Court Opinion

ID: 4364748
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-02-05 17:05:41.543127+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:49:14.823775
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

KAREEM BRADLEY,                            §
                                           §      No.   554, 2017
       Defendant Below,                    §
       Appellant,                          §      Court Below: Superior Court
                                           §      of the State of Delaware
       v.                                  §
                                           §      Cr. ID. No. 1602015338A (N)
STATE OF DELAWARE,                         §
                                           §
       Plaintiff Below,                    §
       Appellee.                           §
                                           §
                                           §

                              Submitted: November 28, 2018
                               Decided: February 4, 2019

Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and VAUGHN, Justices.

                                     ORDER

      On this 4th day of February 2019, upon consideration of the parties’ briefs and

the record on appeal, it appears that:

      (1)    The appellant, Kareem Bradley, appeals from a jury verdict finding him

guilty of Possession of a Firearm By a Person Prohibited and Possession of

Ammunition by a Person Prohibited. The firearm involved was found in a garage

possessed by Bradley. He makes one claim on appeal. He claims that the Superior

Court committed plain error by allowing into evidence items obtained from a

warrantless and invalid search of the garage. His claim is set forth in three subparts.
First, he contends that the search of the garage violated his rights under the Fourth

Amendment and Article I, § 6 of the Delaware Constitution. In support of this

contention, he argues that the application for the warrant authorizing the search of

the garage contained information obtained from a prior warrantless, unlawful entry

into the garage. He further argues that the inevitable discovery rule does not apply.

Second, he contends that even if the inevitable discovery rule applies (or the warrant

was otherwise valid), the warrant was constitutionally defective because the warrant

application lacked particularity. It lacked particularity, he argues, because it did not

establish a nexus between the garage and his unlawful activity and failed to specify

the places within the garage the police intended to search. Finally, he contends that

the officers exceeded the scope of the warrant by searching a vehicle in the garage

because the vehicle was not identified in the application for the warrant.

      (2)    In November of 2015, Detective Barnes of the Wilmington Police

Department and FBI Agent Haney received information from a trusted and past-

proven reliable, confidential informant that Bradley was involved in marijuana

distribution in Wilmington. The informant told the officers that Bradley possessed

multiple firearms, including a handgun with an extended magazine and an AK-47-

style assault rifle.   The informant also told the officers that Bradley lived in

Southbridge and frequented a garage in the area of 13 th and Locust Streets.

Furthermore, “the informant advised that s/he observed Bradley illegally purchase a

                                           2
gun from someone while inside the shop in the area of 13 th and Locust streets.”1

The informant also supplied the officers with a text message from Bradley that

indicated he was engaged in trafficking marijuana.

         (3)    The police began surveillance of Bradley in January 2016.

Surveillance continued for approximately two months. During this period, the

police observed him meeting with subjects and engaging in what appeared to be

hand-to-hand drug transactions. They also observed that he frequently visited three

locations: his residence at 317 Townsend Street, his mother’s residence at 2303

Thatcher Street, and a garage on the 1200 block of Locust Street. Officers observed

him driving a red Dodge Challenger and a black Chrysler 300. “There were also

several occasions where, while Bradley was at 317 Townsend or the garage in the

1200 block of Locust Street, subjects would respond to these locations and enter/exit

same within a few minutes or less”—activity consistent with drug dealing according

to Detective Barnes’s training and experience.2 The police searched a trash can at

the curb directly in front of Bradley’s residence and found “numerous pieces of drug

paraphernalia,” including “numerous empty, small, torn, knotted plastic sandwich

bags commonly used to package drugs for sale,” and a “small piece of marijuana

blunt.”3 In the fourth week of February, the police stopped an individual after he

1
    App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A22, ¶ 12.
2
    Id. at A16, ¶ 14.
3
    Id. at A16, ¶ 14.
                                                3
had engaged in one of the observed hand-to-hand transactions with Bradley and

found that he possessed marijuana.

      (4)   On February 22, 2016, the police secured a search warrant for Bradley’s

residence, the Chrysler, and Bradley’s person (the “first warrant”). At 5:09 p.m.

that same day, Bradley was stopped in his black Chrysler and arrested; he was found

in possession of several individually packaged bags of marijuana, a large sum of

money, and a key ring with numerous keys.          The officers then searched his

residence pursuant to the first warrant and found more individually packaged bags

of marijuana and another large sum of money. When the officers asked Bradley

about the Locust Street garage, he denied any knowledge of it.

