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Parties Involved:
United States of America
Appellant
Michael Williams
Appellee

Document Text:

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION

File Name: 16a0386n.06

Case No. 15-3801

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

MICHAEL WILLIAMS,

Defendant-Appellee.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED 

STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR 

THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF 

OHIO

Before: MERRITT, SUHRHEINRICH, and DONALD, Circuit Judges 

MERRITT, Circuit Judge. In this case, the government conducted two searches of a 

house—the first without a warrant and illegal; the second with a warrant reciting information 

recovered during the illegal search. The United States as plaintiff-appellant appeals the district 

court’s suppression of evidence gathered during the warranted search of the house that 

defendant-appellee Michael Williams and his associates used as a stash house for illegal 

narcotics. This case presents a Fourth Amendment problem because officers first used an illegal 

search of the stash house to obtain information that was subsequently recited in a warrant 

authorizing the second search of the house. The district court suppressed the evidence recovered 

from the warranted search, finding that officers used the illegal search to gather evidence for the 

subsequent warranted search. On appeal, the United States concedes that the initial search of the 

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residence was illegal, but argues that the evidence is nevertheless admissible under the 

“independent source doctrine” because the illegal search did not prompt police to seek the 

warrant, and because the warrant affidavit established probable cause to search irrespective of 

the information obtained through the illegal search. After reviewing the record, we reject the 

government’s arguments and AFFIRM the district court.

1

 I. Facts

As a result of a nearly eight-month investigation of a Cincinnati-area heroin-trafficking 

ring involving Michael Williams and his associate Christopher Gulley, police obtained and 

executed search warrants for Williams’s and Gulley’s respective homes on 119 Retreat St. in 

Bellevue, Kentucky (“Retreat St.”) and 403 Elberon Ave. in Cincinnati, Ohio (“Elberon Ave.”)

in the early morning hours of June 11, 2014. The warranted searches revealed significant 

evidence of drug trafficking that corroborated other evidence police had compiled over the 

course of the investigation. Items found during the warranted searches included: heroin, cash, 

firearms, a kilogram press, and several sets of keys.

As police completed the searches of the Retreat St. and Elberon Ave. homes, officers 

began turning their attention to 239 McCormick Place (“McCormick Place”)—a residence that 

police believed Williams and Gulley used as a stash house for illegal narcotics. Police had 

already been surveilling McCormick Place as part of the investigation. The surveillance revealed 

that Williams and Gulley visited the house, that the frequency, length, and duration of these 

visits were identical to prior visits to other suspected stash houses, that Williams and Gulley both 

 

1 The district court followed the logic outlined by the Supreme Court in Murray v. United States, 487 U.S. 533, 540 

(1988): 

An officer with probable cause sufficient to obtain a search warrant would be 

foolish to enter the premises first in an unlawful manner. By doing so, he would 

risk suppression of all evidence on the premises, both seen and unseen, since his 

action would add to the normal burden of convincing a magistrate that there is 

probable cause . . . .

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had keys to open the front door of the residence, that no one appeared to be living in the house, 

and that a Pontiac Montana—a vehicle suspected of trafficking drugs for the organization—had 

regularly visited the residence. 

Sergeant Cliff Mitchell and other officers drove from Elberon Ave. to McCormick Place, 

apparently in anticipation of a magistrate issuing a search warrant for McCormick Place.

According to Mitchell’s testimony, another officer, Matthew Waters, was already in the process 

of preparing a warrant affidavit for McCormick Place as Mitchell and his colleagues arrived at

McCormick Place. 

After arriving, Mitchell and his colleagues did not wait for a search warrant to issue. 

Instead, they tested a set of keys the police took from Gulley’s Elberon Ave. home in the front 

door of McCormick Place. One of the keys unlocked the front door, knocking it “ajar.” A few 

moments later, officers heard footsteps in the house, and an alarm sounded. Officers then

entered the residence and conducted a “protective sweep.” Officers found three large dogs in the 

basement and David Richardson and his girlfriend in an upstairs bedroom. Richardson told 

officers that he was Williams’s uncle; that the house belonged to Williams; and that Williams 

provided him with a key to the house. Officers radioed the information obtained as a result of 

their warrantless search to Officer Waters, who placed it in the warrant affidavit.

Officer Waters then filed the affidavit with a Hamilton County Judge, and the Judge 

signed and issued a search warrant for the McCormick Place residence later that morning. The 

subsequent warranted search revealed heroin, a kilogram press, and multiple firearms. 

The evidence recovered from the Retreat St., Elberon Ave., and McCormick Place 

residences formed the basis for a six-count federal indictment against Williams and his 

associates. At a suppression hearing, Williams asked the district court to suppress the evidence 

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obtained through the warranted search of the McCormick Place residence. In a June 26, 2015 

opinion and order, the district court suppressed the evidence obtained from the warranted search 

of McCormick Place. The court determined that the search warrant affidavit was tainted because

the illegal search prompted officers to seek the warrant, and because without the information 

obtained through the illegal search, there was not sufficient probable cause to justify the issuance 

of the warrant. The United States appeals to this Court for reversal. 

II. Discussion

The United States concedes that officers’ initial search of McCormick Place violated the 

Fourth Amendment, and invokes the independent source doctrine to argue that the district court 

should not have suppressed evidence obtained through the subsequent warranted search because 

this evidence was obtained independently of any constitutional violation. 

