decision to search the third floor.
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floor, and similarly authorized a search for property "on the
person or in the possession of" Pimentel and the three other
individuals identified above.
Pimentel argues that the phrase "which is occupied
by . . . " must be read only to modify the phrase "88 Fountain St.
2nd floor," which he views as the sole location that the warrant
authorized searching. The government instead suggests that the
"which is occupied by" clause could reasonably be read more
broadly, i.e., to permit a search of Pimentel's residence within
the building even after such residence was discovered to be on the
third floor. To support this reading, the government cites to the
focus -- both elsewhere in the warrant and in the supporting
affidavit -- on Pimentel himself and his suspected possession of
a firearm.
The warrant here is not an exemplar of grammatical
precision, and no reading of it is free from ambiguity. However,
we are mindful that we do not subject warrants to the same exacting
standard of textual rigor as we might demand in matters of
statutory interpretation. Cf. O'Connor v. Oakhurst Dairy, 851
F.3d 69, 70 (1st Cir. 2017) ("For want of a comma, we have this
case."). Instead, our caselaw instructs that "there is some
breathing room in our analysis, since 'search warrants and
affidavits should be considered in a common sense manner, and
hypertechnical readings should be avoided.'" United States v.
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Peake, 804 F.3d 81, 87 (1st Cir. 2015) (quoting United States v.
Bonner, 808 F.2d 864, 868 (1st Cir. 1986)). Here, a reasonable
officer could understand the principal command of the warrant to
authorize a search of Pimentel's person and residence within the
building. Thus, we believe that the warrant's text, in light of
the context in which it was executed, was sufficiently ambiguous
to support a finding of good faith.
The HPD officers' conduct and the on-the-scene
discoveries they made "in the dangerous and difficult process
of . . . executing [the] search warrant[]" also militate in favor
of finding good faith. Maryland v. Garrison, 480 U.S. 79, 87
(1987). In their initial sweep of the premises, the officers
encountered Pimentel coming down the back stairwell from the third-
floor apartment, and discovered that Pimentel's girlfriend and
aunt were also present in that same unit -- three of the four
people enumerated in the warrant's "which is occupied by" clause.
Further, by Pimentel's own admission, the officers learned that
the shotguns that were the primary object of the warrant were in
Pimentel's bedroom, which the officers correctly understood to be
on the third floor. It was thus only upon discovering that
Pimentel's current bedroom and the whereabouts of the sought-after
property were both on the third floor that the officers conducted
the search at issue. They did so while searching for dangerous
and possibly loaded weapons -- one of which had been discharged
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only hours previously -- and holding a warrant in hand that spoke
of the premises "occupied by and/or in possession of" Pimentel and
authorized a search of property "on the person or in the possession
of" the same. Under these particular circumstances, we cannot say
the HPD's behavior reflects the type of "lawlessness" that
"requires application of the extreme sanction of exclusion." Leon,
468 U.S. at 916.6
As the district court noted, the instant case in many
ways resembles United States v. Woodbury, 511 F.3d 93 (1st Cir.
2007), where we also applied the good-faith exception. In
Woodbury, the police received a search warrant specifying the
location to be searched as "#7 Leisure Lane Windham, Maine[,]
believed to be the bottom floor left apartment." Id. at 95. Upon
arriving at the bottom-floor apartment, however, the police were
informed by that apartment's occupant that the defendant actually
resided in a second-floor unit, and proceeded to search the latter
6Other contextual factors point toward the same conclusion.
The officers knew that Pimentel had recently resided on the second
floor. Using the back staircase that directly connected the second
and third floors, they did not have to open any locked doors to
access the third-floor unit. Thus, throughout the search, the
officers encountered a multigenerational living situation in a
family-owned and family-occupied dwelling. To be sure, we find no
error in the district court's determination that the third-floor
unit constituted a separate apartment from the second-floor unit.
But these facts underscore that the officers' search of the third
floor was not the sort of "deliberate, reckless, or grossly
negligent conduct" that "the exclusionary rule serves to deter."
Herring v. United States, 555 U.S. 135, 144 (2009).
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apartment. Id. The defendant moved to suppress the evidence
recovered in the search, including a firearm and drug
paraphernalia, arguing in relevant part that the officers acted
outside the scope of the warrant in searching the upstairs
apartment. Id. at 96. We upheld the district court's denial of
said motion. Despite the warrant's misidentification of the
bottom-floor apartment, we emphasized that the police "were able
to execute the warrant against their intended target." Id. at 99.
In doing so, they "made clear their good faith" by focusing their
search on the defendant's apartment, as the warrant had clearly
anticipated. Id. at 100.