      (5)   At around 6:30 p.m. that night, Detective Barnes and Agent Haney

arrived at and opened the locked garage on Locust Street with the keys recovered

from Bradley.    According to Detective Barnes’s testimony at the preliminary

hearing, they walked in after unlocking the garage and observed a parked car, but

did not attempt to open it. After the officers determined that the keys found on

Bradley’s person fit the locks to the garage, Officer Barnes asked Bradley if he

leased the garage. He responded by saying he leased the garage with a friend to

work on cars.

      (6)   Detective Barnes left to get a search warrant for the garage (the “garage

warrant”), while Agent Haney remained with other officers to secure the location.

                                         4
The garage warrant was obtained at 8:30 p.m. The application for the warrant

included the same facts supporting the first warrant, except the affiant added that the

officers found individually packaged bags of marijuana and large sums of money on

Bradley’s person and in his residence while executing the first warrant, that the keys

recovered from Bradley fit the locks to the garage, that Bradley admitted to leasing

the garage after the keys were confirmed to fit the locks, and that the informant had

previously informed the officers that he or she observed Bradley illegally purchase

a gun from someone while inside the garage. The affiant also changed the address

of the garage from “1200 block of Locust Street” to “1203 Locus Street.” 4

According to Detective Barnes’s training and experience, Bradley’s actions were

consistent with maintaining several caches of drugs in different locations to facilitate

drug dealing. Although the affidavit did not mention the vehicle in the garage, the

garage warrant authorized the search of a “[o]ne story brick garage building with a

white front door and a mailbox to the right marked 1203,” including “[a]ny/all

curtilages.”5

       (7)      At some point, the officers discovered that one of the keys recovered

from Bradley unlocked the car.6 Agent Haney observed a zipped, cloth lunchbox

4
  Compare id. at A16, ¶ 14 (first warrant affidavit), with id. at A24, ¶ 16 (garage warrant affidavit).
5
  Id. at A18.
6
  The record is unclear as to precisely when the car in the garage was unlocked. Appellant’s
Opening Br. at 7 n.2. Compare App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A43-44 (Detective Barnes
testifying at the preliminary hearing that the car was not unlocked until after he returned with the
garage warrant), with App. to Appellee’s Answering Br. at B5 (Agent Haney testifying at trial that
                                                  5
sitting on the driver’s seat, in which he found a loaded firearm with an extended

magazine.

       (8)    At the preliminary hearing, defense counsel (“DC”) questioned

Detective Barnes (“DET”) concerning the police’s initial entry into the garage:

              DC: Prior to the execution of the search warrant nobody
                  went into the garage, is that what you’re telling us?

              DET: No. We did go into the garage.

              DC: Okay. And what did you do while you were in the
                  garage waiting for the search warrant, secure it?

              DET: Yes

              DC: And what did that consist of?

              DET: Entering, observing what was in the garage, and
                   leaving the garage.

              DC: Okay. So you walked in the garage. There’s
                  basically nothing in the garage other than this
                  vehicle that you’re talking about, right?

              DET: Correct.

              DC: You don’t attempt to enter the vehicle or to open
                  any of the doors. You just see it. You see there’s
                  nothing there of any danger and then you secure the
                  premises and wait for the return of the warrant?

              DET: Correct.7

he called Detective Barnes (who had left to get the garage warrant) to tell him that he found a
firearm in the car).
7
   App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A43.
                                              6
Bradley’s trial counsel never filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized in the

garage.

       (9)    “To warrant review on appeal when the issue has not been fairly

presented [to the trial court], there must be ‘plain error.’” 8 “Under the plain error

standard of review, the error complained of must be so clearly prejudicial to

substantial rights as to jeopardize the fairness and integrity of the trial process.” 9

“[T]he doctrine of plain error is limited to material defects which are apparent on the

face of the record; which are basic, serious and fundamental in their character, and

which clearly deprive an accused of a substantial right, or which clearly show

manifest injustice.”10 There is no such error here.