The independent source doctrine requires courts to admit evidence “if the government 

can show that it was discovered through sources ‘wholly independent of any constitutional 

violation.’” United States v. Leake, 95 F.3d 409, 412 (6th Cir. 1996) (quoting Nix v. Williams, 

467 U.S. 431, 443 (1984)). The idea behind the independent source doctrine is that “police who 

carry out a search that they should not have carried out should be put in the same, but no worse, 

position than they would have been in absent any error or misconduct.” United States v. Jenkins, 

396 F.3d 751, 758 (6th Cir. 2005) (emphasis in original). 

In order to show that the independent source doctrine applies to a warrant based on both 

legally and illegally obtained information, the government must make two showings by a 

preponderance of the evidence. United States v. Siciliano, 578 F.3d 61, 68 (1st Cir. 2009). First, 

the government must show that the initial illegal search did not prompt officers to seek a warrant 

for the second search. Murray v. United States, 487 U.S. 533, 542 (1988); see Jenkins, 396 F.3d 

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at 758. This is a fact-based inquiry that requires the district court to assess the record. Murray, 

487 U.S. at 540 n.2. While officers’ testimony regarding whether the illegal search led police to 

seek a warrant is probative of this question, the Supreme Court has instructed district courts not

to give dispositive effect to officer assurances that a warrant would have been sought in the 

absence of the illegal search. Instead, “[w]here the facts render [officer] assurances implausible, 

the independent source doctrine will not apply.” Id. 

The government also must show that a neutral magistrate would have issued the search 

warrant even if she was not presented with the information obtained from the illegal search. 

Jenkins, 396 F.3d at 761. Courts make this determination by excising the illegally obtained 

information from the affidavit and then deciding whether the remaining legally obtained

information sufficiently supports a finding of probable cause to search. Id. at 760. The 

standards that guide our determination of probable cause are well settled:

The task of the [Court] is simply to make a practical, commonsense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the 

affidavit before [it], including the “veracity” and “basis of 

knowledge” of persons supplying hearsay information, there is a 

fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be 

found in a particular place.

Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 238 (1983). 

The district court made such a decision. It concluded that the illegal search of 

McCormick Place prompted police to seek a warrant for the second search of the residence. 

Specifically, the district court determined that police illegally searched McCormick Place in 

order to establish probable cause for a search warrant. We review the district court’s factual 

determinations on a motion to suppress for clear error. United States v. Master, 614 F.3d 236, 

238 (6th Cir. 2010) (citing Jenkins, 396 F.3d at 757).

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In attacking the district court’s conclusion, the government appears to rely solely on 

Sergeant Mitchell’s testimony at the suppression hearing. The illegal search did not prompt 

police to seek a warrant for McCormick Place, the government says, because Mitchell testified at 

the suppression hearing that the illegal search had “no bearing on [police] serving the search 

warrant,” which, according to Mitchell, was already being prepared when officers arrived at 

McCormick Place. But Mitchell’s inconsistent testimony and other facts speak louder than 

Mitchell’s self-serving assurance, and thus we are not left with the definite and firm conviction

that the district court erred in finding that the illegal search of McCormick Place prompted police 

to seek a warrant. 

While Mitchell did state that police would have sought the warrant irrespective of the 

illegal search, the district court’s reasonable reading of the record “render[s] [Mitchell’s] 

assurance[] implausible.” Murray, 487 U.S. at 540 n.2. Mitchell testified that officers used a 

key recovered during the warranted search of the Elberon Ave. residence to open the front door 

of McCormick Place—an act the government concedes was an illegal search—in order to make a 

connection between Elberon Ave., a house where officers had just found significant evidence of 

drug trafficking, and McCormick Place. At the suppression hearing, Mitchell elaborated: 

We wanted to make sure that the key that we got from Elberon was 

the key that fit that door and it made a connection from Elberon to 

McCormick. It showed that someone at that address had a 

connection at Elberon—or I’m sorry, at McCormick.

The meaning of this statement is clear: officers illegally searched McCormick Place in order to 

gather probable cause for the subsequent warrant. This reading of the situation undermines

Mitchell’s assurances that police would have sought a warrant irrespective of the illegal search. 

Presumably, if the key did not fit the door, there would not have been a later search. Thus,

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Mitchell’s testimony (when combined with the information’s subsequent inclusion in the warrant 

affidavit) provides the district court with a sound basis for finding that the illegal search 

prompted police to seek a warrant. 

The fact that police waited to seek a warrant for McCormick Place until after officers

discovered incriminating evidence as part of the illegal search only lends additional support to 

the district court’s conclusion. While it is certainly possible that the police may have still sought 

a warrant for McCormick Place even if officers found no incriminating evidence during the 

illegal search, the district court’s finding comports with the more plausible interpretation that 

“officers would not have chosen to return immediately to [McCormick Place] with a warrant to 

search had they not discovered [incriminating] evidence during the initial search.” Murray, 

487 U.S. at 549 n.4 (Marshall, J., dissenting). 

Finally, we are satisfied that the district court’s suppression of the evidence seized at 

McCormick Place advances the deterrence function of the Fourth Amendment’s exclusionary 

rule. Indeed, a contrary finding would “emasculate[] the Warrant Clause” because it would give 

police the affirmative incentive to conduct illegal searches to ascertain whether probable cause 

exists for a subsequent warranted search. Id. at 544. The Fourth Amendment simply does not 

countenance such “an intolerable incentive for conducting warrantless searches.” Id. at 551.

Because the district court did not commit clear error in finding that the illegal search of 

McCormick Place prompted officers to seek a warrant, we need not consider whether the warrant 

affidavit, when excised of the information obtained in the illegal search, nevertheless established 

probable cause to search McCormick Place.

For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.

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