Here, as in Woodbury, the officers possessed a warrant
to search the defendant's apartment, supported by an affidavit
that focused on his suspected possession of contraband, but learned
on the scene that the warrant had specified a different area of
the dwelling. Moreover, in Woodbury, we did not rely on the
warrant's "believed to be" qualification in finding the search had
been made in good faith. Rather, we stated that it was "plain
from the face of the warrant[] that the wrong unit was specified
on the warrant." Id. at 98–99. However, despite "listing the
wrong unit, the warrant made clear reference to the apartment
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occupied by" the defendant. Id. at 100. On the facts of the case,
this sufficed for Leon to cover the officers' search. Id.7
The same logic applies to the case at bar. While the
warrant referenced 88 Fountain Street's second-floor apartment,
instead of the third-floor unit to which Pimentel had recently
relocated, both the warrant and supporting affidavit identified
him by name, and the warrant directed the officers toward the
apartment "which is occupied by" him. Indeed, whereas in Woodbury
the police learned of the error from an unknown third party, the
officers here were able to ascertain from their own encounter with
Pimentel both that he resided on the third floor and that the
weapons they sought were located there. In searching the third-
floor unit, the officers acted "consistent with a reasonable effort
to ascertain and identify the place intended to be searched."
Garrison, 480 U.S. at 88. Given the overall context of this
search, and "judge[d] . . . in light of the information available
7 Caselaw in other circuits regarding searches of
misidentified apartments has often pursued a similar line of
reasoning. See, e.g., United States v. Owens, 848 F.2d 462, 463,
465 (4th Cir. 1988) (finding good faith where "[t]he affidavit
supporting this search warrant set forth facts [indicating that
defendant] . . . exercised control over this apartment" and where
"[t]he affidavit clearly identified the apartment to be searched
as one that was occupied [by defendant]"); United States v.
Clement, 747 F.2d 460, 461 (8th Cir. 1984) (declining to "conclude
that the inaccurate address in the warrant should operate to
invalidate the search" where "the search warrant named the correct
street number" and "specifically named [defendant's] residence").
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to them at the time they acted," we hold the officers' conduct to
be covered by the Leon good-faith exception. Id. at 85.
Pimentel argues that Garrison in fact supports
suppression. In Garrison, the officers executing a warrant found
contraband prior to realizing that there were two apartments
contained within the premises described in the warrant, rather
than one as they had initially believed. 480 U.S. at 87. In
upholding the search, the Court noted that "as the officers
recognized, they were required to discontinue the search of
respondent's apartment as soon as they . . . were put on notice of
the risk that they might be in a unit erroneously included within
the terms of the warrant." Id. at 87. Pimentel relies on this
language to claim that the HPD officers should have ended their
search when they discovered that his bedroom was not on the second
floor. In parallel, Pimentel attempts to distinguish Woodbury by
noting that the court there found evidence of good faith in the
officers' declination to search the bottom-floor apartment
mistakenly listed on the warrant. See Woodbury, 511 F.3d at 100.
We are unpersuaded. Pimentel's argument would appear to
call into question the officers' search of the second-floor
apartment, which is the only unit that might have been "erroneously
included within the terms of the warrant" in the manner of Garrison
or Woodbury. Garrison, 480 U.S. at 87. But Pimentel does not
question the propriety of the second-floor search, and all the
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evidence he seeks to suppress was recovered from the third floor.
In any event, Pimentel had recently relocated from the second
floor, and one of the parties listed on the warrant (Pimentel's
grandmother) did reside on that floor. As such, the officers'
search of both floors hardly evidences bad faith or constitutes
one "of the wide-ranging exploratory searches the Framers intended
to prohibit." Id. at 84. Rather, their actions reflected a
reasonable interpretation of the command of the warrant, which
authorized the recovery of firearms from Pimentel at the place he
resided.
We likewise find inapposite Pimentel's reliance on
Second Circuit caselaw, arising from very different contexts,
where the court declined to find good faith. In United States v.
Voustianiouk, 685 F.3d 206 (2d Cir. 2012), the court emphasized
that the police, by listing only the apartment unit to be searched,
"purposefully exclude[ed] any mention of [defendant's] name from
the warrant and affidavit" and did not even "provide any basis for
concluding that [defendant] may have been involved in a crime."
Id. at 211. Accordingly, the court concluded that the search went
beyond the issuing magistrate's intentions and exceeded the scope
of the warrant. Id. In so holding, the court explicitly
distinguished Woodbury by again highlighting that "[n]either the
warrant nor the affidavit mentioned [defendant] as the occupant of
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the apartment that officials were authorized to search." Id. at
215.
Similarly, in United States v. Bershchansky, 788 F.3d
102 (2d Cir. 2015), the Second Circuit declined to apply Leon where
the "warrant itself ma[de] no reference to [defendant] at all."
Id. at 111. The court further stated that the government's
invocation of "good faith is undercut by [the agent's] repeated
erroneous and conflicting statements," and, noting that the case
involved the same agent as in Voustianiouk, found that the agent's
"'recurring' conduct further supports the application of the
exclusionary rule to the circumstances of this case." Id. at 113–
14 (quoting Herring v. United States, 555 U.S. 135, 144 (2009)).
No such misconduct is apparent here.
III. Conclusion
We deal here with a particular situation in which
officers were forced to respond to new information that was
uncovered while executing an awkwardly worded warrant, and made a
good-faith judgment about whether this search remained within the
scope of the warrant. As this case involved a search of a three-
unit, family-occupied dwelling, it may not be a useful analogue
for cases involving searches of larger multi-unit buildings, or
cases in which the building's occupants lack familial ties. On
the record before us, we find that the officers reasonably believed
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that the warrant permitted the search of Pimentel's third-floor
bedroom. Accordingly, the Leon exception applies.
Affirmed.
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