       (10) Bradley contends that the Superior Court committed plain error by not

suppressing the firearm found in the garage for three reasons. Before discussing

each of his arguments in detail, however, it must first be noted that Bradley’s failure

to file a motion to suppress before trial constitutes a waiver of the arguments he now

makes.11 Moreover, this Court generally declines to review suppression issues not

raised below because, in “the absence of a motion to suppress and a pretrial

suppression hearing, there is not an adequate record upon which to conduct an

8
   Zhurbin v. State, 104 A.3d 108, 113 (Del. 2014).
9
   Wainwright v. State, 504 A.2d 1096, 1100 (Del. 1986) (en banc).
10
    Id.
11
    Mills v. State, 947 A.2d 1122, 2007 WL 4245464, at *4 (Del. Dec. 3, 2007) (Table).
                                               7
appellate review of the suppression claim.” 12 Nonetheless, under Supreme Court

Rule 8, this Court may review questions not presented to the trial court “when the

interests of justice so require.”13

         (11) Bradley contends that the interest of justice exception to Rule 8 applies

here, and therefore this Court should review his claim, because “but for the police

officer’s illegal conduct there would not have been any evidence on which to proceed

to trial under the [person-prohibited charges].”14 Each of his three arguments for

suppression will be addressed in turn.

         (12) First, Bradley contends that the police violated his federal and state

constitutional rights when they used the keys recovered from him to unlock and enter

the garage without a warrant and that the inevitable discovery rule does not apply.

In support of this contention, he first argues that the inevitable discovery rule cannot

apply because the police were not seeking to obtain a warrant prior to their initial

entry. However, whether the police initiated the process of obtaining the garage

warrant before or after initially entering the garage is irrelevant.

         (13) Under United States Supreme Court precedent, evidence seized before

the police obtain a warrant will not be suppressed if the evidence would have been

discovered independently of an initial unlawful search or inevitably would have been

12
     Id. (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted).
13
     Supr. Ct. R. 8.
14
     Appellant’s Opening Br. at 8.
                                                   8
discovered through lawful means. 15          Here, the question is whether the garage

warrant was supported by probable cause that is independent of anything the police

learned when they initially entered the garage or whether the police otherwise would

have inevitably discovered through lawful means the information used to obtain the

warrant.16

       (14) Bradley argues that the inevitable discovery rule does not apply because

the garage warrant contained information obtained during the initial warrantless

entry: “paragraph 14 of the first warrant and paragraph 16 of the garage search

warrant are the same verbatim except that the language of ‘1200 block of Locust

Street’ was suddenly replaced with an exact address of the garage, ‘1203 Locust

Street.’”17 He claims, “This shows that the police did not know the exact location

of the garage until they illegally used Mr. Bradley’s keys to attempt to open the

various locks of the building.” 18

       (15) However, because Bradley did not raise this issue below, it is not

apparent from the record that the officers did not know, or would not have

discovered, the specific address of the garage prior to obtaining the warrant. The

officers had information from a trusted, confidential informant, and they observed

15
   Murray v. United States, 487 U.S. 533, 537-39 (1988); Nix v. Williams, 467 U.S. 431, 443-44
(1984); see also Hardin v. State, 844 A.2d 982, 985, 987 (Del. 2004) (applying the inevitable
discovery rule).
16
   See Murray, 487 U.S. at 542; Nix, 467 U.S. at 444.
17
   Appellant’s Opening Br. at 23, 23-25.
18
   Id. at 23.
                                              9
Bradley frequently visit the location of the Locust Street garage. At the preliminary

hearing, Bradley’s trial counsel questioned Detective Barnes about the officers’

actions in initially entering the garage but never questioned whether the police

learned of the garage’s specific address only because of this initial entry. Even

assuming the police did not know the exact address of the garage until they

approached the garage for the initial entry, it is clear to us that the police would have

inevitably discovered (and likely actually discovered) its exact address through other

lawful means, such as by walking up to and looking at the garage mailbox, which

was marked 1203,19 without needing to test the keys. Because it is not apparent on

the face of the record that the police did not know, or would not have inevitably

discovered, the exact address of the garage, there is no plain error.

       (16) In his reply brief, Bradley relies on the Supreme Court’s recent decision

in Collins v. Virginia to draw a distinction between a “search” and a “seizure.” 20 In

that case, the Court held that a police officer engaged in a “search” when he walked

onto a driveway to inspect a motorcycle because such activity was an intrusion into

the “curtilage of [Collins’s] home.”21 Collins is inapplicable here because that case

had nothing to do with inevitable discovery. Murray v. United States, in which the

19
   App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A18 (describing the garage as a “[o]ne story brick garage
building with a white front door and a mailbox to the right marked 1203”).
20
   138 S. Ct. 1663 (2018).
21
   Id. at 1671.
                                              10
Supreme Court held that the inevitable discovery rule applies to evidence initially

discovered during an unlawful “search” but later obtained lawfully, 22 renders the

question of whether the initial unlawful activity was a “seizure” as opposed to a

“search” irrelevant.

       (17) Second, Bradley contends that, in any event, the subsequent search

warrant for the garage was invalid because it failed to (1) show a nexus between the

crime of drug dealing and the garage and (2) state with particularity the vehicle

within the garage that the police intended to search.

       (18) “A search warrant may be issued only upon a showing of probable

cause.”23 “Probable cause requires that, ‘given all the circumstances, there is a fair

probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular

place.’”24 Although probable cause is not established until a nexus between the

items to be sought and the place to be searched appears, “[c]oncrete firsthand

evidence that the items sought are in the place to be searched is not always required

in a search warrant.”25 “An affidavit in support of a search warrant must, within the

four corners of the affidavit, set forth facts adequate for a judicial officer to form a

reasonable belief that an offense has been committed and the property to be seized

22
487 U.S. at 537.
23
   Fink v. State, 817 A.2d 781, 786 (Del. 2003).
24
   Stones v. State, 676 A.2d 907, 1996 WL 145775, at *2 (Del. Feb. 23, 1996) (Table) (omission
omitted) (quoting Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 238 (1983)).
25
   Hooks v. State, 416 A.2d 189, 203 (Del. 1980).
                                             11
will be found in a particular place.”26 “In reaching a decision, a magistrate’s finding

should be based on the totality of the circumstances.” 27 “After-the-fact scrutiny by

the courts of the sufficiency of an affidavit should not take the form of de novo

review.    A magistrate’s determination of probable cause should be paid great

deference by reviewing courts.”28

       (19) Here, the affidavit in support of the garage warrant set forth facts

adequate for a judicial officer to form a reasonable belief that evidence of Bradley’s

criminal activity would be found in the garage, thus establishing the requisite nexus.

First, the affidavit stated that the police found individually packaged bags of

marijuana and large sums of currency during the prior searches of Bradley’s person,

Chrysler 300, and residence. The affiant did not simply suspect that Bradley was

trafficking marijuana. He had hard evidence of such. The affiant also stated that

(1) a past-proven reliable informant observed Bradley illegally purchase a gun while

inside the garage and (2) the police, on several occasions while Bradley was in the

garage, observed subjects enter and exit the garage within a few minutes or less,

activity consistent with drug dealing according to the affiant’s training and

26
   Sisson v. State, 903 A.2d 288, 296 (Del. 2006) (en banc).
27
   McKinney v. State, 107 A.3d 1045, 1047 (Del. 2014) (en banc).
28
   Smith v. State, 887 A.2d 470, 473 (Del. 2005) (en banc) (alteration omitted) (quoting Gates, 462
U.S. at 236).
                                                12
experience. The affidavit thus adequately connected Bradley’s criminal activity to

the garage.

         (20) In support of his argument that there was no nexus between Bradley’s

drug dealing and the garage, Bradley cites several cases, but all of these cases

involved situations where the affidavit did not provide any visual observations of

illegal or suspicious activity connecting the alleged criminal activity with the place

to be searched. For example, in State v. Cannon, the Superior Court declined to

hold that probable cause to search a residence could be supported “solely by a

statement of police expertise combined with mere presence of defendant’s car at

both a drug transaction and his residence.” 29 And in State v. Ada, the Superior Court

declined to find probable cause based on an officer’s training and experience and an

informant’s assertion that another suspected drug dealer (not the defendant) was

“possibly selling drugs” for a subject (possibly the defendant) living on the block of

the defendant’s residence (the place to be searched).30 In Ada, there was no police

observation of illegal or suspicious activity occurring at the residence. 31 Here,

unlike in these cases, the affidavit provided at least two observations of illegal or

suspicious activity at the garage: (1) Bradley illegally purchasing a firearm at the

29
     2007 WL 1849022, at *6 (Del. Super. June 27, 2007)
30
     2001 WL 660227, at *5 (Del. Super. June 8, 2001).
31
     Id.
                                              13
garage and (2) subjects entering and exiting the garage within a few minutes while

Bradley was at the garage.

       (21) Bradley also relies, in part, upon our recent case of Buckham v. State,

in which we stated that a search warrant must “describe the things to be searched

with sufficient particularity and be no broader than the probable cause on which it is

based.”32 In Buckham v. State, we held that it was plain error to admit evidence

seized from a cell phone pursuant to a search warrant that did not state with

particularity the exact places on the phone the police wished to search. 33 We

explained that “warrants issued to search electronic devices call for particular

sensitivity” because “[m]odern smartphones store an unprecedented volume of

private information, and a top-to-bottom search of one can permit the government

access to far more than the most exhaustive search of a house.” 34

       (22) In this case, however, the warrant authorized the police to search a

small garage. Because searching a small garage is not as intrusive as searching the

entire contents of a cell phone, 35 the police were not required to describe with

particularity the places within the garage they intended to search. 36 Moreover, the

32
   Buckham v. State, 185 A.3d 1, 18 (Del. 2018) (internal quotation marks omitted).
33
   Id. at 18-19.
34
   Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
35
   See id. at 18.
36
   Cf. United States v. Ross, 456 U.S. 798, 821 (1982) (“[A] warrant that authorizes an officer to
search a home for illegal weapons also provides authority to open closets, chests, drawers, and
containers in which the weapon might be found.”). For this reason, Bradley’s specific argument
that the police failed to particularly describe the vehicle in the garage is best considered in the
                                                14
garage warrant specified the types of items the police sought to seize, which included

marijuana and paraphernalia as well as “any rifle, pistol, shotgun or any device that

a shot may be discharged or any weapon manifestly utilized to protect illegal

drugs.”37 The garage warrant thus described with sufficient particularity the thing

to be searched, the garage, by providing its exact address, and was no broader than

the probable cause on which it was based. It authorized the police to search for

drugs and weapons in the garage, the suspected presence of which formed the basis

for the probable cause on which the warrant was granted.

       (23) Because the garage warrant contained facts showing a nexus between

Bradley’s criminal activity and the garage and because it described the place to be

searched with sufficient particularity and was no broader than the probable cause on

which it was based, there was no plain error here.

       (24) Finally, Bradley contends that the officers executing the garage warrant

exceeded its scope by searching the locked vehicle within the garage because the

vehicle was not mentioned in the warrant. In United States v. Ross, the Supreme

Court held that a lawful search of fixed premises generally extends to the entire area

in which the object may be found and is not limited by the possibility that separate

acts of entry or opening may be required to complete the search. 38 Ross has been

context of his final argument.
37
   App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A20, ¶ 7 (altered to be lowercase).
38
456 U.S. at 820-21; see also Santini v. State, 663 A.2d 488, 1995 WL 420802, at *2 (Del. July
                                              15
extended to permit searches of vehicles found on or within the premises for which

the police have a search warrant.39 “Although a car is less fixed than a closet or

cabinet, however, it is no less fixed than a suitcase or handbag found on the premises,

both of which can readily be searched under Ross if capable of containing the object

of the search.” 40 Here, because the garage warrant authorized the search of the

entire garage and any and all curtilages thereof for marijuana, paraphernalia, and

weapons and because such items reasonably could be found in the vehicle, there was

no plain error in allowing into evidence the firearm the police found in the vehicle.

       NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the judgment of the Superior

Court is AFFIRMED.

                                                BY THE COURT:

                                                /s/ James T. Vaughn, Jr.
                                                Justice

7, 1995) (Table) (citing Ross and holding that the police did not exceed the scope of a warrant
authorizing the search of the defendant’s house for drugs when they opened a safe in his bedroom).
39
   See, e.g., United States v. Duque, 62 F.3d 1146, 1151 (9th Cir. 1995); United States v.
Gottschalk, 915 F.2d 1459, 1461 (10th Cir. 1990); United States v. Percival, 756 F.2d 600, 612
(7th Cir. 1985).
40
   Percival, 756 F.2d at 612; see also United States v. Beall, 581 F. Supp. 1457, 1466 (D. Md.
1984) (holding that warrant for search of auto body shop justified search of U-Haul truck parked
within shop).
                                               16